Henry VIII considered marrying Anne of Cleves to secure a political alliance with Cleves, a German state with an interest in religious reform, which could help protect England from potential threats from Catholic Spain and France.
Anne of Cleves' first meeting with Henry VIII was humiliating because Henry disguised himself and approached her, expecting her to recognize him and fall in love at first sight. However, Anne did not recognize him and largely ignored him, which did not go well with Henry.
Henry VIII went through with the marriage to Anne of Cleves because England needed the political alliance with Cleves, and breaking off the marriage at that point could have caused diplomatic issues and embarrassment.
The marriage between Henry VIII and Anne of Cleves failed to be consummated because Henry claimed he could not get an erection with Anne, and he also accused her of not being a virgin. Anne was naive about the expectations of a wedding night, which added to the misunderstanding.
Anne of Cleves agreed to the annulment of her marriage to Henry VIII because she knew the risks of defying the king, having seen what happened to his previous wives. She was promised a comfortable life with money, lands, and the title of the king's sister, which she accepted.
Anne of Cleves is often considered the smartest of Henry VIII's wives because she managed to survive her marriage to Henry without losing her head or status. She agreed to the annulment, received a comfortable settlement, and maintained good relations with Henry and his children.
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Hello, my lovely Bertwicksters. It's me, Kate Lister. You are you, I am me, and this is Bertwick's The Sheets. But before we can get going, I've got to tell you, I have to tell you, I am legally obligated to tell you, this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adult things in an adult way, covering a range of adult subjects, and you should be an adult too. And if you're not, stop holding things up and messing around. Pick your things up and be off with you. The rest of you, on with the show.
Being a Tudor queen was very difficult. I mean, you got jewels and nice things, but wow, it was strict. And if you were one of Henry VIII's wives, well, then the rules just meant doing exactly what he said, bending to every whim and desire, no matter how harebrained or deranged. But, as history tells us, that didn't always go to plan. MUSIC
The women in Henry VIII's life were smart. She was a woman who had her own voice and wasn't afraid to use it. Powerful. She wanted to send Henry the dead king's body as like a war trophy. And rebellious.
She was a definite seductress who knew exactly how to play Henry. But they could also be naive. She is well aware that there is someone trying to get to the bottom of her previous life and she slips up. And downright unlucky. I think that there was no way that her life was ever going to be saved. Who were these women that entered the volatile world of the Tudor court? They're known for their individual fates. Divorced, beheaded...
Died, divorced, beheaded, survived. But we're finding out who these six women really were and why there is so much more to them than just their husband, a fat ginger serial killer with an oversized codpiece and a penchant for jousting. Join me in this mini-series as we explore the secret lives of the six wives. ♪
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Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal in society with me, Kate Lister. The coming together of Henry VIII and Anne of Cleves is as close to the modern approach to dating as we are going to get in this miniseries. Tipped for queenhood by the master manipulator Thomas Cronwell, Anne had never met Henry in real life before their marriage. She was presented to Henry in the form of a
painting, upon which he gave the Tudor equivalent of a swipe right. It is only one step removed from being a 16th century married at first sight scenario. But what was Anne's life like in Germany before she was thrust into the spotlight of the Tudor court? Why was their first meeting so humiliating for, well, both of them actually? And why is it perhaps time that we do some revisionist history on Anne, who is all too often thought of as the ugly
So without further ado, let's crack on.
Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Nicola Tallis. How are you doing? I'm really good, Kate. So nice to be back with you. It's fabulous to have you back once again. You couldn't have left us hanging just a knot and not seen out the last three of the wives. That would have been a really rubbish series, wouldn't it?
Yeah, absolutely. No, it had to be done. So here we are back for number four. Number four, Anne of Cleves. What do I think about Anne of Cleves? She didn't get her head cut off. So well done, Anne of Cleves. She didn't die horribly in childbirth. So well done, Anne of Cleves. But she was the one that Henry just kind of went, bleh, I don't fancy that much. Yeah.
And then she sort of went, oh, all right then. Okay, I guess I'll be off. I'll show myself out. What a strange story. I know. Out of all of them, she probably lucky escape, right?
