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Katherine Parr,1 the last of the six wives of Henry VIII,
was born around 1512, three years into the reign of King Henry VIII, who had
succeeded his father, King Henry VII, to the throne of England in 1509. She was the first child of Sir Thomas
Parr, of Kendal, and Maud, daughter of Sir Thomas Green, who was then seventeen years of age. Lady Parr next had a son, William, and a
second daughter, Anne, but the family's happiness was short-lived. Sir Thomas Parr died in 1517, when Katherine was but five years of
age, and Lady Parr was left to raise three small children alone.
Lady Parr, despite her years, was a formidably determined woman, who devoted herself to bringing her children up well. She was deeply
religious and taught her children to have the same reverence for God. The children grew up under a strict discipline, and were well
educated in scripture and languages. The daughters were also taught the skills needed to run a noble household, and the traditionally
feminine arts of music and dance. Katherine was groomed to be an exemplary noblewoman, with a love of learning and a modest demeanor,
which were to serve her well throughout her life.
Around 1524, Lady Parr began a negotiation with Lord Dacre for a match between Katherine and Henry Scrope. An agreement was not reached,
however, due to a disagreement over the dowry. This was fortuitous, because Henry Scrope died the following year. Out of the many suitors
for Katherine's hand, Lady Parr finally chose Edward de Burgh, or Borough, grandson of 2nd Baron Burgh, whom Katherine married by 1529.2
The marriage was not long; Edward died a few years later, leaving Katherine a young widow. Lady Parr herself had passed away in 1531,
leaving a considerable fortune to Katherine. In 1534, Katherine married John Neville, Lord Latimer. He had been twice married; first to
Dorothy de Vere, grand-daughter to the 12th Earl of Oxford, with whom he had two children, and afterwards to Elizabeth Musgrave who had
died soon after the marriage. As Lady Latimer, Katherine moved to her husband's household at Snape Castle in Yorkshire. The couple took
frequent trips to London, and were well-received at court.
From the autumn of 1542, Lord Latimer's health began to fail. In early 1543, when Latimer's impending demise became apparent, King Henry
VIII began to court Katharine. In February, he gave her a gift of clothes, an improper gesture to a married woman; this distressed her, but
who dared return a King's gift, especially when the King in question was the irascible Henry VIII? After Lord Latimer's death in
March, 1543, Katherine inherited the estates of Nunkmonton and Hamerton, provided she take care of the bringing up of her stepdaughter,
Margaret. Her husband's bequest, combined with the inheritance from her mother, made her a woman of great means.
Katherine Parr stayed on at court, not for Henry, but because of a flirtation with the dashing Sir Thomas Seymour.
He was thirty-seven to her thirty-one, brother of the late Queen Jane, and uncle to Prince Edward.
They were mutually attracted and began to discuss marriage. The King, however, wanted Katherine for himself and was jealous. Katherine was
not interested; she was in love with Seymour, and had no interest in becoming Queen, or indeed wife number six to a man of questionable track
record. In May 1543, King Henry, customarily ruthless, sent Seymour to Brussels on a permanent embassy, and began his advances in earnest.
Around July, the King proposed to Katharine. Feeling she hadn't much choice, she finally acquiesced. The marriage took place in a private
ceremony on July 12, 1543, at Hampton Court.
Queen Katharine was nearly universally liked. She was learned, with a keen intellect; she was virtuous, a great conversationalist, and she
treated everyone with respect and warmth, regardless of station. Katharine was determined to reunite King Henry with his children, who lived
far removed from court, and to be a good stepmother to them. She persuaded the King to have the children visit.
Lady Elizabeth, who was ten, took to her immediately—here at last was a
mother-figure who was offering a warm and loving presence, and who appreciated and encouraged the intelligence and education of the bright
girl. Elizabeth was already well-versed in the classics and spoke several languages—impressive not only for her age, but for her sex,
who were not usually afforded the same rigorous curricula as their male counterparts. Queen Katharine took it upon herself to oversee the
child's education and was, in turn, rewarded with unqualified admiration by the precocious princess. Elizabeth would write Katharine many
warm letters, from 'Your Majesty's very dear Elizabeth,' and there seems to have been genuine fondness on both sides. At the end of 1544,
when Elizabeth was only eleven, she sent Queen Katherine her translation of
Queen Marguerite of Navarre's "Mirror of the Sinful Soul." In covers beautifully embroidered by the young princess, it was accompanied by
a thoughtful letter.
