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by Jo Romero

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There's this old money trend, and then there's 'olllddddd money', as in what it was like to live as a Tudor person in the sixteenth century. I've done my fair bit of poking around historic homes and digging through Tudor wills and inventories so I think I can help you out. If you're interested in exuding historic vibes and enjoying a bit of Tudor-inspired decor then look no further... 

Photo by Katie Puzatova on Unsplash

Opt for a variety of textures

Think leather and wool, tapestry and silk, wood and linens. Faux fur throws or blankets will add a bit of warmth and fluffiness, while a wooden floor would look perfect with a sheepskin rug. Tapestries added even more range, and could be woven to depict everyday scenes or those with themes of romance. The Victoria and Albert Museum in London has a display of a number of early sixteenth century tapestries showing hunt scenes and a unicorn. Henry VIII once paid a fortune for tapestries showing Biblical legends. The weave and colour will also complement other textures in the room and add pops of colour. 

Get yourself a wall painting or two

Wall paintings were sometimes religiously-themed, especially pre-Reformation. In churches they sometimes painted scriptures on the wall, or further back to the medieval era more images of saints and Biblical scenes. But wall paintings served practical reasons too. Sometimes they were painted to look like tapestries or curtains on the wall, like in Ledbury. It was actually cheaper to pay someone to paint a wall with colour and repetitive patterns than it was to buy tapestries. There are similar paintings in The White Horse Hotel in Romsey, Hampshire. These were painted onto walls and made to look like carvings - one was in the shape of a Tudor rose, painted in browns, greys and whites to look as if it had been chiselled into the wood. If you do decide on a wall painting, I can help you with that. 

Go big on colour

Beds often were four-poster beds with curtains that could be drawn for privacy and warmth. They were hung with material in primary colours like blues, yellows and reds. A merchants house in Newcastle in the 1570s had black pillows, and green carpet. The medieval period was even more brightly-coloured. Aim for red, green, blue and yellow in various shades - Tudor decor wasn't like you see in the movies and period dramas, it was far brighter and much more colourful.

Show off some silver or gilt, but do it sparingly 

Families liked to show off a bit of bling to show that they were wealthy or influential locally. They might have had a display of silver in a cupboard to casually show guests. While we don't show off our silver plate today, we can evoke the Tudor equivalent by having a few goblets made with gold gilt, or a salt-cellar in silver. This was placed at the table next to the head of the household, and was sometimes beautifully carved or decorated. 

Keep your valuables in a wooden chest

Wooden chests were safe, sturdy and portable, and Tudors stored anything in them from money to documents to table linen. A couple of big wooden chests (extra points for metal or ironwork reinforcements at the hinges) will give you that Tudor look as well as store away valuables or household stuff. 

Go natural 

The sixteenth century pre-dates the use of polyester or nylon, so go natural. Sheepskins, linen, tapestry work, faux fur throws and wool are the way to go here. Wealthy Tudors also used silk in the their homes - Mr Jenison in Elizabethan Newcastle had a pair of silk curtains hanging up at a window. Opt for wooden furniture over modern flat-packed or plastic items, which will look lovely alongside these natural fabrics. Got some fresh foliage? Make up a wreath using rosemary, thyme, spruce or other plants from the garden and use it as a table centrepiece or hang it on your door. 

 Liked this? You might also like my book Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses, a look at the roles of women - royal and non-royal - during the conflict. Order your copy here at the Pen and Sword website.




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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 The village of Aldermaston is a few miles away from Reading in Berkshire on the A4 coaching road towards Bath. It has a medieval church and some beautiful old brick buildings, some of them with tall Tudor-style chimneys. One Saturday we decided to go for a drive and we popped into Aldermaston's oldest pub, The Hind's Head. 


The pub is said to date from the 1600s, and like many older establishments it looks fairly small from the outside but once you enter there's loads of room. There are lots of little nooks and areas you can sit, and on the walls there's memorabilia from Aldermaston's history. There are photographs, cricket collectibles and some drawings from the 1700s and 1800s showing different aspects of the life of a coaching village. It even received a mention in a book from 2002 named Strangest Pubs in Britain, although I think that was more to do with the unusual addition in the garden, which I'll come on to later. 

