Many readers of Carson’s “Richard Duke of Gloucester as Lord Protector and High Constable of England” will be curious, given “Tudor” criticism of the Duke’s twin roles in 1483, of their practice in the next century, by comparison.

The occasion in question was, of course, the accession of Edward VI as the only surviving son of Henry VIII. It is well established that Edward IV had appointed Gloucester, Edward V‘s paternal uncle just as the Dukes of Bedford and Gloucester had been to Henry VI, to the role of Constable in 1471 (Carson p.85) and of Protector by his codicil, which took effect in 1483, although the Woodville faction sought to prevent him from receiving the seals. The position of Lord High Constable effectively expired in 1521 when Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham, was attainted and executed, although one has subsequently been appointed solely to serve at each coronation.

Henry VIII‘s will left no order regarding the Protectorship but on 1 February 1547, just four days after Henry’s death, appointed Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, to this position. The new King, who was nine, had no paternal uncle and Somerset was his elder maternal uncle, Admiral Thomas Seymour being the younger. As we know, the Admiral was executed in 1549 and Somerset was removed at the same time. He was executed in 1552 along with Sir Michael Stanhope, who we now know to be an ancestor of the journalist Frank Gardner. John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and made Duke of Northumberland, succeeded Somerset but only as Leader of the Council and not Lord Protector.

So, just as we established yesterday with reference to pre-contracts, the “Tudor” regime criticised the conduct of Yorkist (and Lancastrian) Kings, but followed it almost exactly with reference to the appointment of a Lord Protector.


Subscribe to my newsletter

  1. I recall no criticism from any Tudor writer about the joining of the two positions. In fact, they could simply accuse Richard of perfidy in how he conducted either office. They needn’t have cared about the joining.

    Like

  2. The other “Tudor” case was the soi-disant “Protector”, Thomas Stafford, who claimed the title as Mary I had married a foreign King.

    Like

  3. […] (executed over the Anne Boleyn case) was his father-in-law and Sir Edward Seymour, grandson of the Protector Somerset, married one of his daughters, launching a line of baronets, so Arthur’s close family were at […]

    Like

  4. […] thing’s certain in my mind, he was not anti-royal. And with Edward III already fifteen, being Lord Protector was a limited prospect that would surely not be enough for a man like Roger. So what did he want […]

    Like

  5. […] Thomas Seymour guilty of any hanky-panky with his young stepdaughter Princess Elizabeth (to become Elizabeth I)? […]

    Like

  6. […] day for the performance of the performaunce of the will…”22 January 1552: “the duke of Somerset had his head cut off upon Tower Hill between eight and nine o’clock in the […]

    Like

  7. […] cauasing the flight of his nephew Ferdinand. His main aim was to prevent England (newly under the Protector Somerset) from combining with France (under Francis I who died soon afterwards) to aid the Schmalkaldic […]

    Like

  8. […] through a ceremony of marriage. This pre-empted the decision of the commission, of course, and when Protector Somerset found out about it early in 1549 he was infuriated. The Council ordered Parr to separate from his […]

    Like

  9. […] including his descent from Thomas Cromwell‘s sister, his childhood, his rise and service as Lord Protector, after Charles I‘s execution, whilst refusing the crown. Here, as part of his afterlife, […]

    Like

  10. […] I. It features the literally fratricidal feud between the Seymour brothers as the elder, the Duke of Somerset, becomes Lord Protector but also the King’s governor, powers that were separated in the cases […]

    Like

  11. […] de St. Pol  She had been married at 16 to the much older, extremely rich and powerful John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, a brother to Henry V.  Her husband dying quite soon after their childless […]

    Like

  12. […] Henry VIII died, however, his position became precarious as he fell afoul of Edmund Seymour, Lord Protector of England. Returning to his Leicestershire home, he began plotting with Edmund’s brother, […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Richard P.McArthur Cancel reply