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See also: queen of See also: Henry VIII. of
See also: England, daughter of See also: Ferdinand and Isabella of
See also: Spain, was See also: born on the 15th or 16th of See also: December 1485
.
She See also: left Spain in 1501 to marry Arthur, See also: prince of See also: Wales, eldest son of See also: King Henry VII., and landed at
See also: Plymouth on the 2nd of See also: October
.
The wed-ding took place on the 14th of See also: November in See also: London, and soon afterwards See also: Catherine accompanied her youthful See also: husband to Wales, where, in his sixteenth See also: year, the prince died on the 2nd of See also: April 1502
.
On the 25th of See also: June 1503, she was formally betrothed to the king's second son, Henry, now prince of Wales, and a papal See also: dispensation for the See also: alliance was 'obtained
.
The See also: marriage, however, did not take place during the lifetime of Henry VII
.
Ferdinand endeavoured to cheat the See also: English king of the marriage portion agreed upon, and Henry made use of the presence of the unmarried princess in England to extort new conditions, and especially to secure the marriage of his daughter Mary to the archduke See also: Charles,
See also: grandson of Ferdinand, and after-wards Charles V
.
Catherine was thus from the first the unhappy victim of See also: state politics
.
Writing to Ferdinand on the 9th of See also: March 1509, she describes the state of poverty to which she was reduced, and declares the king's unkindness impossible to be
See also: borne any longer.' On the old king's See also: death, however, a brighter prospect opened, for Henry VIII. decided immediately on marrying her, the See also: wedding taking place on the 11th of June and the See also: coronation on the 24th
.
Catherine now enjoyed a few years of married happiness; Henry showed himself an affectionate husband, and the alliance with Ferdinand was maintained against See also: France
.
She was not without some influence in state affairs
.
During Henry's invasion of France in 1513 she was made See also: regent; she showed See also: great zeal and ardour in the preparations for the Scottish expedition, and was See also: riding towards the See also: north to put herself at the See also: head of the troops when the victory of See also: Flodden See also: Field ended the
See also: campaign
.
The following year an affectionate meeting took place between the king and queen at See also: Richmond on the return of the former
.
Ferdinand's treachery, however, in making a treaty with France roused Henry's wrath, and his angry reproaches See also: fell upon his unfortunate wife; but she took occasion in 1520, during the visit of her See also: nephew Charles V. to England, to urge the policy of gaining his alliance rather than that of France
.
Immediately on his departure, on the 31st of May 1520, she accompanied the king to France, on the celebrated visit to See also: Francis I., called from its splendour the Field of the See also: Cloth of Gold; but in 1522 war was declared against France and the emperor again welcomed to England
.
In 1521 she is represented by See also: Shakespeare as See also: pleading for the unfortunate duke of See also: Buckingham
.
These early years of happiness and of useful influence and activity had, however, been gradually giving way to gloom and disappointment
.
Between See also: January 1510 and November 1518 Catherine gave See also: birth to six See also: children (including two princes), who were all stillborn or died in See also: infancy except Mary, born in 1516, and rumour did not fail to ascribe this series of disasters to the curse pronounced in See also: Deuteronomy on incestuous unions
.
In 1526 the condition of Catherine's See also: health made it highly improbable that she would have more children
.
No woman had ever reigned in England, alone and in her own right, and to avoid a fresh dispute concerning the succession, and the revival of the See also: civil war, a male heir to the See also: throne was a pressing See also: necessity
.
The See also: act of marriage, which depended for its validity on the decision of the ecclesiastical courts, had, on account of the numerous dissolutions and dispensations granted, not then attained the security since assured to it by the secular See also: law
.
For obtaining dissolutions of royal marriages the facilities were especially great
.
See also: Pope See also: Clement VII. himself permitted such a dissolution in the See also: case of Henry's own See also: sister See also: Margaret, in 1528, proposed later as a solution of the problem that Henry should be allowed two wives,2 and looked not unfavourably, with the same aim, on the project for marrying the. duke of Richmond to Mary, a See also: brother to a sister.3 In Henry's case also the irregularity of a union, which is still generally reprobated and forbidden in Christendom, and which it was very doubtful that the pope had the power to legalize, provided amoral See also: justification for a dissolution which in other cases did not exist
.
It was not therefore the immorality of the plea which obstructed the papal decree in
' Cal. of State Pap., England and Spain, i
.
469
.
2 Letters and Papers, iv . 6627, 6705, and app . 261 . 2 lb. iv . 5072 . Henry's favour, but the unlucky imprisonment at this See also: time of Clement VII. at the hands of Charles V., Catherine's nephew, which obliged the pope, placed thus "between the See also: hammer and the anvil," to pursue a policy of delay and hesitation
.
