Read The Book of Ancient Bastards Online
Authors: Brian Thornton
The Cheap Bastard’s Guide to Solidifying Your Hold on Power
( A.D. 1457–1509)
He was of a high mind, and loved his own will and his own way; as one that revered himself, and would reign indeed. Had he been a private man he would have been termed proud: But in a wise Prince, it was but keeping of distance; which indeed he did towards all; not admitting any near or full approach either to his power or to his secrets. For he was governed by none.
—Sir Francis Bacon
A distant cousin of the Lancastrian dynasty defeated by Edward IV, Henry Tudor was a young Welsh nobleman who bounced around Europe living mostly in exile until popping onto the scene in the early 1480s and challenging Richard III’s hold on the English throne.
Once he’d seized power, Henry VII proved a capable, if ruthless, ruler. Determined to end nearly a century of civil war, he settled the succession question for decades to come by marrying a princess of the opposing York family. Not fond of crowds, suspicious of the nobility, and so tight with money that his wallet squeaked on the rare occasions when he opened it, Henry VII ruled for a quarter of a century unloved by his indifferent subjects, and died virtually unmourned by them as well.
Inheriting a realm bankrupted by decades of civil war, Henry early on hit on a number of ways to make ends meet with the nobility footing the bill. He staffed his retinue with nearly twice the number of retainers as any previous English king, then set up royal visits to his most wealthy landowners (most of them dukes and earls, guys with lots of land and lots of money). A “royal visit” consisted of Henry and his entire court descending on a given lord’s country estate and staying there for from two weeks to a month, with the lord in question having the honor of feeding, housing, and entertaining the king and his retinue. This had the double effect of keeping his greatest nobles too poor to fund rebellions against him, and of saving the crown itself an awful lot of money!
Doubly a Bastard!
Henry Tudor’s blood connection to the royal House of Lancaster was twofold: on the one hand, his grandfather, Owain Tudor, a squire serving in the Lancaster household, secretly married Catherine of Valois, the widow of Henry V. She had four children by Tudor before the marriage was annulled (with the result that all four of their children were declared illegitimate) and Tudor was thrown into prison for a time. One of Owain’s sons by this liaison, Edmund Tudor, grew up to marry Lady Margaret Beaufort. For her part, Margaret was the great-granddaughter of John of Gaunt, Edward III’s younger son, who was also father of the future king Henry IV. Her grandfather was the first of four illegitimate children John of Gaunt had with his then-mistress and future wife Katherine Swynford. Both of Henry Tudor’s blood claims to the throne of England came to him through illegitimate lines (although in the case of the Beauforts, that line was later declared legitimate by king and parliament), so this English king was quite literally doubly a bastard!
Another way in which Henry filled the kingdom’s coffers was through marrying his eldest son Arthur to a wealthy Spanish princess named Catherine of Aragon, who brought with her a peace treaty with Spain and an enormous dowry. When Arthur died suddenly shortly after the wedding, Henry, rather than return the girl and her dowry to her father, simply got a dispensation from the pope and prepared to marry her off to his second son, Henry. As we shall see in the final chapter, this move, a money-saving gesture, had far-reaching unintended consequences of its own!
Where to Begin?
( A.D. 1491–1547)
We thought that the clergy of our realm had been our subjects wholly, but now we have well perceived that they be but half our subjects, yea, and scarce our subjects: for all the prelates at their consecration make an oath to the Pope, clean contrary to the oath that they make to us, so that they seem to be his subjects, and not ours.
—King Henry VIII of England
It is fitting that we close out our study of ancient bastards with a quick look at this last of the truly medieval monarchs. After Henry, no king of England would ever have so much license to do as he pleased.
The second son of Henry VII, young Henry didn’t become heir to the throne until the age of ten. He succeeded his father at age eighteen, and inherited a well-ordered realm with a full treasury, thanks to his penny-pinching, reclusive father’s programs as king. When he died thirty-eight years later, Henry would leave a vastly different England to his own heirs: a bankrupt treasury, a different official state religion, and (the last thing he wanted) a simmering succession crisis.
