The Rest Is History - 618. Elizabeth I: The Shadow of the Tower (Part 3)
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Why did Elizabeth I’s brother, Henry VIII’s heir, Edward VI, choose his cousin Jane Grey to succeed him, rather than either of his wily Tudor sisters? Later, how did Elizabeth survive the reign of... her once dear Catholic sister, “Bloody Mary”, given Mary’s growing resentment? And, while imprisoned in the Tower of London, how did Elizabeth avoid the same bloody fate as her beheaded mother, Anne Boleyn…? Join Tom and Dominic as they recount the course of Elizabeth I’s dangerous early life, as she outfaced her rivals following Edward VI’s death, witnessed the execution of the young Jane Grey, and survived the reign of her sister and rival, Mary Tudor… _______ Hive. Know your power. Visit https://hivehome.com to find out more. _______ Learn more at https://www.uber.com/onourway Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editor: Jack Meek Social Producer: Harry Balden Assistant Producer: Aaliyah Akude Producer: Tabby Syrett Senior Producer: Theo Young-Smith Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Of Queen Mary this truly may be affirmed and left in story for a perpetual memorial or epitaph for all kings and queens that shall succeed her, to be noted, that before her never was read in story of any king or queen of England, under whom, in time of peace, by hanging, beheading, burning and prisoning, so much Christian blood.
So many Englishmen's lives were spilled within this realm
as under the said Queen Mary for the space of four years was to be seen.
And I beseech the Lord never may be seen hereafter.
So that was the Tudor No. 1 bestseller.
The thrillingly titled Acts and Monuments of these latter and perilous days
touching matters of the church.
And it was by an unusually forensic.
and judicious historian, John Fox, a man of Lincolnshire, hence the accent, and that book
went down in English history as Fox's Book of Martyrs, one of the foundational texts.
You might argue of English national identity. It was published in 1563, five years after the death
of the character he's talking about Mary Tudor. And Tom, in that passage, John Fox is describing
the depredations, crimes and horrors of her reign. A rain so drenched in blood that to this day,
and I remember this when we did it at school when I was about 10, she is still known as
Bloody Mary. And he's not just talking about Mary, is he? He's talking about the subject of our
series, which is Elizabeth, because Elizabeth is the yin to Mary's yang. Well, or is she, or do they
actually have more in common perhaps than is conventionally assumed?
we will be finding out in this episode. But specifically, that passage comes in an entire segment
that is focused on Elizabeth and what Fox sees as the miracle that enables Elizabeth to survive
the reign of Bloody Mary, her half-sister. And Fox thinks that obviously Elizabeth is absolutely
brilliant because Fox is writing as a Protestant, Elizabeth is a Protestant. But just as he
thinks Elizabeth is brilliant. He thinks Mary is an absolute shocker, the worst ruler ever on the
English throne. So he casts Mary as this terrifying papist tyrant and Elizabeth as a Protestant
deliverer. He says that Mary was inflamed with zeal, not for God, but for idolatry, whereas
Elizabeth is a restorer of the gospel. He describes how Mary-filled England.
with smoke from the burning of God's saint,
whereas Elizabeth, when she comes to the throne,
is all about the advancement of learning and godliness.
And he's not exaggerating the differences, is he?
So just to remind people, we ended last time
with the death of Edward the 6th, their brother.
So he'd been an ultra-protestant,
a kind of evangelical reformer.
So we are in 1553.
And now we are going to find out what happens.
Edward wanted his Protestant relative Lady Jane Gray to succeed him.
But Mary is, of course, the obvious person, more beloved of the English people.
But the thing about her that everybody knows, the thing that Fox knew, that we learn in schools, that everybody knew at the time,
was that her defining characteristic was her loyalty to the faith of her mother, Catherine of Arrigan.
That is to say she is a Catholic.
Are people using the words Catholic and Protestant by this time?
Not really.
It's still a little bit muddy.
Again, we'll be kind of looking at that.
But I think the sense of Europe being divided into kind of rival polls is starting to clarify.
But Mary, remember, is of an older generation.
Yeah.
She's not entirely on top of that.
But anyway, she sees herself as upholding the traditional faith of England.
and when she's interrogated by her brother's counsel in 1550 she's absolutely up front about this
she says I would rather refuse the friendship of all the world than forsake any point of my faith
and to that end she had defied her father Henry the 8th and she defies her brother Edward the 6th
she attends mass daily she refuses to accept the very radical Protestant reforms that her brother
is pushing forward.
And remember, there is a huge age difference.
Edward, by 1553, when he dies, he's still just a teenager and a very priggish teenager
and very vehemently Protestant.
And I think that he views his elder sister rather in the way that a student coming back
from his first term at university might view, you know, a middle-aged turf or someone like that.
She's in her late 30s.
She's 37 in 1553.
Yes. And I think Edward just feels, you know, she's got these very antiquated, unacceptable, very cancelable views. Her religious views are problematic, right? Yes. Elizabeth is different because Elizabeth, unlike Mary, had done well under her brother's rule. So she also, like Mary, has inherited a faith from her mother. Elizabeth's mother, of course, Anne Boleyn was an evangelical and Elizabeth has been raised in that faith. But actually, the huge influence on her, obviously is in Ambelin, because she's mother.
Amblin died when Elizabeth was only three and a half. It's her stepmother, Catherine Parr,
Henry VIII's last wife. And like Catherine, Elizabeth, I think, has an authentically
evangelical sense of convictions, but she also quite likes a crucifix, you know, a choir,
a cathedral close, all of that. The core is evangelical, Protestant, if you want to call it like
that, but she's perfectly happy with, you know, a bit of traditional cladding. Yeah. And to that
extent she's much less kind of obviously Protestant than Edward, who is all about, you know,
if there's anything that's more than 15 years old, rip it down, whitewash it. But the one thing
that Elizabeth does do to signal to her brother, her religious affiliations, and we'd mentioned
this in the last episode, she very ostentatiously wears plain and sober clothes. And I think
that's quite a challenge for Elizabeth, because she does love a beautiful dress. Nice dressing up.
So, obvious question. Edward VI is dying. He knows he's dying.
He regards it as his last duty on earth to ensure that England passes into the hands of somebody who will uphold what he sees as the unproblematic evangelical religion.
Why does he not basically arrange the succession for his half-sister Elizabeth?
Why does he turn to Lady Jane Grey instead?
It's such a good question.
I remember when we did our episodes on Lady Jane Grey that we discussed this question then.
And I think the answer is that we've been talking about how different.
Mary and Elizabeth Arbour. They also have very, very profound similarities. So both of them are
the daughters of mothers who've been rejected by their father, Henry the 8th. Catherine of Aragon had
been packed off and Ballin had a head chopped off. Both of them had been born as princesses and
lost that title under Henry the 8th and under Edward the 6th. They're called Lady rather than
Princess. Yeah. And this is because both of them have been officially and legally declared
bastards by Act of Parliament.
