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16 <Metadata name="Author">Marilee Mongello</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="Content">Queen Elizabeth I: Biography, Portraits with commentary, Primary Sources Elizabeth Tudor 1533 to 1603 The Virgin Queen Gloriana</Metadata>
18 <Metadata name="Page_topic">Queen Elizabeth I: Biography, Portraits with commentary, Primary Sources Elizabeth Tudor 1533 to 1603 The Virgin Queen Gloriana</Metadata>
19 <Metadata name="Title">Queen Elizabeth I: Biography, Portraits, Primary Sources</Metadata>
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39
40&lt;table border=&quot;0&quot; cellpadding=&quot;3&quot; width=&quot;100%&quot; height=&quot;667&quot;&gt;
41 &lt;tr&gt;
42 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
43 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/td&gt;
44 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;29&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
45 &lt;/tr&gt;
46 &lt;tr&gt;
47 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
48 &lt;td width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;
49 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
50 &lt;IMG height=98 alt=&quot;Queen Elizabeth I&quot;
51 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/eliz1-queenuse.gif&quot; width=422&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
52 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;3&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
53 &lt;/tr&gt;
54 &lt;tr&gt;
55 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
56 &lt;td valign=&quot;top&quot; width=&quot;50%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;
57 &lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;
58 &lt;IMG height=444
59 alt=&quot;'The Rainbow Portrait' of Elizabeth I, c1600&quot;
60 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/eliz1-rainbow.jpg&quot; width=350 align=center border=2&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;
61 &lt;p align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;
62 &amp;nbsp;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
63 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;Visit
64 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.marileecody.com%2feliz1-images.html&quot;&gt;Elizabethan
65 Images&lt;/a&gt; to view portraits of the queen and her courtiers, with
66 commentary.&lt;BR&gt;Read poems, letters, and speeches by the queen at &lt;A
67 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html&quot;&gt;Primary
68 Sources&lt;/A&gt;.&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/DIV&gt;
69 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;Read ES Beesly's 1892 biography of Queen
70 Elizabeth I at &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fsecondary.html&quot;&gt;
71 Secondary Sources&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/DIV&gt;
72 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;Visit &lt;A
73 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fboleyn.html&quot;&gt;the Anne
74 Boleyn website&lt;/A&gt; to learn more about Elizabeth's mother.&lt;BR&gt;Visit &lt;A
75 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fmaryqos.html&quot;&gt;the Mary,
76 queen of Scots website&lt;/A&gt; to learn more about Elizabeth's
77 cousin.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Test your knowledge of Elizabeth's life and times at &lt;A
78 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ftudor1.html&quot;&gt;Tudor
79 Quizzes&lt;/A&gt;.&lt;/DIV&gt;
80 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/DIV&gt;
81 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;Meet other Elizabethan enthusiasts at
82 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.alassea.net%2ffl%2felizabeth&quot;&gt;The Virgin Queen
83 fanlisting&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/DIV&gt;
84 &lt;DIV align=left&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/DIV&gt;
85 &lt;/td&gt;
86 &lt;td width=&quot;25%&quot; height=&quot;610&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
87 &lt;/tr&gt;
88&lt;/table&gt;
89
90&lt;blockquote&gt;
91 &lt;blockquote&gt;
92 &lt;blockquote&gt;
93 &lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;
94 &lt;p&gt;&lt;B&gt;Elizabeth Tudor is considered by many to be the greatest monarch in
95 English history.&amp;nbsp; When she became queen in 1558, she was twenty-five
96 years old, a survivor of scandal and danger, and considered illegitimate
97 by most Europeans.&amp;nbsp; She inherited a bankrupt nation, torn by
98 religious discord, a weakened pawn between the great powers of France and
99 Spain.&amp;nbsp; She was only the third queen to rule England in her own
100 right; the other two examples, her cousin Lady Jane Grey and half-sister
101 Mary I, were disastrous.&amp;nbsp; Even her supporters believed her position
102 dangerous and uncertain.&amp;nbsp; Her only hope, they counseled, was to marry
103 quickly and lean upon her husband for support.&amp;nbsp; But Elizabeth had
104 other ideas.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/B&gt; &lt;BR&gt;&lt;B&gt;She ruled alone for nearly half a century,
105 lending her name to a glorious epoch in world history.&amp;nbsp; She dazzled
106 even her greatest enemies.&amp;nbsp; Her sense of duty was admirable, though
107 it came at great personal cost.&amp;nbsp; She was committed above all else to
108 preserving English peace and stability; her genuine love for her subjects
109 was legendary.&amp;nbsp; Only a few years after her death in 1603, they
110 lamented her passing.&amp;nbsp; In her greatest speech to Parliament, she told
111 them, 'I count the glory of my crown that I have reigned with your
112 love.'&amp;nbsp; And five centuries later, the worldwide love affair with
113 Elizabeth Tudor continues.&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
114 &lt;hr&gt;
115 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
116 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
117 &lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;4&quot;&gt;'Proud
118 and haughty, as although she knows she was born of such a mother, she
119 nevertheless does not consider herself of inferior degree to the Queen,
120 whom she equals in self-esteem; nor does she believe herself less
121 legitimate than her Majesty, alleging in her own favour that her mother
122 would never cohabit with the King unless by way of marriage, with the
123 authority of the Church....&amp;nbsp; &lt;BR&gt;She prides herself on her father and
124 glories in him; everybody saying that she also resembles him more than the
125 Queen does and he therefore always liked her and had her brought up in the
126 same way as the Queen.' &lt;/font&gt;&lt;FONT size=-1&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;I&gt;the Venetian
127 ambassador Giovanni Michiel describes Elizabeth; spring 1557&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
128 &lt;blockquote&gt;
129 &lt;blockquote&gt;
130 &lt;hr&gt;
131 &lt;p&gt;Elizabeth Tudor was born on 7 September 1533 at Greenwich
132 Palace.&amp;nbsp; She was the daughter of &lt;A
133 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fhenry8.html&quot;&gt;King Henry
134 VIII&lt;/A&gt; and his second wife, &lt;A
135 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fboleyn.html&quot;&gt;Anne
136 Boleyn&lt;/A&gt;.&amp;nbsp; Henry had &lt;A
137 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ffaq.html#Eleven-b&quot;&gt;defied the
138 papacy&lt;/A&gt; and the Holy Roman Emperor to marry Anne, spurred on by love
139 and the need for a legitimate male heir.&amp;nbsp; And so Elizabeth's birth
140 was one of the most exciting political events in 16th century European
141 history; rarely had so much turmoil occurred on behalf of a mere
142 infant.&amp;nbsp; But the confident predictions of astrologers and physicians
143 were wrong and the longed-for prince turned out to be a princess.&amp;nbsp;
144 &lt;/p&gt;
145 &lt;P&gt;Eustace Chapuys, the Imperial ambassador and enemy of Anne Boleyn,
146 described the birth to his master as 'a
147 &lt;IMG height=324 alt=&quot;portrait of Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn&quot;
148 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/elizmom.jpg&quot; width=250 border=2 align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;great disappointment and sorrow to
149 the King, the Lady herself and to others of her party.'&amp;nbsp; But for the
150 next two years, Henry VIII was willing to hope for a son to join this
151 healthy daughter.&amp;nbsp; Immediately after Elizabeth's birth, he wrote to
152 his 17 year old daughter, &lt;A
153 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fmary1.html&quot;&gt;Princess
154 Mary&lt;/A&gt;, and demanded she relinquish her title Princess of Wales and
155 acknowledge both the annulment of his marriage to her mother, &lt;A
156 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2faragon.html&quot;&gt;Katharine of
157 Aragon&lt;/A&gt;, and the validity of his new marriage.&amp;nbsp; Mary refused; she
158 already blamed Anne Boleyn (and, by extension, Elizabeth) for the sad
159 alteration of her own fortunes.&amp;nbsp; In December, she was moved into her
160 infant half-sister's household.&amp;nbsp; When told to pay her respects to the
161 baby Princess, she replied that she knew of no Princess of England but
162 herself, and burst into tears.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
