Wandering around Google Images, as you do, I can across these less than flattering but pretty darn funny vintage cartoons of Henry VII and his offspring Horrible Henry VIII.

I’ve seen other cartoons of Henry VII in a miserly pose but whoever drew THIS one must have been well aware of a contemporary description of him noting his thin hair and his awful teeth. And of course that eye that would follow you around the room…

I mean, just look at those chompers and that miseriguts’ face!

It seems not everyone loved the Tudors, even back in Victorian times…


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  1. Sellars and Yeatman had a few things to say about them too in their “1066 and all That”…. (Must find my copy again, it’s hilarious!

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    1. Ah yes, a very Memorable book. I discovered it at my grandparents’ place, and it’s my favourite version of history! >:D
      I thought it was funny even before I knew anything much about English history, which shows you just how well they got their humour across. It was ten times as funny once I knew what they were referencing.

      Their description of the Wars of the Roses:
      “Noticing suddenly that the Middle Ages were coming to an end, the Barons now made a stupendous effort to revive the old Feudal amenities of Sackage, Carnage, and Wreckage and so stave off the Tudors for a time. They achieved this by a very clever plan, known as the Wars of the Roses (because the Barons all picked different coloured roses in order to see which side they were on).”

      Also this section, titled ‘Cause of the Tudors’:
      “During the Wars of the Roses the Kings became less and less memorable (sometimes even getting in the wrong order) until at last one of them was nothing but some little princes smothered in the Tower, and another, finding that his name was Clarence, had himself drowned in a spot of Malmsey wine; while the last of all even attempted to give his Kingdom to a horse. It was therefore decided, since the Stuarts were not ready yet, to have some Welsh Kings called Tudors (on account of their descent from Owen Glendower) who, it was hoped, would be more memorable.
      “The first of these Welsh Kings was Henry VII, who defeated all other Kings at the Battle of Boswell Field and took away their roses. After the battle the crown was found hanging up in a hawthorn tree on top of a hill. This is memorable as being the only occasion on which the crown has been found after a battle hanging up in a hawthorn tree on top of a hill.”

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      1. Priceless – thank you! Given me a good giggle today!

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    2. Chapter 30 on Lamnel Simkin and Percy Warmneck should also not be forgotten! ^_^

      “The punishment of these memorable Pretenders was justly similar, since Perkin Warmnel was compelled to become a blot on the King’s skitchen, while Perbeck was made an escullion. Wimneck, however, subsequently began pretending again. This time he pretended that he had been smothered in his early youth and buried under a stair-rod while pretending to be one of the Little Princes in the Tower. In order to prove that he had not been murdered before, Henry was reluctantly compelled to have him really executed.”

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  2. Love the “stair-rod”! I also enjoy the Stuarts being “Wrong but Wromantic” – still use that myself!

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    1. hehehehehe 🙂

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