Queen Katherine and the Lady Mary were near in age, and Katherine never attempted to mother her. Instead, she
befriended her and treated her as a princess—not something Mary had experienced in a long while, since she and her mother,
Catharine of Aragón, had been effectively banished from court during the divorce proceedings. Queen
Katherine's gentle manner did much to banish some of the resentment Mary must have harbored toward her father. It was probably thanks to Queen
Katherine that Mary and Elizabeth were again added to the line of succession in the new Act of Succession of 1544.
The heir was still Prince Edward, after whom were to come any children by the King and Queen Katherine, followed by children from marriages
after Katherine, should they take place, then Lady Mary, and finally little Lady Elizabeth. It is known that Queen Katherine had pleaded for
Lady Mary to follow in succession to Edward, but Henry could only be budged so much.
In July, 1544, Henry set to invade France. In an unprecedented display of trust, he appointed Queen Katherine regent in his absence. The King,
whose leg and overweight had been troubling him greatly since the previous Christmas, was much improved by the physical activity of war. London,
however, was not faring as well. Queen Katherine and the children had to set out in August for a progress to the countryside to avoid the plague
which ravaged London that summer. On September 14, 1544, the city of Boulogne fell to the English siege. At the end
of September, King Henry returned in triumph and all was well for a time. In October, Thomas Seymour's embassy ended, and he returned to court.
Taking no chances, Henry appointed him Lord High Admiral of England; a post that would keep him safely away from the court, and thus the Queen.
The Queen had been charged by the King to supervise the education of Elizabeth and Edward, a responsibility she acquitted admirably. The children
had a strict and extensive course of studies, not only in the letters, but also in religion and music, needlepoint and dance for Elizabeth, and
swordsmanship for Edward. The Queen herself also never ceased to study. With the King's permission, she published Prayers and meditations,
which she had collected and edited, in November, 1545. The book was applauded by both the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and she was
petitioned to become their patroness. The Queen accepted both requests, and also patronized poor students by paying their tuition at Stoke College.
She further made sure all the children of her tenant farmers were schooled, at her own personal expense.
On Christmas, 1545, the King was ailing. Henry had long been grossly overweight, and an old wound in his leg had never healed, causing infection
upon infection, which in turn caused him great pain. The Queen tried to take the King's mind off his aches with lively debates over theology, a pastime
the King greatly enjoyed. Katherine by this time almost certainly held some protestant views but, for all his renouncing of the Pope's powers, Henry
could not stand Lutherans. The Queen had to tread carefully, for there were those at court who bore enmity towards her, namely the new
Lord Chancellor Wriothesley and Bishop Gardiner, who
would do their best to eradicate her, should she slip. The Queen was then writing her second book, The Lamentations of a Sinner, and the King
was equal parts proud and jealous of her erudition.
In February, 1546, the King was told that a Protestant woman, Anne Askew, had named the Queen as a protestant. The King ordered
Anne Askew questioned again, and she was savagely racked and tortured by Wriothesley, personally, in the Tower. She would not, however, renounce her
Protestant faith, nor implicate anyone else. In June, she was sentenced to death and burned at the stake. Her death was relatively quick compared to
most—someone had paid the executioner to hang a bag of gunpowder at her neck, so she could die of the explosion, instead of waiting to die by
suffocation or the boiling of one's own blood.
Wriothesley was ready to attack.
During the summer of 1546, after one particularly heated argument on theological matters between the King and Queen, Gardiner caught the King's ear and
suggested that the King should look beware cherishing "a serpent within his own bosom."3 Gardiner did his best to persuade the King that the
Queen was a heretic, and the King agreed to draw up a warrant for her arrest, should proof arise. He continued to have debates with the Queen over
matters of religion, and Katherine, suspecting nothing, obliged. Eventually, the King did indeed sign the warrant, but the Queen received word from a
servant. The night before her impending arrest, the King again tried to bait her into a conversation on religion. Katherine played the modest wife, and
responded that the only reason she ever discussed such matters was that it seemed to alleviate the King's pains, but that she would always refer herself
to his better judgement, as her lord and head. The King, hearing this, was mollified. He realized what Gardiner and Wriothesley were doing and aimed to
shame them for it.