Yeah, definitely. She did do quite nicely out of it, really. So although, yeah, maybe slightly embarrassing for her that Henry didn't fancy her. But other than that, I think she really did quite well. It would be cripplingly embarrassing, wouldn't it, to have...
that like you were brought to marry the king and then you had to get it annulled because he, do you know what? I'm getting ahead of myself. We shouldn't even, right, okay. We'll take it back a little bit. Who was Anne of Cleves? Where is Cleves?
Yeah, great question. I mean, Cleves is now part of modern day Germany, but in the 16th century, it was still part of Germany, but it was also part of the far bigger Holy Roman Empire. And it was quite small and insignificant, I guess, in the whole scale of things. But yeah, here Anne was the daughter of the Duke of Cleves.
So, yeah, it's a minor player in the scale of European politics at this time, little old Cleves. Was it ever on the cards that she would marry a king? No, no, not really at all. I mean...
As I say, she is the daughter of the Duke of Cleves, but there's definitely no expectations of major grandeur at this point. Like that's a real curveball. She is betrothed or there's this pre-contract between her and the Duke of Lorraine. So that seems like
quite a nice match. And that's kind of the scale of the sort of marriage that Anne could expect to make. But yeah, marriage with the King of England. Wow. We should remind ourselves why the King of England is even shopping around and why he has to, I don't want to say resort to, but sort of marry Anne,
upper nobility in a sort of a small province of Germany, why princesses around Europe aren't flinging themselves at him. So where is Henry at this point, you know, when he's on the lookout for a new wife? Yeah, so Henry is a widow at this point. His third wife, Jane Seymour, died in October 1537, just days after giving birth to Henry's son. And it's great that he's got this son, but
That's just one male heir that Henry's got. And one male heir is by no means enough to secure his dynasty. Like Henry needs a spare for sure. So that is what triggers his search for another bride shortly after Jane Seymour's death. How soon after Jane Seymour's death? Because if the history books are sort of right, and as we discussed last time, he was ever so upset that Jane Seymour died, right?
Yeah, he's upset. He's upset. But I mean, we're talking weeks before he starts looking for another bride. So, yeah, I guess it's difficult not to think like, Henry, what are you playing at this point? But I think, yeah, when we put it into the context of the time and remember that
Infant mortality is really, really high at this point as well. Henry's son could easily die at any moment. And he needs that spare really, really desperately to ensure that the Tudors are going to be safe in the next generation. So I guess it seems heartless that he's looking for a wife so quickly. But if you're looking at it politically, yes,
It's a sensible move. And he's had babies before, hasn't he, that died pretty quickly after birth or were miscarried? Yeah, exactly that. So his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, had had six children, but only one of these, a girl, Mary, had survived.
Similarly, his second wife, Anne Boleyn, she had had several miscarriages and she had just one surviving child too in the form of Elizabeth. So Henry has got lots of experience in losing children young. All right. So Jane Seymour just about been put into the ground.
Henry's on the lookout. That must have sent a bolt of fear through all the nobility throughout Europe because surely by this point he's getting a reputation as you don't want to marry him. This isn't good. This doesn't work out for his wives.
Well, yeah, that's so true. And we see that firsthand, actually, because Henry actually expresses an interest in marrying Christina of Denmark, who's a young and quite attractive widow, Duchess of Milan. And she says that she would be quite happy to marry Henry if she had two heads, right?
So yeah, he's definitely getting a reputation. People have seen what's happened to Anne Boleyn and it's a pretty terrifying prospect. It would sort of get to the point, wouldn't it? Well, even the money and the titles and the power...
and the political alliance, it's not enough to tempt you because he's batting three for three now. I know James Seymour wasn't his fault, but there must have been a kind of a feeling that, not that he's cursed, but there's something weird going on here.
Yeah, definitely. And, you know, Henry himself, he would have only considered Jane Seymour of the three wives he'd had so far to be his legal wife. So perhaps he didn't view it in quite the same way. But yeah, people throughout Europe are talking about this. Nobody really is in a great hurry to marry Henry. Christina of Denmark is just one example. There's also...