163 &lt;P&gt;Henry already ignored Mary and Katharine's constant pleas to meet; now
164 he began a more aggressive campaign to secure Anne and Elizabeth's
165 position.&amp;nbsp; For one mother and daughter to be secure, the other pair
166 must necessarily suffer.&amp;nbsp; Most Europeans, and indeed Englishmen,
167 still believed Katharine to be the king's valid wife.&amp;nbsp; Now old and
168 sickly, imprisoned in one moldy castle after another, she remained a very
169 popular figure.&amp;nbsp; Anne Boleyn was dismissed in polite circles as the
170 king's 'concubine' and their marriage was recognized only by those of the new
171 Protestant faith.&amp;nbsp; Henry attempted to legislate popular acceptance of
172 his new queen and heiress.&amp;nbsp; But the various acts and oaths only cost
173 the lives of several prominent Catholics, among them &lt;A
174 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fcitizens%2fmore.html&quot;&gt;Sir Thomas
175 More&lt;/A&gt; and Bishop John Fisher.&amp;nbsp; The English people never accepted
176 'Nan Bullen' as their queen.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
177 &lt;P&gt;But while she had the king's personal favor, Elizabeth's mother was
178 secure.&amp;nbsp; And she held that favor far longer than any had
179 expected.&amp;nbsp; It was only after she miscarried twice that Henry began to
180 consider this second marriage as cursed as the first.&amp;nbsp; The last
181 miscarriage occurred in January 1536; Katharine died that same
182 month.&amp;nbsp; With her death, the king's Catholic critics considered him a
183 widower, free to marry again.&amp;nbsp; And this next marriage would not be
184 tainted by the specter of bigamy.&amp;nbsp; It was only necessary to get rid
185 of Anne, and find a new wife - one who could hopefully deliver a
186 son.&amp;nbsp; The king already had a candidate in mind; her name was &lt;A
187 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fseymour.html&quot;&gt;Jane
188 Seymour&lt;/A&gt;, a lady-in-waiting to both Katharine and Anne.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
189 &lt;P&gt;In the end, Henry VIII was not merely content to annul his marriage to
190 Anne.&amp;nbsp; She was arrested, charged with a variety of crimes which even
191 her enemies discounted, and executed on 19 May 1536.&amp;nbsp; Her little
192 daughter was now in the same position as her half-sister, Princess
193 Mary.&amp;nbsp; However, all of Europe and most Englishmen considered Mary to
194 be Henry's legitimate heir, despite legislation to the contrary.&amp;nbsp; No
195 one believed Elizabeth to be more than the illegitimate daughter of the
196 king.&amp;nbsp; Also, there were already disparaging rumors of her mother's
197 infidelities; perhaps the solemn, red-headed child was not the king's
198 after all?&amp;nbsp; It was to Henry's (small) credit that he always
199 acknowledged Elizabeth as his own, and took pride in her intellectual
200 accomplishments.&amp;nbsp; As she grew older, even Catholic courtiers noted
201 Elizabeth resembled her father more than Mary did.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
202 &lt;P&gt;Henry married Jane just twelve days after Anne's execution and his
203 long-awaited son, &lt;A
204 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fedward6.html&quot;&gt;Prince
205 Edward&lt;/A&gt;, was born in October 1537.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth participated in the
206 christening, carried by Thomas Seymour, the handsome young brother of the
207 queen.&amp;nbsp; Jane died shortly after the birth of childbed fever.&amp;nbsp;
208 Henry VIII married &lt;A
209 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fcleves.html&quot;&gt;Anne of
210 Cleves&lt;/A&gt; on Twelfth Night (6 January) 1541.&amp;nbsp; The marriage was a disaster,
211 and Henry quickly divorced Anne and married &lt;A
212 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fhoward.html&quot;&gt;Catherine
213 Howard&lt;/A&gt;.&amp;nbsp; Catherine was a cousin of Anne Boleyn; they were both
214 related to Thomas Howard, 3rd duke of Norfolk and perhaps Henry's most
215 nervous peer.&amp;nbsp; The king enjoyed a brief few months of happiness with
216 his fifth wife.&amp;nbsp; But Catherine was thirty years younger than Henry
217 and soon enough resumed an affair with a former lover.&amp;nbsp; She was
218 executed in February 1543 and buried beside Anne Boleyn in the Tower of
219 London.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
220 &lt;P&gt;For Elizabeth, these changes in her father's marital fortunes did not
221 pass unnoticed.&amp;nbsp; She was part of her half-brother Edward's household;
222 her days were spent mostly at lessons, with the occasional visit from her
223 father.&amp;nbsp; As a child, no one expected her to comment upon her
224 various stepmothers.&amp;nbsp; It was only when she reached adulthood and
225 became queen that its psychological effects were revealed.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth
226 had a dim view of romantic love and, given her father's example, who can
227 blame her?&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
228 &lt;P&gt;It was Henry's sixth and final wife, &lt;A
229 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fparr.html&quot;&gt;Katharine
230 Parr&lt;/A&gt;, who had the greatest impact upon Elizabeth's life.&amp;nbsp; A kind
231 woman who believed passionately in&lt;img border=&quot;2&quot; src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/eliz1-scrots.jpg&quot; align=&quot;right&quot; alt=&quot;Princess Elizabeth, c1546, attributed to William Scrots&quot; width=&quot;370&quot; height=&quot;495&quot;&gt; education and religious reform,
232 Katharine was a devoted stepmother.&amp;nbsp; Understandably, she had far more
233 of an impact with the young Edward and Elizabeth than with Mary, who was
234 just four years her junior.&amp;nbsp; Katharine arranged for 10 year old
235 Elizabeth to have the most distinguished tutors in England, foremost among
236 them Roger Ascham.&amp;nbsp; As a result, Elizabeth was educated as well as
237 any legitimate prince, and she displayed a genuine love and aptitude for
238 her studies.&amp;nbsp; 'Her mind has no womanly weakness,' Ascham would write
239 approvingly, 'her perseverance is equal to that of a man.'&amp;nbsp; And
240 later, 'She readeth more Greek every day, than some Prebendaries of this
241 Church do in a whole week.'&amp;nbsp; And so she did; Elizabeth's love of
242 scholarship never faltered and, in an age when women were considered
243 inferior to men, she was a glorious exception.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
244 &lt;P&gt;
245 Along with
246 such classical subjects as rhetoric, languages, philosophy, and history,
247 Elizabeth also studied theology.&amp;nbsp; Ascham and her other tutors were
248 famous Cambridge humanists who supported the Protestant cause.&amp;nbsp;
249 Likewise, Katharine Parr was devoted to the reformed faith.&amp;nbsp; Unlike
250 their half-sister Mary, both Edward and Elizabeth were raised Protestant
251 during its most formative years.&amp;nbsp; Yet while Edward was known for his
252 piety and didacticism, Elizabeth already displayed the pragmatic character
253 which would make her reign successful.&amp;nbsp; She studied theology and
254 supported the Protestant cause; she had been raised to do so and knew
255 only Protestants recognized her parents' marriage.&amp;nbsp; But she was never
256 openly passionate about religion, recognizing its divisive role in English
257 politics.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
258 &lt;P&gt;&amp;nbsp;Most people viewed the adolescent Elizabeth as a serious young
259 woman who always carried a book with her, preternaturally composed.&amp;nbsp;
260 She encouraged this perception, which was as accurate as any, by dressing
261 with a degree of severity virtually absent at the Tudor royal court.&amp;nbsp;
262 But she was not so serious that she avoided all the material trappings of
263 her position.&amp;nbsp; Her household accounts, which came under the
264 management of William Cecil (who later became her secretary of state),
265 show evidence of a cultivated and lively mind, as well as a love of
266 entertainment:&amp;nbsp; fees for musicians, musical instruments, and a
267 variety of books.&amp;nbsp; As she grew older and her position more prominent,
268 her household also expanded.&amp;nbsp; During her brother Edward's reign, she
269 lived the life of a wealthy and privileged lady - and apparently enjoyed
270 it immensely.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
271 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth was thirteen years old when her father died.&amp;nbsp; They
272 were never particularly close though he treated her with affection on her
273 few visits to his court.&amp;nbsp; He even occasionally discussed the
274 possibility of her marriage for, in the 16th century, royal bastards were
275 common and often used to great advantage in diplomacy.&amp;nbsp; Under the
276 1536 'Second Act of Succession', which declared both her and the 19 year
277 old Mary illegitimate, Parliament gave Henry the ability to determine his
278 children's status, as well as the actual succession.&amp;nbsp; Typically for
279 Henry, he simply let both his daughters live as princesses and gave them
280 precedence over everyone at court except his current wife.&amp;nbsp; But they
281 had no real claim to the title of 'princess' and were known as 'the lady
