Nearly everyone has a mental image of Elizabeth, the brilliant sixteenth-century Queen of England who launched the age we now know by her name. We may think of her as the greatest ruler her nation ever had, one who pulled together a shattered country and laid the foundation for an empire that lasted for centuries. Or we may see her as Glorianna, the improbable Virgin Queen, who inspired the devotion and chivalrous passion symbolized by the myth of Sir Walter Raleigh flinging his cloak across a puddle so that she could cross it dry-shod. We might remember Elizabeth as the global strategist who sent Raleigh to colonize North America and commissioned Sir Francis Drake to plunder the treasure galleons of Spain and then used him to defeat the mighty armada that Spain had launched to conquer England. Or we could see her as the inspiration for a new flowering of English culture, culminating in the music of William Byrd and the plays and poetry of William Shakespeare. All of those visions would be correct, but none of them does her full justice. Elizabeth was a queen for all seasons. She transcended a wretched, motherless childhood: She was declared a bastard after her father, Henry VIII, divorced her mother, Anne Boleyn, and then had Boleyn beheaded. A lifelong lover of books, Elizabeth became a scholar and intellectual; through instinct and her classical studies, she learned to navigate the perilous politics of Tudor England and survive the plots that could easily have ended in her death. And when she finally gained the throne, she used her wit and talent to fend off her many suitors and keep her enemies divided. In the end, she held her fractured country together long enough to mend its worst wounds, see the dawn of prosperity, and win the enduring love of her people. Queen Elizabeth’s life was as complex as her character; no matter how much we learn about her, we will never know the complete woman. But the effort is both instructive and rewarding – and this brief story of her life is a good way to begin. Elizabeth ruled England for forty-four years. She was the last of the Tudor line of monarchs, whose roots were in Wales; the Tudors had risen to power in 1485, when Henry VII became king. His son, the flamboyant, mercurial, sometimes wrathful Henry VIII, broke with the Catholic Church and founded the Church of England to escape his marriage to his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, so he could marry the young and lissome Anne Boleyn, the daughter of one of his courtiers. But Anne turned out to be only another in a succession of wives. Henry married six women, executing two of them, with Anne the first to lose her head. The charges fabricated against her – treason, adultery, witchcraft, and incest – were clearly a pretext; her true fault was failing to produce a male heir. Elizabeth was three years old when her mother went to the block and fourteen when Henry VIII was buried. She would have to wait ten more years, through the reigns of her half-sister Mary I and half- brother Edward VI, until she won the crown. As a monarch, Elizabeth was sensible and judicious. Her father’s break with Rome had thrown the country into turmoil, and Mary had tried zealously to restore Catholicism in England, earning the name “Bloody Mary” by persecuting Protestants and burning them at the stake as heretics. But Elizabeth put an end to the inquests, trials and executions. “I have no desire to make windows into men’s souls,” she said. She reinstated the Protestant Bible and English Mass, but generally refrained from persecuting Catholics. Under her rule, her country experienced a cultural renaissance. Poetry, music, and literature flowered. Shakespeare and Christopher Marlowe composed plays that broke free of tradition to create a new style of theater. William Byrd’s music gave the age its tone, and a generation of British artists began to displace the European painters, led by Hans Holbein, whose portraits had long held sway. Elizabeth used her wit and calculated duplicity to thread her way through the tangle of schemes, rivalries, and wars plaguing Europe, and her country’s power and influence grew. In a time of bold seafaring exploration and conquest, she dispatched Drake to the New World with orders to sack Spanish holdings along the coast of the Americas and intercept the galleons bringing gold to Spain. When Drake brought the Golden Hind into Plymouth port in 1580, the ship was laden with so much treasure that Elizabeth, whose share was half, realized a 4,700 percent return on her investment. The Virgin Queen never married or produced an heir; she insisted that she would live and die a virgin, and despite her pleasure in men and her many flirtations, she probably did. She was never a classic beauty, but in her youth she was slender, vivacious, athletic, and charming. Her courtiers were smitten, and she reigned as Glorianna in a mist of erotic tension, extravagant poetic tributes, and the tattered remnants of chivalry. Somehow, she kept that illusion alive as she aged inexorably into a balding grotesque with painted face and rotting teeth. But all that was a surface play. Elizabeth’s great talent was to rule, wisely and well, using ambiguity and calculated dithering to fend off enemies when she lacked power. She brought wealth and glory to her country and laid the groundwork for a British empire that would span the globe – and to this day, not as Glorianna but as “Good Queen Bess,” she is loved and revered by her countrymen. On September 7, 1533, at Greenwich Palace, official residence of England’s Queen Consort, in a room called the Chamber of the Virgins, Anne Boleyn gave birth to a girl. They named her Elizabeth after her grandmothers, Elizabeth Howard and Elizabeth York, doyennes of