Mary of Guise, who later becomes the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots. She's put forward as a prospective bride for him as well. And she's definitely not keen either. So how does Anne enter this picture then? Well, at this point, England is also quite politically and religiously isolated because
Henry of course has split from the Roman Catholic Church with the Pope at his head and established himself as the head of the Church of England but he's the only one in Europe who's done this and we see the other two main superpowers in Europe who are both Catholic nations Spain and France looking to ally with one another and this leaves England really really vulnerable so it's
Henry's chief advisor, Thomas Cromwell, who suggests perhaps making this alliance with Cleves, which is this German nation who have an interest in religious reform and that perhaps Cleves could be a quite useful ally for England. And that idea seems to appeal to Henry. Do we know anything?
anything about what Anne was like like was she was she a religious person was she gregarious was she quite demure like what was she like well in her early years it's difficult to tell we don't know much about her early life at all we do know that she doesn't seem to have been particularly well educated so we've looked at Catherine of Aragon and Anne of Cleves and talked about how they were
pious and very scholarly in Anne's case. But in Anne of Cleves' case, there doesn't seem to have been as much of that. She seems to have been able to read and write and was taught in all the accomplishments that were thought to be good for girls, you know, sewing, all of those sorts of things. But other than that, we don't really get many glimpses of her personality in the days before she's suddenly thrust into the spotlight. Yeah.
I'm trying to imagine what it would have been like that she'd have just been sat there with her sewing and then somebody would have walked in with a letter of just, do you want to marry the king? Like, how on earth did that even happen?
Well, it's really interesting because what happens is that Henry's court artist, Hans Holbein, who's like the most talented painter of the time, he arrives at the court of Anna's family and he comes to paint not only Anne, but also her younger sister, Amelia as well. And
Holbein has basically been sent along to remember this is a time when people can't just look at a photo of each other so that he's come along to capture the likenesses of these two women, basically to see if either of them float Henry's boat. So that's really the first real suggestion or real hint that Henry could seriously be interested in Anne. And they look nice, these pictures.
They do look nice. And this is kind of part of the mythology of Anne of Cleves, is that this image was painted of her, that it was like sort of the modern equivalent of Facetune app, when it's just like ridiculously flattering and it didn't actually look anything like her. And I wonder how true actually is that? Is that like part of this, well, bullshit basically that Henry suggested about it? Was she a good looking girl? Yeah.
Well, Henry's ambassador in Cleves at the time sees this painting of Anne of Cleves and says that it's actually a really good likeness. And that to me suggests that perhaps it was just for some reason she just wasn't Henry's cup of tea. She didn't conform with his ideals of beauty. And yeah, she just wasn't for him because there aren't any other real suggestions or hints that
any of the people around Anne or any of the people at Henry's court thought that she was ugly. I think that this is part of that mythology that's been circulated later and that fitted with Henry's narrative as well.
So Hans Holbein paints this picture. He takes it to Henry and he goes, I'll have that one, please. Pretty much. That's pretty much it? Yeah, that's pretty much it. He falls in love with the painting. He likes it, thinks great. Yeah. Right. Okay. So then presumably word gets sent to Anne of like, right, we're on. You're going to be, oh God.
What on earth must she have been thinking? How old was she, by the way? She's born in 1515. So she's in her early 20s at this point. She's in her early 20s. Henry, of course, is quite a lot older. So the prospect, I don't know, maybe on a personal level wouldn't have been too appealing. But that idea of becoming Queen of England was probably a career move that Anne would never have seen coming. And
I imagine one that actually quite appealed to her. It's a hell of a step up, isn't it? Definitely. So she, I mean, it's a gamble, but it's a step up. So she arrives at the court and how do things kick off? How do they meet? What's the first encounter?
So Anne actually arrives in England in December 1539 and she and Henry meet for the first time at Rochester. And Henry, when he hears that Anne has landed in England, he's really desperate to see her. And so he hurries down to see her. But unfortunately, that first meeting doesn't go well at all.