282 Elizabeth' and 'the lady Mary'.&amp;nbsp; This was often followed by the
283 explanatory 'the king's daughter.'&amp;nbsp; It was an awkward situation which
284 the king saw no reason to resolve.&amp;nbsp; His will did recognize his
285 daughters' crucial place in the succession.&amp;nbsp; If Edward died without
286 heirs, Mary would inherit the throne; if Mary died without heirs,
287 Elizabeth would become queen.&amp;nbsp; He also left them the substantial
288 income of 3000 pds a year, the same amount for each daughter.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
289 &lt;P&gt;Did Elizabeth mourn her father?&amp;nbsp; Undoubtedly so, for at least
290 under Henry VIII she was three steps from the throne and protected by his
291 rough paternal affection.&amp;nbsp; After his death, she had good cause to
292 wish him alive again.&amp;nbsp; Ten year old Edward was king in name
293 only.&amp;nbsp; The rule of England was actually in the hands of his uncle,
294 the Lord Protector Edward Seymour, soon titled duke of Somerset.&amp;nbsp;
295 Elizabeth was now separated from her brother's household, moving to
296 Katharine Parr's home in Chelsea.&amp;nbsp; This was perhaps the happiest time
297 of her adolescence.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
298 &lt;P&gt;But Katharine married again quickly, to the man she had loved before
299 Henry VIII had claimed her.&amp;nbsp; Her new husband was Thomas Seymour, the
300 younger brother of Lord Protector Somerset and uncle to the new King
301 Edward.&amp;nbsp; He was handsome, charming, and very ambitious.&amp;nbsp; He also
302 had terrible political instincts.&amp;nbsp; Seymour was not content to be
303 husband of the Dowager Queen of England.&amp;nbsp; He was jealous of his
304 brother's position and desperate to upstage him.&amp;nbsp; And so he
305 inadvertently played into the hands of the equally ambitious John Dudley,
306 earl of Warwick.&amp;nbsp; Dudley wished to destroy the Seymour protectorship
307 and seize power for himself.&amp;nbsp; He allowed the feuding brothers to
308 destroy each other.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
309 &lt;P&gt;For Elizabeth, the main problem with Seymour was his inappropriate and
310 very flirtatious behavior.&amp;nbsp; As a teenaged girl with little experience
311 of men, she was flattered by his attention and also a bit
312 frightened.&amp;nbsp; Certainly it placed great strain on Katharine Parr, who
313 had become pregnant soon after her marriage.&amp;nbsp; The queen originally
314 participated in Seymour's early morning raids into Elizabeth's room, where
315 he would tickle and wrestle with the girl in her nightdress.&amp;nbsp; But
316 while Katharine considered this simple fun, her husband was more
317 serious.&amp;nbsp; He soon had keys made for every room in their house and
318 started visiting Elizabeth while she was still asleep and he was clad in
319 just his nightshirt.&amp;nbsp; She soon developed the habit of rising early;
320 when he appeared, her nose was safely in a book. Edward's council heard
321 rumors of these romps and investigated.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth proved herself
322 circumspect and clever; she managed to admit nothing which would
323 offend&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
324 &lt;P&gt;She left the Seymour home for Hatfield House in May 1548, ostensibly
325 because the queen was 'undoubtful of health'.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth and
326 Katharine exchanged affectionate letters, but they would not meet
327 again.&amp;nbsp; The queen died on 4 September 1548 of childbed fever.&amp;nbsp;
328 &lt;/P&gt;
329 &lt;P&gt;After her death, Seymour's position became more dangerous.&amp;nbsp; It was
330 rumored that he wished to marry Elizabeth and thus secure the throne of
331 England in case Edward died young.&amp;nbsp; He had already bought the
332 wardship of &lt;A
333 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fjanegrey.html&quot;&gt;Lady Jane
334 Grey&lt;/A&gt;, a Tudor cousin and heir in Henry VIII's will.&amp;nbsp; He planned
335 to marry Jane and Edward, thus securing primary influence with his
336 nephew.&amp;nbsp; Eventually, his grandiose plans unraveled and he was
337 arrested.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps the most damning charge was his planned marriage
338 to Elizabeth.&amp;nbsp; Immediately, the council sent Sir Robert Tyrwhit to
339 Hatfield with the mission to take control of Elizabeth's household and
340 gain her confession.&amp;nbsp; He immediately arrested Elizabeth's beloved
341 governess Kat Ashley and her cofferer, Thomas Parry; they were sent to the
342 Tower.&amp;nbsp; Now, Tyrwhit told the princess, confess all; he wanted
343 confirmation of the charge that Seymour and Elizabeth planned to
344 wed.&amp;nbsp; If she confessed, Tyrwhit said, she would be forgiven for she
345 was young and foolish - her servants should have protected her.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
346 &lt;P&gt;
347 &lt;IMG height=122 alt=&quot;Elizabeth's signature as Princess of England&quot;
348 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/elizsig-sm.jpg&quot; width=200 align=left border=2&gt;Elizabeth did not hesitate to demonstrate her own wit and
349 learning.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, she drove Tyrwhit to exasperation; 'in no way will
350 she confess any practice by Mistress Ashley or the cofferer concerning my
351 lord Admiral; and yet I do see it in her face that she is guilty and do
352 perceive as yet she will abide more storms ere she accuse Mistress
353 Ashley,' he wrote to Somerset, 'I do assure your Grace she hath a very
354 good wit and nothing is gotten of her but by great policy.'&amp;nbsp;
355 Elizabeth refused to scapegoat her loyal servants and defiantly asserted
356 her complete innocence.&amp;nbsp; She told Tyrwhit she cared nothing for the
357 Admiral and when he had mentioned some vague possibility of marriage, she
358 had referred him to the council.&amp;nbsp; She also secured permission to
359 write to Somerset and, upon doing so, demanded a public apology be made
360 regarding her innocence.&amp;nbsp; She also demanded the return of her loyal
361 servants for if they did not return, she said, her guilt would be
362 assumed.&amp;nbsp; She read Ashley and Parry's 'confessions' in which they
363 described Seymour's romps with her at Katharine Parr's home.&amp;nbsp; The
364 details were undoubtedly embarrassing but she recognized their
365 harmlessness.&amp;nbsp; In short, she demonstrated every aspect of her
366 formidable intelligence and determination.&amp;nbsp; Poor Tyrwhit left for
367 London with no damaging confession.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
368 &lt;P&gt;But the council didn't need Elizabeth's confession to execute
369 Seymour.&amp;nbsp; He was charged with thirty-three other crimes, and he
370 answered only three of the charges.&amp;nbsp; He was not given a trial; a
371 messy execution was always best passed by a Bill of Attainder.&amp;nbsp; He
372 was executed on 20 March 1549, dying 'very dangerously, irksomely,
373 horribly... a wicked man and the realm is well rid of him.'&amp;nbsp; Contrary
374 to some biographies, Elizabeth did not say, 'This day died a man with much
375 wit, and very little judgment.'&amp;nbsp; The 17th century Italian novelist
376 Leti invented this, as well as several forged letters long supposed to be
377 hers.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
378 &lt;P&gt;Soon enough, Seymour's brother followed him to the scaffold.&amp;nbsp;
379 Somerset was a kind man in private life and genuinely dedicated to
380 economic and religious reform in England but, as a politician, he failed
381 miserably.&amp;nbsp; He lacked charisma and confidence; he preferred to bully
382 and bluster his way through council meetings.&amp;nbsp; He simply did not
383 understand how to manage the divisive personalities of Edward VI's privy
384 council.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, John Dudley had been quietly manipulating other
385 councilors and the young king to gain ascendancy.&amp;nbsp; Upon Somerset's
386 execution, Dudley became Lord Protector; he was also titled duke of
387 Northumberland.&amp;nbsp; He was the first non-royal Englishman given that
388 title.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
389 &lt;P&gt;For Elizabeth, these events were merely background noise at
390 first.&amp;nbsp; Dudley took pains to cultivate a friendship with her, which
391 she wisely avoided.&amp;nbsp; He sent her and Mary amiable letters.&amp;nbsp;
392 Since Mary was a Catholic, and Dudley a Protestant who had benefited
393 materially from the Reformation, he was necessarily more friendly to
394 Elizabeth.&amp;nbsp; For example, Edward VI had given Dudley Hatfield House,
395 which was currently Elizabeth's residence.&amp;nbsp; Dudley graciously
396 returned it to her in exchange for lesser lands in her possession.&amp;nbsp;
397 He also passed the patents to her lands, which allowed her more
398 income.&amp;nbsp; This, of course, should have been done at Henry VIII's
399 death.&amp;nbsp; So Elizabeth at first benefited from Dudley's rise to
400 power.&amp;nbsp; She was now a well-respected and popular princess, a landed
401 lady in her own right with a large income and keen mind.&amp;nbsp; She was
402 also an heir to the English throne, though still officially recognized as
