The reader coming
to this volume expecting a major new biography of Henry VIII’s
second and most interesting queen is likely to be disappointed.
Though there is no hint of this on the book’s dust jacket
or copyright page, or even, it must be said, in the author’s
own Preface, The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn is actually a second
edition of Eric Ives’s magisterial Anne Boleyn, issued by
the same publisher on the 450th anniversary of Anne’s execution
in 1986. This is not to say that a second edition is either unjustified
or unwelcome (though an academic reader inevitably regrets the conversion
of footnotes to endnotes). Scholarly interest in ‘Anne of
the Thousand Days’ has kept up apace over the past two decades.
Important contributions include Retha Warnicke’s controversial
The Rise and Fall of Anne Boleyn, George Bernard’s provocative
reassessment of ‘Anne Boleyn’s religion’ in Historical
Journal, a lively debate between Bernard and Ives over the motives
and mechanics of Anne Boleyn’s fall in the English Historical
Review, 1991–2 (subsequently added to by Greg Walker in Historical
Journal, 2002), as well as effective synoptic studies of Henry’s
wives by Antonia Fraser and, more recently, by David Starkey. (1)
Ives takes full account of this and other recent scholarship, though
it becomes evident that it has not impelled him to make much in
the way of retraction or modification to the broad picture he painted
in 1986. In particular, he stands by his emphasis on the importance
of faction as the motor of Henrician politics. Yet neither, fortunately,
is this revised life of Anne a sustained exercise in self-justification.
Historiographical controversies are treated very lightly in the
text (there are no index entries, for example, to either Warnicke
or Bernard – Ives's most vocal critics), and with a minimum
of fuss in the notes. The tone throughout is in general measured
and fair-minded. Nonetheless, it is worth tracking some of the changes
Ives has made to his presentation of Anne’s life and death
with a view to ascertaining how close a book widely hailed as a
magisterial account has come to meriting consideration as a definitive
one.
The volume under consideration is longer, though not substantially
longer, than its predecessor (it has acquired, inter alia, an additional
eight plates, bringing the total to a generous 64). While the structure
of the biography (in four parts, tracing Anne’s background
and courtship; installation as Henry’s consort; reign as queen;
overthrow and execution) is essentially as before, there is a noticeable
sequence of minor repackagings. A new chapter 6 offers an expanded
account of Henry’s courtship, and the original chapter on
‘the turning point’ of 1532–3 is split into two
to sharpen the focus on ‘Wedding nerves’ of various
kinds. Other structural changes seem designed to make yet more explicit
a major theme of the treatment – Anne’s agency and political
significance in her own right. (In the Preface, Ives effuses that
‘Anne deserves to be a feminist icon, a woman in a society
which was, above all else, male-dominated, who broke through the
glass ceiling by sheer character and initiative’ (p. xv).)
Thus the original part 3, ‘A royal marriage’, becomes
‘Anne the Queen’, while a 1986 chapter on ‘Art,
image and taste’ becomes two distinct discussions of ‘Image’
and ‘Art and taste’. The latter of these draws heavily
on a source not available in the 1980s, David Starkey’s edition
of The Inventory of Henry VIII, to reveal the impressive quantities
of gold and silver plate and other artistic valuables associated
with Anne’s queenship. (2) Ives also makes effective use of
recent art-historical scholarship by Susan Foister and others to
link the occasion commemorated by Holbein’s double portrait
The Ambassadors with preparations for Anne’s coronation, and
a possible private message for her from the French envoy George
de Selve, bishop of Latour. (3) Iconographic references to Anne’s
new status, and to her reformist sympathies, are also identified
in the painting itself. Whereas the 1986 composite chapter concluded
(p. 301) that Anne Boleyn must be allowed ‘a small place in
the cultural story of sixteenth-century England’, Ives here
(p. 245) more confidently assigns her ‘a respectable and perhaps
distinctive place’. The claim is underlined by an entirely
new chapter on ‘Life at Court’, which draws on Simon
Thurley’s work on Henrician royal palaces, as well as on the
