Friday, 13 March 2026

The Secret Marriage of George IV and Maria Fitzherbert

The Secret Marriage of George IV and Maria Fitzherbert

Today I want to turn our attention to one of the most secret relationships of the Regency era- the hidden marriage between George IV, the then Prince of Wales, and the widowed Catholic gentlewoman Maria Fitzherbert. 
Their story began in the mid-1780s. The Prince of Wales was a charming and extravagant man, but he was already deep in debt. He loved pleasure, fashion and gambling. But he was a man who craved affection and reassurance. Maria Fitzherbert was very different. She was a Roman Catholic, widowed twice, dignified, and known for her beauty and strong moral principles. She had no desire to be drawn into court politics.

When the Prince first pursued her, Maria actually resisted. She knew the possible dangers. Under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, any marriage contracted by a member of the royal family without the king’s consent was illegal. More importantly, because she was Catholic, and such a marriage would threaten the Prince’s line in succession. To marry her would cause political chaos. Maria understood that her faith alone made the match impossible in the eyes of the law.

The Prince was relentless. He wrote passionate letters and reportedly told her he would be in despair if she would not see him. You cannot help but to wonder how she must have felt- she was torn between her affection for him and fear of breaking the law and causing chaos to the monarchy. To love a future king was no fairy tale. It meant scrutiny and hostility.

In 1785, believing his feelings where genuine Maria gave in to him. On the 15th of December 1785, in her London home, they went through a private marriage ceremony, it was conducted by the Church of England. To them, it was sacred and binding before God. But in the eyes of the state it was invalid. The King had not been asked for approval nor had he consented. The law did not recognise the marriage. Officially, it had never happened.

They briefly lived together as husband and wife in private. The Prince visited her discreetly. But reality soon hit hard. The Prince’s debts got worse, and he needed to turn to Parliament for help. Political allies made it clear that if he acknowledged his Catholic wife, it would destroy support for any financial relief.
Under this pressure, the Prince publicly denied the marriage in 1787. Imagine Maria’s heartbreak and humiliation. She withdrew from public life but she remained dignified. She did not protest, she simply accepted the situation with composure.

Despite this betrayal, their relationship did not end entirely. Maria did however, remain a steady presence in his life. But politics would intervene again. By the mid-1790s his financial situation was desperate. The solution that was offered was clear- he must make a suitable marriage.

In 1795 he married his cousin, Caroline of Brunswick. The marriage was absolutely disastrous from the start, but it was politically necessary. This reportedly hit Maria hard. Though she knew that their relationship could never be recognised, the public royal wedding took away any lasting hope. She would never be queen, never be acknowledged, never be legitimate.

Even after his official marriage collapsed, the Prince continued to be close to Maria. When he eventually became king in 1820, he ensured she had support, though she was never formally acknowledged as his wife. Their bond, complicated and imperfect, had lasted decades.

In a world where reputation and religion dictated almost everything, could their marriage have ever truly have survived or was secrecy the only way it could exist at all?


Image info:
Artist: In the manner of George Romney 
Mrs Maria Fitzherbert, wife of George IV
Date: 18th century

When Animals Stood Trial: The Strange Justice of the Medieval World

When Animals Stood Trial: The Strange Justice of the Medieval World

Today I want to turn our attention to one of the most unusual aspects of medieval life - the strange world of animal trials.

In the early Middle Ages, law and religion were very much intertwined. Justice was not just about punishment; it was about restoring morality. People believed that every action, whether it was committed by a human or an animal, had consequences. If a pig killed a child or rats destroyed a harvest, it was not seen as an unfortunate accident. It was viewed as a crime.

By the thirteenth century, records show formal legal proceedings against animals, particularly in parts of France and other areas of continental Europe. Pigs were the most commonly accused animal. They lived close to people in towns and villages, roaming streets freely and scavenging for food. This closeness made accidents more likely. When a child was injured or killed, in a world without modern policing or forensic science, communities needed someone - or something - to blame.

One of the earliest well-documented cases took place in 1386 in the town of Falaise in Normandy. A sow that had fatally injured an infant was arrested, imprisoned, and eventually executed. The sow was even dressed in human clothing for the execution. It seems sad and strange to us, but to those there it may have felt necessary. It meant that justice had been done. 

In fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, trials became more elaborate. Domestic animals accused of violent crimes were tried in secular courts. They were assigned legal representation and witnesses were even called. It sounds absurd, but these proceedings followed established legal forms. The animals were treated as capable of wrongdoing.

Ecclesiastical courts dealt with creatures such as rats, locusts, or beetles when they destroyed crops. In these cases, priests might issue formal warnings or excommunications. In 1522 in Autun, for example, rats were summoned to court for eating barley crops. Their lawyer argued that travelling to the court was dangerous for the rats due to predators, the defence actually delayed the proceedings. Behind the humour of this, lies a serious reality: harvest failure meant possible starvation. When crops failed, communities felt vulnerable and desperate. 

By the seventeenth century, attitudes slowly began to shift. Scientific thinking and changing legal principles encouraged people to see animals less as creatures driven by instinct. Trials became rarer. Gradually, the idea of putting an animal on trial faded into history, replaced by practical measures of control.

It is easy for us to laugh or judge. But medieval communities lived with constant risk- disease, famine, war, and even sudden death. Their world was fragile. Justice even against animals, gave structure to chaos and reassurance.

It makes me wonder -if we lived in a time of such uncertainty and belief, might we have acted any differently?


Image info:
The book of days: a miscellany of popular antiquities

Thursday, 12 March 2026

The Remarkable Life and Courage of Margaret Brown

The Remarkable Life and Courage of Margaret Brown

I want to introduce you all to a remarkable woman. Some of you may be familiar with her name. Margaret Tobin Brown, who later became known as the “Unsinkable Molly Brown.” You may have heard her name in connection with the Titanic. But she was far more than just a survivor. 

She was the daughter of Irish immigrants, a mother, a reformer, and a woman who challenged the limits that were placed on her gender.

She was born on the 18th of July 1867 in Hannibal, Missouri, into a close-knit Irish Catholic community. Her parents had come to America looking for stability and opportunity, and like many immigrant families, they worked hard for very little. Margaret, who was known as Maggie grew up in a small cottage near the Mississippi River and she understood the insecurity that came with poverty. 

At eighteen, she moved to Leadville, Colorado, to join several siblings who were there in the hopes of mining work. Life was harsh and uncertain. She worked sewing in a dry goods store while her brother worked in the mines. It was here that she met James Joseph Brown also known as J.J. He was ambitious but not wealthy. Margaret later admitted she had once thought she should marry for financial security to help her father, but she chose love instead. They married on the 1st of September 1886. 
The couple had two children, Lawrence and Catherine, and Margaret devoted herself to her family while also becoming involved in her community. When J.J.’s engineering insight led to the discovery of a rich seam of gold in 1893, the family’s fortunes changed dramatically. In Denver she entered society life, learned languages, embraced the arts, and joined women’s clubs devoted to education and reform. Like English reformers such as Millicent Fawcett or Octavia Hill, she believed privilege carried responsibility.

However, she did not forget her roots. In Leadville she had helped in soup kitchens during difficult times for miners’ families. In Denver she continued charitable work and campaigned for women’s suffrage at a time when women in Britain were also fighting for the vote. The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were an age of awakening for women on both sides of the Atlantic. Margaret must have felt that she was living in a moment of possibility, but also frustration, knowing how slowly change came.

J.J. her husband preferred a quieter life than the public and political world she embraced, which unfortunately strained her marriage. After twenty-three years they signed a private separation agreement in 1909. She received financial independence and continued her travels and activism. Although they were separated, she spoke warmly of him.

In early 1912, while travelling in Europe, she learned that her grandson was ill. Without even thinking she booked passage home on the RMS Titanic. On the night of the 14th of April 1912, after the ship struck an iceberg, chaos unfolded. Margaret helped other passengers into lifeboats before she was persuaded to board Lifeboat No. 6. Even then she did not sit quietly. She took an oar and urged the crew to return for those struggling in the freezing water. The fear in that small boat must have been intense, but she was determined. It was said that she even threatened to throw the quartermaster overboard if he wouldn’t turn back. Whether it is true or not it goes to show her strength. 

After she was rescued by the Carpathia, she organised aid for poorer survivors, raising money and giving comfort. 

In 1914 she briefly campaigned for a Senate seat in Colorado, an extraordinary step when women were still battling for full political recognition. When the First World War broke out, she worked in France with relief organisations, helping wounded soldiers and helping rebuild devastated communities. For this work she was later awarded the French Legion of Honour. 