403 a bastard.&amp;nbsp; But she was shown every respect, and a degree of
404 affection from Edward VI completely lacking in his relations with their
405 sister Mary.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
406 &lt;P&gt;Their mutual faith was an important connection with the increasingly
407 devout Edward.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth visited Court occasionally, corresponded
408 with her brother, and continued her studies mainly at Hatfield.&amp;nbsp; She
409 had always been excessively cautious and very intelligent, qualities she
410 displayed to great effect during the Seymour crisis.&amp;nbsp; The only time
411 in her life when she demonstrated any recklessness had been during the
412 Seymour debacle; she had learned its lesson well.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
413 &lt;P&gt;She also cultivated the image of a sober Protestant young lady.&amp;nbsp;
414 When queen, she became known for her love of beautiful gowns and
415 jewels.&amp;nbsp; But before 1558, she took care to dress soberly, the image
416 of chastity and modesty.&amp;nbsp; This was perhaps a conscious attempt to
417 distance herself from Mary, a typical Catholic princess who dressed in all
418 the glittering and garish finery she could afford.&amp;nbsp; It is an ironic
419 note on Mary's character that she has become known as a dour, plain woman;
420 she was as fond of clothes and jewelry as her sister would become.&amp;nbsp;
421 It was Elizabeth who dressed plainly, most often in severely cut black or
422 white gowns.&amp;nbsp; She wore each color to great effect.&amp;nbsp; She had
423 matured into a tall, slender and striking girl, with a fair, unblemished
424 complexion and the famous Tudor red hair.&amp;nbsp; She wore her hair loose
425 and did not use cosmetics.&amp;nbsp; When she traveled about the countryside,
426 crowds gathered to see her, a Protestant princess renowned for her virtue
427 and learning, her appearance modest and pleasing.&amp;nbsp; In this respect,
428 she was emulated by her cousin Jane Grey.&amp;nbsp; When Jane was invited to a
429 reception for Mary of Guise, the regent of Scotland, Mary Tudor sent her
430 'some goodly apparel of tinsel cloth of gold and velvet laid on with
431 parchment lace of gold.'&amp;nbsp; Jane, a devout Protestant, was offended;
432 such apparel reflected the material trappings of Catholicism.&amp;nbsp; When
433 her parents insisted she wear it, Jane replied, 'Nay, that were a shame to
434 follow my Lady Mary against God's word, and leave my Lady Elizabeth, which
435 followeth God's word.'&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
436 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth was honorably and extravagantly received at her brother's
437 court.&amp;nbsp; For example, on 17 March 1552, she arrived at St James's
438 Palace with 'a great company of lords, knights and gentlemen' along with
439 over 200 ladies and a company of yeomen.&amp;nbsp; Two days later she left St
440 James for Whitehall Palace, her procession accompanied by a grand
441 collection of nobles.&amp;nbsp; The visit was a marked success for Edward was
442 open in his affection.&amp;nbsp; She was his 'sweet sister Temperance,' unlike
443 Mary who continued to defy his religious policy.&amp;nbsp; The Primary Sources
444 section of this site contains an excerpt from Edward VI's journal in which
445 he records a religious argument with Mary.&amp;nbsp; In that matter, Elizabeth
446 remained distant, preferring to let her siblings argue without her.&amp;nbsp;
447 &lt;/P&gt;
448 &lt;P&gt;Edward's ministers, especially after the Seymour affair, were careful
449 with her.&amp;nbsp; Dudley recognized Elizabeth's formidable
450 intelligence.&amp;nbsp; When Edward VI became ill in 1553 and it was clear he
451 would not survive, Dudley had a desperate plan to save himself from Mary
452 I's Catholic rule - place Henry VIII's niece, Lady Jane Grey on the
453 throne.&amp;nbsp; (This is discussed in great length at the &lt;A
454 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fjanegrey.html&quot;&gt;Lady Jane
455 Grey&lt;/A&gt; site.)&amp;nbsp; Simply put, Dudley believed he would be supported
456 because Jane was Protestant and the English would not want the Catholic
457 Mary on the throne.&amp;nbsp; Of course, the question arises - Elizabeth was
458 Protestant, so why not put her on the throne instead of Jane?&amp;nbsp; The
459 main reason is that Dudley was well aware that Elizabeth Tudor would not
460 be his puppet, unlike Jane Grey whom he had married to his son
461 Guildford.&amp;nbsp; As for Edward VI, he went along with the plan because of
462 two main reasons: Elizabeth was illegitimate so there might be resistance
463 to her rule and, as a princess, she might be persuaded to marry a foreign
464 prince and England would fall under foreign control.&amp;nbsp; Jane was
465 already safely wed to an Englishman.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
466 &lt;P&gt;
467 &lt;IMG height=228
468 alt=&quot;a profile portrait of Elizabeth's half-brother, King Edward VI&quot;
469 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/edward4-cr.jpg&quot; width=150 border=2 align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;Edward VI's decision should not indicate any great dislike of
470 Elizabeth.&amp;nbsp; He was primarily determined to preserve the Protestant
471 regime in England.&amp;nbsp; He believed this was necessary for his personal
472 and political salvation.&amp;nbsp; He was also practical.&amp;nbsp; He
473 disinherited Mary because of her Catholicism; however, it was officially
474 sanctioned because of her illegitimacy.&amp;nbsp; Like Elizabeth, Mary had her
475 illegitimacy established by an act of Parliament during Henry VIII's
476 reign.&amp;nbsp; Since he had ostensibly disinherited Mary because of this
477 act, he couldn't let Elizabeth inherit - it simply wasn't logical.&amp;nbsp;
478 So the throne would pass to the legitimate - and Protestant - Lady Jane
479 Grey.&amp;nbsp; As most know, she ruled for just nine days before Mary became
480 queen of England.&amp;nbsp; It should be noted that Edward originally told
481 Dudley that, though he didn't want Mary to succeed him, he saw no logical
482 reason for Elizabeth to be disowned.&amp;nbsp; It was Dudley who pointed out
483 the logical inconsistency - that Mary 'could not be put by unless the Lady
484 Elizabeth were put by also.'&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
485 &lt;P&gt;Dudley attempted to place Mary and Elizabeth in his power while Edward
486 was dying.&amp;nbsp; He knew that if he imprisoned the two princesses, they
487 would be unable to rouse popular support against his plan.&amp;nbsp; But if
488 that failed, he was determined to prevent them from seeing Edward,
489 especially Elizabeth.&amp;nbsp; Dudley feared that Edward's affection for his
490 sister, and Elizabeth's cleverness, might persuade Edward to rewrite his
491 will in her favor.&amp;nbsp; Like her sister, Elizabeth would undoubtedly
492 destroy Dudley, making him the scapegoat for Edward's ineffectual
493 regime.&amp;nbsp; In fact, Elizabeth had suspected her brother was ill and set
494 out from Hatfield to visit him just a few weeks before Edward died, but
495 Dudley's men intercepted her and sent her home.&amp;nbsp; She then wrote her
496 brother a number of letters, inquiring about his health and asking
497 permission to come to Court.&amp;nbsp; These were intercepted as well.&amp;nbsp;
498 &lt;/P&gt;
499 &lt;P&gt;But as Edward's health continued to deteriorate and death was imminent,
500 Dudley sent a message to Hatfield, ordering Elizabeth to Greenwich
501 Palace.&amp;nbsp; She may have been warned of his intentions - more likely she
502 guessed them.&amp;nbsp; She refused the summons, taking to her bed with a
503 sudden illness.&amp;nbsp; As a further precaution, her doctor sent a letter to
504 the council certifying she was too ill for travel.&amp;nbsp; As for Mary,
505 Dudley had told her that Edward desired her presence; it would be a
506 comfort to him during his illness.&amp;nbsp; She was torn - though Dudley hid
507 the true extent of the king's illness, the Imperial ambassador had kept
508 Mary informed.&amp;nbsp; He was the agent of her cousin, the Holy Roman
509 Emperor Charles V; Mary's mother had been his aunt.&amp;nbsp; Conscious of her
510 sisterly duty, Mary set out for Greenwich from Hunsdon the day before
511 Edward died.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
512 &lt;P&gt;Dudley was enraged by Elizabeth's refusal but he could do
513 nothing.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough, events moved too quickly for the princess to
514 be his primary concern.&amp;nbsp; It was being whispered that Dudley had
515 poisoned the king to place his daughter-in-law on the throne.&amp;nbsp; Of
516 course, this was untrue since Dudley needed Edward to live as long as
517 possible for his plan to work.&amp;nbsp; To this end, he had engaged a female
518 'witch' to help prolong the king's life.&amp;nbsp; She concocted a mix of
519 arsenic and other drugs; they worked, at least for Dudley's purpose.&amp;nbsp;
520 The young king lived for a few more weeks though he suffered
521 terribly.&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 6 July 1553, Edward VI died.&amp;nbsp;
522 Immediately, Dudley had Jane Grey proclaimed queen, an honor she had not
