Sunday, May 20, 2012

Economics and the Wars of the Roses

This article first appeared in the June, 2011 issue of the Ricardian Register


Economics and the Wars of the Roses By Brian Wainwright
A number of economic factors had a particular influence on England at the time of the Wars of the Roses. The purpose of this article is to explore some of them, though it is necessary to go back to earlier periods of history, certainly the fourteenth century, to understand the roots of these issues.
One of the most significant was the relative shortage of labour. It has been estimated that between 1348 and 1350 the Black Death killed 1.5 million people out of a total population of around 4 million. At this time there was no large-scale immigration. Indeed most people rarely, if ever, travelled more than a few miles from their home village or town, so there were no means by which numbers [of people] could be made up in the short term. The population of England and Wales was slow to recover. In 1500, 150 years after the Great Plague, it is estimated at between 2.2 and 2.6 million, depending which source is preferred.[1]
A second and often overlooked factor is the damage to national finances caused by Edward III’s disastrous foreign policy. Though this brought the ‘glory’ of Crecy and Poitiers, it also led to a long losing war which the country could not afford to finance, and a threadbare exchequer that made Richard II’s task an exceedingly difficult one. Novel forms of taxation to meet the deficit led to the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 and to class warfare by means of legislation, including a vain attempt to hold down the level of wages by statute. (There was a labour shortage, remember? It was inevitable that real wages would rise – and they did – but the ultra-conservative landlords sitting in Parliament acted like so many King Cnuts.) Richard II did bring about national solvency through his peace policy and by the proscription of certain rich enemies. At the end of his reign the exchequer was full and there were barrels of gold stacked up in Holt Castle. The policies of the three successive Lancastrian kings reversed this temporary prosperity, and by the 1450s the disastrous outcome of the French war left the country virtually bankrupt. The direct impact on the great lords was that they could not (generally) recover the debts the Crown owed them, nor did they rely on receiving the salaries for the offices they held or the grants due to them from the exchequer. For someone like the Duke of York, who had run up large debts in Crown service while in France and Ireland, and who relied on exchequer grants for a fair proportion of his basic income, this was a matter of direct concern.[2]
Thirdly, arising principally from the labour shortage, there was a fall in the value of land. It’s pretty obvious that if you have no one to work your land that land quickly reverts to waste and produces little or nothing. Some villages were completely wiped out by the Black Death and were simply abandoned.[3] Historically, lords had relied upon serf labour to work their demesne lands; now those serfs were fewer in number and aware of the increased real value of their labour. The difficulty in carrying on in the same old way accelerated a trend that had started at least a century earlier; lords gave up their own direct involvement in agriculture and leased out not only demesne land but whole manors and lordships. It was more straightforward to collect fixed cash rent from one person than to bully and cajole sundry discontented serfs into performing labour service. The tenants (mostly people of substantial means) often turned former arable land over to sheep farming, displacing what population was left. Alternatively they relied upon hired labourers. Where feudal obligations remained, they were often commuted for cash or avoided altogether. Land rents were rarely, if ever, reassessed to take account of inflation or any added value the tenant had developed. A conservative attitude to economics led to a general assumption that if a piece of land was worth £1 a year in 1300, it was still worth that in 1450. Indeed the main purpose of producing a valor for a lord’s lands was to ensure his officials were not cheating him, not to provide evidence that income could be increased.[4]
A fourth issue was the damage caused by the Glendower Rising from 1400 to (circa) 1412. Obviously this had little impact on those lords with no Welsh property, but most of the great magnates (including the King) did have substantial Welsh lands. Obvious 15th Century examples are the dukes of York and Buckingham and the Earl of Warwick. In the 1390s quite astonishing sums were raised from this relatively poor country, even allowing for the fact that the Welsh were not required to pay Parliamentary taxation. For example when Henry Bolingbroke (later Henry IV) visited his lordship of Brecon for the first time in 1397 he was granted a subsidy of £1,333 payable over three years, adding at least 35% to the existing far from modest demands on his tenants there during that period.[5] In 1393 the Earl of March drew no less than £2,775 from his Welsh lands, while in the same era Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel was taking at least £1500 a year from his relatively small lordships in the north east of the country.[6] To set these figures in context, at this time the theoretical endowment for an earldom was 1000 marks of annual income (just under £667) and for a dukedom £1000. The enormous damage done by the Glendower rising slashed net income for these lords almost completely in the short term, and the wrecked Welsh economy took a very long time to recover. There was a glut of vacant property and tenants increasingly refused to accept land except of the basis of English tenure which (perhaps surprisingly) was more favourable to the tenant.[7] It is safe to say that the revenues from Welsh lands and lordships in the 15th Century never again approached the dizzying heights of the 1390s.
What were the impacts of these changes on 15th Century noble families? First, we should be clear that none of these people were not exactly starving. It was possible to live as a gentleman on £5 a year, while a £100 a year was a reasonable income for a quite wealthy knight. Yet the nobles needed huge incomes to maintain their status. Put yourself in their place for a moment. It goes without saying that you and your lady must be dressed in the best, and ride top quality horses. These things do not come cheap. Silk and similar luxury fabrics are in real terms much dearer than in the 21st Century. It is not unknown for a great lady’s dressmaker’s bill to exceed £1000.[8] A good warhorse can cost £80 and even a relatively cheap one for riding will be around £5. The castle that belonged to your grandfather may not be up to the standards required for modern living. Rebuilding it will be an expensive option, and if you decide to build a new mansion instead it will cost in the region of 7000 marks (£4667)[9] for something roughly appropriate to your rank.
Then there is the matter of your household. The more important you are, the more people you will have to employ. The wage roll is quite likely to run to hundreds of men and a few women. (The expected number of staff for an earl was around 200[10]) Now it’s true that labour is cheap, but the wages, food and livery coats for so many people add up. In addition, many of the employees will be gentlefolk and expect expensive cloth for their liveries and decent wages. Nor is this the end of the human resources issue. Someone will have to be paid to collect your rents and manage your estates; in fact you will almost certainly have your own council, with several lawyers on it. Everyone knows how expensive they are. There will be at least some retainers, paid to show up when you go to war and also sometimes to attend you in peace, so everyone can see how rich and powerful you are. Then there are ‘feed men’. Your hangers-on, people you want to influence and have on your side – local officials, for example. Their annuities all add up.
Next, consider your children. Apart from the cost of bringing them up, clothing them, giving them horses and so on, the daughters will certainly need dowries. We are looking at hundreds, if not thousands for each one, depending on how high up the social scale they marry. As it’s disgraceful to marry them much below their social class, this is going to be costly, especially if you’re a medieval version of Mr. Benet. Even nunneries aren’t cheap to enter, not if you want one of the few top-class ones, like Barking or Sion. Then there are your younger sons. The days have long gone when you could simply give them a sword and a coat of mail and send them off to the crusades. You are now expected to provide them with at least some land. However, there’s still a social taboo against alienating inherited land from the eldest son, so you are going to have to buy or otherwise acquire it.[11] Because of that taboo, land is in short supply and purchasing it takes luck and knowledge. Usually the only people who want to sell are either childless or in very serious debt. You are likely to be up against other bidders and even if you do succeed you’ll have to be quite sure that you have good title and there are no other claimants. Do you think there might be a few lawyer’s fees involved?
Then there’s your soul to worry about. You’ll certainly be generous to the church during your life, if only because it’s part of your status. Yet as you get older, and start to worry about dying (given that this is the 15th Century you won’t need to be that old to have concerns) you’ll certainly want to do more. It’s too expensive nowadays to found a monastery (the mortmain licence alone is prohibitive) but you’ll certainly want to put money aside to ensure you have a good funeral (with plenty of tips handed out so people will pray for you), a fine tomb (so people will remember you and pray for you), and some provision for priests to say masses for you for a very long time. You may be able to put some of your estates in trust (enfeoffment) to pay for all this, but one way or another it will cost.
You may think you can skip some of this – so you can, but if you do, you would ‘lose worship’, that is, people would not respect you as they should one of your rank. The medieval concept of largesse is a foreign language to the 21st Century monarchy and nobility in the UK. They would regard it as nouveau riche if not downright common. Medieval nobles were more like Arab oil sheikhs, who routinely hand out Rolex watches to their gardeners and chauffeurs. You must not only spend, but be seen to spend, lavishly and with open-handed generosity. Warwick the Kingmaker allowed random strangers to take hunks of meat from his kitchen; it was part of his image as a great man.