How he got there is an interesting story that could fill dozens of volumes (and has). For starters, chalk it up to the parsimony of his father: Henry VII had married his son Arthur to Catherine of Aragon, the daughter of the king of Spain, in return for a huge amount of gold and silver. When Arthur died four months after the marriage, Henry refused to return Catherine or the money. The crisis was resolved when Henry VIII took the throne, got the pope’s blessing to marry his brother’s widow, and did so that same year.
The problem was that Catherine couldn’t give him a male heir. Only one of their children lived to adulthood: Mary (the future “Bloody Mary”). So Henry decided to divorce her and marry someone else who could give him the heir he desperately wanted.
The only problem was that there was a different pope by this time, a pope who owed his throne to the most powerful king in Europe: Charles V Hapsburg, king of Spain and the Holy Roman Emperor. And Charles V just happened to be the beloved nephew of the woman that Henry now wished to set aside.
So the pope said no. And Henry, who had actually been named “Defender of the Faith” for writing a tract excoriating the new Protestant sects in Germany, did the unthinkable: he broke with the Catholic Church, founded the Church of England, with himself as its head, dissolved the monasteries in England (pocketing both their property and their wealth), and began marrying a series of women intended to give him a male heir.
Purposeful bastard.
Bastard and His Wives
In the end, Henry had six wives (and an untold number of mistresses, including the sister of one of these wives). Two of his wives were beheaded for “treason” (adultery committed by a queen was considered treason at the time, and they were accused adulterers), and one died giving him the only legitimate male child who lived past infancy (his successor, Edward VI). Only two of them, Anne of Cleves, whom he divorced, and Catherine Parr, his last queen, outlived him.
By the time of Henry’s death, even the notion of monarchy was changing. The question of male heirs became ever-more irrelevant. In fact, Henry did sire arguably the greatest monarch ever to rule England, an effective, diligent, intelligent ruler who outfoxed every opponent and made England a player on the modern stage in ways of which Henry could have only dreamed.
It’s unlikely that this royal bastard even considered the possibility that the heir he so desired would actually be a woman, and a great one.
Elizabeth I—in many ways an even bigger (and more effective) bastard than her old man.
How’s that for a “modern” notion?
A
Acre, Battle of, 178–80
Adalgis, 146
Aelfgifu, 156, 157
Aemilianus, Scipio, 51, 52
Aethelgifu, 156
Agincourt, Battle of, 217
Agnes of Merania, 189
Agrippa, Marcus, 104
Agrippina, 109–10, 114–15
Akhenaton, 6–8
Alcibiades, 27–28
Alcmeonid family, 22, 28
Alexander the Great, 37–43, 54–55
Alexander VI, Pope, 223–24
Alfred the Great, 156
Alhambra Decree, 220
Alienus, Aulus Caecina, 121
Alleghieri, Dante, 199
Alys of France, 171
Amenhotep III, 6
Amenhotep IV, 6–8
Amyntas IV, 35
Anna, 155
Anne of Cleves, 231
“Antiochus Epimanes,” 49
“Antiochus Epiphanes,” 49
Antiochus III, 48–49
Antiochus IV, 48–49, 58
Antiochus VIII, 53
Antiochus IX, 53
Antoninus, Marcus Aurelius, 133–34.
See also
Elagabalus
Antonius, Antyllus, 102
Antonius, Marcus, 60, 86–87, 98–102
Aper, Arrius, 137, 138
Appian, 53, 56, 65, 76
Aquillius, Manius, 56
Aristagoras, 24–26
Arnulf, King, 150
Arsinoe, 46–47
Arsuf, Battle of, 180
Arthur, son of Henry VII, 228, 230
Augusta, 131
Augustus, Aurelius Commodus Antoninus, 125.
See also
Commodus
Augustus, Philip, 172, 179, 183–84, 186, 188–90
Augustus, Tiberius Caesar, 104–11
Aurelius, Marcus, 125
B
Bacon, Sir Francis, 227
Balas, Alexander, 53
Bardas, 152–53
Basil I, 152–53
Basil II, 154–55
Bassianus, Varius Avitus, 133.
