Books 2017 – on sale today – Elizabeth of York and Her Six Daughters-in-Law by Retha M Warnicke


27th October 2017 – Elizabeth of York and Her Six Daughters-in-Law: Fashioning Tudor Queenship, 1485-1547 (Queenship and Power) by Retha M Warnicke

(c) Palgrave Macmillan


‘This study of early modern queenship compares the reign of Henry VII’s queen, Elizabeth of York, and those of her daughters-in-law, the six queens of Henry VIII. It defines the traditional expectations for effective Tudor queens―particularly the queen’s critical function of producing an heir―and evaluates them within that framework, before moving to consider their other contributions to the well-being of the court. This fresh comparative approach emphasizes spheres of influence rather than chronology, finding surprising juxtapositions between the various queens’ experiences as mothers, diplomats, participants in secular and religious rituals, domestic managers, and more. More than a series of biographies of individual queens, Elizabeth of York and Her Six Daughters-in-Law is a careful, illuminating examination of the nature of Tudor queenship.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Palgrave Macmillan

Further details – Amazon.co.uk



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Interview with Michele Smith – Visitor Experience Manager at Bradgate Park


Michele Smith is the Visitor Experience Manager at Bradate Park in Leicestershire.


(c) Michele Smith


Follow Bradgate Park Trust on Social Media:

Website: Bradgate Park Trust
Facebook: Bradgate Park Trust
Twitter: @BradgatePark


(c) Bradgate Park Trust



Many thanks to Michele for answering my questions.


How long have you been Visitor Experience Manager at Bradgate Park?

I arrived 1st June 2016 and opened the new Visitor Centre 1st July…very quietly.
As the Centre was to be run by volunteers I borrowed a few volunteers from another team…so you could say I started with -3 volunteers. By the end of the week I had 10 application forms to become a volunteer at the VC. I now have a team of 50 volunteers and tour guides. We launched the guided tours of the ruins in February 2017.

The aim was to get 10% of the Parks visitors into the VC, approx 50,000 in the first year. (The Park has approx half a million visitors) by the end of June 2017 we had reached 85,000 visitors not including tours or school groups.


What is your favourite part of the job?

Talking…I thoroughly enjoy chatting with the visitors. Many visitors have been visiting the Park for many years and go away learning something new whether it be about Lady Jane Grey, the Parks history or its natural history. I find it very rewarding. I go home each night with another funny or amazing story about the Park.


Can you describe a typical work day?

It is a strategic challenge, finding out what the other departments are doing that day. Rangers, Wardens, Education, Conservation Volunteers, Catering and contractors on site, visitor bookings for tours and talks and then working together.

Then it is planning the visitor centre day, morning briefing with the volunteers followed by site inspections of the ruins. This is always the best part of the day, entering the ruins first thing by yourself and having the special moment of tranquillity with the deer, doves, peacocks and woodpeckers.

Then we are good to go. After that anything goes. No two days are ever the same. I love working with the public they make every day unique


(c) Lorenzo Madge


The Visitor Centre reopened just over a year ago. What changes did you make?

Wow..good question. Having worked at quite a few heritage venues over the years I knew what we could achieve and how to do it, so from the opening I kind of knew what would work. What I didn’t have a full grasp of was the interest from the parks visitors.

Introducing new types of events was a challenge, the Park had generally relied on natural history walks and the like of. Introducing evening talks and historical one person performances by the lakeside inside the ruins didn’t get the best start mainly as customer just weren’t expecting it. Our communication promoting events on site wasn’t its best and marketing wasn’t as effective as it could have been. However once the social media was active and the Parks Events and Walks were professionally branded flyers produced, 10,000 copies were picked up by visitors to the Park in matter of months. Events success soared for everyone.

Looking back I had to test the water, the feedback I had from those initial events was excellent and they wanted more, the product was right, it was just the correct communication widget I had to find.


This summer, the park held various events to mark the reign of Queen Jane. Where did the idea for the Queen of Bradgate Park celebrations come from?

Ok…a bizarre answer.

Long before I came to work at the Park I was (and still do) run historical ghost walks across the county, one of which is at the Park. On one particular ghost walk something happened (sorry no spoilers) and I just knew that at some point I would do something for Jane.

8 months later I am opening the Visitor Centre. Marking Jane’s Execution date 12 February was the most natural thing, laying white tulips at the gate of the ruins. I never expected the media to hear about it, next the TV, newspaper, radio all want to know about Lady Jane Grey. The people wanted to know more about the local Queen. Their Queen of Bradgate. So I worked on a program of events marking the ‘9-days’ in July.


