Showing posts with label Anne and Henry's Wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anne and Henry's Wedding. Show all posts

January 25, 1533: Henry VIII Marries Anne Boleyn (For the Second Time)

In the pre-dawn darkness of January 25, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn slipped out of Whitehall Palace to the gatehouse, accompanied by a few selected friends. It was a new moon, and so their movements would have been covered by darkness - I've wondered if they chose the date for that reason.

Nicholas Harpsfield wrote a narrative description of the events later. The dialogue is probably imagined, but it's likely that some similar exchange did take place.

Dr. Rowland Lee, Henry's chaplain, was nervous. What the king was asking him to do could get him excommunicated, after all.

The king had asked Lee to come perform his wedding to Anne Boleyn - a wedding that was illegal in the eyes of the church because Henry was still married to Katharine of Aragon.

Lee said to the king, "Sir, I trust you have the Pope's license, both that you may marry and that I may join you together in marriage."

"What else?" Henry replied, lying through his teeth.

Lee wasn't mollified. And he was right to suspect the king was lying. After all, if the pope had actually agreed to give Henry his annulment, it would have sent shockwaves through all of Europe. The news would have set every tongue wagging and been known by everyone from king to stableboy. The king would have celebrated his triumph with feasts and jousts for weeks.

And yet, here he was, saying he had a license from the pope that no one knew had been issued.


You can almost hear his timorous tone as Lee asked to see the actual paperwork.

"This matter touches us all very near, and therefore it is expedient that the license be read before us all, or else we run all — and I more deep than any other — into excommunication in marrying your grace without any bans being asked, and in a place unhallowed, and no divorce as yet given of the first matrimony."

Harpsfield writes that the king seemed amiable in his response, but you can imagine a steely look in his eyes.

"Why, Master Rowland, think you me a man of so small faith and credit? You know my past life well and have heard my confession. Do you think me a man of so small and slender foresight and consideration of my affairs that unless all things were safe and sure I would enterprise this matter? I have truly a license, but it is stored in another safe place where no man goes but myself, which, if it were seen, should reveal us all. But if I should, now that it waxes towards day, fetch it, and be seen so early abroad, there would rise a rumor and talk. Go forth in God's name, and do that which appertains to you. I will take upon me all other danger."

Lee must have felt backed into a corner. He couldn't tell the king to his face that he thought he was lying, especially with the king saying he would take all of the repercussions on his own shoulders.

And so, Lee performed the ceremony.

Anne and Henry had already married in late November, and she had likely discovered by this point that she was pregnant. However, the ceremony at Dover had stayed too secret.

Henry and Anne may have also been giving a nod to traditional marriage customs, in which a foreign princess was married once by proxy, and then had a second ceremony once she reached her new husband's side.

In a few months, Henry would have his bride also doubly crowned: as consort, and as a monarch in her own right using the crown of St. Edward.

Three years later, Henry would also have his marriage to Anne doubly ended, first with an annulment and then with the stroke of a sword. StumbleUpon Share on Tumblr

When Did Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII Marry?

Their marriage literally changed the world, but no one is certain when it occurred. All of the records of the marriage of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn -assuming there were any - were destroyed, either intentionally after Anne's execution, or by Time's indifferent hand.

There are two dates proposed as the date of Henry and Anne's marriage: November 14, 1532 and January 25, 1533.

Two chroniclers of the day, Nicholas Sander and Edward Hall, claim that Henry and Anne were married on November 14, 1532, right after their return from Calais. During that trip, Francis, King of France, had tacitly recognized Anne as Henry's consort, a very significant win in the battle for their union's legitimacy.

Historian David Starkey agrees with this date. It seems to coincide with the beginning of the couple’s physical relationship. (Coincidentally, November 14 was also the day that Katharine of Aragon wed Arthur Tudor in 1501.) Traditionally, the Protestant faction favored this date because it would mean Henry and Anne's daughter, Elizabeth, was conceived in wedlock. Sander's agreement with the November date is interesting in this case, because he hated Elizabeth, and if he felt he could have tarnished her with the accusation of illegitimacy, it seems odd he wouldn't have taken the chance.

The second date is January 25th, 1533, a ceremony performed in the pre-dawn hours in the gatehouse at Whitehall Palace. According to NASA, January 25, 1533 was a new moon. I wonder if it that date was chosen because their movements to the gatehouse would be under the cover of darkness?

Nicholas Harpsfield writes a narrative of the marriage in which Henry basically bullies Dr. Rowland Lee into performing the service, lying about having a license from the pope. Cranmer wrote a letter citing this date:

But now, sir, you may not imagine that this coronation was before her marriage; for she was married much about St Paul’s Day last, as the condition thereof doth well appear, by reason she is now somewhat big with child.

He goes on to write it was done so privately that Cranmer himself didn't know it had happened until two weeks after the fact.

Why the discrepancy in the dates? How can two sets of chroniclers confidently assert two dates so many months apart? Were there really two ceremonies?

Some scholars assert that the first ceremony was merely some sort of betrothal/formal commitment ceremony, after which Anne Boleyn felt it was safe to "give in" and begin a physical relationship with the king.

But why would they have a ceremony that wasn't necessary? All of Europe already knew of their intention to marry, and that intention alone was binding. Henry had even gotten a dispensation from the pope (before he decided the pope had no such authority) to marry a woman whose sister he had slept with: Anne. Had Henry and Anne broken up, both would have needed a dispensation to marry others, simply based on the strength of what had already transpired.

I, personally, do not believe Anne Boleyn would have slept with the king without a marriage ceremony. Nor do I agree with the assessment that Anne was holding on to her virginity only as a way of propelling herself to the throne, and that she “gave in” to the king during this trip to France because she could trust that the crown was safely within her grasp. Whatever her flaws, Anne was a deeply religious woman and I don’t believe she would have slept with the king without being married to him, no matter what assurances she had. Henry, too, wouldn't have wanted to begin a physical relationship with Anne before they were safely married.

Once he had committed to marry her, Henry wanted his heirs to be born in lawful wedlock. He even staged a monarch's coronation for Anne, to ensure no one could challenge his heir, born to an anointed queen. Getting her "knocked up" before they were lawfully married would have been a disaster. He would not have wanted any hint of illegitimacy to hang over his child's head.

The second wedding was performed once it was discovered that Anne was pregnant. They decided to allay any doubts Anne was his wife by having another wedding on what was indisputably English soil in front of a handful of select witnesses, including Charles Brandon, Henry NorrisWilliam Brereton, and Anne Savage.

The secret wedding after the return from Calais had stayed too secret. The second wedding was also kept a secret until after it was done - they didn't want anyone trying to stop them before the deed was accomplished. And so, they slipped out of Whitehall before dawn, through the moonless dark to the gatehouse, and there they married again, this time, intending to let the "secret" slip when it was expedient to do so. By April, everyone knew Anne and Henry were wed.

Henry didn't do things by half measures. His wife was double-married and in a few months, she would be doubly-crowned, first as a consort and also as a monarch in her own right.


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