523 sought and did not want.&amp;nbsp; It was only Dudley's appeal to her
524 religious convictions which convinced her to accept the throne.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
525 &lt;P&gt;Meanwhile, Jane's cousin, Mary Tudor, was still on her way to Greenwich
526 to see her brother, until a sympathizer (sent by Nicholas Throckmorton or
527 William Cecil) rode out to meet her; the summons was a trap, he told her,
528 and Dudley intended to imprison her.&amp;nbsp; Mary rode to East Anglia, the
529 conservative section of England where her support would be
530 strongest.&amp;nbsp; Eventually she would realize the true extent of her
531 support.&amp;nbsp; Protestants and Catholics alike rallied to her cause since
532 she was Henry VIII's daughter and the true heir under his will.&amp;nbsp; As
533 she left for East Anglia, she didn't know her brother was already dead but
534 she sent a note to the Imperial ambassador Simon Renard; once she knew of
535 Edward's death, she said, she would declare herself queen.&amp;nbsp; She sent
536 another note to Dudley, telling him she was too ill to travel.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
537 &lt;P&gt;The failure of Dudley's ambitions is discussed at the &lt;A
538 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fjanegrey.html&quot;&gt;Lady Jane
539 Grey&lt;/A&gt; site.&amp;nbsp; Suffice to say, he was overthrown and executed and
540 Mary Tudor, at the age of thirty-seven, was declared queen of England in
541 her own right.&amp;nbsp; During the nine days of Jane's reign, Elizabeth had
542 continued her pretense of illness.&amp;nbsp; It was rumored that Dudley had
543 sent councilors to her, offering a large bribe if she would just renounce
544 her claim to the throne.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth refused, remarking, 'You must
545 first make this agreement with my elder sister, during whose lifetime I
546 have no claim or title to resign.'&amp;nbsp; So she remained at her beloved
547 Hatfield, deliberately avoiding a commitment one way or another.&amp;nbsp;
548 When word reached her that Mary was finally queen, she sent a letter of
549 congratulation to her sister and set off for London.&amp;nbsp; On 29 July, she
550 entered the capital with 2000 mounted men wearing the green and white
551 Tudor colors.&amp;nbsp; There she awaited Mary's official arrival into the
552 city.&amp;nbsp; On 31 July, Elizabeth rode with her attendant nobles along the
553 Strand and through the City to Colchester, the same path her sister would
554 take.&amp;nbsp; It was here she would receive her sister as queen.&amp;nbsp; They
555 had not seen each other for about five years.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
556 &lt;P&gt;Mary had always disliked her half-sister for many reasons, not least
557 because she sensed an innate shiftiness in Elizabeth's character.&amp;nbsp;
558 Elizabeth, Mary believed, was never to be trusted.&amp;nbsp; Originally, this
559 dislike was because of Elizabeth's mother, Anne Boleyn.&amp;nbsp; Mary had
560 long blamed Anne for her own mother's tragic end as well as the alienation
561 of her father's affections.&amp;nbsp; After Anne died and Elizabeth, too, was
562 declared illegitimate, Mary found other reasons to hate Elizabeth, chief
563 among them religion.&amp;nbsp; Like her mother, Mary was a devout Catholic;
564 she recognized Elizabeth's lack of religious zeal.&amp;nbsp;&lt;img border=&quot;2&quot; src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/elizsister.jpg&quot; align=&quot;right&quot; alt=&quot;portrait of Elizabeth's half-sister, Queen Mary I; she ruled England from 1553 to 1558&quot; width=&quot;350&quot; height=&quot;522&quot;&gt; But at her
565 accession, the moment of her great triumph, she was prepared to be
566 conciliatory.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
567 &lt;P&gt;Mary ordered that Elizabeth share her triumphal march through
568 London.&amp;nbsp; Their processions met at Wanstead on 2 August.&amp;nbsp; There,
569 Elizabeth dismounted and knelt in the road before her sister.&amp;nbsp; Mary
570 dismounted and raised her sister, embracing and kissing her with
571 affection.&amp;nbsp; She even held her hand as they spoke.&amp;nbsp; Their two
572 parties entered London together, the sisters riding side by side.&amp;nbsp;
573 The contrast between their physical appearances could not have been more
574 striking.&amp;nbsp; Mary, at thirty-seven, was old beyond her years.&amp;nbsp; An
575 adulthood passed in anxiety and tribulation had marred her health and
576 appearance.&amp;nbsp; She was small like her mother and thin, with Katharine's
577 deep, almost gruff voice.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth was nineteen years old, taller
578 than her sister and slender.&amp;nbsp; While Mary was richly attired in
579 velvets covered in jewels and gold, Elizabeth was dressed in her usual
580 strikingly severe style.&amp;nbsp; Neither sister was conventionally beautiful
581 but onlookers commented upon Mary's open compassion and kindness and
582 Elizabeth's innate majesty.&amp;nbsp; And since Mary was thirty-seven, quite
583 old to have a child, Elizabeth was viewed as her probable heir.&amp;nbsp; As
584 such, she was cheered as much as the new queen.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
585 &lt;P&gt;On 1 October, Elizabeth rode to Mary's coronation with Henry VIII's
586 discarded fourth wife, Anne of Cleves.&amp;nbsp; She was once again accorded a
587 place of honor amongst the English ladies, though not the highest position
588 as was her due.&amp;nbsp; The Imperial ambassador Renard reported that she
589 spoke often with the French ambassador de Noailles.&amp;nbsp; For his part, de
590 Noailles reported that Elizabeth complained her coronet was too heavy and
591 made her head ache.&amp;nbsp; He replied to her that, God willing, she would
592 soon wear a heavier crown.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
593 &lt;P&gt;This was dangerous talk, as Elizabeth soon discovered.&amp;nbsp; Mary's
594 mood was fickle regarding her clever half-sister.&amp;nbsp; For every kind
595 word or gesture, there were public statements dismissing Henry VIII as
596 Elizabeth's father, or allowing distant cousins precedent at court.&amp;nbsp;
597 It was simply impossible for Mary to forget the past, etched so acutely
598 upon her spirit.&amp;nbsp; She could not like Elizabeth, nor trust her.&amp;nbsp;
599 Elizabeth responded to this emotional hostility by retreating to
600 Hatfield.&amp;nbsp; There she continued her studies and attempted to remain
601 safe in the morass of English politics.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
602 &lt;P&gt;But however much she might wish for peace, she was not to have
603 it.&amp;nbsp; She was destined to be the focal point for all discontent over
604 Mary's reign.&amp;nbsp; And there was soon much reason for discontent.&amp;nbsp;
605 Edward VI's council had left the economy in shambles; currency was debased
606 and near worthless.&amp;nbsp; There was a series of bad harvests.&amp;nbsp; Prices
607 rose and discontent spread.&amp;nbsp; And worst of all, Mary soon decided to
608 marry King Philip II of Spain, son and heir of Charles V.&amp;nbsp; This was
609 yet another example of her inability to forget the past.&amp;nbsp; Philip
610 represented the homeland of her beloved mother, and a chance to bring all
611 the weight of the Holy Roman Empire to bear upon the heretics of
612 England.&amp;nbsp; Mary was determined to turn back the clock on twenty years
613 of religious reform and make England a Catholic nation again.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
614 &lt;P&gt;Understandably, her subjects were less than thrilled.&amp;nbsp; Even
615 English Catholics did not want their country to become a powerless
616 appendage of the Hapsburg empire.&amp;nbsp; Certainly a queen had to marry,
617 but not the emperor's son!&amp;nbsp; In this climate of rebellion and
618 repression, Elizabeth's life was in great danger.&amp;nbsp; It could not be
619 otherwise; she was the only alternative to Mary's rule.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
620 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth conformed outwardly to the Catholic faith.&amp;nbsp; But she
621 could not distance herself too much from her Protestant supporters.&amp;nbsp;
622 When Sir Thomas Wyatt, the son of her mother's great poetic admirer, led a
623 rebellion in January 1554, matters came to an unpleasant impasse.&amp;nbsp;
624 Wyatt had written to Elizabeth that he intended to overthrow Mary but his
625 letter was intercepted, as was a letter from de Noailles to the king of
626 France.&amp;nbsp; His letter implied that Elizabeth knew of the revolt in
627 advance, and repeated rumors that she was off gathering armed
628 supporters.&amp;nbsp; The government was able to suppress the rebellion before
629 it spread very far and Wyatt was arrested.&amp;nbsp; Mary's council could find
630 no real proof that de Noailles's suppositions were true but they decided
631 to summon Elizabeth back to London for questioning.&amp;nbsp; She was
632 understandably frightened and ill; she sent word that she could not
633 travel.&amp;nbsp; Two of Mary's personal physicians were sent to evaluate her
634 condition.&amp;nbsp; They diagnosed 'watery humors' and perhaps an
635 inflammation of the kidneys.&amp;nbsp; She was ill, they reported, but not too
636 ill to travel the 30 miles to London in the queen's own litter.&amp;nbsp;