After J.J.’s death in 1922, legal disputes over his estate caused problems between Margaret and her children. In the 1920s she started to enjoy the theatre and the arts.

She died on the 26th of October 1932 in New York, at the age of sixty-five. By then newspapers were calling her “The Unsinkable Mrs. Brown.” 

Do you think her legacy should centre on that single night in 1912, or on the decades of reform and compassion that followed?

Image info:
Mrs. James J. “Molly” Brown, 
Date:1890-1920
Library of Congress

The Pilgrimage of Grace: When the North Rose Against Henry VIII

The Pilgrimage of Grace: When the North Rose Against Henry VIII

We have been learning about different aspects of the Tudor era. Today I want to turn my attention to the Pilgrimage of Grace, the northern rising that shook Henry VIII in 1536. I want to try to understand not only what happened, but how it may have felt to the people involved. I will definitely need to return this subject and break it down further, but for now, I want to just get an overview.

By the mid-1530s England was changing fast. Henry VIII had broken with Rome, declared himself Supreme Head of the Church of England, and he began dissolving the monasteries. In London these reforms were driven by royal authority and Thomas Cromwell, but in the north they hit at hard. Monasteries were more than just religious houses, they gave the local people employment, and they were places people could turn to when they were in need. It must have felt like their safety net was taken away. 

Economic pressures made matters even worse. The population growth had started to put a strain on resources, the harvests in 1535 were bad, and food prices went up sharply. Enclosures reduced access to common land causing further stress. New financial measures such as the Statute of Uses also caused anxiety among landholders, and rumours started to spread that church plate would be seized and even that baptisms could taxed. 

Tension finally erupted in Lincolnshire in October of 1536. Crowds grew after hearing sermons about the king’s religious changes and the dissolution of monasteries. Anger soon turned in to violence; royal officials were attacked and even killed, and thousands of people marched to Lincoln demanding an end to the religious changes, heavy taxation, and the suppression of the monasteries. The rising was quickly dispersed after the king threatened to use force.

Within only days, a far larger movement began in Yorkshire. This was the Pilgrimage of Grace. Its leader, Robert Aske, a lawyer from a respected Yorkshire family, made the rebellion discipline. Participants called themselves “pilgrims” rather than rebels and they swore oaths to defend the faith and the commonwealth. They carried banners depicting the Five Wounds of Christ, presenting their cause as holy rather than treasonous. Many insisted that they were loyal to Henry VIII but opposed to his “evil counsellors,” especially Cromwell.

The movement spread across northern England, it drew in tens of thousands of people from all different social backgrounds, from peasants, townsmen, clergy, and even members of the gentry. York was occupied, expelled monks were restored to their houses, and Catholic rites resumed. The sense of unity must have been powerful. For a brief moment, it may have felt as though the north had reclaimed its voice.

By late October, the pilgrims assembled near Doncaster in huge numbers. The king’s representatives, including the Duke of Norfolk, were heavily outnumbered and they decided to negotiate rather than to fight. The rebels presented a list of their grievances, they asked for the restoration of the monasteries, the removal of Cromwell, and a parliament to be held in the north. Norfolk offered them a general pardon and promised that their concerns would be addressed. They trusted these assurances, so Aske urged the crowds to disperse. 

In early 1537 a further disturbance, known as Bigod’s Rebellion, broke out. Although it was not authorised by Aske, it gave Henry VIII the reason he was waiting for. The leaders were arrested and charged with treason. Over the following months, more than two hundred people were executed. Robert Aske was hanged after being placed in chains in York. Lords, knights, monks, priests, and ordinary villagers were all treated the same. The message was abundantly clear that any kind of resistance would be ended.

Do you see the Pilgrimage of Grace, as a religious protest, a social and economic rebellion, or a desperate attempt to protect a way of life people felt was slipping away?


Image info:
The Pilgrimage of Grace
Date: 1865S 
Artist: John Cassell

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church

Today lets discover more about the Acts of Supremacy- the moments when faith, and the crown became entangled.