Next day, the King invited the Queen to the garden, and as Wriothesley approached with a contingent of the guard, intent on arresting the Queen, the King
called him "knave, fool, and beast," and ordered him "to get out of his presence."4 When the Queen, feigning innocence of the Chancellor's
duplicity, tried to excuse his behavior, Henry replied, "Ah! Poor soul! thou little knowest, Kate, how little he deserveth this grace at thy hands."5
Little the King knew, how much she indeed knew of how close she had come to following the fates of his previous wives.
In the fall of 1546, King Henry grew steadily worse. It became apparent, even to Henry himself, that the end was near. In December, he dictated his will.
The kingdom was to go to Edward, and a generous amount of money and goods to the Queen. He wished to be buried next to Queen Jane at Windsor.
The King improved somewhat in the beginning of January, 1547, but on the eve of the 28th of January, he called his family to his side for a final goodbye.
King Henry VIII, aged fifty-five, died at two a.m., most likely of a blood clot that had travelled from his leg to his heart.
Edward was crowned King Edward VI, on January 31, 1547. Since he was a minor, he was under the control of his regency Council.
Neither the Dowager Queen Katherine, nor his sisters, were permitted to visit the King. This grieved both Katharine and the young King, but there was little
to be done. Katherine announced that she would retire from the court to her house, Old Manor, at Chelsea. Meanwhile, Seymour
returned to court. He was created Baron Seymour of Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, and confirmed in his post as Lord High Admiral for life, as well as
admitted into the Order of the Garter. His aggravation over not being allowed into the regency Council was alleviated only somewhat by the new title granted
to him; he had hopes of even higher. He secretly began to court the thirteen year-old Lady Elizabeth, thinking to advance himself by that means. Elizabeth,
though perhaps flattered, turned him down. Seymour, bemused, set his sights on his Katharine Parr.
The Dowager Queen, Katharine Parr, still harbored feelings for the man she had once thought to marry, and when he renewed his suit, she accepted. The Council
would be unlikely to grant a petition for the Dowager to marry so soon after Henry's death, so Seymour went straight to King Edward. The young King, who was
fond of both his uncle Thomas and, naturally, of the Queen, consented. The couple married in secret some time by the end of April, 1547, most likely at the
Queens estates at Chelsea. The King and Council were not told of the marriage until the end of May. The Council were livid and censured Lord Sudeley. The King,
despite exhortations to the contrary by his Council, wrote to the Queen. He concluded the letter with, "I do love and admire
you with my whole heart. Wherefore, if there be anything wherein I may do you a kindness, either in word or deed, I will do it willingly."6 After
such words, what could the Council do?
The reception from the Lady Mary was quite the opposite. Seymour had written to Mary, hoping Mary could help further his cause with the Council. Mary was
outraged at his forwardness and lack of taste and sent back an acerbic reply saying she would not intervene. Mary, who once had born such respect for her
father's wife, now thought that by marrying improperly soon after the passing of Henry, and to a man of such character, Katherine would not be a good moral
example for Elizabeth. She asked Elizabeth to cease contact with Katherine, but Elizabeth sent a lukewarm reply; she had after all long loved Katherine almost
as a mother. In November, 1547, Katherine published her second book, The Lamentations of a Sinner. It was an enormous success, widely praised. At this
time, she invited Elizabeth to come stay with her, which she did in early 1548, enough time having passed for their renewed closeness not to elicit mutters.
Unfortunately, Katherine knew nothing of her husband's past courting of Elizabeth. The situation was tricky: Elizabeth was all of fourteen, and Seymour, who
styled himself her "stepfather," began once again to pay attention to her. Katherine suspected nothing, and Seymour was very good at keeping what he did not
wish known secret. Elizabeth also let on nothing, for fear of hurting Katherine, who was so happy in her new marriage and her country life.