And there are numerous versions of what happened and accounts of what happened. But we're told that Henry actually disguised himself, which was something that he quite liked to do. It was in keeping with these ideas of kind of courtly love. And he just assumed that Anne would naturally recognise him or that they'd naturally just be drawn together and it would be love at first sight. So it would be this hugely romantic dream of,
However, Anne doesn't recognize him. And worse than that, she largely ignores him, actually. And yeah, not good, not good move, not good start. And that doesn't go down with Henry very well at all, as you can imagine.
awkward and he did this dressing up and pissing around as like chivalric knights nonsense with Catherine of Aragon but she thought it was really cute and like knew what he was doing so you can kind of see I guess what he thought he was doing that he would kind of like come charging into her room as you know like the knights of old but she obviously had no clue what on earth he or who he was or what was happening or anything
No, she was totally clueless. She didn't realise what was expected of her at this point. And yeah, let's not forget, she hadn't seen Henry in person. So she didn't know what she was looking for. So yeah, she was totally, I think she was mortified when she found out that this was Henry. Absolutely. Like somebody could have given her a heads up. Somebody could have helped her out with that. And Henry's 48 at this point. Now,
In his prime, he was a catch, was Henry. Six foot tall, strapping lad, works out all the time, redhead. Even the people who didn't like him said how good looking he was. At 48, which isn't old by our standards, but what are we dealing with? What does Henry look like at 48?
So by 48, Henry is in increasing bad health. And this also makes him increasingly bad tempered as well. He is getting bigger and bigger by the year, like his girth literally is expanding. And he also is suffering with an ulcer on his leg, which has been
inflicted as a result of a jousting accident and that causes him a huge amount of pain so his health is by no means what it once was he's no longer in the prime of life no what about the language barrier because she's german he's not could they speak to each other all right
No, no, not at all. Like, yeah, exactly. Anne doesn't speak English. She does try and learn English, but obviously she hasn't been raised with this expectation of becoming Queen of England. So she hasn't had time to prepare for that. Although importantly, she does make an effort to try and learn card games that she knows that Henry likes. So priorities. But yeah, she is, I know, but she's very much relying on an interpreter at this point. And,
And literally the language of England is completely foreign to her, which means she can't communicate with Henry. And so it's customs as well. So it's basically a completely new and alien land to Anne. So we have this awful exchange where Henry has tried to do this sort of
like a joke almost, like a kind of a play and that she didn't understand it. She didn't recognise him. It must have been mortifyingly embarrassing for everybody involved. Do you think it was that that made him suddenly go off her? I think it definitely didn't help. And I think that he felt that...
Anne's appearance in life didn't match with Holbein's image of her on canvas. But yeah, I think he was definitely... He must have been so mortified and humiliated. I mean, he's so mortified at the time when Anne doesn't recognise him that he's bought presents for her and he actually leaves Rochester without giving her the presents. He leaves them behind for someone else to pass on. So...
He is, these first impressions really have stuck and so much so that he doesn't want to go through with this marriage at all. I'll be back with Nicola and Anne after this short break.
Whoa, easy there. Yeah.
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So why does he? I mean, presumably at this point, he could still say, no, we're not getting married. They're not married yet. So why does he go through with it if at this point he's already taken against her?
Well, two reasons, I guess. One of which is that England do still really need that alliance with Cleves at this point. So there's the political aspect. But also imagine how humiliating it would be for both Henry and Anne if you actually turned around and were like, no, sorry.
It's not happening. You need to go. Henry wasn't prepared to do that because he didn't know what the outcome would be in terms of the alliance with Cleves. For Anne, that would be career over. There would be no hope of any other kind of marriage for her. But it could have caused all sorts of political problems there.
with Cleaves if he had turned around and said, no, it's not going to happen. So he does go through with it. Where's the wedding? Was it a happy affair? Was he dragged down the aisle? Well, seems like it in many ways, because he did famously declare, I like her not, and he was doing everything he could to extricate himself. But yeah, this...
He really was desperate not to go through with it. And it's Thomas Cromwell, the man who's arranged it in the first place, who's like, no, come on, sir, you really have got to do this. And the marriage takes place at the beginning of January 1540 at Greenwich Palace. And...
