Dauphin

The above image depicts Henry V receiving a box of tennis balls from the French Dauphin. Right. I know this was supposed to have happened – well, Shakespeare said so – but this doesn’t look like Henry V to me! It looks more like a Tudorised Richard III! Wearing Nora Batty’s wrinkled stockings.

More bah, humbug! A load of balls, in fact.


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  1. “That’s never Henry V, he never had that good a hairdo” was my first thought even before I got to your text.

    I see Alamy give no information on the source. The signature says Charles Folkard, and he illustrated The Children’s Shakespeare, so I would guess it’s from that.

    The English leopards on the hanging look less than impressed with the whole thing, too. But then they are cats.

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  2. Nothing wrong with cats! =^..^=

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Cats are the best! I have always lived with them. One of my current ofurlords is master of looking unimpressed/stinkeye, which was why the royal leopards’ expressions caught my attention – it looks so familiar. 😸

      Liked by 1 person

      1. “Pass, friend….”

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  3. I had to think of Morticia Adams, lol.

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  4. […] we had Henry V, of course, who did much to restore faith and respect for the throne. I won’t have a go at him. […]

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  5. […] this article is about his more palatable son, Henry V, and is interesting if not hugely detailed. Or […]

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  6. […] was full of Richard III fans. So, WATSON, why in the name of usurping cadet branches has the Henry V hoodie has massive outsold the Richard III one.” “Where are you, […]

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  7. […] I wonder about any direct descendants of Henry V. Is there any record of him having illegitimate children? Perhaps in his wild youth as Prince […]

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  8. […] himself starts off as a sort of down-and-out Shakespearean Prince Hal. He wakes up in a straw-stuffed old bed (in a loft, I think) having spent the night with his […]

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  9. […] the king who was prisoner, hostage and then guest of the three Lancastrian kings, before marrying Henry V‘s cousin in Southwark Cathedral and going home to reign in person, heavily influenced in […]

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  10. […] the blue label atop the shield indicate them to be those of Henry, Prince of Wales (to become Henry V). Why would the prince figure in this Mortimer/Clare matter? Perhaps because when Roger Mortimer, […]

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  11. […] He has a vacant expression, is clean-shaven and his blond locks are short in the fashion of Henry V. He’s ideal prey for the likes of Warwick, and is soon in the latter’s capacious back pocket. […]

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  12. […] hairstyle dating from the early 15th century  – think of a young Henry V.  In fact is this Henry V?  See portrait below for comparison. Owned by the Society of Antiquaries of London now on loan to […]

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  13. […] was also the grandson of the famous Dafydd Gam, who gave his life for Henry V at Agincourt and had been a persistent enemy of Owain Glyndŵr. He adopted the surname […]

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  14. […] and his division was completely routed. Meanwhile, on the left, the young Prince of Wales (future Henry V) was badly wounded by an arrow to the face. It left him scarred for life. He also had to endure a […]

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  15. […] survived the war. He accepted a pardon in 1421 and probably ended his days as a paid soldier of Henry V. The family lands were never […]

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  16. […] Bohun, Bolingbroke’s wife, in 1394, Montagu’s wife took temporary custody of the future Henry V, Bolingbroke’s […]

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  17. […] was also very close to Henry V, but inexplicably got himself involved in the Southampton Plot, led by Joan’s step-son, […]

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  18. […] a Beaufort mother and if Edmund Tudor had in reality been a Beaufort to. (Born of an affair between Henry V’s queen, Katherine of Valois, and Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset.) So Cadwaladr’s DNA […]

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  19. […] in such astonishing detail that I felt I was looking at it under a microscope. We were told that Henry V wore it at the Battle of Agincourt, and that he had a hole drilled in it in which to place a […]

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  20. […] to many of the chief families of England. John’s father had served in France during the reign of Henry V, and was for the remainder of his life to be fairly regularly appointed as either Lieutenant, […]

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  21. […] exit the abbey. Inside all the shrines and memorials are being given a good dusting. Some tlc for Henry V, but especially for the Tomb of the Unknown […]

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  22. […] that Isabella loved him and wouldn’t marry his murderer’s son and heir, who would become Henry V. It was eventually Isabella’s sister, Catherine of Valois, who married Henry V. And we all know […]

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  23. […] when as plain Sir John Talbot he had been struggling to make ends meet as Lieutenant of Ireland to Henry V, had also been accused by the Irish parliament of having exacted coyne and livery within the Pale […]

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  24. […] to the Le Toure that Perrers built?  However on the 18th March 1410 Henry Prince of Wales, later Henry V, was granted ‘quoddam hispitium sive placeam vocatam le Coldherbergh‘.  It is thought that […]

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  25. […] providing wonderful things he also made many loans to Richard II as well as Henry IV and his son, Henry V.   At the time of Richard II was evicted from the throne he still owed £1,000 to our Richard. […]

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  26. […] it seems the Fearsome Five are (in chronological order) William I, Edward I, Robert the Bruce, Henry V and … Richard III. Now, I’m not saying Richard wasn’t a fearsome warrior, because he was, […]

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  27. […] of the generous grants of land and annuities Richard had bestowed on her. Although later the Prince of Wales hassled her over certain lands he regarded as inalienable parts of the Duchy of Cornwall, and […]

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  28. […] remains were banished to King’s Langley Priory instead. It was the usurper’s son, Henry V, who had conscience enough to bring Richard to Westminster Abbey, to join so many of his […]

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  29. […] Incidentally, Thomas of Woodstock had a child bride too. When he was twenty-one he married 10-year-old Eleanor de Bohun, elder of the two heiress daughters of Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Norfolk, who’d been exceedingly wealthy. Thomas wanted all the inheritance and did his utmost to “persuade” the younger sister, Mary, to take the veil. He didn’t succeed. She married Henry of Bolingbroke, the future Henry IV, and was the mother of Henry V. […]

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  30. […] de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk, (1367 to 17 September 1415) who died of dysentery fighting for Henry V at the Siege of Harfleur. I’ve read that the effigies are true likenesses, so I have to say […]

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  31. […] is known as the Crystal Sceptre and was given to the City of London by a grateful Henry V (b.16 September 1386 – d.31 August 1422) as thanks for the generous financial aid the City gave […]

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  32. […] real reason Henry IV is given a pass, however, is that he was the father of Henry V, the idol of historians, and one of the most splendid killers of foreigners ever. Because, you see, […]

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  33. […] children together and in 1418 Edward was killed in a fight at sea while acting as an admiral for Henry V. (He had been briefly suspected of involvement in the Southampton Plot, so it may be that military […]

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  34. […] to keep Isabella’s dowry, the Lancastrian usurper pressed her to marry his son, Henry of Monmouth, now Prince of Wales, but she wouldn’t. In the end she was returned to France, and in 1406 became […]

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  35. […] who was to regain the dukedom of Norfolk in the fullness of time as a reward for his services to Henry V in France. There were three daughters. Elizabeth, who married the Earl of Suffolk. Isabel, who […]

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