It all begins with Henry VIII, and a story most are familiar with. By the early 1530s, his marriage to Catherine of Aragon had failed to produce the long-desired surviving son. For a king who had grown up in the shadow of civil war and succession insecurity, this was not just a disappointment. It was seen as a threat to the dynasty. The Wars of the Roses was still fresh in many peoples minds and Henry had been raised to believe that a disputed succession could send the country back into war. He became convinced that his marriage was cursed, and that God was punishing him. It also had a little something to do with wanting to be with Anne Boleyn, who was not willing to give herself to him as only his mistress. Whether she wanted to be queen or was hoping it would convince him to leave her alone, we will never know for sure. 

When Pope Clement VII refused to grant an annulment, to say Henry was frustrated would have been an understatement, he became defiant. This was no small falling out with the church, and became huge. In 1534, Parliament passed the first Act of Supremacy. It declared the king “Supreme Head on Earth of the Church of England.” Faith was hugely important in this time and to go against the church like this was to many-unthinkable. This was not presented as a gift of power, but as a recognition that Henry claimed had always existed. The authority of Rome was rejected. England’s church would answer to its monarch.

The act was not just about theology. It was about control, identity, and sovereignty. The Treasons Act of the same year made it a capital offence to deny the king’s supremacy. Men like Thomas More, who could not accept the break with Rome, were executed. Families were divided. Priests and ordinary believers were forced to choose between conscience and loyalty. Religion, once anchored in centuries of tradition, felt unstable.

The policy did not remain confined to England. In 1537, the Irish Parliament passed its own Act of Supremacy, recognising Henry as head of the Church of Ireland. Acceptance in Ireland was far more fragile and resistant though.
When Henry died, the religious direction of the country changed again. Under his Catholic daughter Mary I of England, the 1534 Act was repealed in 1554. Papal authority was once again restored. For Mary, this was not politic, it was a matter of salvation. She had watched her mother cast aside and her own legitimacy was questioned. To her, returning England to Rome may well have felt like restoring moral order. But her reign persecuted Protestants, and the country became anxious once again.

After Mary’s death in November 1558, her half-sister Elizabeth I inherited a fractured coubtry. In 1559, her Parliament passed a second Act of Supremacy. This time the monarch was styled “Supreme Governor” rather than “Supreme Head.” The wording was deliberate. It softened the objections, particularly among those who were uneasy about a woman claiming to be head of the church. Elizabeth was pragmatic. She did not seek constant persecution, but she demanded outward conformity. An Oath of Supremacy required office-holders to acknowledge her authority over the Church. Refusal could still mean charges of treason.

In Ireland, a further Act of Supremacy came in 1560, mirroring Elizabeth’s settlement. But in practice, religious allegiance across Ireland remained complex.

Over time, royal supremacy became part into the constitutional fabric of England. It was interrupted during the Interregnum in the mid-seventeenth century and restored with the monarchy in 1660. What began as one king’s desperate attempt to secure a male heir had permanently altered the relationship between Crown and Church.

Do you think the Acts of Supremacy were more about faith, fear, or the need for control -and could they ever have unfolded differently?


Image info:
Portrait of Henry VIII  
Artist: After Hans Holbein the Younger
Date: 1540–1547
Collection: Walker Art Gallery

The Fight to Repeal the Corn Laws

The Fight to Repeal the Corn Laws 

I have been learning more about the political movements that shaped Victorian Britain, and today I want to discover more about the Anti-Corn Law League, a campaign that united industrial towns in an effort to change how Britain fed its people.

To understand the League, we have to begin with the Corn Laws themselves. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, Parliament introduced tariffs on imported grain in order to protect British landowners from foreign competition. On paper, this seemed a good idea that would create stability. In reality though, these laws kept the price of bread high. For wealthy landowners, this protection safeguarded their income. But for working families in growing industrial towns, where wages were often insecure, the cost of bread must have felt like a constant worry. Bread was not a luxury, it was survival. During the 1830s economic downturns caused further hardship, and inevitably this created resentment. Many began to believe that the political system favoured the landed elite at the expense of ordinary people.

In 1838, in the industrial city of Manchester, a group of reformers formally established the Anti-Corn Law League. Two of its most prominent leaders were Richard Cobden and John Bright. Both were manufacturers rather than aristocrats. They believed passionately in free trade and argued that removing tariffs on grain would lower food prices, improve living standards, and encourage international cooperation. Cobden in particular framed the campaign as a moral issue. To him, the Corn Laws were not just a misguided policy, they were unjust.