So there is a sense that both of them have a kind of shared taint.
And it's this that prompts Edward to decide that they should have to be removed from the
succession, which Henry VIII had kind of said that, you know, they should succeed him.
Edward decides he's going to overturn that and appoint his heir, as you said, their cousin, Lady Jane Gray.
I suppose the truth is you can't have Elizabeth and not have Mary, right?
If you can legitimize Elizabeth, then why are you excluding Mary?
Yeah, I think that's right.
And so Edward dies on the 6th of July 1553, and Jane's father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland,
one of the Dudley families, he declares Jane Queen, but as we heard in the last episode
and in the two episodes that we did years ago on Lady Jane Grey, episodes 239 and 240,
for those who are interested, it all goes wrong.
Elizabeth hunkers down in Hatfield, her great house in Hertfordshire, but Mary is much more
proactive. She's in East Anglia. She raises basically the kind of the English people against
Lady Jane's regime. And Lady Jane ends up ruling so briefly that she will be commemorated
inaccurately, actually, as the nine-day queen. And so the tutors are able to maintain their hold
on the throne. Because, of course, that's what's at stake. It's a struggle not just for Mary to
obtain what she sees as her birthright, but also to keep the Tudor dynastic hold on the throne.
And because Elizabeth is next in line to Mary, Mary's triumph is also, in a sense, Elizabeth's.
And so Elizabeth makes sure to share in it. And she actually enters London before Mary on the 29th of July.
So she arrives from Hatfield and she's escorted by 2,000 horsemen. And they have spears, they have
bows, they have guns, and they're dressed in the green and white livery of the Tudors. And this is
obviously a very public declaration, a reminder to people, not just that she is there, that she
is a Tudor like her Victoria sister, but also that she is a heavyweight in her own right.
If she can command 2,000 horsemen, then it promotes her to the people of London and the country
more generally. As someone with backing, with wealth, with lands, she is a person of great
substance in her own right. And to remind people, she is going to turn, she's not yet turned
20. So she is 19 and a half years old. She's still effectively a teenager. A very daunting
moment, but a good example of her political skill and the kind of the cool and the steel
beneath the surface, right? Yeah. And of course, it's a reminder to Mary. And Elizabeth comes
in from the northwest of London, rides through the city, heads out east, and Mary is
approaching London from East Anglia, and the two sisters meet at Wonstead, east of London.
And this is the first time that they've met for three years.
And Mary welcomes Elizabeth very warmly, and we're told even to kissing all her ladies.
So that's very nice.
And on the 3rd of August, Mary makes her formal entry into London.
and Elizabeth is riding by her side.
And I think Elizabeth, who's a very shrewd observer,
would have noted two things in particular
about Mary's triumphant entry into the capital.
The first is the crowds cheer her ecstatically.
They are as enthusiastic to see a queen
as they ever were to see a king.
And this is a key revelation,
because Mary is the first woman to be ruling
in her own right
since Stephen and Matilda
and Matilda had not
her rule had not been uncontested
so really Mary is the first
queen regnant to rule
in an uncontested way
in English history
and people salute and hail
and cheer her as a monarch
the irony Henry the 8th
it had all been for nothing
all that faffing around with wives
he'd assumed I suppose
after the wars of the roses
understandably he had assumed
there'll probably be more civil wars,
you'll need to command armies, all of that kind of business.
But he was wrong because actually the affection for the dynasty is such
and what people regard as the legitimate line,
that Mary never really has,
well, we'll come to what ructions there are later on,
but she never really has that much difficulty
in cementing her regime, does she?
No, she doesn't.
And I think it makes clear that there are opportunities for a queen
to command the love and devotion of her subjects
just as there are for a king.
But having said that, I think the other thing that Elizabeth notices, as she's riding by
her sister's side, is that the cheering for her as the younger and more glamorous sister is louder.
And I think that is something also that she bears in mind, that if the people of London are
saluting the ruling queen, she also is a very, very popular person.
and her reliance on the love of her subjects
will be a running theme throughout the next few years
and then when she becomes queen throughout her reign.
How do we know that the cheers were louder for her?
So that must come from witnesses at the time,
but how do we know that they're not party pre?
Because it's noted by people who are sympathetic to Mary
and it's a cause of concern.
Right.
Because obviously, you know,
it's not the kind of thing that would make Mary feel brilliant about Elizabeth
with whom she already has a very complicated relationship.
Although, having said that to begin with, for the first few weeks, their relationship seems okay to reiterate the point that David Starkey make, which we quoted in the earlier episode, Mary was tenderhearted to excess when issues of principle were not involved.
So, of course, the issue of principle in that comment is the sticking point.
But I think even on this score, Mary is not the monstrous bigot of Fox's Book of Martyrs.
Well, I'm delighted to hear this because as you know from last week's episodes, I actually have a lot of time for Queen Mary.
I think she's a very impressive person.
And actually, it's really important in this context to hammer home the point that basically it's not so simple as they're being card-carrying Catholics and card-carrying Protestants.
The whole kind of religious ecosystem is in flux.
To see it just as two camps is wrong, isn't it?
Because actually people are trying to find their place in the new order.
And it's not necessarily obvious to people what they are and how things will settle down.
Yeah.
And so it's perfectly possible for Mary throughout, you know, all the time that Henry VIII has been terrible to her, she continues to proclaim her admiration for him.
And she does so now that she's queen.
Henry serves her as a role model.
She allows her dead brother, Edward VI, to be buried using the Protestant funeral service.
And in fact, both Henry and Edward as, well, Henry's not exactly a Protestant, but I mean, he's a kind of weird kind of Catholic who's thrown off the papal supremacy.
Edward is definitely a Protestant. Both of them uphold the notion that the king should be the head of the Church of England and use that to ram through their reforms of the Church of England.
Mary as a Catholic thinks that the papal supremacy should be restored and does that very quickly.
But even once she's done that, she still operates on the assumption, basically, that she's the head of the Church of England.
I mean, what she decides basically goes.
So she's inherited that assumption as well, I think, from her father and her brother.
But the reason that she doesn't really see any tension there is, as you said, that she doesn't really have a sense of their having been.
a reformation that needs to be counted. She doesn't really think that the scale of the upheaval
that England has gone through is something that has imposed a kind of binary contrast on
England. So to quote Lucy Wooding in her wonderful introduction to Tudor England,
which I think is the best single volume on Tudor England that there is, she writes,
Mary seems to have had the firm conviction that, bar a few troublemakers, she was essentially
ruling a Catholic country with the support of its people. But that's probably true, isn't it?