To some extent the greatest peers were protected against declining land incomes by a series of what might be called ‘corporate mergers’. McFarlane points out that in 1300 there were 136 families whose heads had received at least one personal summons to Parliament (in effect, they were peers). A further 221 peerages were created over the next 200 years. However, by 1500 there were only 61 peers, and only 16 of them had unbroken male descent back to 1300.[12] It is a mistake to think this was entirely down to the slaughter of the Wars of the Roses, or the political turmoil during the reigns of Edward II, Richard II and Henry VI. The principal cause was infertility. To some extent this may have been caused by inbreeding. Prior to Magna Carta great heiresses had been handed out to all sorts of dubious individuals, including foreign mercenaries and penniless knights.[13] By the 15th Century they were the exclusive preserve of the nobility, and everyone ‘suitable’ as a marriage partner was some kind of cousin. One result of this was to concentrate the bulk of land in the ownership of fewer and fewer individuals.
The Warwick[14] family is an excellent example – perhaps even the best. Back in the 13th Century, William Beauchamp of Elmley was lucky enough to marry Isabel Mauduit, who turned out to be heiress to her brother, the Earl of Warwick, when he died without issue. (She was heiress of her mother, who represented the still earlier Beaumont earls.) His descendant Richard Beauchamp (1382-1439) married two heiresses in succession; firstly the Berkeley heiress, and then in 1423, the real jackpot, the Despenser heiress, who by a remarkable chance was the widow of his cousin and namesake, Richard Beauchamp of Abergavenny. This lady brought with her the vast Despenser inheritance, including the senior share of the former de Clare lands,[15] including the Marcher Lordship of Glamorgan, the biggest and best of all such lordships, and the former Burghersh lands of her grandmother. As a bonus, because Beauchamp of Abergavenny had died without a male heir much of his endowment also returned ‘home’ to Warwick as it was entailed to the male Beauchamp line, while Warwick retained effective control of what was left. Beauchamp and Isabelle Despenser had one son, Henry, who eventually inherited everything apart from the Berkeley lands, which went to his half-sisters.[16]
In 1434 Henry Beauchamp married Cecile Neville[17] and at the same time his full sister, Anne Beauchamp, married Richard Neville, son of the Earl of Salisbury. Salisbury had received the lion’s share of the Neville lands because his mother, Joan Beaufort, had been given a jointure in them and preferred her own eldest son to his elder half-brother, the Earl of Westmorland. In addition, he had married Alice Montagu, heiress of the Montagu (or Montacute) earls of Salisbury. This marriage cost Salisbury a net dowry of 4700 marks (about £3,133) a figure only exceeded in the 15th Century by the 70,000 florins (about 14000 marks or £9333) supposedly attached to Lucia of Milan[18] when she married Edmund, Earl of Kent. Kent never saw a penny. Richard Beauchamp undoubtedly did, and the size of the net dowry (bearing in mind there was a gross figure offset by Anne Beauchamp’s dowry) demonstrates the exceptional value of his heir’s marriage.
Henry Beauchamp was created Duke of Warwick, but died young leaving a daughter who died in infancy. Salisbury’s investment paid off handsomely as his son now inherited the combined Warwick estates; of course on his father’s death in 1460 he also inherited the Salisbury/Neville lands into the bargain. ‘Warwick the Kingmaker’ in his person represented no less than 5 magnates who had attended Richard II’s court: Warwick, Salisbury, Beauchamp of Abergavenny, Westmorland (in part) and Despenser, Earl of Gloucester. He was as rich as any of his forbears but whether he was as powerful or rich as those five men combined is a moot point. I am pretty well certain he wasn’t as rich as they, together, had been.
What else could a lord do apart from marry well? War profits were certainly one possibility. The French wars may have been (nay, were) a disaster for the English national exchequer and taxpayer, but they were a source of potential enrichment for private individuals. I once lightly compared Richard II’s peace policy to cancelling the national lottery. That is the easiest way to understand its unpopularity. Imagine you were a penniless soldier. As long as the wars went on, you could dream of capturing a French knight, or, better still, a French lord. Though your own lord and the King would take a big slice of the action, and might even make you settle for a fixed sum, that reward would still be more than you could ever hope to earn in a lifetime. Of course, your chance of actually making such a capture was vanishingly small and you were far more likely to die in a ditch of dysentery. But people like to dream.
These calculations worked higher up the income scale. McFarlane cites the case of Sir John Fastolf, who went from the status of esquire with £46 a year to a knight-banneret with a clear income of £1,450 per annum.[19] This was mainly, if not wholly, due to his participation in the war. For a brief period during the reigns of Henry V and Henry VI, Englishmen were able to receive and hold lands in France. This was a great incentive to men like the Duke of York, who had younger sons to provide for. Is it too outrageous to suggest that a compelling motive for the war-party was French land rather than English patriotism? Of course, the really wise ones (like Fastolf) sold their French property while the going was good and invested the profit in English land.
Another way to boost income was to chase up feudal incidents. These applied at all levels of society, and were frequently avoided, indeed had often fallen into practical disuse. A lord could chase these up to some effect. For example, where land was held by feudal tenure, the lord had the right of wardship during the heir’s minority. Some feudal tenants sought to avoid this by enfeoffment (putting the land into trust by nominally granting it to a panel of others while retaining the tenant’s own use of it). By this method the ‘tenant’ never died, so there was never any wardship. Naturally lords objected to this practice and tried to poke legal holes in such enfeoffments. The fact that they themselves were almost invariably enfeoffing land to keep it out of the sovereign’s hands was neither here nor there. A particularly nasty trick used by lords was to claim that prosperous townsmen were their serfs as a way of extracting blackmail. McFarlane quotes the case of a citizen of Norwich who had to pay £20 for manumission.[20] One imagines that the lord, or his officials, used their local knowledge to construct pedigrees of merchant families, and if there was a remote case that Mr. X was a serf by ancestry they would swoop on their unfortunate victim. Many people did, of course, have serf ancestors at near remove. Even the Pastons were descended from bond tenants, and much was made of it by their enemies before Edward IV declared them official gentlefolk.
Another route to increased income was to become one of the sovereign’s chosen men. Politics was (and largely still is) about control of patronage, given that in any economy there are never enough resources for everyone to be satisfied. The pool of patronage in medieval England was quite shallow, but there were still a number of lucrative offices in the King’s gift ranging from Lord Chancellor to gentleman porter of some obscure and half-demolished castle. Relatively few of these offices required the holder to do anything much – for example the Lord Admiral had a court, but it was normally staffed for him by professional lawyers. The office of Lord Great Chamberlain was the next thing to a sinecure. Joining the King’s Council was also worthwhile – you might actually have to turn up once in a while, but a useful salary was paid. In addition, if you were in good odour at court you might pick up the occasional wardship and marriage and if you were very lucky, a promotion in the peerage or even a grant of land or an annual payment from the exchequer. If there was an Act of Resumption on the stocks (every so often Parliament passed a law clawing back all land given away by the Crown since such-and-such a date) you would be well placed to get yourself exempted from it. There was also the possibility of picking up local offices for your clients – it was often useful to have one of your hangers-on picked as a sheriff, for example. The client would be grateful and it helped increase the patron’s influence.
Some offices were particularly valuable. Consider William, Lord Hastings in his role of Lord Chamberlain.[21] This gave him control over access to the King, certainly for anyone below the rank of a prince of the blood. Due to the highly personal nature of medieval government, access to the King was indispensible for anyone who wanted any kind of political or legal favour, and people were more than willing to court Hastings’ favour in order to receive this facility. This was not always a matter of a straightforward bribe. For example, Hastings was appointed as steward by about a dozen lords, ladies and religious houses.[22] He certainly did not go around collecting their rents; the appointments were profitable sinecures. It’s highly unlikely they’d have waged him had he remained plain William Hastings, a country esquire. His role at court was the deciding factor.
Ah, you may say, but what about the fact that in straightened times the exchequer was empty? Would these salaries and fees still be paid? Well, that was the whole point of being a big noise at court. If you were a member of the King’s clique you were far more likely to find that the exchequer was able to pay you in cash rather than tally sticks. Or you might be able to get your income assigned directly to one of the customs ports, which gave you the first chance of getting your hands on the cash, cutting out the hungry exchequer altogether. When the ruling clique was deemed too narrowly based by a significant portion of the nobility, trouble always followed, as in the reigns of Edward II, Richard II, Henry VI and Edward IV. While political issues (such as the war in France) were often waved about as a pretext, the bottom line was that the opposition felt the ‘wrong people’ had their hands on the patronage. In other words, it all came down to money.