evidence of the inventories to create an effective evocation of
the material culture surrounding Anne’s life as queen. (4)
The single 1986 chapter on Anne Boleyn’s religious attitudes
and significance is here split into two, with a second focused on
‘Personal religion’. These broadly restate the position
which Ives, following the pioneering work of Maria Dowling, staked
out in the earlier book, namely that in a period of religious flux
and confessional indeterminancy, Anne is most usefully described
as an ‘evangelical’ in religion. (5) Interestingly,
Ives goes further than Dowling in stressing Anne’s principled
determination to keep at arm’s length the purveyors of radical
views on the eucharist. This conforms with the recent intuition
of another Birmingham historian, Alec Ryrie, that orthodoxy about
the real presence was entirely characteristic of Henrician evangelicalism
in its first phase. (6) Curiously, Ives makes no direct engagement
in these chapters with George Bernard’s ingenious thesis that
Anne’s religious outlook was essentially conventional and
traditionalist, but having entered the lists over this issue in
Historical Journal (1994), he may have seen no need to refight the
battle. (7) In fact, throughout the first three sections of the
book, Ives is concerned mainly to fill out his earlier picture,
and to fine tune particular points of chronology or detail. Thus
he accepts, for example, Tom Freeman’s argument that Anne
was able to promote to Henry works both by William Tyndale and Simon
Fish, something of which he had earlier been sceptical. (8) But
at the same time he courteously but firmly restates his position
on such issues as a likely date of c.1501 for Anne’s birth
(making her, pace Warnicke, a mature woman at the time of her blossoming
relationship with Henry), or on a 1526 dating for the beginnings
of Henry’s pursuit of her, against Starkey’s attempt
to push it back a year and therefore make Anne more of a catalyst
in the decision to initiate the divorce.
There is much more substantial rewriting, and a noticeably more
combative tone in part 4, ‘A marriage destroyed’. Ives
has no truck with the theory around which Retha Warnicke built her
1989 study, namely that a deformed foetus resulting from Anne’s
miscarriage in January 1536 was the root cause of Anne’s downfall,
the sixteenth-century belief that infant deformity reflected the
sins of the parents requiring accusations of multiple adulteries
to protect Henry from any possible suspicion. This, remarks Ives,
‘would not merit a moment’s consideration apart from
a mountain of fantasy that has been built upon it’ (p. 297).
Why, he asks reasonably enough, was the putative deformity canvassed
in later recusant circles apparently never mentioned before, during
or after Anne’s trial? Ives is equally dismissive of Warnicke’s
claims that Henry seriously believed himself to be the victim of
witchcraft, or that George Boleyn’s homosexuality was a factor
in his fate (‘a fiction for which there is not a scintilla
of evidence’ (p. 332)). Nor does Ives endorse the theory that
Henry was already tiring of Anne at the time she failed to give
birth to a live son. Rather, he detects the repetition of a pattern
from the Aragon match: the psychological blow of failing to receive
a male heir convincing him that God did not accept his marriage.
Ultimately, however, in Ives’s reading it is not Henry himself
but Thomas Cromwell who is most clearly instrumental in the dramatic
fall of the queen: the ‘factional’ interpretation of
these events is emphatically restated. The narrative here is dense
and complex, though Ives does as good a job as one could wish of
guiding the reader through the evidential thickets. The argument
takes account of important new evidence coming to light since the
1980s. In particular, Ives is able to work into his interpretative
framework the sermon known to have been preached on Passion Sunday
1536 by Anne’s almoner, John Skip. This constituted a thinly
veiled attack on Cromwell’s policy towards the smaller monasteries,
implicitly comparing Henry to the Old Testament King Ahasuerus,
Cromwell to his wicked adviser Haman, and Anne to his godly Queen
Esther. In 1986, Ives regarded disagreements over the wisdom of
a rapprochement with the emperor as the main issue dividing
the erstwhile allies; he now identifies Anne’s opposition
to the secularisation of the proceeds of the dissolution as the
key factor, while ‘Cromwell’s estrangement from Anne
Boleyn was exacerbated by problems in foreign policy’ (p.