Lady Jane Grey, Elizabeth's cousin, also joined the household in January, 1548. Queen Katherine had promised to provide for her
education, and it would be good for Elizabeth to have company her own age. Elizabeth requested to have Roger Ascham
as tutor to her and Jane, and Queen Katherine, who had corresponded with Ascham since the publication of her first book, heartily approved. Ascham was a famed
scholar, and a magnificent teacher—he polished the already well-learned, intelligent girls into brilliance. Ascham's tutelage was rigorous and exacting.
Elizabeth, later as Queen, would never forget to extol the virtues of her old tutor. Queen Katherine's house came to be known as a respected place of learning
for young women.
In March, 1548, Katherine Parr was finally pregnant with her own child. All the years of caring for others' children, she was going to have one with the man
she loved. In the midst of all the preparations for the baby and the exuding happiness, Katherine had no idea that her husband was meeting with Elizabeth
clandestinely. Elizabeth's governess later testified in front of the Privy Council that the Admiral would enter Elizabeth's chamber some mornings, wearing
nothing but a nightshirt. On occasion he would climb in with her and tickle her. Mrs. Ashley, her lady in waiting, was scandalized and resolved not to leave
her alone with the Admiral.
Katherine finally started suspecting something out of the ordinary was going on. In April, she walked in on Elizabeth and the Admiral embracing. Instead of
confronting them, she walked out. In May, Elizabeth was sent away to one of her own estates. Before leaving, Elizabeth was summoned to Katherine who was very
cold towards her. Tradition has it that she told Elizabeth, "God has given you great qualities. Cultivate them always, and labour to improve them, for I
believe you are destined by Heaven to be Queen of England."7 Elizabeth left in shame and wrote an apologetic letter in June. Katherine Parr had
always been a gentle person, and she wrote a kind letter of reply, even though she was in considerable pain, having hurt her wrist. Elizabeth in turn wrote
a relieved letter of thanks. At this time, Katherine also reconciled with Mary, who wrote
Katherine a letter of congratulations on her impending motherhood.
On August 30, 1548, Katherine gave birth to a daughter whom she named Mary, after the Lady Mary. Katherine, however, had puerperal fever; infection of the
uterus after childbirth, which most often led to death. The Queen was delirious with a fever for a week, until it became apparent she would not recover. She
wrote a dying will leaving everything to her husband. The Queen died on September 7, 1548. She was buried at Chelsea. Queen Katherine Parr was mourned by
her stepchildren, by Lady Jane Grey, and all who had known her. When Lord High Admiral Thomas Seymour was executed for treason in 1549, baby Mary was taken
in by her mother's friend, Lady Suffolk. She is thought to have died in childhood.
Queen Katherine Parr was the only one of Henry VIII's wives to have survived him. She also has the questionable distinction of being England's most-married
Queen. All who knew her praised her for her learning, her character, her godliness, gentleness and charity. She had great talent as a writer, and had she
lived two hundred years later, she may have been a formidable presence. Yet perhaps her most lasting legacy was her shaping and nurturing of the learning and
character of the little girl who would bring England to another Golden Age: the girl who would become Queen Elizabeth I.
Notes:
1 Her name has, alternately, been spelled Catharine, Catherine, Katharine, Kateryn, or Katherine,
the last being the strongest contender. In her mother's will, (Testamenta Vetusta, v.2, p651),
her name is spelled "Katherine".
2 Starkey, 697; Porter, 49-59; [Thanks to Meg McGath]
3 Reported by John Foxe as said by Gardiner. Quoted
in Weir, 519.
4 Memoirs of the Court of Henry the Eighth, Vol II,
by Mrs. A. T. Thomson. London: Longman, Rees, &c., 1826. 570.
5 Memoirs of Henry the Eighth of England by
H. W. Herbert. New York: Miller, Orton & Mulligan, 1856. 440.
6 Letters of the Kings of England, Vol II,
by J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps. London: Henry Colburn, 1848. 34.
7 Weir, 554.
Article Citation:
Jokinen, Anniina. Katherine Parr. Luminarium.
16 Jun 2011. [Date when you accessed the page].
<http://www.luminarium.org/encyclopedia/katherineparr.htm>
Other Local Resources:
Books for further study:
Elton, G. R. England Under the Tudors.
London: Routledge, 1991.
Fraser, Antonia. The Wives of Henry VIII. Reissue.