Endnotes:
[1]       Google is your friend for these estimates. There is some variation, but little doubt that there was a serious hit to the level of population in the mid 14th Century that took a long time to recover.
[2]       For York’s problems see R.A. Griffiths, The Reign of King Henry VI (1981), p674. The debt owing to York for his French service alone was £38,667. In medieval terms an astronomical amount.
[3]       There are at least 3000 such sites in England, though not all as a direct result of the Black Death. See http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/T/timeteam/snapshot_villages.html
[4]       K.B. McFarlane, The Nobility of Later Medieval England (1973) pp.213-14.
[5]       R.R. Davies, The Revolt of Owain Glyn Dwr (1995) p.72.
[6]       Davies, ibid. p.73.
[7]       Davies, ibid. p.319.
[8]       Both Cecily, Duchess of York and Isabel, Lady Montagu, are known to have run up huge bills on clothes.
[9]       7000 marks was the reputed cost of building Hunsdon House, the home of Sir William Oldhall, one of York’s advisers.
[10]     P.W. Hammond, Food and Feast in Medieval England, 1993, p.121.
[11]     Francis Lovel’s father was a rare example of a peer who proposed to divide his lands almost equally between his four sons. As it turned out, only Francis survived to manhood so the decision was irrelevant.
[12]     McFarlane, op.cit. pp.144-145.
[13]     William Marshal for example. He didn’t have a bean. There is no way that in the 15th Century a man of his kind would have been given an heiress like Isabel de Clare.
[14]     See McFarlane, op.cit. p. 188 et seq.
[15]     These came to the Despensers via the marriage of Hugh the Younger to Edward II’s niece, Eleanor de Clare, the eldest of three sisters and co-heiresses of the last de Clare Earl of Gloucester, killed at Bannockburn.
[16]     Principally to Margaret, Countess of Shrewsbury, who spent years in a running battle with her cousins, the male Berkeleys, over the inheritance.
[17]     Not to be confused with her aunt, the Duchess of York.
[18]     For Lucia of Milan see Barron, C.M. and Sutton, A.F., Medieval London Widows 1300-1500 pp. 77-84.
[19]     McFarlane, op.cit., p.183.
[20]     McFarlane, op.cit., p.221. I am sorry to say that my own researches revealed that Constance of York attempted this trick on at least one citizen of Reading. The only defence I can offer for her is that the practice was widespread, even in the later part of the 15th Century when serfdom was practically a dead duck.
[21]     This office, known as Lord Chamberlain or King’s Chamberlain was a working one and should not be confused with the largely honorific office of Lord Great Chamberlain. The Lord Chamberlain was usually a close friend of the sovereign.
[22]  McFarlane, op.cit., p.216, note 2. His patrons included Warwick, Clarence, Norfolk and the Duchess of Buckingham.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Margaret Pole

This article first appeared in the March 2012 Ricardian Register Vol. 43 No. 1

Margaret Pole: Countess of Salisbury, Edward IV and Richard III’s Niece
by Elizabeth Dorsey Hatle

Lady Margaret Plantagenet was born into a turbulent century on August 14, 1473 at Farleigh Castle in Somerset. Margaret was only a few months younger than her first cousin, Richard III and Anne Neville’s only child, Edward of Middleham. Margaret’s mother, Isabella Neville, died when she was three, and her father, George, 1st Duke of Clarence, was executed when she was four. Margaret’s father was put to death on the orders of her uncle, King Edward IV, in 1478. “He was arrested in June 1477 and privately executed at the Tower of London on 18 February 1478. In just over a year Margaret’s parents had both died, and from the security and honour of being the daughter of the ‘right noble Prince my Lord of Clarence,’ she was now the daughter of an executed traitor.”[1] After Clarence’s death, Edward IV made his orphaned niece and nephew his wards. He created Clarence’s son Edward the Earl of Warwick and Margaret’s name is seen in Edward IV’s household accounts as our “dear and well-beloved niece, Margaret, daughter unto our late brother, the late Duke of Clarence.”,

Even at a young age, Margaret was able to survive politically in what must have been trying circumstances. “In September 1486 ‘my lady Margaret of Clarence’ headed the list of ladies attending the christening of the Henry’s first-born son, Prince Arthur, and in November 1487 she viewed the coronation of Elizabeth of York on a specially erected stage between the pulpit and the high altar of Westminster Abby in the company of Henry VII and his mother.”[2] Margaret is referred to as ‘my Lady Margaret Pole’ at the christening, indicating that her marriage to Sir Richard Pole had already taken place. King Henry had given Margaret in marriage to Sir Richard Pole, whose mother was the half-sister of the King’s mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort. Margaret Pole earned some criticism for marrying a man considered beneath her station, but she was most likely relieved to be out from under Henry VII and his mother’s direct control. “At the time of her marriage Margaret was only fourteen, but Richard was twenty-eight or twenty-nine years old. Intelligent, prudent and reliable, he provided his wife with the safe haven not only which Henry VII required, but which she herself must have desired after a somewhat tumultuous childhood. After 1488 when Richard’s royal duties in Wales increased, Margaret eschewed her place at court in order to remain close to him, and Henry VII granted them the use of Stourton Castle in Staffordshire.”[3]

