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Royal Marriage Secrets

Page 27

by John Ashdown-Hill


  Clementina Walkinshaw was also a religious lady. She came from a gentry background and seems to have been able to cope even with rather difficult situations, and to have been a kind person. She bore a daughter and heiress who also seems to have had good qualities in terms of character, though she suffered from ill health. Perhaps Clementina could have made a good queen. We know from her conduct during her lifetime that she would have wished to be remembered by history as a wife, and not as a mistress. But in her case, of course, to have become a queen she would have needed to overcome not only questions about her marriage, but also the exclusion of the Catholic Stuart dynasty from the British throne.

  Maria Smythe also seems to have been a promising candidate for a consort’s Crown, and at least some contemporaries so described her. She too was a moral and religious lady, and we know from her behaviour that she objected very much to any suggestion that she was not married to George [IV]. She was admired by many in her day for her upright character and her charm, and she tried to curb her husband’s expenditure. In Maria’s case there is no possible question about the fact of her royal marriage. The only problem is that on several grounds that marriage contravened the British succession law as then enacted. If we are considering Maria as a potential queen, we are also left with some uncertainty about her capacity to produce heirs to the throne. Although it has been suggested that she did produce a child or children by George [IV], this remains open to dispute, and it is certain that her first two marriages had remained childless.

  Little information is available about Laura Culme-Seymour. Like several of our other contenders she had an ancestral relative who had previously worn the consort’s Crown, and her family background may have meant that she would have been able to take on a public role without too much difficulty. But in her case, despite some new evidence which has now been revealed, a great deal of uncertainty about the facts remains. It must now be considered possible that she had a relationship with the future George V, just as a widespread contemporary rumour suggested, even though both Laura’s family and the king later publicly denied this in a court of law. I have suggested that the confused state of the evidence today recalls, in some ways, the official action on the part of the government of Edward IV to hide evidence of his relationship with Eleanor Talbot at the time of that lady’s demise. Unlike the case of Edward IV and Eleanor, however, it is by no means certain that there was ever any form of marriage between George [V] and Laura. Moreover, Laura, like Eleanor Talbot and perhaps Maria Smythe, may not have been well equipped to produce heirs to the throne. In addition, her early death (if true) means that she might not, in any case, have survived long enough to wear the consort’s Crown which her distant cousin, Jane, had briefly assumed in the reign of Henry VIII.

  Anne Boleyn was officially demoted by Henry VIII, but history has treated her more kindly than he did. Whatever the truth about the technicalities of her marriage, she has consistently been remembered by history as a Queen of England. Also, despite her lack of living sons, she did produce an heir to the throne – an heir, moreover, who, despite the questions about her birth, ultimately became one of England’s most celebrated monarchs.

  As for Lucy Walter, her relationship with the future King Charles II is beyond doubt, and by him she produced a son, and a line of descendants of whom she could have been proud. However, Charles himself consistently denied that he had ever been married to her, and no real evidence has been found to undermine his official statements. Fortunately, perhaps, Lucy died before the Restoration of the Monarchy, so there was never any question of her making a bid for the role of queen – a role for which her suitability seems in some respects to have been questionable.

  Finally we come to Hannah Lightfoot, a mystery figure about whom so little is known that her suitability for a consort’s Crown is impossible to evaluate. In the past Hannah’s very existence was questioned, but recent research has shown that this was unjustified. Nevertheless, the question of a marriage between her and George [III] remains very open. Although it now appears possible that there really was a relationship between them, on balance it seems improbable that they ever married.

  APPENDIX 1

  MONARCHS OF ENGLAND

  AND THEIR CONSORTS

  Controversial consorts examined in this book are included, with question marks.

  ‘Foreign’ royal consorts (children or grandchildren of a foreign monarch) are marked in bold. Only nineteen out of forty-nine monarchs or heirs listed here (abut 39 per cent) married such ‘foreign’ royal consorts. Most of the Lancastrian and Stuart sovereigns did so, but since the Hanoverian accession there have only been two such ‘foreign’ royal marriages.

  William I Matilda of Flanders

  William II [none]

  Henry I Matilda (Edith) of Scotland; Adeliza of Louvain

  Stephen/Matilda (civil war) Matilda of Boulogne

  Emperor Henry V; Geoffrey, Count of Anjou

  Henry II Eleanor of Aquitaine

  [Henry the Young King Margaret of France]

  Richard I Berengaria of Navarre

  John Isabel (Hawise) of Gloucester; Isabelle of Angoulême

  Henry III Eleanor of Provence

  Edward I Eleanor of Castile; Margaret of France

  Edward II Isabelle of France

  Edward III Philippa of Hainaut

  [Edward the Black Prince Joan of Kent]

