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George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier and Diplomat George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier and Diplomat
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TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 74% done
Jane Seymour's brothers came to an equally sticky end. Thomas Seymour was executed for treason on 20 March 1549 and Edward Seymour on 22 January 1552. A number of Jane's other supporters also suffered unpleasant deaths, including Nicholas Carew, who had coached Jane on how to capture the King's heart. He was beheaded for treason in 1539, just three years after the executions of Anne and George.
Jun 23, 2025 01:09PM Add a comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 74% done
By involving George Boleyn in Anne's downfall, Cromwell had destroyed his principal noble supporter on the council. The irony is not lost on historian Rory McEntegart, who suggests that George was "the man best placed to offset the anti-Cromwellian feelings of conservative noblemen such as the Duke of Norfolk."2 In the long term, the deaths of Anne and George had considerably weakened Cromwell's position.
Jun 23, 2025 01:08PM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 73% done
Henry's illegitimate son, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond, died on 23 July 1536, probably of consumption. He was just 17 years old. Of Henry's four children, not one of them had children of their own to carry on the Tudor dynasty.
So much brutality had been carried out, and so many innocent people had died, to ensure that the King had a legitimate son, and in the end it was all for nothing.
Jun 23, 2025 11:06AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 73% done
It is difficult for us today to understand why people who are so obviously innocent do not reaffirm their innocence on the scaffold. Sixteenth century values and conventions are poles apart from our own. George's speech reiterated what he had said at his trial:that the verdict proved he deserved death.

He explained that he died under the law,because it was the law that had condemned him. The law was the word of God,
Jun 23, 2025 11:02AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 72% done
George Boleyn had many faults, but treason had never been one of them, and Henry must have known that. None of the men's heads were put on display on spikes, as was usual with convicted traitors; this would surely have been the case if Henry seriously thought they were guilty, just as Thomas Culpeper's would be five years later.
Jun 23, 2025 02:22AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 71% done
George had gone from palace to prison to execution within 15 days, and it is a testament to his courage and strength of character that he was able to defend himself so well at his trial and give such an impassioned speech on the scaffold, when lesser men would still have been in shock.
Jun 23, 2025 02:21AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 71% done
It is easy to use Jane as a scapegoat, but just as the Boleyn siblings should be given the benefit of the doubt due to the lack of evidence for the charges against them, so the same courtesy should be extended to Jane.
Jun 22, 2025 10:04AM Add a comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 70% done
The statement Jane gave to the court did not in itself condemn her husband, or the Queen. Both were already prejudged. There was never a chance that either would be spared, regardless of the evidence laid before the court - or more accurately, the lack of evidence. When George was initially arrested, it is probable that there was a vague intention of charging him as an accessory to his sister's misdemeanours
Jun 22, 2025 09:52AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 70% done
Following her husband's arrest, Jane may also have been in the position of either providing the Crown with a useful statement, or potentially facing charges herself as an accomplice, seeing as she too had discussed the King's problems. It may even be that she provided the statement regarding Henry's impotence without appreciating that it would be specifically used against her husband;
Jun 22, 2025 09:50AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 68% done
You don’t realize how messed up and outrageous thre trial for Anne, George, and the others were until read the full accounting of it...

:(
Jun 21, 2025 03:17PM Add a comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 65% done
Upon Anne's removal from the court, her brother was brought to the bar. The brother and sister did not see one another, and were not allowed the consolation of a final farewell. Ironically, during life it was Anne who was the more tempestuous and reckless of the two siblings, yet she faced her accusers with the quiet and restrained dignity of a true queen.

(Cont in comments)
Jun 21, 2025 07:44AM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 61% done
Anne Boleyn appears to have undergone some sort of mental breakdown following her arrest and imprisonment. She vacillated between hysterical laughter at the absurdity of the charges, and floods of tears. In her fear and distress she also babbled incessantly, trying to make some sense of what had happened to her.
Jun 20, 2025 05:52PM Add a comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 61% done
George Boleyn was arrested on the afternoon of 2 May 1536 at Whitehall.3 This did not become common knowledge until the following day, which must mean it was orchestrated to be carried out as privately as possible. Upon hearing that he was in the Tower, not even Chapuys could come up with an explanation as to why he had been arrested.
I
Jun 20, 2025 05:49PM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 60% done
The evangelical Anne and George could not have been charged with a crime that would have caused them more anguish, shame and dishonour than incest. Not only did they lose their lives, their reputations were completely destroyed and their names blackened for centuries to come.
Jun 20, 2025 01:26PM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 60% done
George and Anne were known to be close, and George would have moved heaven and earth to try to save her. He seems to have been arrested doing just that - attempting to see the King at Whitehall. George was far too dangerous to be allowed his liberty. Although there was realistically nothing he could have done to save Anne, he had the verbal acumen to have protested her innocence persuasively
Jun 20, 2025 01:24PM 2 comments
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 60% done
The incest charge brought against George Boleyn is one of the most cynical and spiteful attacks on an individual in English history. He was accused for a number of reasons. Firstly, the charge was brought in order to bring further shame and dishonour to Anne's name.
Thirdly, there is every possibility that, in a similar way to Wolsey's abuse of the reform of the Privy Council in 1526,
Jun 20, 2025 01:23PM 2 comments
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

TL *Humaning the Best She Can*
TL *Humaning the Best She Can* is 60% done
On 24 April, the King approved the setting up of two commissions of oyer and terminer to investigate crimes committed in the counties of Middlesex and Kent.17 These were set up by Cromwell and Thomas Audley, the Lord Chancellor. Just eight days later, Anne and George Boleyn were arrested for crimes committed in those two counties.
Jun 20, 2025 01:18PM 1 comment
George Boleyn: Tudor Poet, Courtier & Diplomat

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