Margaret’s was ten years old when her uncle Richard succeeded to the throne. Richard III kept his brother Clarence’s children protected and safe during his reign. Upon Henry VII’s accession to the throne in 1485, Margaret was brought to court where her first cousin Elizabeth reigned as Henry’s wife and queen. “With this in mind, Henry ordered Warwick and his sister should be conducted to the household of his mother, Margaret Beaufort. Fellow ‘guests’ of the king’s mother included Elizabeth of York and her sisters.”[4] Henry VII put her brother into the Tower. Her brother Edward had been allowed by his uncle Edward IV to succeed as 17th Earl of Warwick and 7th Earl of Salisbury, but as the last male representative of the Yorkist line, was seen as a danger to the new Tudor dynasty. Her brother Warwick’s execution for treason shattered Margaret’s new found stability. In September 1497, a man named Perkin Warbeck, who claimed to be Margaret’s missing first cousin, Richard, Duke of York, son of Edward IV, rebelled against Henry VII. The uprising was quelled but it allowed Henry VII an excuse to eliminate Margaret’s brother.

Within days of the Perkin Warbeck rebellion, “the court of the lord high steward (John de Vere, earl of Oxford, for the occasion) in Westminster Hall considered the findings of a grand jury returned against Edward, Earl of Warwick, found him guilty of treason, which he admitted. A week later he was beheaded on Tower Hill. The most innocent sprig of the white rose was thus lopped off. Tudor reason of State had claimed the first of its many victims.”[5] On the coming of his age in 1496, Edward was legally entitled to inherit a rich manor called Ware through his mother Isabella Neville’s estate. The king’s mother, Margaret Beaufort, “had shown an immediate interest in Ware, on 22 September 1485 securing the right to appoint a steward there.”[6] With his execution, Warwick succeeding to his property or to the throne were no longer possibilities. At the time of her brother’s execution Margaret was three months pregnant with Reginald and “her feelings must have been a mixture of grief and fear. Grief for a brother who should have been one of the great magnates in England but also loss at his losing his liberty at the age of eleven and his life at the age of twenty-four simply because he was Clarence’s son, and fear for the fate of Clarence’s grandsons, her own children.”[7]

After her husband’s death in 1505, Margaret was left with five children, of whom the fourth, Reginald Pole, was to become a Cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury. Her chief residence was Warblington Castle in Hampshire. Her husband’s death was a huge loss to Margaret. “If Margaret was to ensure that her children received the best start in life through their connections at court, there was only one man to whom she could look,”[8] but he was Henry VIII, who still considered her and members of her family an inconvenient liability, as they had been to his father in 1485. Margaret managed again to survive in a new regime, and in 1513, four years into his reign, King Henry VIII reversed her brother’s attainder, allowing Margaret to succeed as 8th Countess of Salisbury. An Act of Restitution was also passed by which she came into possession of her ancestral domains. Margaret Pole and Catherine of Aragon were close and possibly at his wife’s request, Henry VIII granted Margaret her petition for the restoration of the earldom of Salisbury, becoming a countess in her own right. Her estates covered seventeen counties and it has been estimated that this placed her among the top five wealthiest nobles in early 16th century England. She had four main residences in the south of England, and her London home stood on the site of what is now Cannon Street station. As the disgraced Duke of Clarence’s daughter, Margaret had grown up in perilous times, seeing terrible things happen to her family. With her family background, and as Edward IV and Richard III’s niece, Margaret had made some ambitious moves to improve her family’s status. She was now one of the most important women in the country.

Margaret had given birth to five children who survived into adulthood: Henry Pole, 1st Baron Montagu, John Bourchier, Cardinal Reginald Pole, Sir Geoffrey Pole, Sir Arthur Pole and Ursula Pole who married the 1st Baron Stafford. Not unlike her grandmother, Cecily Neville, Margaret had as many of her children escape the typical dangers of childhood and survive into adulthood. At the age of forty-seven, her children grown and married, Margret became governess to Mary, Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon’s only child. When the countess of Salisbury entered into Mary’s life she was, “Tall, thin and elegant, she boasted the auburn hair of the Plantagenets, and the pale skin which accompanied such colouring. No stain attached to her person or behavior and she had the considerable advantage of knowing the court and its etiquette inside and out. A better choice for Mary’s welfare or role as a princess could not have been made.”[9] Considering that Margaret was the niece of kings, Mary Tudor’s grandmother’s first cousin and cousin of royal Plantagenet princesses and princes, Margaret's bloodline was impeccable, and it was a significant tribute to her to be Mary Tudor’s governess.

Margaret’s influence was strong upon Mary, and the princess quickly became attached to her. The Countess and Queen Catherine were confidantes. Margaret’s son Reginald, the future Cardinal Pole, had committed his life to the church. Katherine knew that her daughter’s spiritual health would be in good hands with the Countess of Salisbury. “The countess of Salisbury, a devout woman herself, did not need to be told her duty. The princess' spiritual development might be guided by her chaplains but behind them was Margaret Pole, the epitome of a Christian woman.”[10] Margaret requested a translation of Erasmus’ De Immensa Misericordia Dei from Gentian Hervet for Mary. When Henry and Catherine were in France to attend what is now known as the Field of Cloth of Gold between Henry and France’s king Francis I, Henry’s counselors wrote to him that Mary was “daily exercising herself in virtuous pastimes and occupation.”[11] But life at court was changing, and Margaret, who must have felt for the first time in her life that she had some security for her family, was about to lose everything once again.

When Anne Boleyn came between Henry and Catherine, the Boleyn family most likely felt that Mary should be separated from the Countess of Salisbury, as she was a close friend of Catherine’s. Margaret was temporarily removed from Mary’s presence, but for other reason. First, as lady governess because Margaret’s daughter’s father-in-law, the Duke of Buckingham, had crossed Wolsey, who had been accused of conspiring against Henry and had been executed. Margaret had “found herself, not for the first time, mistrusted,”[12] by association. In 1525 she was once again Mary’s governess. With no more children from Henry and Catherine’s union, King Henry decided it was time for Mary to do what generations of princes of Wales had done before, gain some practical experience of government. Margaret could be counted upon with Mary Tudor to “keep quiet about the real reasons for her absence. Failure to do otherwise would have put her in great peril.”[13] Margaret knew from first hand experience how to keep quiet, having survived her Uncle King Richard III’s overthrow by Henry VII and survivied in a Tudor court afterwards. Living under suspicious kings was a way of life for Margaret. Keeping Mary Tudor away from court was necessary, as the conflict between Henry VIII and Catherine over Anne Boleyn heated up.