See also
Elagabalus
Bathsheba, 15
Battle of Acre, 178–80
Battle of Agincourt, 217
Battle of Arsuf, 180
Battle of Bedriacum, 120–21
Battle of Bosworth Field, 226
Battle of Bouvines, 191
Battle of Hastings, 161
Battle of Lewes, 195
Battle of Nancy, 222
Battle of the Milvian Bridge, 140
Beaufort, Margaret, 228
Bedriacum, Battle of, 120–21
Belisaurius, 144, 145
Belshazzar, 16, 17
Benedict IX, Pope, 158–60, 181, 199
Berengaria, 179
Blagdon, Francis, 210
Blanche of Bourbon, 206
“Bloody Mary,” 230
Bolingbroke, Henry, 214–15
Boniface VIII, Pope, 198, 199
Borgia, Cesare, 223, 224
Borgia, Lucrezia, 223, 224
Borgia, Rodrigo, 223
Borja, Rodrigo, 223
Bosworth Field, Battle of, 226
Bouvines, Battle of, 191
Browning, Robert, 150
Brutus, Lucius Junius, 61, 62
Brutus, Marcus Junius, 62, 95–98
C
“Cadaver Synod,” 151
Caepoinis, Servilia, 96
Caesar, Augustus, 102, 104, 106.
See also
Octavian, Gaius Julius Caesar
Caesar, Gaius Julius, 59, 62, 68, 86, 91–99, 101, 105, 112, 114
Caesar, Julia, 101
Caesar, Tiberius Augustus, 106–7
Caesarion, 59, 102
Caligula, 107, 110–12, 143
Cambyses, King, 18, 19, 20, 21
Caracalla, 131–32
Carinus, 135–36
Carloman, 146–47
Carus, 137, 139
Cassius, Gaius, 97–98
Catherine of Aragon, 230–31
Catiline, Lucius Sergius, 71–73, 99
Cato the Elder, 93
Cato the Younger, 93–94
Cattanei, Vanozza dei, 223
Cerda, Charles de la, 210
Cethegus, Cornelius, 76–78
Charlemagne, 146–47
Charles IV of France, 222
Charles VI of France, 216–17
Charles VII of France, 221
Charles the Bad, of Navarre, 209–11
Charles the Terrible, 221–22
Chlorus, Constantius, 141
Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 72–73, 86–88, 90, 99, 102
Cinna, Lucius Cornelius, 74–75
Claudius, 112–14
Cleisthenes, 28
Clement V, Pope, 198–200
Cleopatra II, 51
Cleopatra VII, 58–60
Cleopatra Thea, 53–54
Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt, 100, 102
Commodus, 110, 125–26, 130, 143
Conrad, 166
Constantia, 141
Constantine the Great, 140–42
Constantine VI, Emperor, 149
Constantine VIII, 154
Constantius II, 142–43
Conti, Lotario dei, 181
Crassus, Marcus Licinius, 82–83
Crispus, 141
Critias, 29–31
The Critias
, 29
Crusades, 168–70, 181
Curio, Gaius Scribonius, 100
Curthose, Robert, 162
Cyclops
, 34
Cyrus the Great, 17
D
Dandolo, Enrico, 169–70
Dante, 199
Darius I, King, 23, 25
Darius I, King of Persia, 18–19
David, King, 14, 15
Demetrius II, 53
DeMille, Cecil B., 2
DeMolay, Jacques, 198, 200
Desiderius, King, 146, 147, 159
Despenser, Edward le, 203
Despenser, Hugh le, 202
“Devil’s Brood,” 171, 173, 183–85
Dio, Cassius, 100, 120, 128, 129, 133
Diocles, Gaius Aurelius Valerius, 137
Diocletian, 135–39
Dionysius I, 32–34
Dives, Marcus Licinius Crassus, 82–
83
Dolabella, Gnaeus Cornelius, 88,
89
Domitian, 123–24, 143
Domus Aureum, 115
Drusilla, Livia, 104–5, 111
Drusus, 104–5, 109
Dunstan, Abbot, 156, 157
E
Eadwig, 156–57
Edmund I, 156
Edward I, King, 193–96, 201
Edward II, King, 201–4
Edward III, King, 204, 214, 228
Edward IV, King, 225
Edward V, King, 225
Edward VI, King, 231
Edward of Westminster, 225
Edward the Black, 205, 214
Edward the Confessor, 161
Einhard, 146
Elagabalus, 110, 133–34
Eleanor of Aquitaine, 171–74, 178, 183
Elizabeth I, 231
Elizabeth II, 206
F
Fausta, 141
Felix, Lucius Cornelius Sulla, 69–70
First Crusade, 168
Formosus, 150–51
Fourth Crusade, 169–70, 181
Froissart, Jean, 205, 207, 209, 214
Fulvia, 100
G
Galba, Servius Sulpicius, 117–19, 121
Galeazzo, Gian, 207–8
Galerius, 138
Gaveston, Piers, 202, 203
Geoffrey II of Brittany, 183–84
Gerald of Wales, 178, 179, 183, 188
Gerberga, 147
Germanicus, Nero Claudius Caesar Augustus, 109, 114.