I mean, yeah, it doesn't go particularly well, particularly because we know that that night, the wedding night, what should have been a really happy and exciting occasion doesn't quite turn out that way either.
And Henry isn't remotely gentlemanly like about this whatsoever. And it's because I think that we're going to the real crux of masculinity here now, whether or not you can get it up. I think that that, you know, it's crude and it's overly simplistic, but it's amazing how much of the human psyche, particularly the male psyche, comes back to their willies. And we have this wedding night where it's not consummated and
And so he just goes on the attack, doesn't he? Yeah. He says that he feels that he can get an erection with other women, just not her. And I mean, yeah, how embarrassing, how totally embarrassing. And he says that her breasts are really droopy and that her belly's really soft. He's basically implying that he doesn't believe that she's a virgin and that someone else has been there first. Yeah.
I mean, Pot calling the kettle black for fuck's sake. Like, it's just, it's vicious what he does. He implies that not only that she's so ugly that he couldn't get an erection, but also that he doesn't believe that she's a virgin, which is just so unfair. And what on earth must poor old Anne have been thinking? Yeah.
Well, to begin with, she doesn't actually realise that anything is wrong or amiss. She doesn't actually seem to have been schooled in what was expected on a wedding night. And she kind of thought that everything was fine.
And it's only when one of her ladies, one of her English speaking ladies, basically plucks up the courage to say to her, what actually is going on with you and the king? And Anne's like, okay, well, every evening he kisses me goodnight. Every morning he kisses me goodmorning. Isn't this enough? Oh,
And her lady-in-waiting's like, no. Yeah, exactly. It's like nowhere near enough. So she's totally naive to it. So by that token, it doesn't even seem like Henry's trying. No, he's not really because he's just, he's convinced himself that...
marriage is never going to work for him it's one by this point of politics only like he can't get himself roused by Anne and he says that he's tried but
But really, he's just not interested in her. And he says that she smells as well, which is a particularly nasty thing. Yeah, exactly. Him with his big ulcery leg as well. Yeah, I know, the cheek of it. So Anne's physical characteristics are literally dragged through the mud by Henry and there's nothing she can do about it.
So I guess this now has become, it's not just like an awful thing between a husband and wife and he's humiliating her, but this is sort of a matter of state because he must be saying these things to people. He must be saying them to Cromwell and other people and they must be giving him some kind of advice. Yeah, exactly. I mean, Thomas Cromwell is basically trying to encourage Henry to pay
plough on through with it and to consummate this marriage Henry is just not having any of it he just genuinely believes that the problem is with Anne and not with him at all and he
sort of proves this in some ways by taking an interest in another woman, another woman who is part of Anne's own household in the form of Catherine Howard. He starts showing attention to her and makes it clear that he quite fancies her. But yeah, he's really, I think from that first moment at Rochester when he set eyes on Anne,
I think he'd already made his mind up that there was no way physically that this was going to work for him. And I think that once he had that idea in his head, that was it. There wasn't anything that anyone could say to him to make him view her differently. Do you think any of it is true? It's really tragic that this is kind of what Anne's name has been named.
caught up with and these awful descriptions of just quite frankly a very sulky petulant emotionally unstable man who is lashing out at her do you think that this is true what he says about her no
No, not at all. I think that Anne was actually quite a smart cookie in lots of ways. And bear in mind, Henry's making all these slurs about her personal character. I think she was actually a woman who really wanted to make a good impression on her subjects as well and those around her. And
People around Henry's court actually seem to have quite liked her too. I mean, they didn't have to sleep with her, I guess, but she really did like the finer things in life. And one of the things that I quite like about Anne, it is almost like she knew from the start that it wasn't going to last for very long because she
It's like she decides to make the most of it with Henry's money because she spends... Well played. Well, yeah, you know, why wouldn't you? She spends an absolute fortune on jewellery at this point. So she's definitely going about trying to make herself look good and feel good. And on one occasion, she spends the modern day equivalent of nearly 12 grand on a single diamond. Wow.
So it almost feels to me as if she, in some ways, knows that Henry doesn't really fancy her. But that's not going to stop her from glamming up and making herself feel good and splashing the cash at the same time. So.
