Chris77
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- Apr 6, 2011
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I know it isn't used as Royal Palace anymore. But has anyone been there? I've been dying to go but it'll be quite some time before I can get over to England.
Yes, it's great fun historic house wise and garden wise. Did you know you can stay there now? www.heverhotel.com
I know it isn't used as Royal Palace anymore. But has anyone been there? I've been dying to go but it'll be quite some time before I can get over to England.
Interesting that Harry would take possession of it when Mary had two children (and a son at that) and Anne had Elizabeth. So there was some legacy.
Could Henry seize it in right of his late wife? I seem to recall reading that somewhere and it is rather cheeky, considering Henry was the cause of Anne being "late." But royalty does have its privileges. Still, it doesn't explain why it did not go to Mary if she was the elder of the sisters, because women did inherit at that time. She just could not inherit the earldoms without special leave.
Actually, because Anne was tried and put to death for treason, and because Thomas Bolelyn would have been named as a co-conspirator because he didn't tell Henry if he knew about Anne cheating, then the estate would have immediately been taken from Thomas and given to the Crown, as part of his punishment. Of course, now no one believes that she did cheat, but that's beside the point.
And for Chris 77 - Henry VIII never executed Thomas Boleyn - just his daughter Queen Anne, and his son and heir George, Viscount Rochford. So the earldom of Wiltshire and the lands of Thomas Boleyn could not have been in the legal entitlement of the king, unless they reverted to the Crown when Thomas died without a male heir.
Blickling was transferred by Act of Parliament to Jane, Lady Rochford, after her father-in-law's death.. since it had once been the property of her husband George. It was apparently given with its revenues for the maintenance of his widow. When she was executed in 1542, it was either sold or transferred to the Clere family.
Not to get off point, because this thread is about Hever Castle, but wasn't Jane Parker mentally unstable? Or am I getting this from poetic license taken with books and movies about the Tudors?
Yay, now I am a serene highness!
Edward was not sickly, and we dont relaly know much about George Boleyn's relationship with his wife. Novelists have portrayed them as disliking each other and her being jealous of his love for Anne but it is not really clear what made her say something about Anne and George..Its possible that what she saiad to Cromwell could have been twisted.From all I have read, Jane Parker was a spiteful, embittered woman who loved intrigue.
George Boleyn detested her, and this probably had an effect.
Also, Henry VIII was known to desire a male heir; his only son Edward was sickly and unlikely to live long.
Had Catherine Howard become pregnant, her influence woud have grown (and thus, by association, Lady Rochford's influence).
A pregnancy would also provide a safety measure for Catherine, since Henry's matrimonial track record was not good.