London: Orion Books, 2002.
James, Susan E. Kateryn Parr: The Making of a Queen.
London: Ashgate Publishing, 1999.
Matzat, Don. Katherine Parr: Opportunist, Queen, Reformer.
Stroud, Gloucestershire: Amberley Publishing, 2021.
Norton, Elizabeth. Catherine Parr: Wife, Widow, Mother, Survivor.
Stroud, Gloucestershire: Amberley Publishing, 2011.
Porter, Linda. Katherine, the Queen.
New Yorkl: St. Martin's Press, 2010.
Starkey, David. Six Wives: The Queens of Henry VIII.
New York: Harper Perennial, 2004.
Weir, Alison. The Six Wives of Henry VIII.
New York: Grove Press, 1991.
Katherine Parr on the Web:
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Page created on 12 Sep 2006. Last updated 26 February 2012.
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Henry Wriothesley, 2. Southampton
Henry Wriothesley, 3. Southampton
Charles Neville, 6. E. Westmorland
Thomas Percy, 7. E. Northumberland
Henry Percy, 8. E. Northumberland
Henry Percy, 9. E. Nothumberland
William Herbert, 1. Earl of Pembroke
Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham
Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk
Henry Howard, 1. Earl of Northampton
Thomas Howard, 1. Earl of Suffolk
Henry Hastings, 3. E. of Huntingdon
Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland
Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland
Francis Manners, 6th Earl of Rutland
Henry FitzAlan, 12. Earl of Arundel
Thomas, Earl Arundell of Wardour
Edward Somerset, E. of Worcester
William Davison
Sir Walter Mildmay
Sir Ralph Sadler
Sir Amyas Paulet
Gilbert Gifford
Anthony Browne, Viscount Montague
François, Duke of Alençon & Anjou
Mary, Queen of Scots
Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley
James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell
Anthony Babington and the Babington Plot
John Knox
Philip II of Spain
The Spanish Armada, 1588
Sir Francis Drake
Sir John Hawkins
William Camden
Archbishop Whitgift
Martin Marprelate Controversy
John Penry (Martin Marprelate)
Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury
John Dee, Alchemist
Philip Henslowe
Edward Alleyn
The Blackfriars Theatre
The Fortune Theatre
The Rose Theatre
The Swan Theatre
Children's Companies
The Admiral's Men
The Lord Chamberlain's Men
Citizen Comedy
The Isle of Dogs, 1597
Common Law
Court of Common Pleas
Court of King's Bench
Court of Star Chamber
Council of the North
Fleet Prison
Assize
Attainder
First Fruits & Tenths
Livery and Maintenance
Oyer and terminer
Praemunire
The Stuarts
King James I of England
Anne of Denmark
Henry, Prince of Wales
The Gunpowder Plot, 1605
George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham
Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset
Arabella Stuart, Lady Lennox
William Alabaster
Bishop Hall
Bishop Thomas Morton
Archbishop William Laud
John Selden
Lucy Harington, Countess of Bedford
Henry Lawes
King Charles I
Queen Henrietta Maria
Long Parliament
Rump Parliament
Kentish Petition, 1642
Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford
John Digby, Earl of Bristol
George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol
Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax
Robert Devereux, 3rd E. of Essex
Robert Sidney, 2. E. of Leicester
Algernon Percy, E. of Northumberland
Henry Montagu, Earl of Manchester
Edward Montagu, 2. Earl of Manchester
The Restoration
King Charles II
King James II
Test Acts
Greenwich Palace
Hatfield House
Richmond Palace
Windsor Palace
Woodstock Manor
The Cinque Ports
Mermaid Tavern
Malmsey Wine
Great Fire of London, 1666
Merchant Taylors' School
Westminster School
The Sanctuary at Westminster
"Sanctuary"
Images:
Chart of the English Succession from William I through Henry VII
Medieval English Drama
London c1480, MS Royal 16
London, 1510, the earliest view in print
Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
London in late 16th century
Location Map of Elizabethan London
Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
Visscher's View of London, 1616
Larger Visscher's View in Sections
c. 1690. View of London Churches, after the Great Fire
The Yard of the Tabard Inn from Thornbury, Old and New London
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