I mean, in so far as most people, if you said to them, you're a Catholic Protestant, they'd look
at you like, you were mad. Maybe younger people, as in people under the age of 20, will have been
brought up in a more evangelical mindset. But older people, I mean, people are aware that changes
have happened, and many of them will probably say, God, a lot of these changes are a bit
bonkers, aren't they? I don't really understand them myself. But they don't, they don't
don't think to themselves, well, we're living through the Reformation. I wonder if there'll be a
counter-reformation. I mean, that's not how people think. I think that's absolutely right. So to that
extent, Mary is correct that there's a kind of bit of spring cleaning that needs to be done. There's
kind of damage being done. Yeah, things have gone much too far. Things have gone too far, but you just
tidied up and then things will basically be as they were. Now, it has to be said, you know,
we also have this idea, I think, that there's such a thing as Catholicism, which is
monolithic, refusing to change. But that's not the case at all, because the Catholic world like
the Protestant world in the 16th century is in a constant state of flux. There are Catholic
reformers. There are people in the upper echelons of the Catholic Church who absolutely feel
that reform is necessary. And Mary herself belongs to that wing of the Catholic Church. So she never
goes on pilgrimage as a queen. Before she came to the throne, she had helped to translate Erasmus,
who's the great humanist scholar, who had been a kind of a coruscating critic of corruption in the Catholic Church.
And she had no problem at all with using the Bible in English.
She thought, you know, that was fine as well.
And just to reiterate, she belongs to this generation that hasn't yet conceptualized, I think,
the notion of their being Catholics and Protestants.
And that's why she feels that she's not kind of instituting a counter-reformation, really.
As I say, it's just a kind of process of housekeeping, of tidying things up that have been a little bit smashed up.
Now, as it turns out, that's not entirely the case because, of course, what she is demanding of people who have accepted reformed religion, who are Protestants, as we might call them, she is obliging them to make a choice.
Because actually, papal supremacy is something that has become a massive sticking point for people like that.
And the most prominent person for whom this is an issue is, of course, her sister Elizabeth.
But I think it's a reflection not just on Elizabeth's character, but on the general tenor
of evangelicals at this point, that Elizabeth is not prepared to be martyred. So Fox's Book
of Martyrs, as its name suggests, there are lots of people who will be prepared to go to the
stake. But relatively speaking, relative to the number of Protestants that they probably are in
England this time, there aren't actually that many because most people are happy to do as Elizabeth
does and kind of just kind of keep their head down. So Elizabeth,
knowing, you know, she's got to prove herself to Mary. Early in September, she requests
an audience with her sister. She's a great actress. She falls down on her knees, tears streaming
from her cheeks, lamenting that Mary seems ill-disposed to her. And to quote, she knew of no other
cause except religion. She might be excused in this because she had been brought up in the
way she held and had never been taught the doctrine of the ancient religion. That's a good
card to play, because Mary knows that's absolutely, you know, she knows that's true. And the real
victim in all this.
Yeah. So Elizabeth says, well, you know, can you send me a priest, give me books that I can read up
and, you know, learn the error of my ways. And on the 8th of September, she duly attends
mass with Mary at the Chapel Royal, although again, a kind of classic Elizabeth maneuver.
She does try to get out of it by pulling a sickie. But Mary sends a doctor and says actually
nothing fine. Yeah. So after that quite promising start, things start to get tense again,
don't they? And how much of this
do you think is that, I mean, it's an interesting question
actually, how much have they inherited the bad blood
between Catherine of Aragon and Amberlin?
So how much does, you know,
obviously Mary hated Ambelin
because Ambelin was horrible to her?
Does she blame Elizabeth at some subconscious level,
do you think? Possibly. I mean,
once the kind of complications of religious divides
have been removed, as we've said,
Mary has been incredibly kind to Elizabeth
and viewed her as a sister. But the moment that religion
complicates the picture, then things start
go tense again. And Mary in the first months of her reign is busy disassembling the Protestantism
of her brother. And she knows that Elizabeth is unsympathetic to this. And so she starts to see
Elizabeth again as a threat. And specifically, she begins to go on to her advisors that Elizabeth
resembles Anne Boleyn. And again, to quote, as her mother had caused great trouble in the kingdom,
the queen feared that Elizabeth might do the same. But important,
to say, Mary's anxieties about Elizabeth are not just on the religious dimension, because
there is also a further one, which is that of foreign policy. And Mary is worried that Elizabeth
might imitate Anne Berlin in being a French partisan.
Well, that's a massive issue throughout all this period, isn't it? That's often forgotten
in the sort of popular literature or the popular understanding of it. The cleavages in British
politics are not just about religion, but they're also about, you know, there are two big powers
in Europe and which one are you going to ally yourself with?
Berlin, of course, had come from France. Her father had been a diplomat in France. And Elizabeth
is perceived as being a francophile rather than a kind of Hispanophile. Yeah, and this is a problem
because Mary is planning a really spectacular diplomatic coup, namely marriage to the son of the
most powerful monarch in the world. And that monarch, of course, is Charles V. And on the 16th of November,
Mary announces to Parliament that she is going to be marrying the son of Charles the 5th, Philip of
Spain and her admirers think this is an incredible coup. So one of them describes it as the most
splendid royal match since the Norman conquest. And in a sense, that's not an exaggeration.
I mean, it is an amazing coup. Protestants will see this as a terrible mistake. Mary handing England
over to the Catholic superpower. This isn't how Mary sees it. And again, it's a reminder that she's
operating in a world where the divisions between Catholic and Protestant,
are not yet set in concrete, because to marry Charles V, who as emperor, rules the low countries,
he is the heir of the Dukes of Burgundy.
And all that region in the low countries is crucial to the English economy.
And it's also crucial as a counterpoint to France.
And it's also crucial as an obvious launching pad for any invasion of England.
So it has been English policy to side with whoever is ruling the low countries for,
for decades and decades and decades.
And the fact that Charles V is as powerful as he is,
it seems to Mary and her advisers
just makes the deal even better.
I mean, basically, it's a traditional Anglo-Bagundian match.
And kind of issues of Protestant and Catholic
don't really come into the equation, I think,
for Mary and her foreign policy advisors.
Well, do you remember in our first episode,
we described how the marriage of
first Arthur Tudor and then Henry VIII
to Catherine of Aragon
was an amazing diplomatic coup for Henry the 7th.
right, being allied to the emerging superpower of Spain. This is more of the same, but with
nobs on. And if you're a patriotic Englishman who thinks smiting the French is the supreme
goal of life, what's not to like about this? This is great. Well, I think there is an issue,
which of course is that Mary is not a princess. She is a queen. And so there are understandable
anxieties, I think for that reason that her marrying Philip may result.
in England's subordination.
I mean, you can see the ruling monarch is the partner of the world's, you know, the son of the
world's most powerful man.
There is an issue there.
And so Mary goes to great lengths to ensure that England will not be subordinated to Phillips' empire.
So she prescribes that when he's in England, he has to have kind of Englishmen in his
household, not just Spaniards.
