The Tudor Society

17 November – The queen is dead! Long live the queen!

On this day in Tudor history, 17th November 1558, forty-two-year-old Queen Mary I, daughter of Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, died at St James’s Palace in London. She passed the throne on to her twenty-five-year-old half-sister, Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn, who became Queen Elizabeth I.

In today's talk, I talk about the accession of Queen Elizabeth I and the traditional story of Elizabeth finding out that she was queen at Hatfield.

You can find out more about Accession Day and how it was celebrated in my article here.

Also on this day in history:

Transcript:

On this day in Tudor history, 17th November 1558, forty-two-year-old Queen Mary I, daughter of Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, died at St James’s Palace in London. She had been queen for just five years and four months. She passed the throne on to her twenty-five-year-old half-sister, Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn.

Parliament was in session on the day that Mary died so Mary’s Lord Chancellor, Nicholas Heath, Archbishop of York, announced the queen's death to the House of Lords. Then, at noon, The Houses of Lords and Commons proclaimed Elizabeth queen at Whitehall.

Sir Nicholas Throckmorton recorded how Elizabeth had arranged with him to bring her Mary’s enamelled black ring, one given to her by her husband Philip of Spain, on her death so that she could be sure that her sister was really dead. He said that he “galloped in post” from court to Elizabeth’s estate at Hatfield with the ring, but that his news was “stale”, for it had already reached Elizabeth. It served as confirmation though, from a trustworthy source: “My news was stale”, Throckmorton wrote, “butt yet she knewe it true.”

The Count of Feria recorded that six of Mary's council travelled to see the new queen:
“The day on which the Queen died, after the customary proclamation was made at Westminster and London, the Council decided that the Chancellor, the Admiral, the earl of Shrewsbury, the earl of Pembroke, the earl of Derby and William Howard, should go to the new Queen and perform the ordinary ceremonies, and that the remainder should stay behind, but everyone wanted to be first to get out.”

Sir Robert Naunton in his “Fragmenta regalia” writes a very romanticised account of Elizabeth finding out she was queen:

“ […] which on her sisters departure, she most religiously acknowledged, ascribing the glory of her deliverance to God above: for she being then at Hatfield, and under a guard, and the Parliament sitting at the self same time, she received both the news of the Queen's death, and her own proclamation, by the general consent of the house and the public suffrage of the people: whereat falling on her knees, after a good time of respiration, she uttered this verse of the psalme: A domino factum est istud, et est mirabile in oculis nostris”

The Latin translates to “this is the Lord's doing; it is marvellous in our eyes” and is from psalm 118. Elizabeth was, according to this tradition, sitting under an old oak tree in the parkland around the palace of Hatfield, reading a book when the men arrived to give her news of her accession.
Sadly, this romantic tradition may well not be true. As David Starkey points out, this account was written 70 years after the event and is “psychologically wrong” as it has Elizabeth speaking only “after a good time of respiration” when Elizabeth had already heard the news and wasn't the sort to receive new with what Starkey describes as “female flutterings”.
I do love it though!

Today, you can still see an oak tree in the parkland at Hatfield. It is not THE tree, as that died. However, our present queen, Elizabeth II, planted a new oak in its place on 22 July 1985. The plaque there reads:
“This oak tree was planted by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on the 22nd July 1985 on the site of the original oak tree under which Her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth I heard of her accession to the throne.”

The 17th November was celebrated as Accession Day throughout the reign of Elizabeth I and the reigns of many of her successors. As well as Accession Day, it was also known as Queen Elizabeth's Day or Queen's Day and was celebrated with the ringing of bells, processions, the burning of an effigy of the Pope, and special tilts in which knights not only jousted but also dressed up and took parts in special pageants involving poetry and theatre. Accession Day celebrations continued well into the 18th century with Elizabeth being seen as an "icon of the Protestant revolution" and effigies of the Pope and the Devil being traditionally burnt on this day. It is not marked in the UK today, though.

I might well raise a glass to Gloriana, the Virgin Queen, Good Queen Bess later, after all, she was the daughter of my favourite historical character.

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