Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton |
In this series:
- The Essex Rebellion and the Earl of Southampton.
- The Secret Correspondence of Robert Cecil and James I.
- Who Saved Southampton from the Ax?
One of
the popular mysteries of the final years of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I is
why the Queen executed her favorite, the Earl of Essex, for treason, and left
his accomplice, the Earl of Southampton, to languish as a prisoner in The Tower
until King James I ascended the throne.
Like any apparent inconsistency, concerning a Queen’s broken heart,
treason, witness testimony and heads being lopped off it has proven endlessly
intriguing.
Even day
to day governance during Tudor times was inherently steeped in deeper shadows
than governing in the modern world. The
Earl of Essex had been corresponding with the King of Scotland for years, James
VI (later James I of England). During some
of those years he had been doing so at the behest of the Queen who had made him
a sort of special ambassador while reading over his shoulder. Other letters seem to have been written on
his own initiative toward his own purposes.
James had come to count Essex his most valuable and dedicated ally in
England.
Certainly,
the communications of 1600 were deeply private and amounted to treason. Essex was furious and distraught to have been
placed under house arrest after insubordinately returning from his command in
Ireland. The sources of his wealth and
power were being removed from him.
His
lieutenant in Ireland, Lord Mountjoy, unwisely made inquiries to James VI. If Montjoy marched toward the Scottish border
at the head of 4000-5000 soldiers would James muster forces to join with him
and enforce his claim as the legal heir to the English throne upon the death of
Elizabeth? Essex would join them with
what men he could muster. With James as
established heir, Essex’s power would be restored.
The Earl
of Southampton further wrote the King to sound him on his thoughts and to let
him know the extent of Essex’s support.
Always careful, James was inconclusive and played for time. Mountjoy began to realize his vulnerability
and soon withdrew his own idea.
By
February of 1601, Southampton was in London spending his time at his residence,
Drury House, consulting with his cynosure.
The two Earls were surrounded by a small cadre of allies and
retainers. Soon they were at Essex House
planning the takeover of London in preparation for taking control of the person
of the Queen.
Another
letter had already gone from Essex to James, this one asking the Scottish King
to send ambassadors to the English Court to demand his restoration. The takeover of London was being considered
while Essex waited. By the time the
letter had arrived to the King and the decision was made to send the
ambassadors to save James’s most valuable ally in Elizabeth’s Court word had
followed that the Earl had been executed for treason.
On
February 11, while the conspirators were beginning to be tried, Southampton
wrote a letter to the Queen’s First Secretary, Robert Cecil. In it, he provided evidence he had not
thought to give before and some insight into how he avoided execution:
I doe
rely so much vppon your fauor that I doute not but you will make vse of them
for my aduantage, and I shall continew bound vnto you, as I protest I doe
account my self alredy, more then to any man lyuinge, which whether I liue or
dy I make the world know to your honor.[1]
Cecil,
with whom he had shared a home as a ward of William Cecil, was now advising
him. Shortly after Essex’s execution
Cecil freely presented his feelings on the Southampton matter in a letter to Sir
George Carew:
It remayneth now that I lett you know what is
lyke to become of the poore yong Erle of Southampton, who meerely for the love
of the Erle hath ben drawen into this action, who, in respect that most of the
conspirascies were at Drury Howse, where he was alwaies cheef,… those that
would deale for him (of which number I protest to God I am one as farr as I
dare) are much disadvantaged of arguments to saue him; and yet when I consider
how penitent he is, and how mercifull the Queen is, and neuer in thought or deed
but in this conspiracy he offended, as I can not write in despaire, so I dare
not flatter myself with hope.[2]
The evident
sense of powerlessness, however, is Cecil being politic. Always aware that communications might be
intercepted at any time, his letters always stress the power of the Queen regardless
that he was ever more often having to send clean copies of her illegible
letters and artfully guide her towards decisions personal and governmental. Fragile though she might be, she could still
command misery with a flourish of her hand.
Of this, enemies at Court were well aware.
While
there would seem to be no direct reference to Southampton in the extant secret
correspondence of the Scottish King, Cecil’s right hand man, Henry Howard,
comforted his ambassadors that great care was being taken for Southampton’s
safety. In a letter to the King from the
Earl of Northumberland, the Earl lauds Cecil in terms sure to please the man
who will soon be King also of England:
was
not the clemency great that hath been used to all the nobility that offended in
this last rebellion, and many others that were conceived to lean toward your majesty?
Was it anybody else that saved Southampton? Has he not mitigated the
extremities against Mountjoy…[3]
It was
fully understood by all that James had made clear he wanted Southampton to be
treated as leniently as Cecil could arrange.
Surely, a more easily distractible Queen proved a help in the matter.
It was
Robert Cecil who saved the Earl of Southampton from the axe. He might have chosen to do so simply because
he had gotten to know Southampton as the
Earl had grown up a ward in his father William Cecil’s house. He most certainly chose to do so in order to
serve the wishes of the man who would
soon be King of England and hold his fate in his hands.
[1] Stopes,
Charlotte Carmichael. The Life of Henry, Third Earl of Southampton, p.
230. Citing Salisbury Papers,
vol. xi,
p. 72.
[2]
Maclean, John. Letters from Sir
Robert Cecil to Sir George Carew (1864), 74.
[3] Bruce,
John. Correspondence
of King James VI. of Scotland with Sir Robert Cecil and others in England (Camden Society, 1861), 68. “was
not the clemencie great that hathe bene wsed to all the nobilitie that offendid
in this last rebellion, and many wthers that were conceawed to leane towars
your maiestie? Was it any boddy els that sawed sowthehamtonne? Hes he not
mitigated the extremities against montioye…”
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
- The Fascinating Itinerary of the Gelosi Troupe, 1576. June 10, 2019. “The Spanish soldiers had not been paid and unpaid soldiers tend to rob and loot. The citizens were prepared to give them a fight. Violent flare ups were occurring everywhere.”
- A Thousand Years of English Terms. June 2, 2019. ‘One person did not say to another, “Meet you at three o’clock”. There was no clock to be o’. But the church bell rang the hour of Nones and you arranged to meet “upon the Nones bell”.’
- A Most Curious Account of the Funeral of Queen Elizabeth I: April 28, 1603. April 28, 2019. “Once it was clear that James I would face no serious challenges, Cecil and the others could begin to give attention to the matter of the Queen’s funeral.”
- The Battle Over Shakespeare's Early and Late Plays. September 24, 2018. “The answers to the post-Oxford dilemma, of course, are three.”
- Stratford Shakespeare’s Undersized Grave. July 22, 2018. “Mr. Coll’s considers this evidence to support an old rumor that Shakspere’s head had been stolen in 1794. But I submit that he is merely making his observation based upon a coincidence.”
- Check out the English Renaissance Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time and about the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
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