(c) Lorenzo Madge


How did you decide on the celebration events?

I love doing dusk walks and not many people realise there is even an orchard and lake in the ruins. So I devised a new guided tour which took us into these areas as well as talking about the myths and legends that surround Jane, her royal blood and the 3 sovereigns. The weather was perfect and the evening sky was so beautiful.

I am a big believer in getting the kids involved with history, it has to be fun and a little bit horrible. I found John White historical interpreter extraordinaire, he helps the rather marvellous Lesley Smith out at Tutbury Castle, it is not every day when you meet someone and he says ‘I so want to be your official executioner madam.’ He was perfect performing in the ruins for the families.

Of course we also did a ghost walk, but a very special one.

A chapel service had to be a key part of the whole week, and the local Reverend Richard was, well just awesome. He had always had an urge to do something in the chapel, coming up with the idea for the actual reading Jane would have heard on that day in history is total credit to him. The name of the service was The Rose Petal Service and the idea was for it to be symbolic, and give Jane the service I hope she would she have been pleased with.

The medieval musicians have been working with the Park for a few years they also performed in the chapel surrounded by scattered rose petals and candles. It was perfect. Two performers with beautiful voices….I was asked where the other two voices came from that could be heard singing, no one could see them..

Tamise, your eulogy was so moving. I know you said you were nervous, but wow.

…and Jed, can’t forget Jed. I have known Jed for many years, he rolled up in the Visitor Centre one day (he is a historical educator) and said ‘aye aye..do you have need of an executioner around here?’ He was my Glorious Grey, meeting and greeting the service guests, then slipped into the mute executioner to lead the service up to the lake and hold out a basket of freshly plucked rose petals for the guest to throw into the lake.

I am glad about the way the tickets for the service were requested, it made it more special for those who were there. I will do that again. People just turned up to help, quite by chance.


(c) Bradgate Park Trust


Can you share any future plans for Bradgate Park?

Well following on from Queen of Bradgate, I had several visits from Japanese film crews who were making a documentary about the Delaroche painting going on tour to Asia. It seems there is a marked increase in interest about Jane.

So yes, there will be more for 2018. I am planning a larger scale flower laying & procession laying on 12th Feb. As for the Queen of Bradgate, she will rise again.

I am open to any suggestions from Jane supporters of what they would like to see. (It would be rather marvellous to have a closer look at Jane historical dress TBC).

Other related plans…there could be a play about Bess of Hardwick going on tour, I met with the production company last week and saw the play. Flippin excellent, however it was theatre based so will need to be revised for non -heatre performances, Hardwick Hall and Chatsworth are also possible venues. Just looking for tour funding from the Arts Council.

You might have heard of a chap called Richard III, well when he was interned in Leicester I was working at a visitor Centre in Leicester, where I worked with a local jeweller to create ‘The Missing Years Rose Pin’, demand went viral around the world. Lindsay, the jeweller is currently busy having a baby, however we are planning on working together on another project very soon…very Jane related.




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Mary, Katherine and Lady Jane Grey: Heirs to the last Tudor – Talk by Leanda de Lisle


On 22nd September Leanda de Lisle gave a talk about the Grey sisters at the Ryedale Book Festival.

Thank you to the Ryedale Book Festival for letting me share the video.



Mary, Katherine and Lady Jane Grey: Heirs to the last Tudor from byland media on Vimeo.


A presentation by Leanda de Lisle, historical author, at the Ryedale Book Festival, on the heirs to the last Tudor. Accompanying her are Chris Parsons, trumpet and Nicholas Brooksbank, art advisor.


Follow @LeandadeLisle and @RyedaleBookFest.


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Books 2017 – on sale now – Catherine of Aragon by Amy Licence (paperback)


15th October 2017 – Catherine of Aragon: An Intimate Life of Henry VIII’s True Wife (paperback) by Amy Licence


(c) Amberley Publishing


‘Catherine of Aragon continues to fascinate readers 500 years after she became Henry VIII’s first queen. Her life was one of passion and determination, of suffering and hope, but ultimately it is a tragic love story, as circumstances conspired against her. Having lost her first husband, Henry’s elder brother Prince Arthur, she endured years of ill health and penury, to make a dazzling second match in Henry VIII. There is no doubt that she was Henry’s true love, compatible with him in every respect and, for years, she presided over a majestic court as the personification of his ideal woman.

