Difference between revisions of "Catherine Parr" - New World Encyclopedia

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We can be sure that she held some strong reformed ideas after Henry's death, when the ''Lamentacions of a synner'' (Lamentations of a Sinner) were published in late 1547. However, her commissioning of the translation of [[Desiderius Erasmus]]' ''Paraphrases'' shows her more as a [[MacConica]]-style Erasmian [[Pietism|Pietist]].
 
We can be sure that she held some strong reformed ideas after Henry's death, when the ''Lamentacions of a synner'' (Lamentations of a Sinner) were published in late 1547. However, her commissioning of the translation of [[Desiderius Erasmus]]' ''Paraphrases'' shows her more as a [[MacConica]]-style Erasmian [[Pietism|Pietist]].
  
She was reformist enough to be viewed with suspicion by Catholic and anti-Protestant officials such as Bishop [[Stephen Gardiner]] and Chancellor [[Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton]] who tried to turn the king against her in 1546. An arrest warrant was drawn up for her, but she managed to reconcile with the King after vowing that she had only argued about religion with him to take his mind off the suffering caused by his ulcerous leg. <ref>[http://englishhistory.net/tudor/monarchs/parr.html Catherine Parr's life] ''englishhistory.net'' Retrieved May 20, 2008.</ref>
+
She was reformist enough to be viewed with suspicion by Catholic and anti-Protestant officials such as Bishop [[Stephen Gardiner]] and Chancellor [[Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton]] who tried to turn the king against her in 1546. An arrest warrant was drawn up for her, but she managed to reconcile with the King after vowing that she had only argued about religion with him to take his mind off the suffering caused by his ulcerous leg. <ref>Ibid.</ref>
  
 
==Scholarship==
 
==Scholarship==

Revision as of 21:36, 20 May 2008

Katherine Parr
Queen Consort of England
CatherineParr.jpg
Catherine Parr
Born ca. 1512
Kendal Castle
Died 5 September 1548
Sudeley Castle, Gloucestershire
Consort 1543 - 1547
Consort to Henry VIII
Issue Mary Seymour
Father Sir Thomas Parr
Mother Maud Green

Catherine Parr (c. 1512 – 5 September 1548), also known as Katherine or Katharine Parr(e), was the last of the six wives of Henry VIII of England. She was queen consort of England during 1543–1547, then dowager queen of England. She was the most married English queen, with four husbands.

Early life and marriages

Catherine was the daughter of Sir Thomas Parr of Kendal and Maud Greene; she was the eldest of three children, probably born in 1512, followed by a brother, William and a sister, Anne. Thomas and Maud were courtiers during the early years of Henry VIII's reign. Thomas was knighted at the king's coronation in 1509 and Maud was a lady-in-waiting to his first queen, Katharine of Aragon after who, Catherine was named. Her father died in 1517 and she was sent to live with her uncle, Sir William Parr in Northamptonshire where she received a good education.

At the age of fifteen, she became the second wife of Edward Borough, 2nd Baron Borough of Gainsborough, in 1529. Not of good health, he died in early 1533.

In the summer of 1534, she married John Nevill, 3rd Baron Latymer of Snape, North Yorkshire, who died in March 1543 after the stress of being held hostage in 1536, during the Pilgrimage of Grace, due to the northern rebels who fought against King Henry's religious policies. Catherine and her two stepchildren were also held hostage at that time. Her husband had to report to the king as to his imprisonment and soon after died.

As Catherine nursed her second ailing husband she spent more time at court where she saw many new things, foremost, vital young men her own age.

It was in the household of Henry's daughter by Catherine of Aragon, Mary, that Catherine caught the attention of the king. After the death of Catherine's second husband, the rich widow began a relationship with Thomas Seymour, the brother of the late queen Jane Seymour and uncle to the future king, Edward. But the king took a liking to her and she was obliged to accept his proposal instead.

Catharine Parr, a dutiful woman, entering into her third marriage with an older, sickly husband. It wasn't easy for her, she wrote to Seymour, 'As truly as God is God, my mind was fully bent.... to marry you before any man I know. But the will of God was different' than her own. She struggled greatly, but she had no choice but obedience. And now another family began to ascend in court, the Parr's.[1]

Queen consort of England and Ireland

Catherine was the last and final Queen of King Henry VIII.