  Richard II Anne of Bohemia; Isabelle of France

  Henry IV Mary de Bohun; Joanna of Navarre

  Henry V Catherine of France

  Henry VI Margaret of Anjou

  Edward IV ?Eleanor Talbot; ?Elizabeth Woodville

  Edward V [?none]

  Richard III Anne Neville

  Henry VII Elizabeth of York

  Henry VIII ?Catherine of Aragon; ?Anne Boleyn; Jane Seymour; ?Anne of Cleves; ?Catherine Howard; Catherine Parr

  Edward VI [none]

  [Jane Guildford Dudley]

  Mary I Philip II of Spain

  Elizabeth I ?none; ?Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester

  James I Anne of Denmark

  Charles I Henrietta Maria of France

  interregnum

  Charles II ?Lucy Walter; Catherine of Bragança

  James II Anne Hyde; Mary of Modena

  William III and Mary II (married couple)

  Anne George of Denmark

  [James III Maria Clementina Sobieska]

  [Charles III ?Clementina Walkinshaw; ?Louise of Stolberg]

  [Henry IX none]

  George I Sophia Dorothea of Celle

  George II Caroline of Ansbach

  [Frederick, Prince of Wales Augusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg]

  George III ?Hannah Lightfoot; ?Charlotte of Mecklenburg

  George IV ?Maria Smythe; ?Caroline of Brunswick

  William IV Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen

  Victoria Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha; ?John Brown

  Edward VII Alexandra of Denmark

  [Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence ?Annie Elizabeth Crook]

  George V ?Laura Culme-Seymour; ?Mary of ?Teck

  Edward VIII Bessie Wallis Warfield

  George VI Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon

  Elizabeth II Philip of Greece and Denmark

  APPENDIX 2

  LIST OF ROYAL

  EXTRAMARITAL AFFAIRS

  For marriage partners and alleged marriage partners see Appendix 1.

  William I

  No recorded mistress

  William II

  No recorded mistress

  Henry I

  Gieva de Tracy

  Ansfride …

  Sybil (or Adela or Lucia) Corbet

  Edith Fitzforne

  Nest ferch Rhys, daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, last King of South Wales

  Isabel de Beaumont.

  Stephen

  No recorded mistress

  Henry II

  Ykenai (or Hikenai), described as a ‘prostitute’

  Ida de Toesny, Countess of Norfolk, was ver
y likely a daughter of Ralph V de Tosny (died 1162) and his wife Margaret (born circa 1125 and living in 1185), a daughter of Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester.

  Nest(?), wife of Ralph Bloet

  Alys of France, Countess of the Vexin

  Rosamund Clifford

  Richard I

  No recorded mistress

  John

  Clemence d’Arcy [Pinel] – mother of Joan of Wales

  … de Warenne

  Henry III

  No recorded mistress

  Edward I

  No recorded mistress

  Edward II

  Male lovers: Piers Gaveston; Hugh Despenser – no recorded mistress, but one illegitimate son

  Edward III

  Alice Salisbury (Perrers; Windsor), lady-in-waiting to Queen Philippa

  ?Catherine Montacute (or Montagu), Countess of Salisbury

  John of Gaunt

  Catherine de Roët (Swynford)

  Richard II

  No recorded mistress

  Henry IV

  No recorded mistress

  Henry V

  No recorded mistress

  Henry VI

  No recorded mistress

  Edward IV

  Elizabeth Wayte (Lucy)

  Elizabeth Lambert

  Richard III

  No mistress as king, but ?Catherine Haute before his marriage

  Henry VII

  No recorded mistress as king, but unnamed mother of Sir Roland de Velville before his marriage

  Henry VIII

  Ann Stafford [Hastings] Countess of Huntingdon (niece of Elizabeth Woodville)

  Elizabeth Blount

  Mary Boleyn

  Elizabeth Bryce

  Anne Bassett

  Elizabeth Bryan (Carew)

  Elizabeth Browne (Somerset) Countess of Worcester

  Margaret Shelton

  [Mary Shelton]

  Edward VI

  No recorded mistress

  Mary I

  No recorded lovers

  Elizabeth I

  ?Thomas Seymour, ?Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford

  James I

  Male lovers but no recorded mistress

  Charles I

  No recorded mistress

  Charles II

  Barbara Palmer

  Moll Davis

  Nell Gwynn

  Hortense Mancini

  Catherine Pegge

  Louise De Kerouaille

  Elizabeth Killigrew, Viscountess Shannon

  Lucy Walter

  Winnifred Wells

  James II

  Arabella Churchill

  + 10 other short-lived affairs

  Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, Countess of Portmore

  William III

  Elizabeth Villiers

  Elizabeth Hamilton, Countess of Orkney

  Mary II

  None

  Anne

  None but relationships with

  Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough

  Abigail, Baroness Masham

  [James III

  None

  Charles III

  Marie-Louise de la Tour d’Auvergne and others

  Henry IX

  None]

