Love British History

by Jo Romero

Tudor Power Couples

Forgotten Women of History

Forgotten Women of History

Historic Recipes

Historic Recipes

Wars of the Roses

Wars of the Roses

Power Couples of History

Power Couples of History

Reading, Berkshire

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Charles I, anointed King of England and Scotland, stood at the scaffold at Whitehall. Although it was January, he didn’t shiver, wearing a double layer of clothing so that the crowd would not perceive any trembling from the wintry cold as fear. Before kneeling to place his head on the wooden block, he is said to have uttered, ‘I go from a corruptible to an incorruptible crown, where no disturbance can be, no disturbance in the world’, referring to the Civil War which in 1649 claimed his life. But there is another, more cryptic last word, a parting shot, that he uttered to his minister standing alongside him. The weary king, passing his medal of St George to William Juxon, Bishop of London, spoke the single word, ‘Remember’. Kneeling, his head was severed from his neck with an axe, and the monarchy's rule, which had existed for more than a thousand years, came to a bloody end.

Charles I, Metropolitan Museum, Public Domain

But what did Charles mean? He may have been referring to the solemnity of the event – a nation beheading its rightful king on charges of treason and for inciting war and dissension in the realm. It was unprecedented. Queens had been executed on the scaffold, two on charges of adultery and two for treason, but up until 1649 no king had suffered in this way. Alternatively, Charles may have been bidding a last goodbye, telling Juxon to remember this moment and any consequences that might follow. Charles was a stubborn and righteous king, who believed he ruled via Divine Right granted to him only by God. Answerable only to Him, the king angered his subjects and triggered increasingly hostile sanctions from Parliament. It is entirely logical that Charles considered his legal murder an affront to God, and believed that divine punishment would follow. 

 

By the end of the seventeenth century though, there was another explanation. The writer John Aubrey, who was twenty-three years of age at the time of Charles’ death, claimed that the king predicted that his son would come to the throne despite the Civil War’s abolishment of the monarchy and his own death sentence. ‘After King Charles the First was condemned’, wrote Aubrey, ‘he did tell Colonel Tomlinson that he 'believed the English Monarchy was now at an end.' About half an hour after, with a radiant countenance, and as if with a preternaturally assured manner, he affirmed to the Colonel, positively, that his son should reign after him. This information I had from Fabian Phillips, Esq., of the Inner Temple, who had the best authority for the truth of it.’ Was Juxon supposed to remember the occasion's futility, Charles believing that the monarchy would be once again restored under his son Charles II, which happened in 1660? 

 

A spooky prediction or significance given by Aubrey and others long after the event? What do you think? 


Liked this? You might also like 7 Historic Events That Happened in Hampton Court and Elizabeth Dormer, the Tragic Countess of Carnarvon.


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Sipping a hot cup of coffee, I sat opposite our friend at his kitchen table. We had been chatting about one of our favourite books, Charles Spencer's The White Ship. 'Makes you wonder', he said philosophically, 'how history would have changed had that boat not sunk'. A thought trickled across his face as he shot up from the table, his voice trailing away as he disappeared into another room. 'If you liked that book, you'll love this one', he said, handing me a small faded paperback, the outside edge of its pages browned and vanilla-scented with age. The book's title shone, emblazoned in metallic copper foil. 

He was right. Tim Severin's 1978 book The Brendan Voyage was a fascinating read. It follows the story of St Brendan who sailed from Ireland in the sixth century in a small leather boat across the Atlantic Sea and reached the New World, the Americas. It had been a myth, told in an ancient manuscript called The Navigatio, and there was some debate among historians whether Brendan's trip could have been even possible, considering medieval technology and the challenges of such a long and dangerous mission across open sea. The tale told of the crew encountering pillars of crystal, sea monsters with teeth attacking one another and a blacksmith's island where they were pelted with hot pieces of coal before one of the crew members caught fire and died on the spot.


To see if the legend could have been true, Tim Severin set out to build a replica of St Brendan's boat, made of leather that was wrapped around a wooden frame. Employing traditional medieval techniques such as sewing it together with flax and protecting the leather with wool grease he equipped the boat, appropriately named
Brendan, with a crew and supplies. Understandably, they encountered difficulties along the voyage, but learned a great deal about St Brendan's original trip. The pillars of ice the manuscript described turned out to be icebergs, the molten coal a volcano. St Brendan and his fellow monks also reported a sea monster - Severin concludes that their description was very similar to the behaviour of curious pilot whales and the killer whales they saw on their own journey. Severin and his crew did indeed reach the New World - the coast of modern-day North America - and concluded that it was possible, and perhaps even probable, that St Brendan had made the journey that he claimed back in the sixth century. He even traced Brendan's original course, travelling from Ireland to Newfoundland via Shetland, the Faroes, Iceland and Greenland.