637 Three of the queen's councilors - Howard, Hastings, and Cornwallis, all of
638 whom were friendly with Elizabeth - escorted her back to London.&amp;nbsp;
639 They traveled quite slowly, covering just six miles a day.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
640 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth kept the curtains of the litter pulled back as she entered
641 the city, and the citizens were able to see her pale, frightened
642 face.&amp;nbsp; She had good cause for her fear; the heads and corpses of
643 Wyatt and his supporters were thrust upon spikes and gibbets throughout
644 the city.&amp;nbsp; The queen waited for her at Whitehall but they did not
645 meet immediately.&amp;nbsp; First, Elizabeth's household was dismissed and she
646 was told that she must undergo close interrogation about her
647 activities.&amp;nbsp; She was questioned by the unfriendly bishop of
648 Winchester, Stephen Gardiner, but she was not intimidated.&amp;nbsp; She
649 denied any involvement in the rebellion and repeatedly asked to see the
650 queen.&amp;nbsp; But she was told that Mary was leaving for Oxford where she
651 would hold a Parliament.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth would be leaving Whitehall as
652 well, though at first the council could not decide where to send
653 her.&amp;nbsp; No councilor wanted the responsibility of keeping her in close
654 confinement at their homes; it was too unpleasant and potentially
655 dangerous.&amp;nbsp; And so Gardiner and Renard had their way and she went to
656 the Tower of London.&amp;nbsp; The earl of Sussex and the marquess of
657 Winchester were sent to escort her from Whitehall.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
658 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth was terrified.&amp;nbsp; The mere mention of the Tower was enough
659 to shatter her already fragile nerves.&amp;nbsp; She begged to be allowed to
660 write to her sister, and the men agreed.&amp;nbsp; The letter was long,
661 rambling, and repetitious - proof of her fear and trepidation:&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
662 &lt;BLOCKQUOTE&gt;
663 &lt;p&gt;I have heard in my time of many cast away for want of coming
664 to the presence of their Prince....&amp;nbsp; Therefore once again kneeling
665 with humbleness of my heart, because I am not suffered to bow the knees
666 of my body, I humbly crave to speak with your Highness, which I would
667 not be so bold to desire if I knew not myself most clear as I know
668 myself most true.&amp;nbsp; And as for the traitor Wyatt, he might
669 peradventure write me a letter but on my faith I never received any from
670 him; and as for the copy of my letter sent to the French king, I pray
671 God confound me eternally if ever I sent him word, message, token or
672 letter by any means, and to this truth I will stand it to my
673 death.&amp;nbsp; &lt;BR&gt;....Let conscience move your Highness to take some
674 better way with me than to make me be condemned in all men's sight afore
675 my desert know.&lt;/p&gt;
676 &lt;/BLOCKQUOTE&gt;
677 &lt;p&gt;After finishing, she carefully drew lines
678 throughout the rest of the blank sheet so no forgeries could be added, and
679 she signed it 'I humbly crave but one word of answer from yourself.&amp;nbsp;
680 Your Highness's most faithful subject that hath been from the beginning
681 and will be to my end, Elizabeth'.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/p&gt;
682 &lt;P&gt;The letter had taken too long to write; they had missed the tide.&amp;nbsp;
683 They could wait a few hours and take her to the Tower in the darkest part
684 of night, but the council disagreed.&amp;nbsp; There could be an attempt to
685 rescue her under cover of darkness.&amp;nbsp; They decided to wait until the
686 next morning, Palm Sunday, when the streets would be nearly deserted since
687 everyone would be in church.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, her letter was sent to Mary
688 who received it angrily and refused to read it through.&amp;nbsp; She had not
689 given permission for it to be written or sent, and she rebuked her
690 councilors fiercely.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
691 &lt;P&gt;The next morning, 17 March 1554, arrived cold and grey; there was a
692 steady rain.&amp;nbsp; At 9 o'clock in the morning, Elizabeth was taken from
693 her rooms and through the garden to where the barge waited.&amp;nbsp; She was
694 accompanied by six of her ladies and two gentleman-attendants.&amp;nbsp; She
695 waited under a canopy until the barge began to slow; she then saw that
696 they would enter beneath Traitor's Gate, beneath St Thomas's Tower.&amp;nbsp;
697 This was the traditional entrance for prisoners returned to their cells
698 after trial at Westminster.&amp;nbsp; The sight terrified her and she begged
699 to be allowed entry by any other gate.&amp;nbsp; Her request was
700 refused.&amp;nbsp; She was offered a cloak to protect her from the rain but
701 she pushed it aside angrily.&amp;nbsp; Upon stepping onto the landing, she
702 declared, 'Here landeth as true a subject, being prisoner, as ever landed
703 at these stairs.&amp;nbsp; Before Thee, O God, do I speak it, having no other
704 friend but Thee alone.'&amp;nbsp; She then noticed the yeoman warders gathered
705 to receive her beyond the gate.&amp;nbsp; 'Oh Lord,' she said loudly, 'I never
706 thought to have come in here as a prisoner, and I pray you all bear me
707 witness that I come in as no traitor but as true a woman to the Queen's
708 Majesty as any as is now living.'&amp;nbsp; Several of the warders stepped
709 forward and bowed before her, and one called out, 'God preserve your
710 Grace.'&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
711 &lt;P&gt;She still refused to enter the Tower.&amp;nbsp; After the warder's
712 declaration, she sat upon a stone and would not move.&amp;nbsp; The Lieutenant
713 of the Tower, Sir John Brydges, said to her, 'You had best come in,
714 Madame, for here you sit unwholesomely.'&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth replied with
715 feeling, 'Better sit here, than in a worse place, for God knoweth where
716 you will bring me.'&amp;nbsp; And so she sat until one of her attendants burst
717 into tears.&amp;nbsp; She was taken to the Bell Tower, a small corner tower
718 beside Brydges's own lodgings.&amp;nbsp; Her room was on the first floor, and
719 had a large fireplace with three small windows.&amp;nbsp; Down the passageway
720 from the door were three latrines which hung over the moat.&amp;nbsp; It was
721 not as destitute or uncomfortable as she had feared, but it was still the
722 Tower of London and she was a prisoner.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
723 &lt;P&gt;This was the beginning of one of the most trying times of her
724 life.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
725 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth spent just two months in the Tower of London, but she had no
726 idea that her stay would be so brief - and it did not feel particularly
727 brief.&amp;nbsp; She truly believed some harm would come to her and she dwelt
728 most upon the possibility of poison.&amp;nbsp; She knew Mary hated her and
729 that many of her councilors constantly spoke ill of her, encouraging
730 either her imprisonment or execution.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
731 &lt;P&gt;However, Elizabeth had enough popular support that she would not face
732 death at her sister's orders.&amp;nbsp; But Lady Jane Grey, the unfortunate
733 Nine Days' Queen, and her husband were neither so popular or lucky.&amp;nbsp;
734 They, too, had lived in the Tower under threat of execution; both had been
735 convicted of treason.&amp;nbsp; But Mary had always been fond of Jane and was
736 close friends with her mother Frances; she allowed her cousin to live very
737 comfortably in the Tower while her fate remained undecided.&amp;nbsp; Mary
738 probably intended to release Jane as soon as the country settled under her
739 own rule.&amp;nbsp; But Renard wanted both Jane and her husband
740 executed.&amp;nbsp; He warned Mary that the emperor would not allow Philip to
741 enter England as long as Jane lived.&amp;nbsp; She was a traitor, and it was
742 only a matter of time before the Protestants tried to place either Jane or
743 Elizabeth upon the throne.&amp;nbsp; Mary was not persuaded by Renard's
744 arguments, but his threat carried greater force - she wanted to marry
745 Philip and he would not come to England until it was safe.&amp;nbsp; The small
746 rebellion led by Jane's father clearly did not help matters.&amp;nbsp; And so
747 Jane and the equally unfortunate Guildford Dudley were executed.&amp;nbsp;
748 Elizabeth herself arrived at the Tower just six weeks later, and her
749 cousin's fate must have weighed heavily on her mind.&amp;nbsp; After all, she
750 and Jane had lived and studied together briefly under Katharine Parr's
751 tutelage, and Jane's admiration of Elizabeth had been open and
752 obvious.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
753 &lt;P&gt;It was abundantly clear to Elizabeth that her position was precarious
754 and dangerous.&amp;nbsp; During the first weeks of her imprisonment, she was
755 allowed to take exercise along the Tower walls but when a small child
756 began to give her flowers and other gifts, Brydges was told to keep her