He's not allowed to have powers of legislation.
he is not allowed to embroil England in kind of distant wars.
So essentially he has a largely ornamental role.
And Philip is actually so offended by this that he almost walks out of the marriage.
But for Philip also, France is the great enemy for the Habsburgs.
And so for him also, England is a real catch.
And so the marriage does go ahead.
There's kind of grumbling discontent in Parliament.
And I think some of this is tinged by kind of Protestantism.
But in the main, it's a more kind of brexit-y vibe.
kind of, you know, a dislike of any suggestion of foreign influence over England.
And surely turbocharged because she's a woman.
So Henry VIII was right about one thing.
He said, didn't he?
The problem with having a daughter succeed me is that she will inevitably fall into the influence
of her husband and the kingdom will pass to him.
And that must be a huge part of this.
That had it been an English king marrying a Spanish princess, the dynamic would be so different.
Yeah.
But, you know, Mary's Queen.
She's a Tudor. She's the daughter of Henry the 8th, and so she's not having any opposition in Parliament at all.
So she swats all criticism aside in a very imperious manner. We shall marry as God shall direct our choice to his honour and to our country's good.
And again, a very Henry the 8th development. She ponder's disinheriting Elizabeth completely.
And of course, Henry the 8th was always doing that. He was always disinheriting his various children.
Mary now wants to disinherit her sister because she sees her as two.
heretical, too popular with the mass of the people. She suspects her of being in league with
the French. There are all kinds of good reasons. It seems to marry. But her counsels say this
would be a really, really bad idea. So as one of them puts it, since Parliament had accepted
the Lady Elizabeth as proper to succeed, it would be difficult to deprive her of the right
she claimed without causing trouble. And what does he mean by trouble? Well, there are those
you know, 2,000 horsemen, there's the fact that Elizabeth is the second largest landowner
in the country. Let sleeping dogs lie is basically the advice. So Mary does, but of course she
remains very suspicious of her. And all the more so, because the marriage with Philip is
unpopular for the reasons that we've been saying. And, you know, she's nervous about whether
Elizabeth might be kind of causing trouble. So Elizabeth, by December,
is aware that she is really not flavour of the month with Mary.
And so she decides to withdraw from London, withdraw from the court,
and she goes back to Hatfield and hunkers down there.
And at the same time as she does this,
in closed rooms across the capital,
across the south of England and into the Midlands,
conspirators are starting to plot rebellion.
And the object of these conspirators is to depose Mary
and to replace her with Elizabeth.
And the man who gives his name to this plot
is a kind of young, dashing blade called Sir Thomas Wyatt,
the son of the man who introduced the sonnet into England.
He's a very experienced soldier, he's a Protestant,
and he loathes the Spanish,
because his father, as well as bringing the sonnet into England,
had also been an ambassador to Spain.
And so the young Thomas had been there
and had seen the Inquisition doing its son.
stuff and had fully brought into the idea of Spain as a kind of a nest of Catholic tyrants.
And because he's a swashbuckling charismatic character, Wyatt, everyone calls this Wyatt's
rebellion. But actually, it's kind of Lady Jane Grey, too, isn't it? Yeah.
So, for example, Lady Jane Grey's father, the Duke of Suffolk, is involved with this.
And there's lots of people who are basically, they've found themselves out in the cold
since Mary took over. It's kind of your classic Tudor faction fight to some degree, isn't it?
Yes, and as Nicola Talas in her book on Young Elizabeth points out, the conspirators were all well connected, and they all had contacts within Elizabeth's household.
And this will be a key issue in how this rebellion plays out.
So the plan of these conspirators, Wyatt and his co-conspirators, is to raise the country on Palm Sunday, 1554.
Wyatt will raise Kent.
the Duke of Suffolk will raise the Midlands
and the other uprisings are planned in the West Country
and tellingly in Hertfordshire,
which is where Hatfield House, Elizabeth's base is.
But news of this conspiracy leaks well,
well before Palm Sunday.
So Palm Sunday is the Sunday before Easter.
Already by January 1554,
news of what's being plotted
is starting to reach the ears of Mary's spies.
And so all the uprisings are suppressed,
really before they can kick off, except for one. And that is Wyatt's uprising in Kent.
So there he has raised about 3,000 men. Most of them are Protestant. They march on London.
It's very reminiscent of the Peasants' Revolt. They are unable to cross London Bridge,
but they go down to Kingston, swing back and try to enter London through the Western Gates.
And as they're approaching, Mary is urged to flee. But instead, she rides.
to the Guildhall and she rallies the city
and she declares herself married to her people
and a contemporary witness describes the performance
she puts on and is very impressed.
More than Marvel it was to see that day
the invincible heart and constancy of the queen herself
who being by nature or woman
and therefore commonly more fearful than men be
showed herself in that case more stout than is credible.
That's impressive and that's very
that's very Tudor and Tom, it's very Elizabeth
the first at Tilbury, you know? It's very Elizabeth the first. And so again and again,
when you read about how Mary kind of plays the role of a queen, you realize that she's providing
a role model that Elizabeth, I think, undoubtedly kind of remembered. It's very Elizabeth at
Tilbury. It's the second time she's done this in a year, right? I mean, she did it during the
Lady Jane Grey business. This is Lady Jane Grey, too, basically. Yeah. And once again,
the people are with her. They are. Yeah. They rally and support Mary.
Wyatt's rebellion is crushed and Mary who I think naturally is kind-hearted she is widely thought
to be of a merciful disposition but she feels she has no choice now but to you know firm
smack of government so Wyatt is executed the Duke of Suffolk is executed because the Duke of
Suffolk is Lady Jane Grey's father that means that Lady Jane Grey has to be executed
Guilford has to be executed a hundred of Wyatt's followers are hanged
And in London, the Imperial Ambassador reports one sees nothing but gibbets and hanged men.
Oh, Mary's brilliant, isn't she?
It's such a shame she let herself down about the Pope because in every other respect.
Her choices are great.
She's nice.
She's a merciful person, but she does what she has to do, and I applaud her for it.
Well, so she has smacked down the rebellion.
But, of course, there is one massive question that is left hanging, and that is what in this rebellion was the
role of Elizabeth and of course this is investigated immediately and Elizabeth is a very shrewd
operator already she's not the woman who is going to leave incriminating evidence around if she
had been involved in the plot which I think she probably had been and I think the most salient
piece of evidence that she had at least been complicit in the plot is that the husband of her
great favorite cat Ashley, John Ashley, in the wake of the rebellion, he flees abroad.
And why is he doing that?
Presumably, he had been a kind of go-between.
I mean, it's, it seems the likeless explanation for what's going on.
And it might not be as straightforward as her saying, let's get rid of my sister and
I'd like to be queen.
It may be her just saying, well, listen, let's see what happens.