312). A more intense scrutiny of the timing and manner of the action
against Anne and her five alleged ‘lovers’ also allows
Ives to be more emphatic than he had earlier permitted himself to
be on the question of Anne’s innocence, directly responding
to Bernard’s claim that the queen and at least some of her
co-defendants were in fact guilty of the charges brought against
them. In 1986, the accusations in the indictment seemed implausible;
Ives now asserts that ‘even after nearly 500 years, three-quarters
of these specific allegations can be disproved’ (p. 344).
There is also the question of the ‘dog that did not bark’,
the inherent unlikelihood of the queen having been able to commit
any adulteries at all without the collusion of at least several
of her ladies in waiting, something which was never alleged at the
time. Ives concedes that Anne’s behaviour with male courtiers
was unguarded, sailing close to, and at times beyond, the conventional
limits of courtly and chivalric play. But he rejects too Greg Walker’s
argument that this in itself was enough to bring down Henry’s
murderous wrath. At the start of 1536, Henry still had very considerable
diplomatic and dynastic investment in the Boleyn marriage, and it
took a conspiracy to bring matters to a head.
After all of this, the reader attempting to follow the extraordinary
happenings of spring 1536 without the microscopic knowledge of the
sources enjoyed by Ives and his various critics is likely still
to be left with a sense of wonderment. The staggering audacity of
Cromwell’s plan, the almost unbelievably egregious self-serving
self-delusion practised by the king, the moral complacency of an
entire political system, can all be hard to take in. It is not meant
as a disparagement to say that Ives has given us the least unlikely
account of these events. He has also given us a fully rounded and
persuasive account of Anne’s life as a whole, and its significance
for understanding the politics and political culture of the early
Tudor decades. At the conclusion of his chapter on ‘Sources’,
Ives ruefully notes that ‘the sources for the life of Anne
Boleyn stop short of that level of inner documentation which biography
ideally requires’ (p. 61). If this is so, it must surely be
true, mutatis mutandis, for any man or woman of the sixteenth
century. Yet Ives demonstrates triumphantly the potential of the
biographical approach in a pre-modern setting. He evinces a deep
empathy for his subject without ever becoming an apologist for her,
and, particularly in the final sections, he provides a narrative
which is genuinely moving without ever becoming mawkish. No biography
is ever truly definitive, and future scholarship will no doubt require
a different reading of Anne Boleyn’s life and death. But,
half a generation on from its first appearance, Ives has given his
version a new lease of life, and it seems unlikely to be supplanted
any time soon.
Notes
1. R. Warnicke, The Rise and
Fall of Anne Boleyn (Cambridge, 1989); G. Bernard, ‘Anne Boleyn’s
religion’, Historical Journal, 36.1 (1993), 1–20; G.
Bernard, ‘The fall of Anne Boleyn’, English Historical
Review, 106.420 (1991), 584–610 ; E. Ives, ‘The fall
of Anne Boleyn reconsidered’, English Historical Review, 107.424
(1992), 651–64; G. Bernard, ‘The fall of Anne Boleyn:
a rejoinder’, English Historical Review, 107.424 (1992), 665–74;
G. Walker, ‘Rethinking the fall of Anne Boleyn’, Historical
Journal, 45.1 (2002), 1–29; A. Fraser, The Six Wives of Henry
VIII (1993); D. Starkey, Six Wives: the Queens of Henry VIII (2003).
2. The Inventory of Henry VIII:
Society of Antiquaries MS 129 and British Library MS Harley 1419,
ed. D. Starkey, and transcribed by P. Ward (1998).
3. S. Foister, A. Roy and M.
Wyld, Holbein’s Ambassadors (1997).
4. S. Thurley, The Royal Palaces
of England (New Haven, 1993).
5. M. Dowling, 'Anne Boleyn and
Reform', Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 35 (1984), 30-46.
6. A. Ryrie, The Gospel and Henry VIII. Evangelicals in the Early Reformation (Cambridge, 2003).
7. E. Ives, 'Anne Boleyn and the early Reformation in England: the contemporary evidence', Historical Journal, 37.2 (1994), 389-408.
8. T. S. Freeman, 'Research, Rumour and Propaganda: Anne Boleyn in Foxe's "Book of Martyrs"', Historical Journal, 38 (1995).
May 2005
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