the Tudor clan. Her parents had wanted a boy; all of England had wanted a boy, and the royal astrologers and physicians had confidently predicted the birth of a prince. So Elizabeth began life as a disappointment. The king already had two children: the illegitimate and half- royal Henry FitzRoy, who pursued a life in the shadows as the Duke of Richmond; and a daughter, Mary, by Henry’s first wife Catherine. The duke was not considered an heir, but Mary was, though not a preferred one. Ruling was a man’s job. Only once in English history had a woman, Mathilda, sat on the throne, and her twelfth-century reign was not considered a success. Still, Henry understood that all of England saw Elizabeth as one of his heirs, and he undertook to make her birth a cause for celebration. For Elizabeth’s christening, the mayor of London and a contingent of the city’s most prominent citizens went to Greenwich aboard barges decorated for the occasion. They were accompanied by the entire royal court. The assemblage gathered at the palace and then proceeded in a parade to the church, walking on a road that had been carpeted with green rushes. The baby Elizabeth wore a purple velvet gown and a long train trimmed in ermine that was carried by high-ranking lords and ladies of the court. An enormous crowd lined the street. At the church, decked in fine tapestries, the Archbishop of Canterbury baptized Elizabeth under a crimson canopy. Afterward, the baby was showered with expensive gifts. Although he continued to long for a male heir, Henry secured an act by Parliament formalizing Elizabeth’s claim to the throne. Henry also demanded that his daughter Mary, now seventeen years old, acknowledge his marriage to Anne and the annulment of his marriage to her mother, Catherine. When Mary refused, he had her moved into Elizabeth’s household to serve as one of her baby sister’s ladies in waiting. Told to pay her respects to the new princess, Mary said she knew of no princess save herself – and burst into tears. It was the beginning of a lifelong enmity between the half-sisters. Anne Boleyn knew how much Henry still wanted a son. As months and then years crawled by with two miscarriages and no future king, Henry began taking his pleasure elsewhere. He told Anne bluntly that her life depended on her producing a son. And when Elizabeth was still a toddler, Henry lost the small amount of patience he had with his wife. Anne was falsely accused of having no fewer than four lovers, one of them supposedly her brother. Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury and a key figure in the English Reformation, decreed the marriage of Henry and Anne “absolutely and entirely null, invalid, void, without force, consequence, moment, or effect at law,” and Parliament declared the Lady Elizabeth, as she was thereafter called, no longer a princess. The Act “preclosed, excluded, and barred” her claim to the throne. Catherine of Aragon had recently died, and now Elizabeth and Mary were both officially bastards. Then events took a darker turn. The Tower of London is a large, heavily fortified castle made up of a number of buildings, including a high tower within an imposing outer wall. Its earliest structures were built by William the Conqueror in 1078, and it was regarded as one of the most impregnable fortresses in the world. Formally a royal palace, the Tower was, for most of its history, not used primarily as a prison, and its reputation as a place where people were tortured and executed is exaggerated. During the reign of the Tudors, however, it was a grim and gloomy death house for the condemned. The castle stands on the bank of the River Thames, and a set of steps drops down to the water from the so-called Traitors’ Gate, through which prisoners could be delivered to the Tower by barge. In the spring of 1536, Henry and Anne quarreled at a jousting tournament. The king believed, or at least feigned outrage, that Anne had behaved improperly with one of the gentlemen in attendance and ordered her taken by a heavily armed barge to the Tower and deposited in a bleak cell. Terrified, she prayed for her life and insisted she had done nothing to deserve punishment. She quickly realized that Henry was not interested in whether she had committed any indiscretion; he only wanted her out of the way so he could marry again. She screamed and cried until the guards concluded she had gone insane, at which point Henry ordered her put on trial. But first, he sent a commission to the Tower to interrogate Anne and make clear what she was being charged with. Also imprisoned at the Tower were her brother and three men Henry had chosen for his scenario. Anne was accused of having illicit affairs with all four; that supported a charge of treason, along with adultery and incest, and for good measure, she was accused of witchcraft as well. Henry had his commission inform Anne that he would spare her life if she confessed. Believing that surely the truth would somehow come out, and perhaps fearing what would befall the four men if she confessed, Anne refused. Instead, she wrote the king a long, pleading letter from the place she called her “doleful prison in the Tower.” Anne professed her complete innocence and told Henry she was bewildered that he would think she had been unfaithful to him. She said it was unfair to besmirch her reputation and, by transference, the infant Elizabeth. Anne begged Henry for a fair, impartial trial, insisting that such a proceeding would establish her faithfulness beyond any doubt. She signed off as Henry’s “most loyal and ever faithful wife.” In fact, there was no way out for any of the accused. The four men were told they could avoid execution by confessing. One
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