And I'm, you know, I'm available if things, you know,
Yeah, if the ball comes loose at the back of the scrum.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
So she gets interrogated, and of course she protests her innocence, and Mary doesn't believe her.
So on the 26th of January, Mary summons Elizabeth to come to London, and Elizabeth classically says, oh, I feel a bit ill, I've got a bit of a headache, a bit of a cold, and refuses to come.
So Mary then sends a posse of very well-born agents, kind of lords and so on, on the 12th of February, to go to hat for.
field and bring her back to London. And Mary makes sure this time to send two doctors to make
sure that, you know, she can't pull a sickie. And so the journey takes a very long time because
Elizabeth continues to say, oh, I've got a headache. I can't go, whatever. But finally,
they arrive. And Elizabeth gets out at Whitehall. A large crowd has gathered to see her. They
cheer her. Elizabeth is taken into Whitehall, a private quarters, she's not allowed to see Mary,
the weeks pass, and all the time Elizabeth is thinking, oh my God, what's going on? Have they found
any incriminating evidence? Are they faking evidence? I mean, you knows what she's thinking,
but she is nervous about what might be about to hit her. And then on the 16th of March,
she finds out. So she is visited by the Lord Chancellor and 19 other things.
council members. So that's about half Mary's council. This is very Anne Berlin. This is what happened
to her, right? Very Anne Boleyn. And almost everything about what Elizabeth is going to go through
is reminiscent of Anne Boleyn. And I think deliberately so. Mary is playing mind games with her.
So the councillors question her about her involvement with Wyatt's rebellion. Going over questions,
she has already been asked. And once again, she denies all involvement in it. And once
again, the councillors display open skepticism. Elizabeth demands to be brought into Mary's
presence so that she can plead her case. This request is refused. Again, she insists on her
innocence. She says, I am a woman. I am a true woman in thought, word and deed. And her interrogators
cut her off. And they answer her with words that Elizabeth must surely have been dreading
from the moment that she was fetched from Hatfield and brought to London.
The counsellors tell her in words that were absolutely calculated to fill the daughter of
Anne Boleyn with dread, there is no remedy for that the Queen's Majesty is fully determined
that you should go unto the tower.
What a cliffhanger.
What on earth is going to happen to the young Elizabeth?
Find out after the break.
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To this present hour I protest before God,
who shall judge my truth whatsoever malice shall devise,
that I never practiced counsel nor consented to anything
that might be prejudicial to your person in any way or dangerous to the state by any means.
And therefore I humbly beseech your majesty to let me answer for yourself and not suffer me
to trust to your counsellors, yay. And that afore I go to the tower if it be possible,
if not before I be further condemned. So that's an extraordinary appeal. And it was written on
the 17th March by Elizabeth to her sister Mary. She is waiting.
for guards to move her from Whitehall up the River Thames to the Tower of London.
She is obviously terrified that she is going to suffer the same fate as her mother,
Anne Boleyn, who was imprisoned in the tower and then beheaded.
She is begging Mary to be able to plead her case directly to her,
exactly as Anne Boleyn had begged that she would be able to plead her case to Henry VIII.
and as we know
things are looking
incredibly bleak for her
she's been put under armed guard
she's been separated from her servants
and then the next day
two members of the council arrived
don't they to take her to the tower
and it looks as though the game is up for her
yeah I think it's the most desperate moment of her life
so the two members of the council
who arrive to take her to the tower
are absolute heavyweights
so one of them is a guy called William Paulett
who is the Marquist of Winchester
he's very grizzled he's very grey
and he, as Elizabeth would have known for well, had been one of the judges at the trial of
Anne Boleyn's supposed lovers. The other is a man called Henry Rackcliffe, and he is the Earl of Sussex.
He is in his mid-forties, and he is Elizabeth's great-uncle. And so Elizabeth turns to him
and begs him, please let me see my sister. Sussex says, no, Her Majesty has absolutely
refused that. And so then Elizabeth says, well, please, may I write the queen a letter? And so Sussex,
you know, he's a great uncle. He's more favourably disposed to her, perhaps, than the Marquis of
Winchester. He says, all right, you can write a letter. And so Elizabeth sits down and she scribbles
away, protesting her innocence, warning Mary to stand guard against all those who would slander her.
And astonishingly, she even cites the example of Thomas Seymour, her very hansy stepfather, who we talked about in the previous episode.
Yeah, Mr. Tickle.
She writes to Mary, in late days, I heard my Lord of Somerset say that if his brother had been suffered to speak with him, he had never suffered.
And it's kind of an amazing thing to say, comparing herself to Thomas Seymour and Mary to Thomas Seymour's elder brother, the Duke of Somers.
set. Because in view of the gossip, I mean, that's a kind of mad illusion to make and may be
reflective of the degree of stress that she's under. You're treating me like Jeffrey Epstein.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, not a sensible thing for her to say. But she's sufficiently on the
ball that when she has, you know, she writes a whole page and then she covers a halfway down
at a second page. And then she scores a line underneath her name and does lines through it so that
people won't be able to kind of fake things underneath what she said. And this takes so much time
that all the while the tide has been rising. And by the time she's finished, the tide has risen
so high that it will no longer be possible to pass under London Bridge. And so the journey to the
tower has to be postponed for a day. And this is a classic example of what will throughout her life
be one of Elizabeth's favorite tactics when she's cornered, which is essentially just to delay,
to prevaricate, to string people along. However, you know, day passes. And at nine the next day,
Palm Sunday, Winchester and Sussex reappear. And this is the day, of course, that White's
rebellion had been scheduled for. There is nothing from Mary. She doesn't reply to Elizabeth's letter.
And so Elizabeth is resigned to her fate. If there be no remedy,
she says, then I must be contented.
So she gets into the boat.
She's rowed up the river towards the tower.
It's bucketing down with rain.
Underneath London Bridge, the boat goes, and they pull up to the tower and more there.
And according to John Fox, who describes all this in great and loving detail, she was rowed up to the traitor's gate.
And she initially, she refused to get out of the boat.
And then when she did so, she declared, here landeth as true a subject.
being prisoner, has ever landed at these stairs. And this becomes a kind of famous, famous scene,
famous lines. However, we know from a contemporary witness that this didn't happen, that actually
she entered the tower across the drawbridge, so she got out of the boat and entered through
the main entrance. And I think this would have been no less chilling for Elizabeth, because that is
the same gateway through which her mother, Anne Boleyn, had entered the tower. And when Elizabeth
passed inside the tower, she would have seen the scaffolding on which Lady Jane Gray, her cousin,
had just been executed, and that had been built on the very spot where her mother had been
executed. And when she is led to her quarters, these are the royal quarters which her father had
rebuilt for her mother's coronation and where Anne had stayed until the hour of her execution.
