Everything about Arthur Prince Of Wales totally explained
Arthur Tudor (
19 September/
20 September,
1486–
2 April,
1502) was the first son of King
Henry VII of England and
Elizabeth of York, and therefore, heir to the throne of England and Wales. As he predeceased his father he never became king, and his place was taken by his brother, who became
King Henry VIII.
Early life
Birth
Henry VII, in order to strengthen his otherwise dubious claim to the throne (Henry came from bastard stock), set his personal genealogists to trace back his heritage to
Cadwaladr and ancient British kings. Henry identified
Winchester in Hampshire as
Camelot, and it was there that the first Tudor
Prince of Wales, Arthur, was born to Henry and his Queen, Elizabeth of York, the daughter of
Edward IV. He was named after the legendary
King Arthur of the
Round Table. His christening took place at
Winchester Cathedral, his godfathers being
Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby and
John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford who was late to the ceremony.
Elizabeth Woodville, his maternal grandmother, was his godmother and carried him during the ceremony. He was made a
Knight of the Bath at his christening. It isn't known if Arthur was a robust child when born. In Arthur's
Church History it says: ". . . [ArthurTudor was] yet vital and vigorous" while Francis Bacon describes him as, "Born in the eighth month, as the physicians do prejudge," yet "strong and able". Some historians suggest that he'd been weak his whole life long, and that was what led him to his death.
His only original surviving portrait shows a teenage boy growing into his skin, though some say he looks weak in it. He certainly differed from his athletic younger brother, the future
Henry VIII. There is no evidence to show that Arthur did
athletics, but he may have been fond of
archery. In the portrait he's the red
Tudor hair, small eyes, and a high-bridged nose. He bears a resemblance to both his father and brother.
Betrothal and alliance
Arthur's father, Henry VII, was eager to strengthen his kingdom through an alliance with newly-united Spain, seeking the support of the Catholic Monarchs
Isabella of Castile and
Ferdinand of Aragon against French interests and possible aggression. When Arthur was two years old, a marriage with the Spanish princess,
Catherine of Aragon (in Spain, Catalina de Aragón) was arranged for him as part of the
Treaty of Medina del Campo. The auburn-haired Catherine was the youngest daughter of Isabella and Ferdinand. However, Ferdinand was more than ready to break the treaty if all of the pretenders to the throne of England didn't vanish. Isabella and Ferdinand were in no hurry to have their daughter married, and, though a treaty had been made, they were still open. Therefore, in
1499,
Edward Plantagenet, 17th Earl of Warwick was beheaded, and the pretender
Perkin Warbeck, who some contemporaries asserted was
Edward IV's illegitimate son, was hanged.
Childhood
At the age of three, Arthur was made
Prince of Wales and
Earl of Chester, and when five he was made a
Knight of the Garter. He, being the heir, was specially trained. Some historians maintain that he'd some kind of bond with
Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk who was also the
Earl of Surrey, and who defended the border of England whenever the
Kingdom of Scotland attacked. His tutors were
John Rede and the blind poet
Bernard André. When he was fourteen to fifteen years old
Thomas Linacre (or Lynaker) began to teach him. His tutor, Bernard André, wrote an unfinished biography of Henry VII in which he inserted the information that Arthur was familiar with all the best
Latin and
Greek language authors. The Prince's governor and treasurer was Sir Henry Vernon. Arthur may have frequently lived with Henry Vernon at his house,
Haddon Hall, in the peak of
Derbyshire where there was an apartment called 'The Prince's Chamber', with Arthur's arms cut in several places.
Marriage
For two years, Arthur wrote numerous letters in
Latin to his bride-to-be, and she'd formally reply back. However, the letters were more polite than passionate, since the young couple had never met, writing as instructed by their tutors. When Arthur was fourteen, the King of Aragon and Queen of Castile promised that they were going to send their daughter Catalina (later known as Katherine) over to England, but it wasn't until after her bridegroom turned fifteen that Catalina and her retinue finally started their journey. One of the major reasons for Katherine's delayed departure was Isabella and Ferdinand's insistence of the death of Edward Plantagenet the 17th Earl of Warwick, who was a possible pretender to the English throne, being more royal by blood than Henry VII himself. The Spanish
Infanta (the Spanish title for princess) finally reached land in the autumn, and on
November 4,
1501, the couple met at last at
Dogsmersfield Palace in
Hampshire. Little is known about their first impressions of each other, but Arthur did write to his father- and mother-in-law that he'd be 'a true and loving husband' and he later told his parents that he was immensely happy to behold the face of his lovely bride. Ten days later, on
November 14,
1501, they were married at
St. Paul's Cathedral. At the end of the festive day came the Bedding Ceremony, in which most of the court put the young couple to bed. This was to be one of the most
controversial wedding nights in history.
Death and aftermath
The couple soon travelled to
Ludlow Castle on the
Welsh border, where Arthur normally resided in his capacity as
Prince of Wales and President of
The Council of Wales and Marches. He then died suddenly at the young age of fifteen. The cause of his death is unknown but may have been
consumption, diabetes, or the mysterious
sweating sickness, which modern theorists tie to a
hantavirus. Catherine was sick as well, but unlike her unfortunate husband, she survived. His brother,
Henry, Duke of York, became heir upon Arthur's death and would come to the throne in
1509. For this he was unprepared -- it had originally been intended that he'd enter the Church and perhaps become
Archbishop of Canterbury -- and his lack of preparation was obvious as for some years he was heavily influenced by older statesmen, such as Cardinal
Thomas Wolsey. Henry wasn't created
Prince of Wales until it was certain that Catherine wasn't carrying Arthur's child. Catherine would marry Henry (who was six years her junior) eight years later, but in the interim, she lived in relative poverty.