One really interesting part of the pub is called The Vault, a small closed-off area a bit like a tiny cellar, which dates to around 1645. It's used for larger dining groups of between 6-8 and you can book it specially. Outside near the garden is a small cell (probably why it ended up in the 'Strangest' book) which was used in the nineteenth century for someone who was drunk and disorderly but is now out of use. The current owner told us that a man in the mid-1800s who was placed in there one night, began a fire to keep himself warm and unfortunately accidentally set fire to himself along with the jail. That's a sad story so I'll move on to the lunch... 

We sat down and ordered our lunch - I had the fish and chips and my husband had the chicken supreme. Both meals were really lovely, the service was great and the staff were amazing. The menu has a lot of 'British classic' type dishes including steaks, a burger and some starters. My husband also had a pudding and ordered the chocolate brownie and ice cream which was one of the best brownies we'd had, a secret recipe created by the pub's owners. 


I've read some reviews online, but honestly I found the meal reasonably priced in consideration of the beautiful historic atmosphere and the quality of the food served. They also have rooms that you can stay in, and the table next to us had a dog who slept under the table while the family ate. The Hind's Head is really a quirky and interesting pub that just seems really well-run and put together, perfect for us history fans. They do a good roast Sunday lunch too, so I've been told. 

After lunch we decided to take a look at the local medieval church of St Mary's just outside the village (historic lunch and a church, what a day, right), but when I tried to open the door I found it locked. It was a nice stroll around the churchyard though, and I found an old eighteenth-century gravestone and some Norman carvings. Oh, and a giant gnarly yew tree which I reckon is probably as old as the church itself. 


You can find out more about The Hind's Head at their website, where you can book The Vault for a special occasion, book a room for a stay or just turn up and ask if they're serving lunches still, like we did. Might be worth visiting the church too to see if you have better luck than we did - apparently there's a Tudor monument inside so I'll have to visit again soon and hope that it's open. 

You might also like: A Tudor Assault in 1534 in Padworth, Berkshire and Life in Eighteenth-Century Theale.

Liked this? You might also like my book Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses, a look at the roles of women - royal and non-royal - during the conflict. Order your copy here at the Pen and Sword website.



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. 



Never want to miss a post? Subscribe to my newsletter here: 



In 1475 Edward IV made a will before he headed to Calais to begin a war effort with France. As it turned out, negotiations with the French were concluded peacefully, but Edward wasn't to know if he would be back. He left wishes for a tomb to be made, the king 'buried low in the ground, and upon the same a stone to be laid and wrought with the figure of Death with escutcheons of our arms and writings convenient about the borders of the same remembering the day and year of our decease, and that in the same place or near to it an altar be made meetly for the room as hereafter we shall devise and declare'. 

St George's Chapel, Windsor, burial place of Edward IV

Edward's longed-for tomb doesn't survive today. Instead, there is an arch with a plain memorial to the king, a slab in the floor alongside it marking the burial of his widow, Elizabeth Woodville, in front. In 1789 repaving work was being carried out in the chapel, and the workers saw for themselves the coffin of Edward IV. The coffin was cut open and examined, a report being submitted to the Society of Antiquaries. Once sealed back up, a new monument was put up, with the simple acknowledgement tin brass lettering that it belongs to 'Edward IIII'. 

I've seen various reports online saying that Edward's magnificent tomb was finished, jewelled and stood for almost two hundred years before it was dismantled and destroyed by Cromwell's soldiers during the Civil War. The only thing is, I can't find any evidence that the effigy and rest of the tomb was ever completed. The twentieth century historian W.H. Hope produced accounts for 1481-2 and 1482-3, which note the purchase of 'thirty-three casks of touchstone, bought for the use of the chapel and for making the King's tomb', along with other references to 'the making f an altar within the King's enclosure there'. Temporary accommodation seems to have been set up for the workers on the tomb, for 'the making of a house for the masons working upon the tomb of our lord the King'. Hope concluded that it seems that the tomb was never finished, although admitted that how far completed it was before the 1780s is 'impossible to say'. 

There are references to a pre-1789 tomb with metal gates, separation Edward's burial site from the aisle of the chapel, but not of Edward's finished tomb itself. If this is the case, and the tomb was never completed, it may have been that Richard III, his eventual successor, had other things on his mind like trying to maintain his hold on power. Or remaining funds weren't released due to internal conflict and readjusting after the Wars of the Roses, which started in the 1450s. 