757 indoors.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth had always been active, both physically and
758 mentally.&amp;nbsp; She chafed at her confinement and its boring
759 routine.&amp;nbsp; She was occasionally interrogated by members of Mary's
760 council, but she held firm to her innocence.&amp;nbsp; She had faced such
761 interrogations during Thomas Seymour's fall from grace, and could not be
762 easily intimidated.&amp;nbsp; Still, the stress - which she handled with
763 outward aplomb - took its toll on her physical health.&amp;nbsp; She lost
764 weight, and became prone to headaches and stomach problems.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
765 &lt;P&gt;Ironically enough, it was the impending arrival of Philip of Spain
766 which led to her freedom.&amp;nbsp; Renard had urged Mary to execute Jane and
767 imprison Elizabeth so that Philip would be safe in England.&amp;nbsp; Philip,
768 however, was far more sensitive to the political implications of such an
769 act.&amp;nbsp; He knew the English were acutely sensitive to any shift in
770 Mary's policies simply because she had chosen to marry a foreigner.&amp;nbsp;
771 If she made an unpopular decision, it would be blamed upon his
772 influence.&amp;nbsp; He knew, too, that the Protestant faith was still popular
773 in the country, and that Elizabeth embodied its greatest hope.&amp;nbsp; If
774 she were harmed in any way, his arrival in England would be even more
775 unpopular and dangerous.&amp;nbsp; And the Wyatt rebellion had merely
776 reinforced Philip's natural inclination to tread lightly.&amp;nbsp; His
777 intention was to wed Mary, be crowned king of England, and find a suitable
778 husband for Elizabeth, preferably one of his Hapsburg relations.&amp;nbsp;
779 Then, if Mary died without bearing a child, England would remain within
780 the Hapsburg sphere of influence, a willing and useful adjunct of the
781 empire.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
782 &lt;P&gt;Accordingly, Philip wrote to Mary and advised that Elizabeth be set at
783 liberty.&amp;nbsp; This conciliatory gesture was not appreciated by Mary,
784 always inclined to believe the worst in her half-sister, but - once again
785 - her eagerness for Philip's arrival made her desperate to please
786 him.&amp;nbsp; She dispensed with Renard's advice and on Saturday 19 May at
787 one o'clock in the afternoon, Elizabeth was finally released from the
788 Tower; incidentally, her mother had been executed on the same day eighteen
789 years earlier.&amp;nbsp; She spent one night at Richmond Palace, but it was
790 clear that her release had not lifted Elizabeth's spirits.&amp;nbsp; That
791 night she summoned her few servants and asked them to pray for her, 'For
792 this night,' Elizabeth said, 'I think to die.'&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
793 &lt;P&gt;She did not die, of course, but she was still frightened and
794 lonely.&amp;nbsp; She had been released into the care of Sir Henry
795 Bedingfield, a Catholic supporter of Queen Mary whose father had guarded
796 Katharine of Aragon during her last years at Kimbolton Castle.&amp;nbsp; He
797 had come to the Tower on 5 May as the new Constable, replacing Sir John
798 Gage, and his arrival had caused Elizabeth no end of terror.&amp;nbsp; She
799 believed he was sent to secretly murder her for, not long before, a
800 credible rumor had reached her; it was said that the Catholic elements of
801 Mary's council had sent a warrant for her execution to the Tower but that
802 Sir John Brydges, the strict but honest Lieutenant, had not acted upon it
803 because it lacked the queen's signature.&amp;nbsp; With Bedingfield's arrival,
804 Elizabeth lost her almost preternatural self-control and she asked her
805 guards 'whether the Lady Jane's scaffold was taken away or no?'&amp;nbsp; When
806 told it was gone, she asked about Bedingfield, and if 'her murdering were
807 secretly committed to his charge, he would see the execution
808 thereof?'&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
809 &lt;P&gt;From Richmond, Bedingfield took his cowed charge to Woodstock, a
810 hunting-lodge miles from London and once favored by her Plantagenet
811 grandfather, Edward IV.&amp;nbsp; She was neither officially under arrest nor
812 free, a nebulous position which confused nearly everyone.&amp;nbsp; She could
813 not be received at court, but she could not be set at liberty in the
814 countryside.&amp;nbsp; And so Bedingfield was essentially her jailer, but not
815 referred to as such; and Woodstock was her prison, but also not called
816 such.&amp;nbsp; The journey to Woodstock certainly raised her spirit.&amp;nbsp;
817 She was greeted by throngs of people shouting 'God save your grace!' and
818 other messages of support.&amp;nbsp; Flowers, sweets, cakes and other small
819 gifts were given to her.&amp;nbsp; At times, the reception was so enthusiastic
820 that Elizabeth was openly overwhelmed.&amp;nbsp; It was now clear to her that
821 the English people loved her, perhaps as much as they did Queen
822 Mary.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
823 &lt;P&gt;But the love of the people was small comfort when faced with the
824 dilapidation of Woodstock.&amp;nbsp; The main house was in such disrepair that
825 Elizabeth was lodged in the gatehouse.&amp;nbsp; The queen had ordered that
826 her sister be treated honorably and given limited freedom; Elizabeth was
827 allowed to walk in the orchard and gardens.&amp;nbsp; She also requested
828 numerous books.&amp;nbsp; After a few weeks, her initial fear of Bedingfield
829 had settled into a bemused appraisal of her jailer.&amp;nbsp; She now
830 recognized him for what he was - a conscientious, unimaginative civil
831 servant with a difficult assignment.&amp;nbsp; They got on tolerably well, and
832 Bedingfield even forwarded her numerous letters to the Council and the
833 queen.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth was concerned that her imprisonment in the
834 countryside would remove her too much from the public eye and her
835 ceaseless letter-writing was an attempt to reassert her position as
836 princess of England.&amp;nbsp; Mary did not read the letters and angrily order
837 Bedingfield to stop sending them along.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
838 &lt;P&gt;At the end of June, Elizabeth fell ill and asked that the queen's
839 physician Dr Owen be sent to her.&amp;nbsp; But Dr Owen was busy tending to
840 Queen Mary and told Bedingfield that his charge must be patient.&amp;nbsp; He
841 recommended the services of Drs Barnes and Walbeck.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth
842 refused to allow their examination; she preferred to commit her body to
843 God rather than to the eyes of strangers, she told Bedingfield.&amp;nbsp;
844 Finally, on 7 July, Mary finally sent permission to Woodstock for
845 Elizabeth to write to her and the Council about her various
846 concerns.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth was petulant and took her time with the
847 composition of this most important letter.&amp;nbsp; When it was finally sent,
848 written in Bedingfield's hand from her dictation, it was a typically
849 shrewd and pointed document.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth wanted the Council to
850 consider 'her long imprisonment and restraint of liberty, either to charge
851 her with special matter to be answered unto and tried, or to grant her
852 liberty to come unto her highness's presence, which she sayeth she would
853 not desire were it not that she knoweth herself to be clear even before
854 God, for her allegiance.'&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth specifically requested that the
855 members of the queen's council who were executors of 'the Will of the
856 King's majesty her father' read the letter and be allowed to visit with
857 her.&amp;nbsp; It was a pointed reminder that despite her deprived
858 circumstances, she was still next in line to the English throne.&amp;nbsp; The
859 Council heard the document uneasily.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
860 &lt;P&gt;Mary, however, had other matters on her mind.&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 20
861 July, even as Elizabeth mulled over her letter, Philip II of Spain finally
862 landed at Southampton.&amp;nbsp; The handsome, fair-haired 27 year old King
863 was already a widow with a male heir; his first wife Maria of Portugal had
864 died in childbirth in 1545 after two years of&lt;IMG height=480
865 alt=&quot;another portrait of Elizabeth's half-sister, Queen Mary I&quot;
866 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/mary1-eworth.jpg&quot; width=332 border=2 align=&quot;right&quot;&gt; marriage.&amp;nbsp; He was a
867 conscientious and pious man who impressed all who met him with his
868 discipline and work ethic.&amp;nbsp; But he also had a tendency toward
869 religious asceticism which worsened as he grew older.&amp;nbsp; As a child, he
870 had accompanied his father to the inquisition in Spain, watching
871 impassively as heretics were burned alive.&amp;nbsp; But his marriage to Mary
872 was one of political necessity and Philip had no intention of threatening
873 its success with unpopular religious policies.&amp;nbsp; He was willing to
874 move England slowly back into the Catholic fold; faced with Mary's
875 impatience, it was Philip who advised moderation.&amp;nbsp; He wed his cousin