Nor was the immorality of Henry's own character the See also: primary cause of the project of See also: divorce
.
Had this been so, a succession of mistresses would have served as well as a series of single wives
.
The real occasion was the king's See also: desire for a male heir
.
But, however clear this may be, the injustice done to Catherine was no less cruel and real
.
Rumours, probably then unfounded, of an intended divorce had been heard abroad as early as 1524
.
But the creation in 1525 of the king's illegitimate son Henry, as duke of Richmond—the title borne by his grandfather Henry VII—and the precedence granted to him over all the peers as well as the princess Mary, together with the See also: special honour paid at this time by the king to his own See also: half-sister Mary, were the first real indications of the king's thoughts
.
In 1526, and perhaps earlier, See also: Wolsey had been making tentative inquiries at See also: Rome on the sybject
.
In May 1527 a collusive and secret suit was begun before the See also: cardinal, who, as See also: legate, summoned the king to defend himself from the See also: charge of cohabitation with his brother's wife; but these proceedings were dropped
.
On the 22nd of June Henry informed Catherine that they had been living in mortal sin and must See also: separate
.
During Wolsey's See also: absence in See also: July at See also: Paris, where he had been commissioned to discuss vaguely the divorce and Henry's marriage with Renee, daughter of See also: Louis XII.,
See also: Anne Boleyn is first heard of in connexion with the king, his affection for her having, however, begun probably as early as 1523, and the cardinal on his return found her openly installed at the See also: court
.
In October 1528 the pope issued a commission to Cardinal See also: Campeggio and Wolsey to try the cause in England, and bound himself not to revoke the case to Rome, confirming his promise by a secret decretal commission which, however, was destroyed by Campeggio
.
But the trial was a sham
.
Campeggio was forbidden to pronounce See also: sentence without further reference to Rome, and was instructed to create delays, the pope assuring Charles V. at the same time that the case should be ultimately revoked to Rome)
.
The See also: object of all parties was now to persuade Catherine to enter a nunnery and thus relieve them of further embarrassment
.
While Henry's envoys were encouraged at Rome in believing that he might then make another marriage, Henry himself gave Catherine assurances that no other union would be contemplated in her lifetime
.
But Catherine with courage and dignity held fast to her rights, demanded a proper trial, and appealed not only to the bull of dispensation, the validity of which was said to be vitiated by certain irregularities, but to a brief granted for the alliance by Pope See also: Julius II
.
Henry declared the latter to be a forgery, and endeavoured unsuccessfully to procure a declaration of its falsity from the pope
.
The court of the legates accordingly opened on the 31st of May 1529, the queen appearing before it on the 18th of June for the purpose of denying its jurisdiction
.
On the 21st both Henry and Catherine presented themselves before the tribunal, when the queen threw herself at Henry's feet and appealed for the last time to his sense of honour, recalling her own virtue and helplessness . Henry replied with kindness, showing that her wish for the revocation of the cause to Rome was unreasonable in view of the paramount influence then exercised by Charles V. on the pope . Catherine nevertheless persisted in makingSee also: appeal to Rome, and then withdrew
.
After her departure Henry, according to See also: Cavendish, Wolsey's biographer, praised her virtues to the court
.
" She is, my lords, as true, as obedient, as conformable a wife as I could in my phantasy wish or desire
.
She hath all the virtues and qualities that ought to be in a woman of her dignity or in any other of baser estate." On her refusal to return, her plea was overruled and she was adjudged contumacious, while the sittings of the court continued in her absence
.
Subsequently the legates paid her a private visit of advice, but were unable to move her from her See also: resolution
.
Finally, however, in July 1529, the case was, according to her wish, and as the result of the treaty of See also: Barcelona
• Cal. of State Pap., England and Spain, iii. pt. ii
.
779
.
and the pope's See also: complete surrender to Charles V., revoked by the pope to Rome: a momentous act, which decided Henry's future attitude, and occasioned the downfall of the whole papal authority in England
.
On the 7th of March 1530 Pope Clement issued a brief forbidding Henry to make a second marriage, and ordering the restitution of Catherine to her rights till the cause was determined; while at the same time he professed to the French ambassador, the See also: bishop of See also: Tarbes, his pleasure should the marriage with Anne Boleyn have been already made, if only it were not by his authority .2 The same year Henry obtained opinions favourable to the divorce from the English, French and most of the See also: Italian See also: universities, but unfavourable answers from See also: Germany, while a large number of English peers and ecclesiastics, including Wolsey and Archbishop See also: Warham, joined in a memorial to the pope in support of Henry's cause
.