The Six Wives of
King Henry VIII
Catherine of aragon 1525.jpg Catherine of Aragon
Anne boleyn.jpg Anne Boleyn
JaneSeymour.jpg Jane Seymour
AnneCleves.jpg Anne of Cleves
HowardCatherine02.jpg Catherine Howard
Kathparr.jpg Catherine Parr

She married Henry VIII on 12 July 1543 at Hampton Court Palace. She was the first English queen consort to enjoy the new title Queen of Ireland following Henry's adoption of the title King of Ireland. As queen, Catherine was partially responsible for reconciling Henry with his daughters from his first two marriages, who would later become Queens regnant, Mary and Elizabeth. She also developed a good relationship with Henry's son Edward, later Edward VI. When she became Queen, her uncle Baron Parr of Horton became her Lord Chamberlain.

For three months, from July to September 1544, Catherine was appointed queen regent by Henry as he went on his last, unsuccessful, campaign in France. Thanks to her uncle having been appointed as a member of her regency council, and to the sympathies of fellow appointed councilors Thomas Cranmer and Edward Seymour, earl of Hertford, Catherine obtained effective control and was able to rule as she saw fit. She handled provision, finances and musters for Henry's French campaign, signed five royal proclamations, and maintained constant contact with her lieutenant in the northern Marches, the Earl of Shrewsbury, over the complex and unstable situation with Scotland. It is thought that her actions as regent, together with her strength of character and noted dignity, and later religious convictions, greatly influenced her stepdaughter Elizabeth I.

Religious views and controversy

Her religious views were complex, and the issue is clouded by the lack of evidence. Although she must have been brought up as a Catholic, given her birth before the Protestant Reformation, she later became sympathetic and interested in the "New Faith."

We can be sure that she held some strong reformed ideas after Henry's death, when the Lamentacions of a synner (Lamentations of a Sinner) were published in late 1547. However, her commissioning of the translation of Desiderius Erasmus' Paraphrases shows her more as a MacConica-style Erasmian Pietist.

She was reformist enough to be viewed with suspicion by Catholic and anti-Protestant officials such as Bishop Stephen Gardiner and Chancellor Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton who tried to turn the king against her in 1546. An arrest warrant was drawn up for her, but she managed to reconcile with the King after vowing that she had only argued about religion with him to take his mind off the suffering caused by his ulcerous leg. [2]

Scholarship

Catherine, and her brother and sister were educated at their mother's direction after the death of their father in the hope of securing good marriages. Catherine was fluent in French, Italian, and Latin, and began learning Greek, and some sources say Spanish, when she was Queen. [3]She was also a patron of the arts and music. Catherine’s education was good but not comprehensive. In 1545, she was the first English queen to publish a book under her own name: “Prayers or Meditations.” Her other book, “The Lamentation of a Sinner”, was published after the death of Henry VIII during the last year of her life.

Catharine Parr encouraged Elizabeth I's education, which allowed the later Queen Elizabeth to be the most learned monarch in English history. She also brought the scholars, John Cheke and Roger Ascham, to be tutors to young Prince Edward. Thus bringing the influence of the reformers from Cambridge to the royal children. [4]

Final marriage, childbirth and death

When Henry VIII died in January 1547 there was probable expectation for Catherine to play the role of dowager queen for the new nine-year-old king, Edward VI, instead, just a few months after Henry’s death, Catherine secretly married her former love, Thomas Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley Lord High Admiral. The secrecy of her marriage and the short mourning period caused a scandal. Yet Catherine was still able to take guardianship of Princess Elizabeth and her husband Thomas purchased the wardship of the king’s cousin, Lady Jane Grey.

Having had no children from her first three marriages, Catherine became pregnant for the first time, by Seymour, at age thirty-five. But her happiness was short-lived.

She had a rivalry with Anne Stanhope, the wife of her husband's brother, Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset. Thomas Seymour was alleged to have taken liberties with the teenaged Princess Elizabeth (Catherine's step-daughter and future Elizabeth I), who was living in their household, and had reputedly plotted to marry her. To protect Elisabeth, Catherine had to send her to live in another household which caused a permanent rift between the women.