See also
Nero
Geta, 131–32
Godwinson, Harold, 161
“Golden House,” 115
Gouth, Raymond Bertrand de, 199
Gratianus, Johannes, 159
Green, Peter, 45
Gregory VI, Pope, 159
Gregory VII, Pope, 165–66
Gryffudd, Llewellyn Ap, 195
H
“Hammer of the Scots,” 194, 196
Hammurabi, 4–5
Hammurabi’s Code, 4–5
Hannibal of Carthage, 64–65
Hapsburg, Charles V, 231
Hastings, Battle of, 161
Helena, 141
Henry III, Emperor, 159
Henry IV, Emperor, 165–66
Henry VI, Emperor, 190
Henry II, King, 171–73, 178, 183
Henry III, King, 175, 192–93, 202
Henry IV, King, 214–15, 228
Henry V, King, 215–18, 221, 228
Henry VII, King, 227–30
Henry VIII, King, 136, 230–32
Henry the Lion, 190
Henry the Young King, 175–77
Herleva, 161
Herodian, 134
Herodotus, 19, 20, 24
Hezekiah, King, 12–13
Hippias, 22–23, 26, 28
Histiaeus, 25
The Historia Augusta
, 136
Hood, Robin, 185
Hortensius, 94
Hruodgaus, 146
Hyparchus, 22
I
Innocent III, Pope, 181–82, 190–
91
“Ionian Revolt,” 19, 23–24, 26
Irene, Empress, 148–49
Isabella of Angouleme, 193, 202,
203
Isabella of Castile, 219
J
John I of England, 171–73, 175, 185–87, 189–90, 192
John of Gaunt, 205, 214–15,
228
John the Good, 209–10
Julian, 143
Julianus, Didius, 127–28
Justinian, 144–45
K
Keraunos, Ptolemy, 45–47
Knights Templar, 197–200
L
Lackland, John, 185
Lactantius, 137
Laodice, 49
Lentulus, Publius Cornelius, 99
Leo IV, Emperor, 148
Leopold V, Archduke, 179
Lewes, Battle of, 195
Licinianus, 141
Licinius, 141
The Lion in Winter
, 179
Livy, 48, 61, 62
Lombards, 146–47
Long, Huey, 165
Longinus, Gaius Cassius, 97–98
Longshanks, Edward, 193–96, 201
Louis VII of France, 171–73, 188
Louis XI of France, 221–22
Lucan, 93
Lucretia, 62
Lusignans, 193
Lysandra, 45–46
Lysimachus, 45–46
M
Maccabee, Judah, 50
Macedonian Dynasty, 152–53
Macro, 107
Magna Carta, 187, 193
Magnus, Gnaeus Pompeius, 84–85
Manlius, 72, 73
Marcelinus, Ammianus, 143
Marcia, 126
Marius, Gaius, 66–68, 89
“Marius’s Mules,” 67
Marshall, William, 175, 176
Martial, 119
Maslow, Abraham, 194
Maud of Saint-Valery, 186
Maxentius, 141
Maximian, 141
McLynn, Frank, 190
Medici, Giovanni de’, 223
Messalina, 113
Michael III, 152–53
Milvian Bridge, Battle of, 140
Mithridates VI of Pontus, 55–57
Montfort, Simon de, 194
Mortimer, Geoffrey, 203
Mortimer, Roger, 203–4
N
Nabonidus, King, 16–17
Nancy, Battle of, 222
Narses, 144, 145
Nero, 109, 114–17, 119, 121, 126
Neville, Anne, 225
Norwich, John Julius, 148, 154, 169
Numerian, 137–38
O
Octavia, 100
Octavian, Gaius Julius Caesar, 60, 86–87, 98–106.