Throughout the late 1830s and early 1840s, it organised public meetings, printed pamphlets and built a brilliant fundraising network. Town halls filled with men and women eager to hear speeches that combined economic argument with morality. 

Opposition was fierce, many landowners and Conservative politicians were worried that repealing the corn laws would undermine agriculture and destabilise rural society and inevitable lower their profits. The Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel, initially upheld the Corn Laws. But the League’s relentless campaigning put him under mounting pressure. At the same time, Britain faced even wider economic difficulties, including unemployment and unrest. The debate over grain became entwined with anxieties about class, power, and representation.

In 1845, the potato blight in Ireland was hitting hard. The crisis, which would become the Great Famine, forced people to recognise the desperation. Peel came to believe that maintaining restrictions on imported grain in the face of starvation was morally indefensible. His decision to support its repeal split his own party and cost him his leadership. 

In 1846, Parliament finally voted to repeal the Corn Laws. For Cobden, Bright, and their supporters, it was a triumphant moment. 

Do you think the repeal of the Corn Laws was an act of courage, political calculation, or economic necessity-and can those motives ever truly be separated?

Image info:
Meeting of the Anti-Corn Law League in Exeter Hall 
Date: 1846

Who Exactly Were the Plantagenets?

Who Exactly Were the Plantagenets? 

Power, Conflict, and the Weight of a Crown
I have been learning more about medieval England, and today I want to discover more about the Plantagenets.

The story started in the twelfth century, during civil war. England had just been through the chaos of the Anarchy, which was a bitter struggle between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda. Out of this instability came Matilda’s son, Henry of Anjou. In 1154, he became king as Henry II, and with him began what we now call the Plantagenet dynasty.
The name “Plantagenet” comes from Henry’s father, Geoffrey of Anjou, who was said to wear a sprig of broom -planta genista -in his hat. But the family did not use this as a formal surname. It was only later that historians gave them this name. Henry II inherited vast lands in France as well as England. His lands stretched across much of western Europe, creating what historians call the Angevin Empire. 

Henry’s reign brought reform but also conflict. He sought to strengthen royal justice, bringing law courts more firmly under crown control. But his determination to assert authority brought him into disagreement with Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury. When Becket was murdered in 1170 by knights who believed they were acting in the king’s name, Henry was left shocked and publicly penitent. 
Richard I, his son is remembered as the Lionheart, and spent much of his reign on crusade and England was often distant to him. The country became a source of funds for his warfare abroad. His brother John, who succeeded him in 1199, struggled to command the same loyalty. John lost most of the family’s French territories and faced growing resentment from his barons. In 1215, he was forced to seal the Magna Carta, a document that sought to limit royal power. For John, this must have felt humiliating.

The thirteenth century saw attempts at recovery and reform. Henry III ruled for over fifty years, but he faced rebellion when barons demanded stronger oversight of government. His son Edward I managed to restore some authority through his military, he conquered Wales and campaigned in Scotland. But even Edward, could not escape resistance. The Plantagenet kings were powerful, but were forced to rely on negotiation as much as force.

By the fourteenth century, tensions were beginning to increase. Edward II’s reign ended in deposition, proving that even kings could be removed. Edward III managed to gain some royal prestige through his victories in the early years of the Hundred Years’ War, giving the nation some pride. But the prolonged war drained resources and caused rivalries. Richard II was determined to assert his authority but he clashed with the powerful nobles and was eventually overthrown in 1399 by Henry Bolingbroke, who became Henry IV. This was the beginning of the Lancastrian line of the Plantagenets.

The fifteenth century was plunged into the Wars of the Roses, a struggle between the houses of Lancaster and York - both Plantagenet lines. Brothers, cousins, and former allies fought for the crown. Edward IV seized power; Richard III’s controversial reign ended at Bosworth in 1485, where he was defeated by Henry Tudor. With that, the Plantagenet era ended.

When we think about the Plantagenets, do we see ruthless ambition -or individuals struggling to hold together a fragile crown in a restless and changing world?

Image info:
Henry II of England

The Secret Marriage of George IV and Maria Fitzherbert

The Secret Marriage of George IV and Maria Fitzherbert Today I want to turn our attention to one of the most secret relationships of the Reg...