Sudeley Castle gatehouse

Catherine gave birth to her only child - a daughter, Mary Seymour - on August 30, 1548, but Catherine died only six days later, on 5 September, 1548, at Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, from puerperal fever like Jane Seymour before her.

Thomas Seymour was beheaded for treason less than a year later, and Mary was taken to live with Catherine Willoughby, dowager Duchess of Suffolk, a close friend of Catherine's. After a year and a half, Mary's property was restored to her by an Act of Parliament, easing the burden of the infant's household on the Duchess. The last mention of Mary Seymour on record is on her second birthday, and although stories circulated that she eventually married and had children, most historians believe she died as a child.

Remains

In 1782, a gentleman by the name of John Locust discovered the coffin of Queen Catherine at the ruins of the Sudeley Castle chapel. He opened the coffin and observed that the body, after 234 years, was in a surprisingly good condition. Reportedly the flesh on one of her arms was still white and moist. After taking a few locks of her hair, he closed the coffin and returned it to the grave.

The coffin was opened a few more times in the next ten years and in 1792 some drunken men buried it upside down and in a rough way. When the coffin was officially reopened in 1817, nothing but a skeleton remained. Her remains were then moved to the tomb of Lord Chandos whose family owned the castle at that time. In later years the chapel was rebuilt by Sir John Scott and a proper altar-tomb was erected for Queen Catherine.

Some of Catherine Parr's writings are available from the Women Writers Project at Brown University [5].

Historiography

The popular myth that Catherine acted more as her husband's nurse than his wife was born in the 19th century from the work of Victorian moralist and proto-feminist, Agnes Strickland. This assumption has been challenged by David Starkey in his book Six Wives in which he points out that such a situation would have been vaguely obscene to the Tudors, given that Henry had a huge staff of physicians waiting on him hand and foot, and Catherine was a woman expected to live up to the heavy expectations of queenly dignity.

Catherine's good sense, moral rectitude, passionate religious commitment and strong sense of loyalty and devotion have earned her many admirers among historians. These include David Starkey, feminist activist Karen Lindsey, Lady Antonia Fraser, Alison Weir, Carolly Erickson, and Alison Plowden.

Notes

All retrieved May 20, 2008.

  1. Catherine Parr's life englishhistory.net
  2. Ibid.
  3. The life of Catherine Parr tudorhistory.org Retrieved may 20, 2008.
  4. Catherine Parr's life englishhistory.net Retrieved May 20, 2008.
  5. Women Writers Project www.wwp.brown.edu Retrieved May 20, 2008.

Titles

  • Miss Catherine Parr (1512-1529)
  • Lady Borough (1529-1534)
  • Lady Latymer (1534-1543)
  • HM Queen Catherine (1543-1547)
  • Lady Seymour (1547-1548)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Fraser, Antonia. The Wives of Henry VIII, Vintage 1993. ISBN 978-0679730019
  • James, Susan E. Kateryn Parr: The Making of a Queen (Women and Gender in Early Modern England, 1500-1750), Ashgate Publishers, 1999. ISBN 978-1840146837
  • Lindsey, Karen. Divorced, Beheaded, Survived: A Feminist Reinterpretation Of The Wives Of Henry VIII, Da Capo Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0201408232
  • Plowden, Allison. Tudor Women, Sutton Publishing, 1998. ISBN 978-0750928809
  • ________________. The House of Tudor, Sutton Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-0750932400
  • Starkey, David. Six Wives : The Queens of Henry VIII, 2004. ISBN 978-0060005504
  • Strong, Roy: Artists of the Tudor Court: The Portrait Miniature Rediscovered 1520-1620, Victoria & Albert Museum exhibit catalog, 1983. ISBN 0905209346
  • Weir, Alison. The Six Wives of Henry VIII. 1993. ISBN 0-8021-3683-4

External links

Retrieved May 20, 2008.


English royalty
Preceded by:
Catherine Howard
Queen Consort of England
12 July, 1543 - 28 January, 1547
Succeeded by: Lord Guildford Dudley


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