Page 36 - All About History - Issue 180-19
P. 36

adultery were tried and condemned, and three
                                                                days later she and George stood trial separately.
                                                                Though both siblings defended themselves ably,                   “Among the

                          Boleyn                                the result was a foregone conclusion. Anne and her          peers who sAt in
                                                                brother were both found guilty and condemned
                                                                to death. Among the peers who sat in judgement
                    V s seyMour                                 upon them was their own father, whom Chapuys                judgement upon


                      The rival who replaced                    had heard was “quite as ready to assist at the               them wAs their
                                                                judgement” as he had been to the other men who
                            Anne Boleyn                         had stood trial.                                                 own fAther”
                                                                   There was no hope of a reprieve, and on 17 May
             In around 1529 Jane Seymour made her               George and the men condemned alongside him
             first appearance at court, where – like Anne       were executed on Tower Hill. Permitted to speak,
             Boleyn before her – she joined the household       in his final moments he stated that “I am come         he no longer basked in royal favour or held the
             of Catherine of Aragon. She later transferred      hither not to preach and make a sermon, but to         influence he had once enjoyed as a result of his
             to Anne’s service, while two of her brothers,      die.” He met his end bravely. Two days after her       daughter’s exalted status. Moreover, the tragedy
             Edward and Thomas, were rising stars at court.     brother’s death it was Anne’s turn. By means of        that he had been forced to endure had left him a
             The children of a Wiltshire knight, Sir John       a final favour to the woman who he had once            broken man, and he retired to Hever to live quietly.
             Seymour, it was these brothers – ambitious for     loved so passionately, the king had sent to Calais     On 3 April 1538 his wife died and was buried
             power and preferment – who were responsible        for a French swordsman who was tasked with             at Lambeth, and it would not be long before he
             for actively encouraging Henry VIII’s pursuit      executing his former queen. Unlike George, a           followed her to the grave. Thomas died at Hever
             of their sister when he began to tire of his       private execution within the confines of the Tower     on 12 March 1539, and was interred in the church
             Boleyn wife. Described as being “of middle         had been arranged for her, and a scaffold erected      there. It was a sad end for the man whose family
             stature and no great beauty”, it was doubtless     in front of the White Tower. Having made a short       had once been raised to such staggering heights.
             with the connivance of her brothers that Jane      speech in which she implored “If any person will       Yet their moment of glory was not quite at an end.
             made a great show of her modesty. Though           meddle with my cause, I require them to judge            The two decades following Anne’s death left
             she was not believed to be “a woman of great       the best”, Anne’s head was removed swiftly and         their mark on her daughter, Elizabeth, whose life
             wit”, she understood her situation only too        cleanly with a deft blow from the sword. Her           was destined to run a less than stable course. She
             well. Chapuys had been told that Jane had          severed remains were interred within the Chapel        would never forget her mother’s terrible end, and
             been “well tutored” and warned not to give         of St Peter ad Vincula within the Tower.               there is no doubt that it deeply affected her. Yet
             in to the king’s advances “unless he makes            Eleven days after Anne’s death, Henry VIII          she was to be Anne’s greatest legacy, for when
             her his queen, upon which the damsel is quite      married Jane Seymour. It was through this              Elizabeth succeeded to the throne on 17 November
             resolved.” By January 1536 she was receiving       marriage that he received that which he had so         1558, she did so not only as her father’s daughter,
             “great presents” from the king. However, she       desperately craved: a son, Edward. Amongst those       but as her mother’s too. For in this queen flowed
             refused a gift of money, declaring to Henry        who attended the prince’s christening at Hampton       the blood of the family who had once been the
             that “there was no treasure in this world          Court in October 1537 was Thomas Boleyn. Yet           most ambitious in England – the Boleyns.
             that she valued as much as her honour.”
             Predictably, his ardour for Jane “marvellously
             increased”, and in order to prove his love to                                                                                       Anne was found guilty of
                       her he insisted on using her brother                                                                                    treason, adultery and incest,
                                                                                                                                               charges that appear to have
                           Edward as a chaperone. He even                                                                                    been concocted by her former
                              moved the apartments of                                                                                              ally, Thomas Cromwell
                                Edward and his wife closer
                                to his own to facilitate
                               easier access. Anne’s
                               execution paved the way for
                               Henry and Jane’s marriage,
                               but tragically Jane died just
                                12 days after her son’s
                                  birth in 1537. In time her
                                    brothers attempted
                                     to seize control and
                                         influence their
                                            nephew,
                                             Edward VI, but
                                             in a similar
                                              manner as
                                              the Boleyns,
                                             both Edward
                                            and Thomas
                                           ended their
                                          lives on the
                                         executioner’s block
                                        on Edward’s orders.



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