Funeral
Arthur was buried in
Worcester Cathedral where "Prince Arthur's Chantry" stands today. Sir
Griffith Ryce, a member of Arthur's household, was an official mourner, and his tomb is located near Arthur's. Arthur's father, the King, didn't attend the funeral. The reasons for his absence are unknown, though many conjecture that the journey was too long or that
Henry VII was too distressed. Arthur's mother,
Elizabeth of York didn't attend the funeral either, and as was the custom, Catherine of Aragon also remained at home.
Question of consummation
Immense controversy surrounds the question of whether or not Arthur and Catherine consummated their brief marriage, since the subsequent history of England and even of British Christianity was strongly influenced by the issue. Some believe that if a 15-year-old couple were to share a bed, the result would naturally be
sexual intercourse. There is also the fact that Catherine and Arthur understood that they needed to begin producing heirs for
England, something they'd have regarded as a pressing and major duty. It was perfectly common then for a girl to marry and to be expected to consummate her marriage at a very young age;
Margaret Beaufort was only 12 when she married
Edmund Tudor.
Catherine's
duenna Doña Elvira said that the marriage wasn't consummated, though some historians argue that Doña Elvira was never close to the girl, whom she'd later betray. Arthur himself, before the wedding night, stated that he was feeling very 'lusty and amorous', and his friends claimed that the following day, he'd proudly called for some water, saying that he'd "been in Spain" and that being a husband was "thirsty work." There is no way to know whether Arthur made this joke to merely to cover up the fact that he'd failed at his marital duty.
Some historians assert that Arthur was frail, like Catherine's late brother,
Juan, Prince of Asturias. Juan had been married to Archduchess Margaret of Austria and had died after six months of marriage. It was believed for a time that Margaret had ruined Juan's health through too much sexual activity. These historians maintain that Arthur and Catherine had a normal sexual relationship throughout their marriage and that this, as in the case of Catherine's brother, led Arthur to die of overexertion. Others suggest that the couple engaged in sexual activity but not to the extent of full and completed intercourse.
What most find hard to believe is that the fervently devout and Catholic Catherine, who insisted that her marriage to Arthur had never been consummated, would lie. Leviticus 20:21 states that it's unclean for a man to take his brother's wife and if a man did so, the union would be childless. (By the same token, other biblical passages enjoin a man to marry his brother's widow and to father children on her, so that the deceased man's line will officially continue. The inconsistency of the Bible on this point was a major issue during the divorce controversy.) The first time Catherine publicly claimed that her marriage to Arthur hadn't been consummated was when Henry sought the divorce; the subject hadn't been mentioned earlier, and some historians believe it makes sense that Catherine would have lied to protect her reputation, her marriage to Henry, and the rights of her only surviving child, her daughter
Mary I. To say otherwise would have been an admission of fornication as well as a condemnation of Princess Mary to illegitimacy. Catherine claimed that she and Arthur had shared a bed for only seven days, but this is unconfirmed by any historical records.
What Henry really wanted was a son, since he'd historical reasons to believe that England wouldn't accept a female monarch. During his marriage to her, Catherine's pregnancies had resulted in several living children, but only Mary had survived infancy. Henry had realized with the passing years that the aging Catherine was unlikely to produce a son and heir, and he was having a notorious love affair with sisters
Mary and
Anne Boleyn. His divorce from Catherine and his marriage to Anne were predicated on his claim that he and Catherine had produced no living son because he'd disobeyed Scripture and married his brother's widow -- which Catherine would only have been, technically speaking, if she and Arthur had consummated their marriage.
This dispute, and Henry's inability to obtain papal dissolution of his marriage, would be the main reason for the
English Reformation. Whatever the truth of the matter, whether Henry had found Catherine to be a virgin on their wedding night, has never been recorded. However, when he was trying to annul his marriage to Catherine, he ordered bloodstained bedsheets, supposedly from his brother's marriage night, to be paraded around his palace as proof of the consummation. How or why these sheets should have been preserved for so many years wasn't explained.
Further research
Christopher Guy, the
archaeologist of
Worcester Cathedral, said he found it odd that, if Arthur had been unhealthy, he was sent to the cold remoteness of
Ludlow Castle. Peter Vaughan, of the Worcester Prince Arthur Committee, finds this strange as well. He remarks: "He wasn't a strong character, unlike his younger brother. Could it be that his father was strong enough to see that the best interests of the Tudors were to be served by Henry Duke of York, rather than Arthur?" However, historians such as
David Starkey and
Julian Litten have dismissed theories of neglect or murder. "There is nothing fishy about his demise", said Litten. "He was in Ludlow as an ambassador for a King setting up a new dynasty." Litten believes that the real mystery in Arthur's death is the disease that killed him. If not
consumption or the historical English
sweating sickness, it could have been a genetic condition that might have been passed on to his nephews,
Edward VI and
Henry Fitzroy.
Arthur in fiction
Arthur has appeared in several novels about Catherine of Aragon.
Norah Lofts wrote
The King's Pleasure in the late 1960s.
Katharine, The Virgin Widow by
Jean Plaidy has Arthur in it as well.
Vanity Fair magazine declared the book "Outstanding".
The Constant Princess, by
Philippa Gregory, tells the story of how Catherine and Arthur fell in love, consummated their marriage, and how he suddenly died. In it, Katherine promises Arthur she'll become Queen of England by marrying his brother in order to fulfill their vision for the future of the kingdom.
Kingsley Amis wrote "
The Alteration" (1976), an
alternative history novel about the effects of a contested "War of the English Succession" (c
1509 CE), where the birth and reign of
Prince Arthur Tudor and
Katherine of Aragon's son, "Stephen II", leads
Henry VIII to attempt to usurp his nephew's throne.
Ancestors
Ancestors of Arthur, Prince of Wales
Further Information
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