So massive psychological pressure, and I think completely deliberate.
partly, you know, you asked, is Mary avenging herself on the ghost of Anne Boleyn?
I think to a degree here she is.
But I think she's also doing it because she needs Elizabeth to break.
She needs Elizabeth to confess, because if Elizabeth doesn't confess, then there isn't
really any hard evidence against her.
And this really matters because, you know, just to reiterate, Elizabeth is very popular.
She is a very powerful figure in her own right.
it would be very dangerous for Mary to prosecute her own sister without extremely solid evidence.
And Elizabeth, I think, probably, is probably confident that there isn't hard evidence against her.
And so when she's brought before the council on Good Friday, it soon becomes very clear that they haven't really got anything on her.
That said, in Henry VIII, Henry VIII, would undoubtedly have executed her.
I mean, he didn't need hard evidence. He made it up.
But Mary is not quite as capricious.
And I guess for a woman, you know, it's hard, maybe harder to be quite so secure that you can just make stuff up as Henry the 8th was.
Yeah, I think her position is less stable than Henry's.
Exactly.
So there is a danger, isn't there?
Wyatt.
He's still on the scene.
And he's going to be executed on 11th of April.
And there must have been some doubt in her mind, some fear that basically he turns up on the scaffold and says, Elizabeth made me do it.
But she was part of it.
She knew about it all along.
But he deliberately doesn't do that.
Why doesn't you do it?
Because it's not true, or he's a kind person?
Well, he explicitly says, Elizabeth had not been privy of my rising or commotion before I began.
Right.
I suppose there are two explanations for that.
One, Elizabeth hadn't been privy to it.
Yeah.
He's telling the truth.
Secondly, you know, he's looking forward to the prospect of a Protestant heir to Mary.
And he wants to keep her in the game.
So either explanation, I think, would be adequate.
So eventually, she, you know, the threat recedes, right?
She's there for another month.
There's another month of dithering.
Well, Mary and the council prevaricate
and they're discussing what to do with her.
And then, again, is this a little nod to the past?
So it's on the afternoon of the 19th of May,
which is the anniversary of Anne Boleyn's execution
that Elizabeth is allowed out of the tower.
Do you think that was deliberately chosen or not?
I'm sure it was.
Right.
I think the echoes of Anne Boleyn's fate
throughout this entire episode are so manifest
that it can't be coincidental.
But here the message is different.
The message is your mother ended up in the chopping block,
but you are being spared.
And doesn't that prove how nice and merciful your sister is?
Don't you think that's the message?
No, I don't.
So Elizabeth is being freed from the tower,
but she's still a prisoner.
So she's rowed down the river
rather than being allowed to pass through the city of London
where she might be cheered.
And Mary, I think, is basically saying,
you know, I've still got my eye on you.
Yeah.
The fate of your mother is still kind of hovering over your neck.
Don't doubt that.
Elizabeth is not kept a prisoner in London.
Mary obviously wants her kind of buried in the wilds of the countryside.
And so she is sent to your neck of the woods, to Oxfordshire, and specifically Woodstock Palace,
so very near what's today is Blenheim.
Woodstock had been a very significant.
could place for the royal family. So it's where the black prince had been born. It's where
Henry the 7th had celebrated the betrothal of Catherine of Aragon to Prince Arthur. So again,
perhaps another piece of kind of psychological warfare there, that might be kind of over-egging it.
What is clearly designed to break Elizabeth is the fact that by this point, Woodstock has become
very dilapidated. So it's very rundown, it's damp, there's dry rot, I guess, kind of, you know,
full mica everywhere,
kind of terrible 1970s
wallpaper,
you know,
not the kind of place
that you'd want to stay
if you are as highborn
as Elizabeth is.
And so she absolutely hates it.
She's bored.
She's isolated.
She's forbidden,
and I quote,
any message,
letter or token to
or from any manner of person.
See,
any manner of person,
but that's not true.
There is one manner of person
that she is allowed contact with Tom.
And that's a Welshman.
There's a lot of Welsh history
on the show these days. Some would say too much. So explain how Wales features yet again.
So Thomas Parry, described by David Starkey, as a fat, self-important Welshman. He is Elizabeth's
agent, you know, her financial planner, the guy who, you know, her accountant. And he is allowed
contact with Elizabeth because Elizabeth has to pay for her own imprisonment. And so he has to
find the money that enables Elizabeth to do this. And so he installs himself in the bull, the local pub.
And there he's able to serve as Elizabeth's window on the world.
God, so much Welsh history in this show.
It has to be said, the windows of Woodstock are really not fun things to be stuck behind.
And according to Fox, again, this is a famous story that he tells.
Elizabeth has a diamond ring, and she uses this to scratch lines of poetry on one of the panes of glass.
Much suspected by me, nothing proved can be, quote, Elizabeth, prisoner.
Do you think that really happened?
Have people found their pain of the window pain?
I think it probably happened.
What I will say is it reads like lines that Elizabeth might have written
because we have quite a lot of Elizabeth's poetry.
Okay.
Now, meanwhile, outside the windows of Woodstock,
Mary is proceeding with her counter-revolution,
even though she doesn't think of it as a counter-revolution.
She thinks of it as housekeeping.
And this is what Fox describes in his book of martyrs
as the great tyranny of Bloody Mary's reign,
so the hanging, beheading, burning and prisoning.
And this is the episode in English history that once upon a time, all boys and girls learned
before the age of about 11 years old, the kind of darkest period in, you know, the story of
England when Bloody Mary and her Catholic tyrants sought to burn out the true religion.
Yeah.
And, I mean, a lot of people do die, don't they?
300 or so Protestants are burned at the stake.
Yeah.
So the charge sheet against Bloody Mary is, thanks to Fox, very much.
lengthy and some of these 300 martyrs are very famous men so one of them is
Thomas Cranmer who'd been Archbishop of Canterbury and of course Ambelin's
chaplain before he became Archbishop and had been Elizabeth's godfather another
is the guy who'd been the Bishop of London under Edward the 6th a man called
Nicholas Ridley and he had in the the spell when Lady Jane Grey was Queen he had
preached against both Mary and Elizabeth
Elizabeth, calling them bastards and saying that Jane was the rightful queen.
So Elizabeth might have enjoyed his martyrdom almost as much as Mary did.
Yeah.
This is the martyrs memorial in Oxford.
You can see it to this day.
Yeah.
But there are also, these are the bigwigs, but they're also very ordinary unsung people who are executed, aren't there?
So famously, there are lots kind of tailors and so on who were burned in Smithfield,
just outside the city of London.
And you can see a memorial to them there on the side of St. Bartholome.
Mews Hospital. And there's one notorious episode which happened on Guernsey in the Channel
Islands when a pregnant woman is consigned to the flames. And to quote Wooding, amidst the
flames, she gave birth to a baby boy who was rescued by a bystander. But the bailiff in
attendance thrust him back into the fire to perish with his mother. And when you read that,
you think that must be propaganda. I can't believe that happened. But we know that it did
because the bailiff was subsequently prosecuted for the murder of the child under Elizabeth.