Margaret knew which way the wind was blowing at court and kept Mary’s life as stable as she could in Wales when Mary’s parents separated. Mary at that time was still allowed to correspond with her mother, which most likely meant Catherine was still in communication with Margaret as well. When Mary turned seventeen, her household was dismantled and the countess of Salisbury was dismissed. “Her offers to continue with Mary at her own expense were rebuffed. The king believed that the countess and others of those around Mary were responsible for encouraging her stance and he wanted her separated from them.”[14] Margaret’s fall from grace over being Queen Catherine’s friend affected her financial circumstances. Her oldest son was not welcomed at court. “The precariousness of the succession, compounded by Henry VIII’s unpopularity, meant that he did not wish to make too much of Henry Pole; he did not want him to come to court, where he might make strategic alliances and possibly offer an alternative to those disenchanted with the Tudor regime.”[15] Margaret was a substantial landowner, with a respectable claim to the throne and four politically active adult sons. It was inevitable that Margaret’s family would be drawn into Henry VIII’s divorce from Catherine.

Reginald Pole had once been Henry VIII’s favored choice for the archbishopric of York. Reginald, now living in exile, had betrayed Henry, happy to encourage a foreign-led invasion to restore traditional Catholicism to England. Reginald’s family paid the price for being within Henry VIII’s easy reach. The Cardinal’s brothers were arrested, brought to the Tower, and stood trial for treason. Margaret returned to Court after the fall of Anne, but in 1530 Reginald Pole sent King Henry a copy of his published treatise Pro ecclesiasticae unitatis defensione, in answer to questions put to him on the King’s behalf by Thomas Cromwell, Cuthbert Tunstall, Thomas Starkey and others. Besides being a theological reply to the questions, the book was a denunciation of the King’s policies. King Henry was enraged, and though lady Salisbury and her eldest son had written to Reginald in reproof of his attitude and action, Reginald Pole did not retract what he had said about Henry publicly. That left his family in England to pay for the insult done to the king.

In November, 1538, Margaret’s eldest son, the 1st Baron Montagu, another son, and other relatives were arrested on a charge of treason, though Thomas Cromwell had previously written that they had ‘little offended save that he (the Cardinal) is of their kin,’ they were committed to the Tower, and in January, with the exception of her son Geoffrey Pole, they were executed. Ten days after the arrest of her sons, lady Salisbury, despite her age, was arrested and examined by the Earl of Southampton and Thomas Goodrick, the Bishop of Ely. They reported to Cromwell that although they had interrogated her for many hours she would utter nothing, and they were forced to conclude that her sons had not made her a sharer in their treason. The brutal coming end of Margaret’s life brought with it the execution of one of her sons, the attempted suicide and nervous breakdown of another son and permanent exile of a third son.

The following May, Cromwell introduced a Bill of Attainder against her, which was hurriedly read. At the third reading Cromwell produced a white silk tunic found in one of her coffers, embroidered on the back with the Five Wounds. This connected her with the Northern Uprising. She was ‘attainted to die by Act of Parliament’ and also lost her titles. The other charges against her, to which she was never permitted to reply, had to do with the escape from England of her chaplain and the conveying of messages abroad. Margaret’s only chance of survival was utter submission to Henry’s will. “In addition, her dogged determination in the face of Henry’s growing disapproval might have been a manifestation of the resentment she felt, but never openly expressed,over the fate of her brother and her own impecunious circumstances following the death of her husband. Naturally, when she found herself in a position to regain her family’s lands, she felt justified, even duty-bound, to try and retain everything to which she believed was entitled.”[16] As she had done all her life before, putting common sense before emotional reasoning, this time she didn’t. Margaret had also underestimated the king. A bond of kinship meant nothing to a Tudor. After the passage of the Act of Attainder, the elderly Margaret was removed to the Tower, and for nearly two years was tormented by the severity of the weather and insufficient clothing. She remained stanch in the defense of herself and her sons, declaring, “that if ever it be found and proved, that she is culpable in any of those things, that she hath denied, that she is content to be blasmed in the rest of all the articles laid against her.”[17] Margaret’s long battle, was now lost and the earldom of Salisbury, was forfeited to the crown. Everything she had worked so hard to achieve was destroyed. In April, 1541, there was another insurrection in Yorkshire, and it was then determined to enforce without any further procedure the Act of Attainder passed in1539. In some sense her 1541 execution was the continuation by King Henry of his father’s program of eliminating possible contenders to the throne. Her son, Reginald Cardinal Pole, said that he would “…never fear to call himself the son of a martyr”. Margaret was the last victim of the Wars of the Roses to be executed at the command of a Tudor, by King Henry VIII, her first cousin’s son.

Endnotes:
[1] Piece, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 6
[2] Piece, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 13
[3] Piece, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 17
[4] Piece, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 12
[5] Chrimes, S. B., Henry VII, University of California Press, Berkeley and Lost Angeles, 1972, pg. 92
[6] Jones, Michael K. and Underwood, Malcolm G. The King’s Mother-Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond and Derby, Cambridge University Press, New York, New York, 1992, Pg. 102-103
[7] Pierce, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 25
[8] Pierce, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 27
[9] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 17
[10] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 41
[11] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 18
[12] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 25
[13] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 26
[14] Porter, Linda, The First Queen of England, St. Martin’s Press, New York, New York, 2007, pg. 92
[15] Pierce, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, Pg. 31
[16] Pierce, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 97
[17] Pierce, Hazel, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership, University of Wales Press, Cardiff, Great Britain, 2003, pg. 137-138

Thursday, February 16, 2012

THE QUESTIONABLE LEGEND OF HENRY WYATT

© Annette Carson 2011

From time to time the exploits of Sir Henry Wyatt (c.1460–1537) crop up in books, both fiction and non-fiction, for he was a fascinating character whose career encompassed espionage as well as military action and high office under the Tudors. Most writers, however, concern themselves mainly with grisly tales of imprisonment and torture in the cause of Henry VII, which grew to become Wyatt family legend. In recent years a flurry of interest was created by Hilary Mantel’s characterization of Wyatt in her novel Wolf Hall, and a biography by Nicola Schulman of his son, the poet Sir Thomas Wyatt, has again rehearsed the same old legends. The true facts of Henry Wyatt’s capture and incarceration may never be known, having been buried under an accretion of myths over the years, but this article addresses some versions of the story that we can certainly clarify, and some we can probably debunk.* Valuable background for all this can be found in Agnes Conway’s Henry VII’s Relations with Scotland and Ireland, 1485–1498.[1]

The different versions of Henry’s story are too numerous to catalogue in all their glorious variety, but the most popular tales may be summarized thus:
1. He was imprisoned and tortured in the Tower of London for two years during the reign of Richard III, on account of his support for Henry Tudor. A particularly good story claims the two Henrys attended Eton College together! Languishing in his cell, he was saved from starvation by the generosity of a cat who brought him pigeons to eat.
2. His torture is usually described as one or more of the following: being racked; having horse-barnacles applied to his mouth; and being force-fed mustard and vinegar. Sometimes heated knives are mentioned. The barnacles were a hinged and toothed metal pinching instrument which seem to have been the equivalent of the modern twitch, a device used by farriers to curb a restive horse by gripping and squeezing its sensitive upper lip area.
3. He was supposedly interrogated by none other than Richard III, who personally oversaw his torture – a point which is of particular interest to this writer.