What do you think? Maybe you have evidence the tomb was finished? Or know why it wasn't (or even agree that it wasn't). Let me know in the comments below. 

Liked this? You might also like my book Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses, a look at the roles of women - royal and non-royal - during the conflict. Order your copy here at the Pen and Sword website.


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Source: W.H. Hope, Windsor: An Architectural History. 1913.



The Battle of Bosworth Field changed history, paving the way for Tudor rule and a timeless legend of an evil king that still endures into the modern day. So what mistakes did Richard III make that resulted in his usurpation and death in August 1485? After all, Richard was king, and far outweighed Henry in numbers of troops, cash, local authority and royal power. So what happened?

His reign became known for brutality

Today, we spend a lot of time rightly trying to put Richard into the context of his time and see him as a human being, rather than as one-dimensional 'villain' of Tudor history. But there's no escaping that during his lifetime he had subjects murmuring about his behaviour. At the beginning of his reign he punished four men acting under Robert Rushe who had been in contact with Henry Tudor. He ordered them to be beheaded on Tower Hill. In 1483, just weeks after his brother Edward's death, Richard had his nephew's guardian, Anthony Woodville, imprisoned and later beheaded. Even at Bosworth he took George Stanley, son of Sir Thomas, as a hostage and threatened to kill him if his father did not fight on his behalf against Tudor, Stanley's stepson. Don't forget too, the spontaneous, surprise ambush and execution of Lord Hastings. Richard's reign quickly became known for its harshness and brutality, and although we can view it today in terms of Richard asserting his new-found authority, people would have wondered whether a new king might rule them more gently and benevolently. With a possible replacement waiting in the wings, they wouldn't care if this behaviour was temporary and was Richard's attempt to maintain power and order in his first few years. I agree that Richard has been cast in a biased and unrealistic light by writers since his time, but that these rumours were believed suggests that they also found them believable. Similar accusations against a character like, for example, Henry VI, would not have been accepted as truth and gathered momentum.

He underestimated (or was too lenient over) the subtle power of women

Margaret Beaufort and Elizabeth Woodville conspired, in the summer of 1483, to unseat Richard from his newly-acquired throne. Although Elizabeth was watched by Richard's guards while in sanctuary in Westminster, a doctor, Lewis Carleon, visited her and conveyed messages between her and Margaret without suspicion, which resulted in the so-called Buckingham Rebellion of 1483. While the rebellion ultimately failed, it did result in a number of Richard's enemies being able to reconvene in Brittany to hatch a plan for Tudor's final invasion force to land two years later. That the two women could enter secret talks didn't seem to occur to Richard at the time. It is significant too that his punishment for Margaret, after discovering that she was corresponding with her son, was to seize her lands and order her husband to watch her. If he, Thomas Stanley, had been found communicating in similar terms with Tudor instead, it is fair to imagine that his punishment would have been more severe. The actions of other women in Richard's rise to the throne are a mystery, for example the thoughts of Cecily Neville, Richard's mother and his own wife, Anne Neville.

Richard III, Public Domain, British Library Collection on Flickr, 11221235456

He underestimated the power of a legend to bring people together

To many, Henry Tudor was the figurehead of an ancient prophecy that a Welshman would come to rule England. This legend formed a central part of Henry's campaign, as he marched from Milford Haven with the red dragon of Cadwaladr fluttering above him. The idea that this prophecy, said to have been uttered from Merlin's lips, put Henry's actions in terms of destiny and fate. It was no wonder Henry raised support as he marched through England to Leicestershire, with many eager to play their part in the achievement of this ancient prediction.