So that did happen.
So that's bloody Mary.
But the propaganda also casts Mary as a political failure.
And Exhibit A on this charge sheet is her marriage to Philip of Spain.
And the argument is that by doing this, Mary has subordinated England to a domineering foreign papist and a Spaniard to boot.
and that the consequence had been nothing but humiliation.
England gets dragged into a war with France that was none of her business.
This culminates in the humiliating loss in January 1588 of Calais,
which had been the English foothold on the continent since the time of Edward III.
And there's this, again, famous story that everyone used to know,
that Mary on her deathbed said,
when I am dead and opened, you shall find Calais lying in my heart. And, you know, this is
Mary as failure as well as bigot. But Tom, this is not now us being revisionist. I mean,
the scholarship, the historiography for the last, well, for decades in our lifetime, has been that
this is, much of this is Protestant propaganda, massively inflated, that Mary's executions
are nothing unusual for a Tudor monarch,
and that even her foreign policy is better than is advertised.
So let's dig into this a little bit.
So let's start with the idea of Bloody Mary,
the Catholic, the mad Catholic bigot,
who rampages across the land,
burning, decent, honest, Protestant churchmen,
all of this.
This is untrue, isn't it, to some extent?
I mean, sure, people do die,
but they always die in medieval and early modern monarchs.
We've been saying throughout that she has a reputation for mercy and that this is not unjustified.
She and her agents do not go around sniffing out heretics.
The people who are charged and interrogated and if they refuse to repent, then burnt, are people who've been denounced by their neighbours.
And Mary undoubtedly would much rather not have executed them.
She wanted their repentance.
She didn't want them dead.
the death of every martyr for Mary and the apparatus of the Catholic Church is a failure.
Now, I can entirely see that from our perspective in the 21st century, this doesn't really
seem much of an extenuation.
But the thing is, and we talked about this in the series we did on Mary Queen of Scots,
a monarch's job is to suppress heresy and rebellion.
And in the 16th century, heresy and rebellion are equated.
It's impossible to distinguish between the two.
It's the monarch's job to suppress heresy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
It's an absolutely crucial function.
It's under 300.
It's about 280 to 290 people who are executed for heresy under Mary.
And when you put that in the context of what other Tudor monarchs did, it starts to seem
less bad because the 280, 290 people who die, that's over a span of three years.
But if you look at the Pilgrimage of Grace, which was a camp.
Catholic rebellion against Henry the 8th in 1537, Henry put 250 Catholics to death, and that's basically in a few weeks.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, that's on a far, vast, more immediate scale than anything Mary does.
And then in 1569, there's a rebellion against Elizabeth, again, by Catholics.
And she put 600 Catholics to death, and we don't hear anything about that.
And just to be clear, like, if you rebel, I mean, you know that these are the penalties, right?
I mean, as you said, it's absolutely the monarch's job.
If people rebel against you, you know, either they win or you win.
And if you just slap them on the wrist and say, go home and don't do it again, you know, you will lose your crown within months.
And everybody will say you were useless and you let England down.
I mean, this is part of the job description.
It is.
And there's a further complication in assuming that the people who are burned are a kind of evidence of Mary's bigotry and bloodlust.
because actually several of them would have been burned under Edward the Sixth or Henry the 8th
because actually their views are so heretical that even a Protestant monarch would have regarded
them as beyond the pale. So they're people who deny the Trinity or reject the divinity of Christ.
That is death whether you are saying it under a Protestant or a Catholic monarch.
They had it coming. Let's be fair.
Well, I mean, Mary did it and she was right to do it, would be the perspective of the 16th century.
I mean, I entirely see that by the lights of a 21st century humanist, this isn't really an adequate extenuation.
But I think by the standards of the 16th century, it is.
I think the image of Mary as bloody is a genius work of propaganda on the part of Fox.
And that's why his book is so seismically influential.
about the record of military failure. Even that, I think, isn't as total as it seemed. The accusation
that England is dragged into this war against France, you know, willy-nilly without any stake in it,
that's simply not true. France is England's traditional enemy. France is always looking to attack
England. And in Mary's reign, England is directly threatened by a massive increase in the size
and the capacity of the French Navy. And people who listen to our series on Mary Queen of Scots
may remember that in 1548, the French intervene in Scotland militarily against the English,
who are doing the rough wooing at the time.
And that shortly afterwards, the five-year-old Mary Queen of Scots is brought by a French fatilla
from the Clyde down to Scotland.
And that is the famous moment, Dominic, where Mary shows no sign of seasickness that you
were very contemptuous of.
Did she not steer the ship herself?
Is that not the claim?
that she personally helmed that ship?
I think this isn't the salient fact about this.
What matters is that the French fleet
are able to sail up the side of England
and intervene in Scotland
and then sail down the other side
and the English can't do anything about it.
And the reason for that is that by Mary's reign,
the English fleet has become very run down.
No English warship has been built since 1551.
And the person who rectifies this is Philip of Spain.
In 1555 he says to his wife,
come on, you've got to get the ship bills hammering. We need to get the English Navy back out
to sea. And the war that results in the loss of Calais isn't all bad news. So to quote Benjamin Redding,
who's written great essay on this, it was fundamentally important for it acted as the stimulus
for reviving the English Navy. And of course, in the long run, England's future does not lie
in maintaining a very, very expensive foothold in France, namely Calais. The future lies in ruling the
channel and the seas beyond. And this is one of the great ironies of Tudor history, because had
Mary not married Philip of Spain, then the English fleet in 1588 would not have been in a condition
to defeat the Spanish Armada sent by Philip of Spain. So what you're saying is Philip of Spain
stands alongside Alfa the Great as the founding father of the Royal Navy. Yes, essentially.
I mean, it's one of the delicious ironies of history. So I think you could say that
far from tottering, far from being weak, far from being blood-soaked. Actually, by 1558,
Mary's regime is looking pretty secure. So Calais has been lost, but England has a fleet that is
capable of stopping the French from bringing the attack to English ports. The campaign to
restore Catholicism is going well. There's a drop-off in trials for heresy, which suggests
that overt Protestantism is starting to be weeded out. Of course,
there are still plenty of people in England who have Protestant sympathies,
but it's the measure of how successful Mary's Counter-Reformation is,
that these, by and large, are content to lie low.
And we have a classic example of this.
A brilliant young public servant, again, from Lincolnshire, like Fox.
It's not Lincolnshire on today's podcast.
A lot of Lincolnshire.
And this is a guy by the name of William Cecil.
So he's only 35 in 1558, but he's a man who's already risen very, very hard.
He's proved very proficient at climbing up the slippery pole of power.