Some of these gaudy tales can actually be found in respectable books, even in a recent publication from The Royal Armouries.[2] There is no surviving account by Henry Wyatt himself, and – perhaps I should emphasize this – there are only two versions that are authentically derived from the Wyatt family’s own traditions, and they occur in the family’s letters and papers. This has been verified by reference to their descendants, the Earl and Countess of Romney, who confirmed that the entire collection of Wyatt family manuscripts known to them is held in the British Library. The MSS in which Henry’s story occurs comprise a substantial assembly of miscellaneous documents and although several extracts have been separately published, there exists no complete transcription or publication of the collection as a whole.[3] Therefore, in relation to the Henry Wyatt legend, this article now publishes the most extensive transcription of the relevant sections that can be found anywhere today.

The most useful document, thanks to its impeccable provenance, is actually not found in the Wyatt family papers. This is a letter written in April 1538 [4] by Henry Wyatt’s son, Thomas the Elder, addressed to his own son Thomas the Younger who had recently married. It contains advice to the young bridegroom, in support of which the laudable example of the boy’s grandfather, Henry, is extolled as a God-fearing man who earned the grace of God which ‘preseruid him in prison from the handes of the tirant that could find in his hart to see him rakkid, from two yeres and more prisonment in Scotland in Irons and Stoks, from the danger of sodeyn changes and commotions diuers, till that ... he went to him that louid him …’ etc.

The words here are ambiguous, and having been unable to inspect the letter itself, I cannot be certain whether this is the punctuation that appears in the original. That given here is taken from the two copies in later hands which are lodged in the British Library’s collections,[5] although some published versions add an extra comma.[6] What the letter makes perfectly clear, as supported by other evidence, is that Henry’s lengthy incarceration was not in the Tower of London but in Scotland. No suggestion of the Tower of London occurs in any Wyatt tradition until as late as 1702, and enquiries of the present Tower authorities have revealed no documentary record that he was ever there.[7] One would have expected to find some mention of a man who became such a celebrated Tudor figure, a leading courtier of Henry VII and Henry VIII, and one who was immortalized in old age by Hans Holbein the younger.

Less clear is the letter’s opening phrase about preservation ‘from the hands of the tyrant that could find in his heart to see him racked’, which can be read in more than one way. Was he saved by God from being subjected to the rack at the hands of this unnamed tyrant, whose heart was sufficiently hard to have contemplated applying such extreme measures? Or was he racked and God permitted him to survive the ordeal? If the latter – which is what seems generally assumed – several questions must be answered. Most importantly, why is it that, among all the family records of torture by barnacles, vinegar, mustard, etc., no document but this letter ever mentions the rack, that most feared and potentially lethal instrument?

Additionally, how many 15th-century places of incarceration were actually equipped with a rack? The device was unknown in these islands until the 1440s when it was introduced to the Tower of London, and indeed torture was illegal under common law in England unless performed by royal prerogative. We know of several persons who were imprisoned under Richard III, in the Tower and elsewhere, but I have yet to find any confirmed record of torture sanctioned by him.

While making no particular claims of expertise in Tudor English, I have always found the OED on Historical Principles enlightening on archaic usage. Looking under the verb ‘rack’, one can find instances in the 1570s–80s where it referred not only to literal racking (a practice freely used under the Tudors), but had also passed into general use as a term for being otherwise afflicted by physical pain or even mental stress. We still speak of being ‘racked’ in this way. Might Thomas have been using the word in its metaphorical sense?

With reference to the ‘tyrant’ – and the assumption that it refers to Richard III – even more questions are raised by the fact that this king never set foot in Scotland during his reign. We know Wyatt was ransomed and released from his Scottish prison only upon Henry VII’s accession in the autumn of 1485 (his earliest recorded grant of office was on 11 October);[8] so if he had been held there ‘two years and more’, when and where could he have fallen into the hands of Richard III? Can it have happened prior to his capture in Scotland in 1483?

Let us imagine that Wyatt was apprehended by the crown on a secret mission before that which took him to Scotland. Richard III assumed the throne on 26 June 1483, at which time Henry Tudor was in self-imposed exile in the custody of Duke Francis II of Brittany. Nothing is known of Wyatt’s early career – he was at this time in his early twenties, and came from an undistinguished Yorkshire background – but something must have drawn him into Tudor’s service. Perhaps he fell in with the faction that supported Edward V, the boy-king who was adjudged to be illegitimate and deposed, in place of whom Richard, as Protector, was petitioned to take the throne.

In the month of July, soon after his coronation, Richard began moving around the country on progress. Meanwhile Edward’s family were doing their best to whip up support for his restoration. A letter has survived from Richard III to his chancellor, written from Oxfordshire on 29 July, ordering a case to be tried in London which seems likely to have been an attempt to abduct Edward V and his brother from their royal lodgings in the Tower of London.[9] The perpetrators, who were executed, were said to have corresponded with the Tudor camp in Brittany – the first whiff of Henry Tudor’s opposition to Richard III. It is possible, therefore, that Wyatt might have been involved in this or something similar, perhaps bearing messages, but was he important enough to be racked? And if so, why did they set him free to carry out more intrigues? At any rate it is on record that Richard III was nowhere near at the time.

Henry Wyatt was fond of a good story, and his dashing exploits must have provided plenty of them. If he did have a brush with the authorities in the summer of 1483, my guess is he was apprehended on suspicion and warned by Richard III’s men, to frighten him off, that they would not hesitate to rack him if they thought he was fomenting rebellion. A lucky escape from the hands of the tyrant – and one that perhaps grew in the retelling – was a better tale than years spent rotting in a Scottish dungeon.

There seems no reason not to believe, however, that Henry was tortured with the barnacles, and the Wyatts made much of it in their family records and iconography. Possibly the instrument was employed to immobilize the poor man’s mouth while noxious substances were forced down his throat.

Moving on to the Wyatt papers, of which the relevant parts were compiled in 1727-31, we already find overlays of assumption and embellishment acquired through years of retelling. Our main source for Henry’s adventures lies in an individual document: ‘Passages taken out of a Manuscript wrote by Thomas Scott of Egreston in Godmersham Esquire concerning the family of Wyatt of Alington’. These ‘Passages’ were copied by Richard Wyatt in 1731, as he notes in his own hand.[10]

Richard Wyatt was a great-great-great-great-grandson of the famous Henry, so he was in no position to judge whether the tales he was copying were true. The document’s author, Thomas Scott, was Henry’s great-great-grandson, and although nothing is known of its provenance, we may guess at its date of writing from an anecdote it contains which derives from a publication of 1655.[11] It therefore appears that a gap of some 170 years has elapsed by the time it is committed to paper. Within the story of the cat and pigeons is interjected the comment ‘it was his own relation unto them from whom I had it’, and it has been surmised, probably from this and from two later references to ‘my grandfather’ within the narration (see below), that the stories were recounted to Thomas Scott by his grandmother, Mrs George Wyatt. But even this is open to question: Thomas’s grandmother should have referred to Henry as her (or her husband’s) great-grandfather, not grandfather. It may seem a small point, but if people of that time were not in the habit of stipulating the requisite number of ‘greats’, it would be rash to assign any particular identity to the narrator. Certainly Henry was dead by the time George, and probably his wife, were born.

In the intervening 170 years the Wyatts had experienced the best and worst of fortunes. Henry himself, from what appears to have been a modest family in a Yorkshire village, had risen high and grown rich in the service of Henry VII, being a councillor and entrusted with many commissions including military work, diplomacy, and acting as the king’s agent/spy throughout his reign, mainly in Scotland (he was also active in Ireland). Moving his home from Yorkshire to Kent, Wyatt purchased Allington Castle in 1492, where among his later visitors were Henry VII, Cardinal Wolsey and Henry VIII.