The book discusses the making of the boat in detail, and Severin's priority in using medieval methods and traditional techniques will make any history lover happy. The difficulties and challenges faced by the crew are given in life-like detail and with careful descriptions so you almost feel as if you're on the boat with them. Their journey not only confirmed that the sixth century trip was possible but tested out medieval boat-building techniques, food supplies and clothing. There's also a great sense of community as word spread via radio and in the press about the trip, and larger ships and control towers regularly make contact with Brendan to ensure they have enough food and batteries for their torches, a luxury the original Brendan wouldn't have had. I also found it interesting that Severin noted the crew's interaction with whales in context with whale populations. As he noted, back in St Brendan's day there would have been many more whales in the Atlantic than today, making it likely that they would have encountered larger numbers of them. 

The book is also easy to read - it's as if you're listening to Severin tell the story - and there are some great photographs captured on the boat during the trip, published throughout the pages in coloured sections. The research is valuable from a historical perspective too, and you can only admire the crew for their passion in setting out to complete such a dangerous and ground-breaking trip, along with their teamwork and good spirits throughout the journey. I'd definitely recommend this book. I think it's still in print in some places but there also seem to be many copies available second-hand. Give it a read and let me know what you think!

You might also like Women of Power in Anglo-Saxon England and Anglo-Saxon Law and Order: Was it Really Brutal and Chaotic? 

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A painting, in the collection of Royal Museums Greenwich, depicts the death of the heroic naval commander Lord Nelson, which took place on 21 October 1805. The work, completed in 1807 by William Arthur Devis, portrays a commotion around the leader as prominent men linked to the battle busy themselves as he lies pale and dazed on the floorboards of his ship, partly covered with a white sheet. They include Sir Thomas Masterman Hardy, the ship’s captain; William Beatty the surgeon and the ship’s chaplain, Dr Alexander Scott. There are around a dozen figures in all, but there is at least one notable person missing from the scene: Mary Watson...

This is a paid subscriber-only post - read the full article on Substack


Copy of ‘The Death of Nelson’. Wellcome Collection, Wikimedia Commons



You might also like The Women of the Princes in the Tower Mystery and Tudor Power Couple: Giles and Elizabeth Daubeney.

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The Church of St Mary in Warwick is hugely underestimated. Inside, it's bigger than it looks from the outside, it has a stunningly beautiful crypt which you can venture on down to, and some real gems in medieval and Tudor monuments. Like this one, the tomb and effigy of Richard Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick. 


The craftsmanship on the tomb is ahead of its time, having been created shortly after 1439 when Richard died. Viewers in the early sixteenth century thought the effigies of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York in Westminster were a wonder of the world - this one, complete with veined hands and soft facial features dates to over sixty years before and deserves more attention from historians than it receives, I think. 


Richard Beauchamp succeeded to the title of Earl of Warwick in 1402 during the reign of Henry IV. Serving the Lancastrian kings, he fought in France with Henry V and commissioned the building of the Beauchamp Chapel which now houses the remains of the earl and his descendants. He married twice. First to Elizabeth Berkeley, who bore three daughters; Margaret, Eleanor and Elizabeth. His second wife was Isabel Despenser, with whom he fathered two children - a son, Henry, and a daughter, Anne. Henry died as a teenager and so Anne inherited the Warwick title and estates, marrying Richard Neville, who was titled Earl of Warwick in her name. Richard Beauchamp died on 30 April 1439.

Richard's effigy is made from gilded brass, with a marble tomb below on which are depicted men and women from the earl's life as his 'weepers'. The bear rests at his feet, a symbol of the earls of Warwick, along with a griffin and a swan. The 'cage' structure seen over the top of Richard's effigy is believed to have once supported a covering of crimson velvet - something that William Dugdale in the eighteenth century reported had long been removed by his time. To walk around the tomb and examine the 'weepers' is to look into the faces of key men and women of the Wars of the Roses, the civil war that gripped England (and had consequences for Wales, Ireland and Scotland) in the fifteenth century.