He went after the Woodvilles

Whether or not you consider Richard's actions in 1483 a personal attack on his Woodville in-laws, he certainly didn't reward them with gifts when he became Lord Protector, or even king. Instead, two of them were executed on dubious grounds, one was in sanctuary with her children and another fled the realm in search of Tudor. Richard did show lenience - for example with Katherine Woodville, the wife of the Duke of Buckingham, but his approach to the family suggests that he wanted to eradicate Woodville power and influence. The Woodvilles had risen in England under Edward from the 1460s because Elizabeth was married to Edward IV, and they had gained titles, advantageous marriages and important positions of royal trust as a result. If there were personal differences between Richard and the Woodville family, he chose to let these get in the way of politics. But could they have put their differences aside following negotiations that offered something in return after Richard was king? This may have provided him with more support, not only of the Woodville lords and ladies but of their allies, too. It is telling that Elizabeth Woodville had promised Margaret Beaufort that she would contact men close to Edward IV (and by association, also close to herself) to remove Richard from power. Without this, Richard may have gained some support.

He got tangled up in the Princes in the Tower affair

OK, so Elizabeth Woodville and her remaining relatives are not going to support a man who caused her two heirs to disappear and usurped Edward V as king. We could talk for hours about whether or not it's likely Richard had the princes in the Tower murdered on his command, or whether they were murdered at all, but the fact remains that they disappeared on his watch. Late fifteenth-century writers soon linked the disappearance of the princes - the sons of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville - to Richard's doing. Whether he had a hand in whatever happened to them or not, Richard never acknowledged or gave a reason for their disappearance, leaving open the opportunity to be made a scapegoat and cementing his role as a 'villain' in early Tudor literature.

He chose to be king in the first place

I generally feel that Richard would have been more successful and retained more support had he ruled England as Lord Protector under his nephew Edward V. He could then have pacified the Woodvilles and their supporters, and Henry Tudor would have been further down the line of succession. Ultimately, it was Richard's bid for the throne, and the methods used to achieve it, that alienated so many against him. Ruling as Lord Protector, he would have still had ultimate authority in the realm.

He waited too late to act

Richard seems to have been cautious, but might have changed history had he reacted sooner to two events. The first, Buckingham's Rebellion in 1483, resulted in an uprising of men, most of them with former attachment to his brother Edward IV. On the failure of the rebellion, many fled to Brittany, a gathering crucial for Henry's later attempt in August 1485 to take the crown. But chroniclers agree that Richard knew of the rebellion before it unravelled in October 1483, but chose to feign ignorance to give him more time to find out more about its key leaders. If Richard had acted sooner and quashed the rebellion in its early stages, it is unlikely Tudor would have seen the number of supporters in exile that he did. It might also have given Richard more chance to work to get them on his side. Another event was Henry's landing in Milford Haven. Nathen Amin, in the book Henry VII and The Tudor Pretenders mentions that Richard's lack of urgency meant that Henry could march through territories and gain new supporters, swelling the size of his army by the time he reached Bosworth. There was some confusion as to whether Henry would land in Milford Haven or Milford on Sea in Hampshire. Had he placed men at each port, or stationed himself between the two so he could meet Henry more locally very near his landing place, Henry might not have been able to gather the support that he did. 

He failed to win the support of his subjects

During Richard's reign, we see people deserting him. Edward's household staff and supporting nobility flocked to join the Buckingham Rebellion of 1483, many of them leaving the realm; while at Bosworth, the military intervention of the Stanleys is believed to have swayed the result of the battle. The brutality of his rule, the harshness with which he dealt with people and his alienation of Edward IV's supporters, along with the Princes in the Tower mystery, meant that he could no longer rely on the support of those around him. It is interesting that Henry, learning of Richard's ruling style, chose instead to show lenience to many of Richard's former supporters, forged relationships with both Lancastrian and York nobility and cautiously rewarded those who had helped him achieve the throne. He also relied heavily on legend, and saw the value of appearing regularly in front of his subjects. Thomas Penn, in The Brothers York hints that there may have been a personality difference between Edward IV and Richard III. Perhaps Edward found it easier to win support, with a more relaxed and charming manner, while Richard was more suspicious or less outwardly confident and appeasing. Whatever the reason, Richard failed to win overall support for his reign, and this directly affected the outcome of summer 1485.

These are just some of my own thoughts on Richard III and his fall from power in 1485. Do you have other ideas? Add to the conversation in the comments below, but also please be kind - we're all here to figure things out together. 

Liked this? You might also like my book Forgotten Women of the Wars of the Roses, a look at the roles of women - royal and non-royal - during the conflict. Order your copy here at the Pen and Sword website.



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. 



Never want to miss a post? Subscribe to my newsletter here: 



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