Under Henry VIII he enjoyed even higher office, was created Knight of the Bath at the coronation and knight-banneret at the Battle of the Spurs. In 1503 his son Thomas was born, and it was this Thomas, the poet, usually identified as Thomas the Elder, who first brought the king’s displeasure upon the family. Allington was a mere twenty miles from the home of the Boleyn family, and in 1536, at the time of Anne Boleyn’s downfall, Thomas was thrown into the Tower of London prior to being called as a witness in the case against her. This (presumed) association with the luckless Anne continues to fire the pens of writers, among them Hilary Mantel.

Not only did Thomas endure another brief sojourn in the Tower in 1561, but his son, Thomas the Younger, in his turn landed there with more serious consequences, having rashly followed in his grandfather’s footsteps by rebelling against his sovereign.[12] He was executed in 1554, and his attainder plunged the family into disgrace and poverty. This lasted until 1570 when they were restored in blood by Act of Parliament. His son George, obsessed with rebuilding the family’s status, wrote copiously and was almost certainly responsible for commissioning several famous portraits of the Wyatts.

By now it will be clear that by the mid 17th century, when Thomas Scott set down the tales of his forebears, a tone of vindication and rehabilitation prevailed. Here are the relevant extracts (with occasional slight modernization of punctuation and spelling).

The account starts by relating Henry’s virtues and Yorkshire ancestors, then continues: ‘Of this Yorkshire house Sir Henry Wyatt was a younger brother, and in his young years did put himself into the service of Henry the Earl of Richmond, afterwards King Henry the 7th. Never any servant in this world was more faithful and constant to his master, or did or suffered more for him. The wit of Morton the Archbishop and others did that King, and the whole Kingdom, and the whole Island, and the whole Christian and Western World, it now appears, and it will appear, I doubt not, the whole World of Man inestimable service. But neither was Sir Henry Wyatt’s council, nor his pains, adventures, courage and sufferance equalled by any.

‘He was imprisoned often, once in a cold and narrow Tower, where he had neither bed to lye on, nor cloathes sufficient to warm him, nor meat for his mouth. He had starved there, had not God, who sent a crow to feed his prophet, sent this and his Country’s martyr a cat both to feed and warm him. It was his own relation unto them from whom I had it. A cat came one day down into the dungeon unto him, and as it were offered herself unto him. He was glad of her, laid her in his bosom to warm him, and by making much of her won her love. After this she would come every day unto him divers times and, when she could get one, bring him a pigeon. He complained to his keeper of his cold and short fare. The answer was he durst not better it. But, said Sir Henry, if I can provide any, will you promise to dress it for me? I may well enough said he, you are safe for that matter; and being urged again, promised him and kept his promise, dressed for him from time to time such pigeons as his accator the cat provided for him. Sir Henry Wyatt in his prosperity for this would ever make much of cats, as other men will of their spaniels or hounds; and perhaps you shall not find his picture any where but, like Sir Christopher Hatton with his dog, with a cat beside him.’

There ensues a digression into the fidelity and service we receive from our animal friends, followed by examples of Henry’s prowess as a raconteur with more family anecdotes, one of which concerns a heart-stopping encounter with a lion which is said to have delighted Henry VIII. Further interpolated matter refers to the family’s heraldry, in which barnacles were introduced to replace the previous three boars’ heads, then the manuscript continues with Henry’s experiences as a prisoner. ‘Besides his imprisonments he was divers times put into divers kinds of tortures, among others with an instrument made like the smith’s barnacles. I know not what wrong they did unto him, that they might powre vinegar and mustard into his nostrils and head. In witness of this torment of Sir Henry Wyat in certain carpets of his which I have seen caused his arms there the image of the barnacles to be wrought, and ever afterwards … the true arms of the Wyats was laid aside and the three barnacles chosen.

‘One time after his torment, the Tyrant himself examined him, and joining flattery to furie, told him, saying Wyat why are thou such a foole? Thou servest for moonshine in the water. Thy master is a beggarly fugitive. Forsake him and become mine who can reward thee and, I swear unto thee, will. My grandfather’s [sic] answer was, Sir, if I had first chosen you for my master, thus faithful would I have been to you if you should have needed it; but the earl, poor and unhappy though he be, is my master, and no discouragement or allurement shall ever drive or draw me from him, by God’s grace. At this the Tyrant stood amazed, and turning to the Lords that stood about him, brake out into these words. Oh, how much more happy is that runaway Rogue in his extreme calamity than I in my greatest seeming prosperity. He hath a friend whom he may trust in his misery. I in this appearing happiness am unhappy only through the want of this happiness. Is there any one of you all, who will thus stick unto me, that is not already ready to leave me?

‘The Earl of Richmond anon after he was crowned king entertained my grandfather [sic] then coming out of imprisonment and affliction in Scotland, first with most gracious words unto himself, and then with this speech unto the Lords. Both I and you must bid this gentleman heartily welcome, had not he above human strength or example also shewed himself our constant friend, neither had I enjoyed now the crown nor you that peace and prosperity and honour which you now possess.’

A list of Wyatt’s outstanding qualities follows, and more anecdotes, all redounding to the credit of Henry and his family. Mistakenly, the writer assumes that Henry VII made him a knight-banneret (recte Henry VIII), ‘which is a higher title honour,’ he sniffs, ‘than that of our new baronets’.[13]

A further interesting reference to Sir Henry occurs later in the papers. ‘The most I can find relating to him,’ writes Richard Wyatt, ‘is on the monument in Boxley Church set up by my father.’ So we now know who was responsible for that misleading stone tablet, dated 1702, which contains the earliest known statement to the effect that Henry Wyatt was imprisoned in the Tower of London, something never suggested in the Wyatt papers.[14] Evidently Richard’s father, Edwin Wyatt, was less punctilious than his son in accurately preserving the family’s early history. Of the story of the cat, Richard Wyatt says he can find ‘no remains but his [Henry’s] picture and another of a cat, seemingly in the same hand-painting, with a pigeon in her claws delivering it at the grates of the dungeon with certain words relating the story. The painting seems old, though we have no account by whose hand done’.

The pictures to which Richard Wyatt refers are probably those which eventually came into the possession of the Earls of Romney, Wyatt’s descendants.[15] The picture of Henry (which is a copy of the Holbein portrait presently in the Louvre) was probably one of those family portraits estimated to have been commissioned by George Wyatt around 1600-1603.[16] The picture of the cat and pigeon was very likely painted about the same time. There is in existence, however, a third painting which Richard Wyatt does not mention and almost certainly never saw, although it has become rather well known. A combination of the two earlier pictures, it shows Henry in affluent old age, his elder-statesman figure as depicted by Holbein sitting incongruously against a background of dungeon and barred window while the caterer cat delivers his next meal. Underneath are the words relating the story, also reproduced in this third picture, which consist of two couplets, one in Latin and one in English.[17] The reason Richard Wyatt would not have seen this picture is because in the opinion of Sir Roy Strong it was not executed until the eighteenth century – and probably late in that century.[18]

The role of the cat need not long detain us: it would be nice to think it was true. A curious parallel exists with another cat bringing comfort to another prisoner, Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton. In a portrait commissioned on his release in 1603 she is depicted with him in the Tower of London. It is tempting to think the George Wyatt painting may have been influenced by this, as they are roughly contemporaneous – but on the other hand, how safe was it to emulate Wriothesley, only recently emerging from prison at the start of a new and unpredictable reign?