876 at Winchester Cathedral on 25 July in a splendid ceremony.&amp;nbsp; On 18
877 August they finally entered London in triumph, its citizens plied with
878 enough free drinks and entertainment to greet Philip
879 enthusiastically.&amp;nbsp; But there were already signs of trouble; the
880 anonymous pamphlets condemning foreigners and the queen's marriage
881 circulated, and Philip's Spanish entourage were unhappy over a number of
882 petty slights and insults from their English hosts.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
883 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth had hoped the marriage would result in some change in her
884 circumstances.&amp;nbsp; But she was sadly mistaken.&amp;nbsp; Instead she passed
885 the months needling Bedingfield for more books, scribbling more letters,
886 and listening to the occasional rumor from her servants.&amp;nbsp; The rumors
887 were hardly comforting.&amp;nbsp; The queen was reportedly pregnant and she
888 and Philip would open Parliament together on 12 November.&amp;nbsp; From then
889 on, the reunion between England and the papacy could begin in force.&amp;nbsp;
890 Mary was the happiest she had been since childhood, but the problem of
891 Elizabeth remained.&amp;nbsp; Gardiner wanted her executed; he argued that
892 Protestantism could not be completely eradicated until its great hope,
893 Elizabeth herself, was gone.&amp;nbsp; But Philip and most other councilors
894 were more pragmatic.&amp;nbsp; Parliament had already agreed that if Mary died
895 in childbirth, Philip would be regent of England during their child's
896 minority.&amp;nbsp; However, if both mother and child died, then Elizabeth
897 once again assumed prominence.&amp;nbsp; Philip, always prudent, preferred to
898 know his sister-in-law before making an enemy of her.&amp;nbsp; With his
899 encouragement, and flush with happiness at her marriage and pregnancy,
900 Mary finally invited Elizabeth to court.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
901 &lt;P&gt;In the third week of April 1555, almost a year since she was sent to
902 Woodstock, Elizabeth was brought to Hampton Court Palace.&amp;nbsp; Mary had
903 gone there to prepare for her lying-in.&amp;nbsp; They did not meet
904 immediately.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth was brought into the palace through a side
905 entrance, still closely guarded.&amp;nbsp; According to the French ambassador,
906 Philip visited her three days later but Mary never came.&amp;nbsp; Two weeks
907 later, the most powerful members of the council appeared to chide her for
908 not submitting to the queen's authority; she was told to admit her past
909 wrongdoing and seek the queen's forgiveness.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth replied that
910 she had done nothing wrong in the past and wanted no mercy from her sister
911 'but rather desired the law'.&amp;nbsp; She told Gardiner she would rather
912 remain in prison forever than admit to crimes she had never
913 committed.&amp;nbsp; He went off immediately to tell Mary of her sister's
914 continued stubbornness.&amp;nbsp; The queen was not pleased.&amp;nbsp; The next
915 day, Gardiner told Elizabeth that the queen marveled that 'she would so
916 stoutly use herself, not confessing that she had offended'.&amp;nbsp; Did
917 Elizabeth really believe she was wrongfully imprisoned? Gardiner asked.&amp;nbsp;
918 Elizabeth refused the bait.&amp;nbsp; She did not criticize her sister
919 explicitly, telling him only that the queen must do with her as her
920 conscience dictated.&amp;nbsp; Gardiner replied that if she wanted her liberty
921 and former position, she must tell a different story; only by admitting
922 her past faults, confessing all sins, could she hope for
923 forgiveness.&amp;nbsp; It was a stalemate.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth again told him she
924 would rather be unjustly imprisoned than gain freedom with lies.&amp;nbsp;
925&lt;/P&gt;
926 &lt;P&gt;The next week passed with no word from anyone.&amp;nbsp; And then, around
927 10 o'clock one evening, a message arrived that the queen would see
928 her.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth had begged for an interview for more than a year but
929 now that the moment had at last arrived, she was understandably
930 nervous.&amp;nbsp; She was accompanied into Mary's apartments by one of her
931 own ladies-in-waiting and Mary's close friend and Mistress of the Robes
932 Susan Clarencieux.&amp;nbsp; The queen's bedroom was lit with flickering
933 candlelight; the queen herself was half-hidden in shadow.&amp;nbsp; Without
934 asking permission, Elizabeth immediately prostrated herself and declared
935 her innocence.&amp;nbsp; And though she and Mary sparred for a short while,
936 the queen was willing to be generous at her own moment of triumph.&amp;nbsp;
937 It was rumored that Philip watched the sisters from behind a curtain;
938 whether or not he was there, Mary was content to make peace of
939 sorts.&amp;nbsp; She sent Elizabeth away amicably enough and a week later poor
940 Bedingfield was relieved of his duties.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth would remain at
941 Hampton Court, still under light guard but with her own household and
942 permission to receive certain guests.&amp;nbsp; It was the end of over a year
943 of tiresome captivity and she was delighted.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
944 &lt;P&gt;While she enjoyed her newfound liberty, the burning of Protestant
945 heretics began in earnest.&amp;nbsp; These killings have earned Mary the
946 nickname 'Bloody Mary' and blighted her reputation.&amp;nbsp; In truth, the
947 roughly 300 people killed (about 60 women) was not considered excessive by
948 Mary's European contemporaries; and in the government's mind,
949 Protestantism had become dangerously linked with treason, sedition, and
950 other secular crimes.&amp;nbsp; For Mary, who was perhaps the most personally
951 kind and gentle of the Tudor rulers, the killings were necessary to save
952 the heretics' souls as well.&amp;nbsp; It is a telling feature of her
953 character that she could often forgive treason against herself, but would
954 not countenance treason against God.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
955 &lt;P&gt;The burnings, coupled with the Spanish marriage, caused enough
956 resentment; but, unfortunately for Mary, famine and poverty added to her
957 list of woes.&amp;nbsp; But the greatest tragedy of all for the queen was the
958 humiliating and heartbreaking realization that her pregnancy was not
959 real.&amp;nbsp; Mary had truly believed she was pregnant; her stomach had
960 become swollen and she had felt the child quicken.&amp;nbsp; But she had
961 always suffered from digestive and menstrual troubles.&amp;nbsp; It is
962 probable that she developed a tumor in her stomach which, combined with
963 the lack of a cycle and her own fervent prayers, made her believe she was
964 pregnant.&amp;nbsp; All of April was spent in a state of readiness.&amp;nbsp;
965 Dozens of nurses and midwives crowded into Hampton Court, joined by a
966 throng of noble ladies who would assist in the delivery.&amp;nbsp; On 30 April
967 a rumor reached London that a male child had been born and celebrations
968 ensued.&amp;nbsp; But it was a false alarm; the next three months were spent
969 in a state of suspended disbelief.&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 3 August, the queen's
970 household departed to Oatlands and the pregnancy was not mentioned
971 again.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
972 &lt;P&gt;Mary's heartache was soon worsened by the impending departure of
973 Philip.&amp;nbsp; He had spent over a year in a country he disliked, married
974 to a woman he pitied but did not love.&amp;nbsp; He used the excuse of
975 pressing business in the Low Countries to leave England.&amp;nbsp; Mary
976 protested passionately, begging him to stay; it was clear to everyone that
977 she truly loved her husband.&amp;nbsp; But Philip was equally determined to
978 go.&amp;nbsp; It was perhaps clear to him that Mary was seriously ill and
979 would never have children.&amp;nbsp; If that was the case, he had no reason to
980 remain in England.&amp;nbsp; He left explicit instructions that she treat her
981 sister well.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
982 &lt;P&gt;Elizabeth was sent to a small manor house a few miles from Oatlands
983 where she played another waiting game, only this time with some measure of
984 freedom and hope.&amp;nbsp; But it was to be another three years before she
985 would become queen of England.&lt;/P&gt;
986 &lt;P&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/P&gt;
987 &lt;CENTER&gt;
988 &lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;A
989 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2feliz2.html&quot;&gt;CONTINUE
990 READING&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/B&gt; &lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;
991 &lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=-1&gt;&lt;A
992 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs.html&quot;&gt;to Tudor
993 Monarchs&lt;/A&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
994 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
995 &lt;/blockquote&gt;
996&lt;/blockquote&gt;
997
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