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The Exeter Conspiracy: True Traitors or Falsely Framed? 

Reading the Past
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Let’s take a look at the Exeter conspiracy and all those it destroyed…
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Intro / Outro song: Silent Partner, "Greenery" [ • Greenery - Silent Part... ]
SFX from freesfx.co.uk/Default.aspx
Linked videos and playlists:
Reginald Pole: • Cardinal Reginald Pole...
Elizabeth Barton: • Elizabeth Barton: Holy...
Pilgrimage of Grace: • The Pilgrimage of Grace
Vicar of Hell: • Sir Francis Bryan: "Th...
Images (from Wikimedia Commons, unless otherwise stated):
Detail from King Richard III, Queen Anne, Edward, Prince of Wales, Margaret, Countess of Salisbury and Edward, Earl of Warwick after an unknown artist (possibly early 19th century). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, by an unknown artist (1520). Held by Magdalene College, Cambridge.
Portrait of Catherine of Aragon by Lucas Horenbout (1525). Held in an unknonwn location / collection.
Portrait of Queen Mary I by Master John (1544). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Elizabeth Barton, the "Maid of Kent", executed because of her prophecies against the marriage of King Henry VIII of England to Anne Boleyn. Engraving from the History of England (1793-1806), based on a painting by Henry Tresham.
Portrait of Henry VIII by Hans Holbein the Younger (c.1537). Held by the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza.
Screenshot of www.british-history.ac.uk/let...
Portrait of Reginald Pole by an unknown artist (after 1556). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
“The Pilgrimage of Grace 1536” by Fred Kirk Shaw (1913). Held by the Lancashire Museums.
Procession for Edward’s baptism. Held by the Royal College of Arms. London.
Portrait of Nicholas Carew by Hans Holbein the Younger (1532-1533). Held by Drumlanrig Castle.
Screenshot of www.british-history.ac.uk/let...
Copper engraving of the execution of Margaret Pole from the "Review of Fox's Book of Martyrs" by William Andrews, 1826.
Quoted texts:
Eltham Ordinances - www.british-history.ac.uk/let...
Hazel Pierce, ODNB entry on Margaret Pole.
Howard Leithead, ODNB entry on Thomas Cromwell.
Stanford Lehmberg, ODNB entry on Nicholas Carew.
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#Tudor #History #Treason

Опубликовано:

 

15 фев 2024

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Комментарии : 229   
@Rosedawn321
I think Margaret Pole was very likely framed with planted evidence by Cromwell and then left to suffer Henry’s zeal for avenging himself on Reginald. Poor lady.
@spews1973
Well, there's some Tudor drama that's been strangely ignored by TV.
@lucieramirez1378
I don't think Reginald Pole really cared about any consequences. I think he was still angry at his mother for leaving him. Thank you for a delightful presentation, I truly enjoyed it. 🎉❤
@user-qr9dn6lf3l
🫅 The two Henry Tudors had a policy of removing anyone with even a distant claim to the throne, which suggests to me they were well aware of how flimsy their own blood claim was. That said, Henry 8th did have Yorkist Plantagenet blood through his mother, the daughter of Edward 4th, whereas Henry 7th didn't have even that.
@lauragutierrez893
I do believe that Henry was trying, in his own revolting and despicable way, to ensure that there were no threats to his son’s reign. It always comes back to Henry. Whether it was Wolsey or Cromwell, or anyone else for that matter, at the end of the day he was King and nothing was done that wasn’t at his wishes. 👑🏰
@julzy3
I think that due to the tenuous claim of Henry VII, Henry VIII decided that his relatives with a better claim would always be a danger to the Tudors. Too bad he didn't seek to unite any of his children with those claimants to reinforce the Tudor position instead of removing most of them. Thank you for a marvelous presentation, Dr. Kat. ♟⚔🪦
@rebeccasharley593
🗝🗝🗝 some keys for those locked up
@arcola44
Great video....think Henry was cleaning out all possible rivals to Edward, and Reginald Pole really ticked him off.👑👑👑👑🏰🏰🏰
@Karens-Zen
To your questions at the end of the video: All of the Above. I think HVIII set out to get his courtiers competing with one another instead of him, but as the decades rolled by Moore, Katherine, Wolsey, and many others turned out to be (at the very least) working at cross purposes to him. Then too, he drank his own cool aide with respect to why he was on the throne. His father undoubtedly instilled a good deal of mistrust, not to say paranoia, while he trained him, and the Plantagenet survivors really couldn't wrap their heads around not being the ruler themselves. The Cousins War could easily gear up again ... His court was a snake pit. If he really believed Anne Boleyn betrayed him that probably broke him. At any rate, he spent most of his time after her demise trying to make sure he was the biggest and most poisonous snake in the snake pit. Talk about Karma manifesting in your own lifetime .... I know he was terrifying and very dangerous at the end, but from the safety created by time's march, I feel sorry for him.
@Myke_OBrien
Brava! Absolutely brilliant! Thank you from the bottom of my heart! I agree that Cromwell had set poor Margaret up. That piece of cloth would have been discovered the first time around. Sadly, her horrific execution may have been due not only to Henry’s increasing rage at Reginald, but to Henry’s ever increasing paranoia. After all, Margaret was a Plantagenet. 👑🏰
@anneangstadt1882
Another great video illuminating the complexity of the time and the challenges for historians. 😄
@raikie
👑 🏰 Fascinating video! I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of the Tudor Era 🏰 👑
@patriciahill6839
Love your podcasts. Thank you for producing them. ❤. Fantastic enjoyment 😊
@nathanielziering
Nice followup on the brilliant Cecils installment.
@kathyjohnson2043
I don't think it mattered if someone was an actual threat to Henry because even a rumor of a rival was something he couldn't have since it could suggest that he was vulnerable.
@penneycason9269
Hey just watched you on a doco Six queens. Felt like a friend on tele. 🤗
@susanbellefeuille
Thank you for the interesting video. As always the Tudor regime was so complicated and divisive.
@emilyrauwerdink3451
Another great video, Dr. Kat! Cheers from Wisconsin, USA. 👑🏰🫅
@madiantin
Re: Henry paying a lot of money for Margaret's clothing a short while before beheading her.
@annefry1489
Another enlightening video- thank you!
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