So Henry's running around court telling anybody that'll listen to him that his wife is so repulsive that he can't get an erection and flirting a lot with, I think she's 17 at this point, 17-year-old Catherine Howard at court,
How long does this marriage last and how does it finally reach a crisis point where someone's got to say, well, where the king says, I don't want to be married to you anymore? Yeah. So the marriage lasts for six months and I think Henry thought he'd done quite well making it that far, to be honest. And all the while that he's been married to Anne, he's been trying to find grounds to remove himself from that marriage. And, um,
Finally, it is annulled on the grounds that Anne has had this pre-contract with the Duke of Lorraine prior to her marriage to Henry. And therefore, because of this pre-contract, her marriage to Henry can't possibly be declared valid. So these deputies on behalf of Henry are sent to Anne to tell her that this annulment is going to take place. She only finds out a couple of days before it actually happens.
So she has to come to terms with that first and foremost. She must have been shitting herself. Like she knows how this one goes. My God. Yeah, exactly. She does know exactly how this one goes. And Henry's envoys basically promise her that things will go really well for her as long as she does exactly what Henry wants.
And like you say, she's seen what's happened before. She doesn't want to end up that way. So she does. She agrees to the annulment. She goes along with everything that Henry wants. And she's quite nicely rewarded as a result of that. OK, so what is it that Henry wants and what is he offering?
So Henry realises that Anne can't really be sent back to Cleves. It would be seen as a bit of a disgrace for her. So he offers her the title of the king's sister. I mean, who wouldn't want that? Is that an official title?
What is that? Well, it is now. Oh, it is now? Yeah, it is now. And he basically, what it means is that Anne will be the leading lady of the realm, aside from Henry's daughters and any other wives that he has. So it's quite a prestigious position, I suppose. And he also offers her money and he offers her lands and he...
He tells her that she can keep all of her jewels and everything that she's had since she became queen. So it's quite a nice sweetener, really. It could have been a lot worse. I'll be back with Nicola and Anne after this short break.
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I mean, she can't have been particularly happy in this marriage either, really. Like, we know that Henry wasn't and he was sulking and moping about, but she must have eventually realised this is very tense and I'm not enjoying this. Yeah, I think so. There are later some suggestions that when Henry becomes a free man after Catherine Howard, that perhaps
and is quite keen to reignite the flame. And it's really difficult. I don't know how true that is. Why would you be? Why on earth would you want to do that? I know, particularly because she's got quite a nice life after leaving or after finishing with Henry. But yeah, I think she was more than happy to go along with his demands when it meant that
she was going to be given all of this money and the chance to stay in England and have this nice title. Did she have to give back the ring? Interesting you should say that. Yeah, she does. She sends back the ring and she says to Henry, basically, you should just break this up now and have it melted down because it's something that has no value anymore. So this is kind of a really...
strong symbolic gesture on Anne's behalf of saying, I'm doing exactly what you want. And yeah, you can have the ring back too. This is smart, really. I mean, I don't know how smart, I mean, it was risky to have ever married Henry VIII, I think, but...
If marrying him means that you never have to actually have sex with him and he just stomps around sulking and you get loads of jewels and then eventually they go, look, you can't be married to him anymore, but you can keep everything and live in this castle. Well played, Anne, I think. Yeah, she did really, really well out of it. I mean, yeah, she'd watched and learned. She knew that there was quite a nice life in store for her in England if she did what he wanted. And I...
After that, after this marriage comes to an end,
Henry, to his surprise, finds that he actually quite likes Anne when that whole pressure of having to sleep with her and having to be... Yeah, he enjoys her company and she carries on coming to court. They carry on swapping presents, that sort of thing. And he finds that he actually, yeah, he enjoys her company when there's no label attached to it. So a good outcome all round, I guess. Interesting. And what does...
