- Queen Mary I to Princess Elizabeth, January 26, 1553 [1554 N.S.]
- Sir Henry Bedingfeld’s Notes Regarding Princess Elizabeth in The Tower.
- Bedingfield’s Remembrances of Princess Elizabeth’s Journey to Woodstock, May 1554.
- Queen Mary I to Henry Bedingfeld, 21 May 1554. Instructions for care of Princess Elizabeth at Woodstock.
Elizabeth’s servants had almost all been dismissed to
survive as they might. In general, her servants
during her removal were provided by the court. She had not been permitted to
send or receive letters nor would she be during her time in Woodstock. She was only
occasionally permitted to leave her lodgings “for hir recreac̃on,” and, then,
only accompanied by Bedingfeld.
The Royal Court itself had departed Richmond at the same
time. The next extant letter between it and Bedingfeld was sent from the palace
at St. James, on May 26.[2]
In it the Council directed the knight that Thomas Parry’s presence was no
longer required. Parry, it may be remembered, was the dedicated treasurer of Elizabeth’s household who she
had protected during the persecutions at Hatfield by the Duke of Somerset, as
Lord Protector. He was once again ordered away, and, once again, he would
remain with her.[3]
He and a considerable number of the Princess’s servants are said to have taken
up residence at the nearby Bull Inn.
Whether her dedicated governess, Kat Ashley, was with her
at Woodstock or among those at the Bull Inn would not seem to be clear. According
to Strickland, they were not reunited until Elizabeth was permitted to return
to Hatfield.[4]
A memoriall gyven by the quenes highnes unto hir trustie and
ryght well beloved counsellor sr henrye Bed. knyght, for the p[ur]poses
ensuyng. xxi. maii 1554.
MARYE THE QUENE.
Ffyrst, where as wee have appoynted or syster the
ladye Elizabeth, for diverse goode cosiderac̃ons, to be removed from or
Tower off London unto or manor
off Wodestock, there to remayne untill
we shall otherwise determyn. The sayde Sr henrye Bed. havyng in hys companie
suche nomber off p[er]sons as wee have appoynted for that p[ur]pose, shall make
hys abode and gyve hys attendũnce wthin or sayde house
of Wodestocke aboute the p[er]son off or sayde Syster, and in hys s[er]vice
to guvern hym selfe as foloweth.
Itm, when comoditee shall s[er]ve he shall brefelye declare
as well to suche gentlemen as wee have p[re]sentlye addressed or Ir̃es
unto for hys assistance in or s[er]vice as to suche other also as
shall have occasion to repare unto hym, the cause off or sayde
systers late comittyng to the Toure, wheroff all though she be not hitherto
thoroughlye clered, yet have we, for hir better quiet and to the ende she maye
be the moore honorablye used, thought mete to appoynte liyr to remayne at or
sayde mannor off Wodestock untill suche tyme as certain matters
towchyng hir case wch bee not yet clered maye be thoroughlye tried
and examined.
Itm, the sayde sr henrye Bed. shall cause my sayde syster to
be saflye loked unto for the salfegarde off hir p[er]son, havyng neverthelesse
regarde to use hyr In suche goode & honorable sorte as maye be agreable to or
honor and hir estate & degree.
Itm, he shall at tymes convenient suffer or sayde
syster, for hir recreac̃on, to walke abroode and take the ayre In the gardeyns
off or sayde house, so as he hym self be p[rese]nt in hir copanie.
Itm, he shall cause goode hede to be gyven to or
sayde systers behavor, for seeng that nether she be suffered to have
conference wth anye suspected p[er]son oute off hys heryng, nor that
she dooe by eny menes eyther receyve or sende eny message, Ir̃e, or token to or
from eny manner off p[er]son.
Itm, he shall generallye have goode regarde not onlye to the
p[ro]miss accordyng to the trust reposed In hym, but shall also dooe hys beste
to cause the countreye thereaboute to be continued In goode and quiet ordre,
usyng eyther for that p[ur]pose or for enye other matter that shall occurre the
advyse and assistence off the sayde gentlemen whome wee have p[re]sentlye
addressed or Ir̃es unto for that p[ur]pose; and yff anye matter
shall happen towchyng thys hys charge worthye adv[er]tismt he shall
immediately signify the same unto or p[ri]vie counsell attendyng
uppon or p[er]son, to thende suche farther ordre maye bee by them
taken in that behalf as shall be convenient.
Marye the Quene.
[1] Norfolk
Archaeology, Vol. IV (1855). “State Papers Relating to the Custody of the
Princess Elizabeth.” 157-9.
[2]
Norfolk. 155-6.
[3] “Seven
rediscovered letters of Princess Elizabeth Tudor.” Wiley Online Library. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1468-2281.12197.
[Accessed Feb. 28, 2021.] Citing Manning, pp. 194, 196; D. Starkey, Elizabeth:
Apprenticeship (2000), pp. 155–6.
[4] Strickland,
Agnes. The Life of Queen Elizabeth (1910). 104. “At Hatfield she was
permitted to surround herself, with her old accustomed train of attached servants,
among whom were, her beloved governess, Mrs. Katharine Ashley, her husband, the
Parrys, and last, not least, her learned preceptor Roger Ascham,…”
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
- Sleeping in the Jakes: Civilized Life in the Middle Ages. June 30, 2019. “But why before the “Third Dormitory”? And why was the Third Dormitory built two stories up on stone column-and-arch stilts?”
- 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”.’
- History of the Medieval Fork… or Lack Thereof. March 28, 2019. “The Italian and also most strangers that are commorant in Italy, doe alwaies at their meales use a little forke, when they cut their meate.”
- Shakespeare’s Barnacles. March 3, 2016. “Prospero will wake, he fears, before they can murder him, and will cast a spell on them.”
- The King's Esnecce. January 13, 2019. “It comes as no surprise, then, that when Maud’s son, Henry Plantagenet, Count or Duke of most of the western territories of France, and, by terms of the treaty, heir to Stephen, next rose to the throne as Henry II, he was quick to arrange for the safest possible means of transit across the channel.”
- Check out the Medieval Topics Article Index for many more articles about this fascinating time.
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