Meanwhile, Catherine, while the great question remained unsolved, was still treated by Henry as his queen, and accompanied him in his visits in the provinces and in his hunting expeditions
.
On the 31st of May 1531 she was visited by See also: thirty privy councillors, who urged the trial of the case in England, but they met only with a See also: firm refusal
.
On the 14th of July Henry left his wife at Windsor, removing himself to See also: Woodstock, and never saw her again
.
In See also: August she was ordered to reside at the See also: Moor in See also: Hertfordshire, and at the same time separated from the princess Mary, who was taken to Richmond
.
In October she again received a deputation of privy councillors, and again refused to withdraw the case from Rome
.
In 1532 she sent the king a gold cup as a new year's gift, which the latter returned, and she was forbidden to hold any communication with him
.
Alone and helpless in confronting Henry's absolute power, her cause found champions and sympathizers among the See also: people, among the court preachers, and in the See also: House of See also: Commons, while Bishop See also: Fisher had openly taken her See also: part in the legatine trial
.
Subsequently Catherine was removed to Bishops See also: Hatfield, while Henry and Anne Boleyn visited Francis I
.
Their marriage, anticipating any sentence of the nullity of the union with Catherine, took place after their return about the 25th of January 1533, in consequence of Anne's pregnancy
.
On the roth of May See also: Cranmer, for whose consecration as archbishop of See also: Canterbury Henry had obtained bulls from Rome, opened his court, and declared on the 23rd the nullity of Catherine's marriage and the validity of Anne's
.
On the loth of August the king caused proclamation to be made forbidding her the See also: style of queen; but Catherine refused resolutely to yield the title for that of princess-dowager
.
Not long afterwards she was removed to Buckden in See also: Huntingdonshire
.
Here her See also: household was considerably reduced, and she found herself hemmed in by spies, and in fact a prisoner
.
In July she had refused Henry the loan of a certainSee also: rich cloth, which had done service at the See also: baptism of her children, for the use of Anne Boleyn's expected infant; and on the birth of See also: Elizabeth and the refusal of Mary to give up the title of princess, the latter's household was entirely dismissed and she herself reduced to the position of attendant in Elizabeth's retinue
.
A project for removing Catherine from Buckden to Somersham, an unhealthy solitude in the isle of
See also: Ely, with a still narrower maintenance, was only prevented by her own determined resistance
.
The attempt in November to incriminate the queen in connexion with Elizabeth See also: Barton failed
.
She passed her See also: life now in religious devotions, taking strict precautions against the possibility of being poisoned
.
On the 23rd of March 1534 the pope pronounced her marriage valid, but by this time England had thrown off the papal jurisdiction, the parliament had transferred Catherine's See also: jointure to Anne Boleyn, and the decree had no effect on Catherine's fortunes
.
She refused to swear to the new act of succession, which declared her marriage null and Anne's infant the heir to the throne, and soon afterwards she was re-moved to Kimbolton, where she was well treated
.
On the 21st of May she was visited by the archbishop of See also: York and Tunstall, bishop of Durham, who threatened her with death if she persisted in her refusal, but only succeeded in confirming her re-solution
.
She was kept in strict seclusion, separated from Mary
2 Cal. of State Pap., See also: Foreign and Dom., iv
.
6290
.
and from all outside communications, and in December 1535 her health gave way, her death taking place on the 8th of January 1536, not without suspicions of See also: poison, which, however, may be dismissed
.
She was buried by the king's See also: order in See also: Peterborough See also: cathedral
.
Before her death she dictated a last letter to Henry, according to Polydore Vergil, expressing her forgiveness, begging his See also: good offices for Mary, and concluding with the astounding assurance—" I vow that mine eyes desire you above all things." The king himself affected no sorrow at her death, and thanked See also: God there was now no fear of war
.
Catherine is described as " rather ugly than otherwise; of low stature and rather stout; very good and very religious; speaksSee also: Spanish, French, Flemish, English; more beloved by the islanders than any queen that has ever reigned." She was a woman of considerable See also: education and culture, her scholarship and knowledge of the See also: Bible being noted by See also: Erasmus, who dedicated to her his See also: book on Christian Matrimony in 1526
.
She endured her bitter and undeserved misfortunes with extra-ordinary courage and resolution, and at the same time with great womanly forbearance, of which a striking instance was the compassion shown by her for the fallen Wolsey
.
Wives of Henry VIII., by M
.
Hume (1905)
.
(P
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