The earliest known and longest lasting mistress of Henry VIII, Bessie Blount was the
king’s first love. More beautiful that Anne Boleyn or any of Henry’s other wives or
concubines, Bessie’s beauty and other charms ensured that she turned heads,
winning a place at court as one of Catherine of Aragon’s ladies. Within months she
was partnering the king in dancing and she rose to be the woman with the most
influence over Henry, much to Catherine of Aragon’s despair. The affair lasted five
years (longer than most of Henry’s marriages) and in 1519 she bore Henry VIII a
son, Henry Fitzroy. As a mark of his importance Cardinal Wolsey was appointed his
guardian and godfather.
Supplanted soon after by Mary Boleyn, Bessie’s importance rests on the vital proof it
gave Henry VIII that he could father a healthy son and through Henry Fitzroy, Bessie
remained a prominent figure at court. In the country at large, for proving that the king
was capable of fathering a son Bessie prompted the saying ‘Bless’ee, Bessie Blount’
and her position of mother of such an important child made her an object of interest
to many of her contemporaries.
Sidelined by historians until now, Bessie and the son she had by the king are one of
the great ‘what ifs’ of English history. If Jane Seymour had not produced a male heir
and Bessie’s son had not died young aged 17, in all likelihood Henry Fitzroy could
have followed his father as King Henry IX and Bessie propelled to the status of
mother of the king.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Elizabeth Norton gained her first
degree from the University of
Cambridge, and her Masters from
the University of Oxford. She is the
author of seven books on the
Tudors and is currently writing The
Boleyn Girls also for Amberley. She
lives in Kingston Upon Thames.
234 x 156 mm | hardback | 288 pages | 40 illustrations (20 colour)
COVER PRICE £ 25.00
0.45 kg
|