  George I

  Ehrengard Melusine Baroness von der Schulenburg, Duchess of Kendal and Duchess of Munster

  George II

  Henrietta Howard

  Amalie Sophie Marianne von Wallmoden, 1st Countess of Yarmouth

  Frederick, Prince of Wales

  None

  George III

  None

  George IV

  Mary Robinson

  Grace Elliot

  Frances Countess of Jersey

  Marchioness of Hertford

  Marchioness Conyngham

  William IV

  Dorothea Bland [Mrs Jordan]

  Victoria

  None

  Edward VII

  Alice Keppel and others

  George V

  Several prior to his marriage – names unknown

  Edward VIII

  Thelma, Lady Furness and others

  George VI

  None

  APPENDIX 3

  ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS

  1. Text of the ‘Remarriage of Widowed Queens’ statute of 1427.1

  Original in French.

  Item, it is ordered and established by the authority of this parliament for the preservation of the honour of the most noble estate of queens of England that no man of whatever estate or condition make contract of betrothal or matrimony to marry himself to the queen of England without the special licence and assent of the king, when the latter is of the age of discretion, and he who acts to the contrary and is duly convicted will forfeit for his whole life all his lands and tenements, even those which are or which will be in his own hands as well as those which are or which will be in the hands of others to his use, and also all his goods and chattels in whosoever’s hands they are, considering that by the disparagement of the queen the estate and honour of the king will be most greatly damaged, and it will give the greatest comfort and example to other ladies of rank who are of the blood royal that they might not be so lightly disparaged.

  2. Extract from the Petition to Richard, Duke of Gloucester, 26 June 1483 (as quoted in the Act of Parliament (titulus regius) of January 1484.2

  Over this, amonges other thinges, more specially we consider howe that the tyme of the raigne of Kyng Edward IV, late-decessed, — after the ungracious, pretensed marriage (as all England hath cause so say) made betwixt the said King Edward and Elizabeth (sometyme wife to Sir John Grey, Knight), late nameing herself (and many years heretofore) “Queene of England”, — the ordre of all politeque rule was perverted … unto the grete sorrowe and heavynesse of all true Englishmen.

  And here also we considre howe the said pretensed marriage betwixt the above-named King Edward and Elizabeth Grey was made of grete presumption, without the knowyng or assent of the lordes of this lond, and alsoe by sorcerie and wichecrafte committed by the said Elizabeth and her moder, Jaquett, Duchess of Bedford (as the common opinion of the people and the publique voice and fame is through all this land; and hereafter — if, and as, the case shall require — shall bee proved suffyciently, in tyme and place convenient).

  And here also we considre how that the said pretensed marriage was made privatly and secretly, without edition of banns, in a private chamber, a profane place, and not openly, in the face of church, aftre the lawe of Godds churche, but contrarie thereunto, and the laudable custome of the churche of England. And howe also that at the tyme of contract of the same pretensed marriage (and bifore, and longe tyme after) the said King Edward was, and stoode, marryed, and trouth-plyght, to oone Dame Elianore Butteler (doughter of the old Earl of Shrewesbury) with whom the saide King Edward had made a precontracte of matrimonie longe tyme bifore he made the said pretensed mariage with the said Elizabeth Grey in manner and fourme aforesaide.

  Which premises being true (as in veray trouth they been true), it appeareth and followeth evidently that the said King Edward (duryng his lyfe) and the said Elizabeth lived togather sinfully and dampnably in adultery, against the lawe of God and his church. And therefore noe marvaile that (the souverain lord and head of this londe being of such ungodly disposicion and provokyng the ire and indignation of oure Lorde God) such haynous mischiefs and inconvenients as is above remembered were used and committed in the reame amongst the subjects.

  Also it appeareth evidently, and followeth, that all th’issue and children of the said king beene bastards, and unable to inherite or to clayme anything by inheritance, by the lawe and custome of England.

  3. Title to the throne (titulus regius) – Act of Henry VII, November 1485.3

  To the pleasure of Almyghty God, the welthe, prosperitie and suertie of this realme of Englond, to the synguler comforth of all the kynges subgettes of the same, and in avoydyng of all ambiguyties and quescions, be it ordeyned, esta
blisshed and enacted, by auctorite of this present parliament, that thenheritaunce of the corounez of the realmes of England and of Fraunce, with all the preemynence and dignytie roiall to the same perteynyng, and all other seignuriez to the kyng belongyng beyond the see, with thappurtenaunces therto in eny wise due or perteynyng, be, rest, remayne and abyde in the most royall person of our nowe soverain lord Kyng Henry the .vij.th, and in the heires of his body laufully comyng, perpetuelly with the grace of God so to endure, and in noon other.

  4. Henry VII’s unquoted repeal of Richard III’s Act naming Eleanor Talbot as Edward IV’s true wife – November 1485.4

 

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