However, Catherine’s body failed her in an age when fertility was a prerequisite of political stability. When it became clear that she could no longer bear children, the king’s attention turned elsewhere, and his once chivalric devotion became resentment. Catherine’s final years were spent in lonely isolation but she never gave up her vision: she was devoted to her faith, her husband and to England, to the extent that she was prepared to be martyred for them. Banished and close to death, she wrote a final letter to her ‘most dear lord and husband’. ‘I pardon you everything… mine eyes desire you above all things.’ The fidelity of this remarkable woman never wavered.’

From Amazon.co.uk

Further details – Amazon.co.uk




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The King’s Pearl Blog Tour – Cousins, servants, friends – Mary and the Grey family by Melita Thomas


I am delighted to host a stop on the blog tour to celebrate the publication of ‘The King’s Pearl: Henry VIII and His Daughter Mary’ by Melita Thomas.


(c) Amberley Publishing


Thank you to Melita for this guest article about the relationship between Mary and the Grey family.




Cousins, servants, friends – Mary and the Grey family

When her cousin, Lady Jane Grey, challenged Mary for the throne in 1553, pushed into it by her father, Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, and her father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland, Mary was facing not just a fight for her crown, but also a deep sense of betrayal. Whilst the fact that Jane’s mother, Frances, was Mary’s first cousin, is well-known, much less familiar is Mary’s long history of friendship with Jane’s Grey family, who were also her relatives, descended from the first marriage of Mary’s great-grandmother, Elizabeth Woodville to Sir John Grey of Groby.

The Grey family had surrounded Mary almost from her birth. Thomas, 2nd Marquis of Dorset, was Henry VIII’s cousin, and despite a fourteen-year age gap, Henry was fond enough of him to forgive his disastrous leadership of a military expedition in 1512, which failed to re-establish English control in south-west France.

The 2nd Marquis had a brother, Lord Leonard Grey, and several sisters, amongst whom were Lady Elizabeth and Lady Anne, who both served Henry VIII’s sister, the first Mary Tudor, during her tenure as Queen of France. Lady Anne continued in her service, whilst Lady Elizabeth (later Countess of Kildare) transferred to that of Katharine of Aragon. It was Lady Elizabeth who stood as proxy for Mary when the princess was chosen as godmother to the French Queen’s daughter, Frances Brandon. The cousins were only seventeen months apart in age, and Mary frequently visited Frances and her brothers during her childhood.

By his second wife, Margaret Wotton (painted by Holbein), the 2nd Marquis of Dorset had at least seven children, of whom several were Mary’s friends or in her household. The Marquis himself was named as Grand Steward of her Household when she went to the Marches of Wales in 1525, but it seems to have been an honorary title whilst his daughter, Lady Katherine, actually accompanied Mary. Lady Katherine remained with the princess until her household was broken up in 1533. By then, Katherine was Lady Maltravers (Lady Maltravers did not die in 1532, as Wiki suggests – she had three children in the late 1530s, dying probably in 1542).

Another of Mary’s favourite attendants in her early household was Mary Browne, who later married Lord John Grey, the 2nd Marquis’ son, whose brother, Lord Henry, was to marry Frances Brandon.

During the years of the annulment, the Greys, like most of the court, had mixed feelings, but usually put their loyalty to the king first. The 2nd Marquis died in 1530, leaving his son, thirteen-year-old Henry, to inherit as a minor. For the next ten years, Henry, now 3rd Marquis and his mother quarrelled incessantly about money. Perhaps as a counter to his mother’s public support for the Boleyn marriage (she stood as godmother to Elizabeth) Henry, like his aunt, Elizabeth, Countess of Kildare, was, according to the Imperial Ambassador, Chapuys, a supporter of Katharine’s. In early 1536, Lady Kildare and Marquis Henry attended a dinner party with Chapuys. The talk was all of the quarrel between Anne Boleyn and Cromwell, which pleased the diners immensely.

Lady Kildare’s support for Katharine may have been born, not just of her previous service to the queen, but from anger against the king at the loss of her husband, whom she had married for love, against the wish of her family. The Earl of Kildare, having been Lord Deputy of Ireland, became deeply embroiled in the complexities of Irish politics, and was replaced. He was arraigned for treason in 1534, but died in the Tower, before he could be either tried or freed.