The identities of the figures on the earl's lower tomb are given by their respective shields, showing their individual arms. They include Margaret Countess of Shrewsbury and her husband John Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury; Richard Neville and Alice Montacute, Earl and Countess of Salisbury and Richard Neville and Anne Beauchamp, later Earl and Countess of Warwick. 


The inscription on the tomb, and recorded by Dugdale, gives the date of Richard's death and states that he was 'visited with a long sickness in the Castle of Rouen' while he was serving as Lieutenant General and Governor of the Realms of France and Normandy under Henry VI. His body was sent from France to England and arrived at Warwick for burial on 4 October 1439.

If you'd like to see the Beauchamp tomb for yourself, St Mary's is a short walk from Warwick railway station and is definitely worth a visit. In the same chapel lie the tombs of Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester and his wife Lettice Knollys along with their infant son - and also Ambrose, Robert Dudley's brother who was created Earl of Warwick in the mid-1500s. Robert and Ambrose were descended from Margaret Countess of Shrewsbury, the daughter of Richard Beauchamp. 

Enjoyed this? You might also like The Women of Warwick Castle, Thomas Beauchamp and Katherine Mortimer, Medieval Power Couple and A Visit to Lord Leycester's Hospital, Warwick. 

Interested in the Wars of the Roses? My first book explores the roles of women from all sectors of fifteenth century society and the impact they had on the Wars of the Roses conflict. Order your copy here. 


My second book, Power Couples of the Tudor Era, published by Pen and Sword Books, explores the contributions sixteenth century couples made to their own times as well as how they influenced our own. Robert Dudley and Elizabeth I have their own dedicated chapter. Order your copy here. 



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Source:  The Antiquities of Warwick and Warwick Castle, Sir William Dugdale. 1786. On archive.org.


Amy, my painting partner, knows all about my quest to visit old pubs. We were working on a mural in Salisbury and it was a 2-hour drive home. On the final day, we packed up at about 5pm and decided, as we had worked super hard, that we would stop off at the beautiful town of Stockbridge in Hampshire for some dinner before the long drive home. 

We had a little chat about where we could go, and while she drove, I Googled some of the likely contenders. One of them, The White Hart, caught my eye straight away.


The White Hart, its website states, is a sixteenth century coaching inn. A guide of 1799 confirms that in the late eighteenth century a coach pulled up at its entrance ready to take passengers to London each morning at 5am, except on Sundays. The lady at the bar, on finding out she had a hungry history nerd to feed, gave us a quick tour of the inside. The oldest part of the building is said to have stood since the twelfth century, with other parts of the inn built in subsequent centuries as it was enlarged and improved. The dining area where we sat was built in the 2000s, but the small room, the snug, is the oldest part of the building. It even has a small wooden hatch where beers were once delivered to waiting customers from the bar area.

It really is a beautiful building with low beamed doorways, timber framing and large areas leading to smaller, more intimate rooms. The staff were amazing - polite, welcoming and eager to help. Next door is a twelfth century church or chapel, which we were told was built at the same time as the inn. There's a small car park too, some outside seating at the front and a garden at the back. They also have a number of rooms available to book for the night, perfect if you're exploring Stockbridge or the surrounding areas and want to stay in a historic building. The photos on the website look lovely.

The 12th century St Peter's Church next door, Stockbridge

For our dinner, Amy had the burger and I had the fish and chips, and we both agreed it was all gorgeous. What a lovely way to round off a couple of days' painting. I'd definitely recommend it for a visit. I've been looking for more information on the inn's history but have come up with a blank so far, except that on the wall that butts to the inn from the old church are marks said to have been made by Stockbridge men sharpening their swords back in the day. If you know anything else about The White Hart let me know in the comments and I'll check it out! 



Check out The White Hart's website for more of its history and details on the rooms and their food menu. 


Enjoyed this? You might also like The Mystery Lady of Romsey Abbey and A Mysterious and Tragic Murder at Littlecote House. 


Interested in Tudor history? You might also like my second book, Power Couples of the Tudor Era, published by Pen and Sword Books, which explores the contributions couples made to their own times as well as how they influenced our own. Order your copy here. 



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Passionate about history. Author and artist, in love with the history of what is now Britain, especially the period 1200-1750. Come and say hi!

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