And what does happen to Anne? Does she go on and marry somebody else? No, she never marries. She lives out... Yeah, very smart. I mean, why would she want to as well? Why on earth would she want to at that point? Yeah, exactly. Henry even gives her Hever Castle, which was the childhood home of wife number two, Anne Boleyn. Quite weird, but she gets that anyway. And she also gets the Royal Palace of Richmond, which...
amongst other properties. So she's given these really fabulous homes to live in. She's given the cash to live a nice, wealthy lifestyle. Why would you want to go and marry? She doesn't. No, she's been there. She's done that. If she gets married, she's just hot. Well, she doesn't even have any wealth. It all belongs to her husband. Yeah.
I'm starting to like Anne. I think that she played a bit of a blinder here. Yeah, no, she definitely does. And she also manages to stay on good terms with all three of Henry's children, Mary, Elizabeth and Edward as well. They all seem to quite like her. And she outlives Henry by 10 years. So...
perhaps we should actually start thinking of Anne as the queen who survived. I think so. When he was making overtures towards Catherine Howard, who we're going to talk about in the next episode, do we have any records of what Anne thought of that? I'm kind of thinking that her attitude will have just been, well, oh no, say it ain't so. I know.
Oh no, please, please don't go off with another woman. I know, right? But there's not really any indication as to what she thought at the time. But when Catherine becomes Queen, Anne does come to court on one occasion to celebrate New Year with Catherine Howard and Henry. And
I think it's quite a weird dynamic in some ways. We haven't seen that before, but we see that Henry at that time, all of the gifts that he's given to Catherine, Catherine then passes on to Anne and they're dancing together. And it's almost like, I don't know. It's almost like, yeah. Anne's kind of thinking, yeah, I've dodged a bullet there. Yeah.
Did she ever, Mike? I mean, the lesson that I'm learning throughout all of this is just don't fight him. Whatever harebrained, deranged, madcap scheme he's going to come up with, you are much safer to just go, yep, yep, that's fine with me, sunshine. Because that's...
what did for Catherine of Aragon, as nobly as she, you know, literally went down with that ship of, I'm still queen, I'm still queen, I'm still queen. It's like, well, you're not though, love. Yeah, like it's gone really wrong. And Anne Boleyn fought him on so many different fronts and came a spectacular cropper. And Anne just went, yeah, all right then.
But your sister would live in a castle. Yeah. She's got no leg to stand on, really, also, because she's got no children with Henry in the way that Catherine of Aragon had as well. True. And so she's got no one who she really needs to fight for, apart from herself. And if you're being offered a nice way out of it and a comfortable life...
Done deal. Why wouldn't you? And where's she buried? Where's Anne buried? She's actually buried in Westminster Abbey. So she's the only one of Henry's wives to be buried in Westminster Abbey. And that is all on account of the fact that she did have this good relationship with Henry's eldest daughter, Mary. And she dies in July 1557. And...
In her will, she leaves her best jewel to Mary. So perhaps that was a nice little sweetener to, you know, go along with the burial. And then the second best jewel to Elizabeth. And yeah, and then Mary arranges for her to be buried there.
in Westminster, which I think is quite a nice place for her story to end in some ways. I agree. Well, well done, Anne of Cleves. Far from being the kind of the munter that Henry just didn't want to marry. She's actually, she's pretty damn smart, I think.
Yeah, definitely. I think she's been overlooked and misrepresented. But actually, she is the wife that arguably came out of her marriage to Henry the best. Well, the next one that we're looking at definitely did not. And maybe was not very smart with it either. But will you come back next time and talk to us about Catherine Howard and how she played the Henry game? Of course. Can't wait.
Me neither. Thank you so much for coming back and telling us about Anna Cleaves. You've been marvellous. Thank you. Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Nicola for joining me. And if you like what you heard, please don't forget to like, review and follow along wherever it is that you get your podcasts.
If you'd like us to explore a subject or maybe you just fancied saying hello, then you can email us at betwixt at historyhit.com. We've got episodes on the history and future of dating coming your way, as well as the fifth part in this limited series, which is coming to you next week. Now, who could that one be about? Yep, it's Catherine Howard.
I've got a bit of a soft spot for Catherine. Actually, I really do. This podcast was edited and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound. This holiday season, when you can't be there, let 1-800-Flowers.com deliver. At 1-800-Flowers, every gift is crafted with care and designed to make spirits bright.
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