All Mary’s attendants had been dismissed in December 1533, and for three years, she was almost friendless in the household of her half-sister, Elizabeth. But in 1536, after the execution of Anne, and when she herself had been forced to accept the annulment of her parents’ marriage, she was permitted to choose her own attendants. She selected only three, leaving the rest of the choices to the king and Cromwell. Amongst the three was Mary Browne, not yet married to Lord John Grey.

In the following years, Mary’s account books contain numerous references to the Greys. One of the earliest, in 1536, notes a tip to Lady Kildare’s servant for bringing a gift from the Countess, presumably pleased that Mary was now in favour again. The following year, Lady Kildare’s step-son, known as Silken Thomas, and his five uncles, rose up in rebellion. The king sent Lord Leonard Grey to Ireland to curb the rebellion – Lord Leonard promised his sister’s step-son that he would be unharmed if he surrendered. But all were executed. Lady Kildare’s own son escaped to the continent, for which her brother was blamed, and accused of treason, was himself executed in 1541. During Mary’s own reign, Lady Kildare’s son was restored to his earldom.

At the New Year of 1538, Mary tipped the servants of Lady Kildare and Lady Margaret Grey for bringing gifts. Lady Margaret Grey was now amongst Mary’s attendants and on Twelfth Night, 1538, they played cards together, Mary starting out with the sum of 20s – although we don’t know how much she ended the evening with. Lady Kildare gave the princess a comb-case worked with pearls as a New Year gift in 1541, whilst her niece, Lady Anne Grey, gave artificial flowers.

In 1543, Lady Margaret sent the princess a cheese. She followed this up with the gift of a partlet (short wrap covering the upper arms, worn over the gown). Mary reciprocated with a present of two sovereigns. The next year, Lady Margaret and Lady Anne Grey gave Mary gifts of conserve (jam). Mary loved fruit of all kinds, so the delivery of jam in November, was probably a much-appreciated treat. That New Year of 1544, Mary also received gifts from her cousin, Frances, Marchioness of Dorset, and Lady John Grey.

During the later years of Henry VIII’s reign, Frances Dorset was often with Mary, although, as a married woman, with a family of three daughters, she was not always at court. But over time, religion began to come between the Greys and Mary. Henry, 3rd Marquis, became an ardent reformer, and brought his daughters up as evangelical Protestants.

With these familial connections, and old friendships, it must have been hard for Mary to bear the betrayal by Henry Grey, now Duke of Suffolk, in 1553 and it was probably her affection for his family, as well as for Frances, that led her to pardon him. His treasonable involvement with Wyatt’s Rebellion, in 1554, along with his brothers, Lord John and Lord Thomas, proved impossible to forgive, and Suffolk and Lord Thomas ended on the block. Lord John had cause to thank his lucky marriage – his wife pleaded for him, and Mary, remembering a friendship first forged in 1525, forgave him. His niece, Jane, was not so fortunate.

Whilst the daughters of Henry, Duke of Suffolk, Lady Jane, Lady Katherine and Lady Mary all suffered for their closeness to the throne, the rest of the family prospered. The current royal family is descended not only from Lady Katherine Grey, via the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, but the late Diana, Princess of Wales, is a descendant of the Lady Anne Grey who sent Mary the jam in 1544.


Mary and the Greys Family Tree

Grey Royal Descendants Family Tree




Other stops on the The King’s Pearl blog tour.


(c) Amberley Publishing


Buy ‘The King’s Pearl’:

Amazon.co.uk
Amberley Publishing



About the Author


(c) Melita Thomas


Melita Thomas is the co-founder and editor of Tudor Times, a repository of information about Tudors and Stewarts in the period 1485-1625 www.tudortimes.co.uk .

Melita has loved history since being mesmerised by the BBC productions of ‘The Six Wives of Henry VIII’ and ‘Elizabeth R’, when she was a little girl. After that, she read everything she could get her hands on about this most fascinating of dynasties. Captivated by the story of the Lady Mary galloping to Framingham to set up her standard and fight for her rights, Melita began her first book about the queen when she was 9. The manuscript is probably still in the attic!

Whilst still pursuing a career in business, Melita took a course on writing biography, which led her and her business partner, Deborah, to the idea for Tudor Times, and gave her the inspiration to begin writing about Mary again.



Follow Melita and the Tudor Times on Social Media

Tudor Times: Tudor Times
Facebook: Tudor Times
Twitter: @thetudortimes



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