See also
Caesar, Augustus
Odo of Bayeux, 163–64
Olmedo, Sebastián de, 219
Olympias of Macedonia, 37, 39–41
Olympic Games, 40, 116
Otho, Marcus Salvius, 119–20
Otto IV of Germany, 190–91
P
Padilla, Maria de, 206
Parr, Catherine, 231
Pastor, Ludwig, 212
Paterculus, Velleius, 55
Pedro of Castile, 205–6
Pepin, King, 146
Percy, Henry, 217
Perdiccas II, 35
Pericles, 28
Pertinax, 127, 128
Peter of Wakefield, 186
Petrarch, 208
Philip II Augustus of France, 172, 179, 183–84, 186, 188–90
Philip II of Macedonia, 35–39, 43
Philip IV the Fair, 197–200
Philip VI of France, 209
Philip of Macedon, 216
Philip of Swabia, 190
Philip the Good, 221
Philoxenus, 33–34
Pindarus, 98
Pisistratus, 22
Pius, Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus, 132.
See also
Caracalla
Plantagenet, Geoffrey, 183–84
Plantagenet, Henry, 171–73
Plantagenet, John, 185–87
Plantagenet, Matilda, 190
Plantagenet, Richard, 178–80
Plato, 29, 32
Plautianus, Gaius Fulvius, 131
Pliny the Younger, 124
Plutarch, 39, 74, 86, 94, 98, 99
Polycrates, 20–21
Pompey the Great, 72, 84–85, 94, 96
Popilius, 48–49
Postumus, Agrippa, 105
Prignano, Bartolomeo, 212–13
“Prince of Wales,” 195, 201
Ptolemy I Soter, 42–43, 45, 59
Ptolemy V, 51
Ptolemy VI, 53
Ptolemy VII, 51
Ptolemy VIII, 51–52
Ptolemy Keraunos (Thunderbolt), 45–47
Ptolemy Memphitis, 52
Pulcher, Publius Clodius, 79–81
Pulgar, Hernando de, 220
R
Ralph of Diceto, 175
Ramesses II, 9–11
Richard II, King, 214–15
Richard III, King, 225–26
Richard III
, 225, 226
Richard I the Lion-Hearted, 171, 173, 177–80, 185–86, 188–89
Richard of Gloucester, 225–26
Robert I of Normandy, 161, 168
Rome, burning, 114, 115
Rufus, Quintus Curtius, 37
Runciman, Steven, 170
S
Sabinus, Flavius, 122
Saladin, 179–80
Sargon II, 12
Sargon of Akkad, 1–3
Savoyards, 192–93
Sejanus, Lucius Aelius, 106–9
Seleucus, 45–46, 53
Seleucus IV, 48–49
Seleucus V, 53–54
Seneca, 114
Sennacherib, King Of Assyria, 12–13
Severus, Septimius, 128–32
Shakespeare, William, 4, 60, 97, 216, 225–26
Siculus, 32, 42
Socrates, 27, 29
Solomon, King, 14–15
“Spider King,” 221–22
Stephen VI, Pope, 150–51, 181
Stone of Scone, 196
Suetonius, 110, 112–13, 118, 120, 122–23
Suidas, 22, 23
Sulla, Lucius Cornelius, 69–70
Sulpicianus, 128
Swynford, Katherine, 228
Sylvester III, Pope, 159
“Synod Horrenda,” 151
T
Tacitus, 104, 106, 108, 114–15, 117, 121, 124
Tarquinius, Sextus, 62–63
Tarquinius Superbus, Lucius, 61–63
Templars, 197–200
Theodora, 144, 145
Theophano, 154
Theramenes, 29–31
Thucydides, 27
Thurinus, Gaius Octavius, 102.
See also
Octavian, Gaius Julius Caesar
Tiberius, 104–11
Torquemada, Juan de, 220
Torquemada, Tomas de, 219–20
Tudor, Edmund, 228
Tudor, Henry, 226–28
Tudor, Owain, 228
Tullia, 61
Tzimiskes, John, 154
U
Urban VI, Pope, 212–13
Uticensis, Marcus Porcius Cato, 93–94
V
Valens, Fabius, 121
Valois, Catherine de, 217,
228