Coincidence or not, it was then only a short step to assume that Henry Wyatt’s ‘cold and narrow tower’ was actually the Tower of London. Add the fact that Wyatt’s son and grandson were imprisoned there – and that Wyatt himself committed treason by supporting a rebel against his king – then the association with England’s most dread place of incarceration for traitors is complete. It had by now, of course, acquired its thoroughly horrid reputation under the Tudors.

The internet, as usual these days, has played a major part in disseminating the full gamut of Wyatt myths, in which connection it is disappointing to have to blame the Dictionary of National Biography whose 19th-century edition, currently available online, has him imprisoned in the Tower of London for two years by Richard III and ‘racked in Richard’s presence’.[19]

This much-quoted entry has been modified in the Oxford DNB of 2004, although too late to redress its widespread repetition which has reached, for example, the Wikipedia page for Henry Wyatt. This 2004 edition now interpolates a new element, stating that in 1483 ‘he probably participated in Buckingham’s unsuccessful revolt against Richard III’. There is no corroboration for this. One can only regret that the writer failed to consult Agnes Conway, who has shed considerable light on Wyatt’s activities on behalf of Henry VII in Scotland, and reveals a fascinating tale of espionage and intrigue which is well worth reading. She cites plenty of evidence relating to Wyatt’s activities as Henry’s agent, both before and after Bosworth. ‘In later years,’ she adds, ‘Wyatt, as a trusted royal official, frequented the Border in times of danger and kept Henry VII informed of what was going on.’

As for his incarceration, ‘It is possible,’ she writes, ‘that Wyatt, engaged on the Earl of Richmond’s business, had fallen into the hands of some Scottish baron with Yorkist sympathies, only to be released when Henry VII was securely on the throne, after a period of cruel imprisonment, and on the promise of a huge ransom.’ It is certainly true that a large ransom was paid: ‘Thirty years later Henry VIII renewed his father’s grant of £20 a year towards Wyatt’s ransom from the cruel hands of the Scots, because he was convinced that he had not yet been able to pay off the sum.’[20]

The above makes perfect sense. But the dramatic scene with Richard III must, I am sure, be apocryphal. Given Richard’s evil reputation, it is perhaps unsurprising that Henry Wyatt should have built a confrontation with ‘the tyrant’ into his exploits. Such a meeting was hardly likely in 1483, as we have seen, nor thereafter as Richard was never in Scotland. There is one last possibility – was Wyatt brought purposely from Scotland into his presence? The context, with Richard lamenting the infidelity of his supporters, belongs to the moralistic tradition, cultivated for dramatic effect by Shakespeare, that his dastardly deeds left him bereft, at the last, of friends and followers. But at the end of Richard’s reign, a derelict Wyatt after two years in a Scottish dungeon would scarcely have possessed intelligence meriting examination by a king, let alone torture on the rack.

Still, who can blame Henry Wyatt, after enduring all those travails, for adding embroidery to the tale – simultaneously boosting his own heroic role, and favourably contrasting the loyalty of Tudor’s followers with the perfidy of Richard’s?


FOOTNOTES
* Considerable appreciation must be expressed to Geoffrey Wheeler for supplying much of the material that made this article possible.
[1] Cambridge, 1932.
[2] B A Harrison, The Tower of London prisoner book: a complete chronology of the persons known to be detained at their majesties' pleasure, 1100-1941 (Leeds, 2004).
[3] The longest extracts previously published, although abridged and redacted, were printed by John Bruce in The Gentleman’s Magazine and Historical Review, June and September 1850.
[4] The year is given as 1537 in some sources, but this seems unlikely since Thomas’s letter contains two references to the death of his father, Henry, who died in November 1537.
[5] BL Add 32379 and BL Egerton 2711.
[6] Kenneth Muir, Life and Letters of Sir Thomas Wyatt, (Liverpool, 1963) pp. 38-41 – this publication adds a comma after the word ‘Scotland’ (acknowledgements to Dr Jason Powell, Saint Joseph’s University, Philadelphia, for locating this letter and other material).
[7] Ex informatio Dr S Dixon-Smith, Curator (Collections), Tower of London & Banqueting House, and B Clifford, Keeper of Collections (South) & Tower History.
[8] CPR HVII vol 1, 1485-94, p. 74 (thanks to Marie Barnfield for this reference).
[9] Annette Carson, Richard III: The Maligned King. (Stroud, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011), pp. 130-1.
[10] BL Add MSS 62135-62138. Relevant sections are in 62135 (2 vols), vol 2, ff. 359-369 and 456.
[11] David Loades, ed., The Papers of George Wyatt, Esquire (London, 1968), p. 4.
[12] Queen Mary Tudor and her Spanish marriage.
[13] A baronetcy (with origins dating back to the 14th century) is the only hereditary honour which is not a peerage. It ranks above all knighthoods except for the Garter and the Thistle. However, this comment undoubtedly refers to the revival of the Order of Baronets in 1611 which James I erected primarily as a money-raising exercise.
[14] The tablet, with the following inscription, appears on the north wall of the choir of Boxley church:
To the Memory of Sr HENRY WIAT of ALINGTON CASTLE
Knight Banneret descended of that Ancient family who was imprisoned and tortured in the TOWER in the reign of KING RICHARD the third kept in the Dungeon where fed and preserved by a Cat. He married ANN daughter of THOMAS SKINNER of SURREY Esqe was of the Privy Council to KING HENRY the Seventh and KING HENRY the Eighth and left one Son Sr THOMAS WIAT of ALINGTON CASTLE who was Esquire of the body to KING HENRY the Eighth and married ELIZABETH Daughter of THOMAS BROOKE Lord COBHAM and well known for Learning and Embasys in the reign of that KING Sr THOMAS WIAT of ALINGTON CASTLE his only Son married JANE younger Daughter of Sr WILLIAM HAWT of this COUNTY and was beheaded in the reign of QUEEN MARY Leaving GEORGE WIAT his only Son that Lived to Age who married JANE Daughter of Sr THOMAS FINCH of EASTWELL and KATHERINE his wife Restored in blood by act of Parliament of the 13th of QUEEN ELIZABETH
[15] Sir Sidney Lee, ed., Dictionary of National Biography (1885-1900), vol. 63, s.v. Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder (1973 reprint p. 1098).
[16] Sir Roy Strong, ‘In search of Holbein’s Thomas Wyatt the Younger’, Apollo (March, 2006), p. 54.
[17] Hunc macrum, rigidum, maestum, fame, frigore, cura / Pavi, fovi, acui, carne, calorie, ioco 'This knight with hunger, cold and care, neere starv’d, parchid, pytid / Jollie Beast did feede, heale, cheere, with dyett, warmth and playe’.
[18] Personal correspondence with Sir Roy Strong, 20 July 2011.
[19] DNB (1885-1900, see note 15) and ODNB (2004), s.v. Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder.
[20] Letters & Papers, Henry VIII, vol 2, 1515-18 (1864) pp. 227-388 (again thanks to Marie Barnfield).