A committed Protestant had been since his mid-20s.
He'd been a student of Roger Asham, the great educationalist and Greek scholar at Cambridge, as Elizabeth had been.
He'd been a very committed servant of Edward the 6th regime.
He'd been on the council.
As a counsellor, he had backed the plot to put Lady Jane Grey on the throne.
And he is a man who has no doubt that the papacy is.
the Antichrist.
So people may be wondering, well, how has this man survived Mary coming to power?
Like Elizabeth, he's a very subtle, self-disciplined operator.
Well, Tom, he sounds like an absolutely splendid man.
But the question is, why hadn't he ended up on the chopping block?
Like, how has he managed to survive and indeed to flourish under Mary, when surely he should
have been one of her targets?
Partly because he's a very subtle, self-disciplined man, a man who knows how he's a
how to keep a secret and knows how to bury a secret. Like Elizabeth, he doesn't leave behind
paper trails. At the same time, as we've been saying throughout this episode, Mary is not a vengeful
woman. She is ready to forgive. She's ready to forget. And so long as men like Cecil are not
actively conspiring against her, she is perfectly happy to tolerate them. To coin a phrase,
she doesn't want to make windows into men's souls. And this is a wise and by the standards of
the age, I think, moderate policy and one that by 1588 seems to be working. And there is a
feeling domestically, but also abroad, that England is being won back for the Catholic
church. So one Catholic puts it, England is beginning to recover its pure form. It all seems
to be going well. So had history worked out differently, maybe England would have continued
along that path towards what Theo describes as England's finest hour. It's reintegration in the
world of Catholic continental Europe. But of course it doesn't. Now one reason it doesn't is because
all of this is dependent on one woman, right, on the person at the top. And Mary, you know,
the tutors have a bit of bad luck, don't they? With Edward VI and now with Mary again. So by the autumn
of 1558, she is seriously ill with cancer. She's confined to her bed. She's got kind of constant
fevers. She has delirium and stuff. And the issue, again, the perennial Tudor issue, she has no
child. She has no Catholic heir. And this is not for want of trying. Right. Exactly. So that's
what Philip II of Spain. That's what Philip of Spain was for. Yeah. But it just hasn't worked out.
And they are, they are living as man and, I mean, they do spend a lot of time apart, but they do
live, as it were, as man and wife, right? Well, immediately after the marriage they do. And by April
1555, Mary had been so convinced that she was pregnant that she actually retires to a kind of,
you know, a birthing chamber in Hampton Court Palace. And she summons Elizabeth from Woodstock.
So this is basically when Elizabeth's in prison and there finishes, obviously because she wants
Elizabeth to witness, you know, her supplanting as the air. But the pregnancy had turned out to be
a phantom one. And Mary is left humiliated. And I think Philip is left feeling humiliated as well.
And so he then leaves England.
He does come back for a brief stay in the summer of 1557, but it's only for a few weeks and then he goes off again and they never see each other.
And in the wake of that stay, there are further rumours of a pregnancy, but they're not widely believed.
And one of Philip's counsellors, a guy called the Count of Faria, it's very blunt about this.
And he wrote to Philip, it seems to me the queen is making herself believe that she is with child, although she does not own up to it.
And I think that's very astute. And it's kind of Mary's great tragedy. As with Henry, so with Mary. You know, this burning desperation for a child. And it just causes her, you know, she dies knowing that she has failed. Because it means that as she is on her deathbed in October 1558, Elizabeth remains what she'd been since the death of Edward the 6th, their brother, five years before. She is the heir to the throne. And Mary can do.
nothing about that. So she hasn't seen Mary for months. She had visited London in earlier in the
spring of 1558 and had stayed at Somerset House, hadn't she? And she had, some people think
she'd gone there basically to reassure herself that, you know, one of these phantom pregnancies
wasn't going to turn out to be a real pregnancy. Yeah. But Elizabeth had used that trip to London
to make some important contacts. Yes, she did. So to quote Stephen Olford, who wrote a brilliant book
on the person that Elizabeth is meeting at Somerset House, there were no great papers for this
meeting. But we know this meeting happened because a servant in the household of the man
who is coming to see Elizabeth, kept a record of it, or to be precise, of a boat trip made by
his master up and down the Thames, the Somerset House, for the meeting. And the person who was going
in the boat, going to meet Elizabeth, to have this secret meeting, was, to quote
all for it again, the cleverest young man in Tudor politics. And this man was Sir William Cecil.
So that's the person we were just talking about. Yeah. And from this point on, William Cecil
effectively is at Elizabeth's right hand. She's setting up a shadow government ready to step in
when Mary dies.
And on the 10th of November,
Elizabeth entertains the Count of Faria,
the counsellor of Philip II,
who's effectively his ambassador,
his agent in England,
at a house called Brockett Hall near Hatfield,
owned by one of Elizabeth's supporters.
And there they have a private conversation.
And the Count then reports details of this conversation back to Philip.
And he says that Elizabeth wants to remain on good terms
with Spain, but she's also absolutely insistent that she owes Philip nothing.
And she emphasises to Faria that it's not Philip who has kept her alive, but rather
the love of her people.
It was the people who put her in her present position to quote Faria.
And he leaves the interview plunged into gloom.
I'm very much afraid he wrote that she will not be well disposed in matters of religion,
for I see her inclined to govern through men who are believed to be held.
And a week later on the morning of 17th November, Mary hears Mass, and then very quietly,
she goes to meet her maker.
She is dead.
And the news is brought to Elizabeth at Hatfield.
The tradition is that she was sitting under an oak tree when the news arrived, but this is
a very late story, and rather sadly seems to be unlikely, but, you know, what the hell?
Let's say it happened.
A Protestant oak.
A Protestant oak.
And with her, as the news is brought to her, is William.
Cecil. And the queen summons Cecil and her most trusted advisors, the people that she has been
preparing with for her reign. And she says to them, my lords, the law of nature moveth me to sorrow for
my sister. The burden that has fallen upon me, maketh me amazed. But Cecil, he's not unduly
amazed. He's ready. And I think as events will show, Elizabeth has
was ready to because she is now against all the odds, Queen of England.
Crikey, what a cliffhanger, because in the next episode, which members of the Restis History Club
can listen to right now, we will find out what happens when Elizabeth becomes queen,
the dawning of the Elizabethan golden age, the issue of her marriage, the revolution that
she and William Cecil are about to unleash in English religion.
and the snake pit, the machinations of Tudor politics as Mary Queen of Scots enters the chat.
So if you want to listen to that episode right now, you merely need to go to the rest is history.com to sign up and join the club and you will get a host of unbelievable benefits along with that.
But Tom, I can't wait to find out what happens next personally.
I'm really looking forward to it because we're going to record it right now.
and on that, Balmichel, thank you very much
and goodbye everybody.
Bye-bye.
