Katherine Parr occupies a special place in royal history. Putting aside her remarkable achievements, and there are many, and her legacy of religious reform and literature, she is also one of those special queens consort. For every ruling dynasty must come to an end which means every royal house has a list of finals. Last king, last heir and last consort. Katherine occupies that place in the dramatic history of the Tudors. Here are her companions on this very regal list.
A blog dedicated to the life, times and general fabulousness of Katherine Parr - so much more than the wife who survived.
Monday, 30 March 2020
Saturday, 28 March 2020
Weekend Reads: books about Katherine
Say hello to weekend reads. This is a place on the blog for a look at some of the books that feature Katherine, her family, her life and her times as well as related subjects. Yes, I'm being ambitious.
Friday, 27 March 2020
Friday Walk Through Sudeley Castle: the Queens' Garden
Wednesday, 25 March 2020
Katherine - with a K or a C?
So how should we spell Katherine's name? You can see from that sentence and the title of my blog that I'm a 'K' girl when it comes to my favourite queen. Yet, many history books, articles and references use the 'C'. So what is the right way and does it really matter?
Tuesday, 24 March 2020
Katherine and Elizabeth: a strange and endless bond
March 24th marks the anniversary of the death of Elizabeth I. Gloriana's glorious rule came to an end #OTD in 1603 and she left the country she ruled in a far better state than when she inherited it. And part of the reason for her success was Katherine Parr.
Friday, 20 March 2020
Friday Walk Through Sudeley Castle
As you enter Sudeley Castle's exhibition rooms now, there is a sign that always makes me stop and think. And I've read it dozens of times. It talks about the beautiful, rolling hills around the castle and how little they have changed since Bronze Age times. All those years, all those centuries, all those eyes seeing the same beauty. And among the viewers, Katherine Parr.
'A man of much wit': the death of Thomas Seymour
They may be the stuff of legend but the words said to have been spoken by the future Elizabeth I on March 20th 1549 have become one of her legendary quotes. When told that Thomas Seymour, Baron Sudeley had been executed for treason, one pithy phrase reportedly dropped from her lips. It has become his epitaph. 'Today died a man of much wit and very little judgement'.
Friday, 13 March 2020
Friday Walk Through Sudeley Castle:
Saturday, 7 March 2020
Mother of a Queen: Meet Maud
I don't really feel we should call Katherine's mother Maud Parr. She was such a ground breaking woman, such a force in her own right that she deserves her own name always. Meet Maud Green.
Friday, 6 March 2020
Friday walk through Sudeley Castle
Thursday, 5 March 2020
The Downfall of Thoas Seymour
There's little point in asking whether Thomas Seymour, Katherine's last husband, was a saint or sinner. We all know he was bad and possibly slightly mad. But it's hard not to feel sympathy with another human at their lowest point. On this day, in 1549, Thomas' world literally came to an end when Parliament passed a Bill of Attainder against him and guaranteed his death on the executioner's block.
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