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Friday, 29 May 2026
The Fear Of The Victorian Asylum And What It Meant For Women
Henry VIII’s Precious Son: The Carefully Guarded Childhood Of Prince Edward
Henry VIII’s Precious Son: The Carefully Guarded Childhood Of Prince Edward
Yesterday we spoke about Henry VIII and his reaction to Jane
Seymours death. Today I want to address Prince Edward, the tiny boy that everyone
in the country had been praying for, especially the king. His arrival was saddened
by the tragic loss of his mother, but nonetheless Henry was determined to keep
him safe. He had his own household, which was not unusual for a royal child, especially the heir to the
throne.
Artist: Circle of William Scrots
Edward was born on the 12th of October 1537 at Hampton Court
Palace, and from the very start his household was almost like a small royal
court of its own. He did not remain constantly with Henry and instead had his
own apartments, servants, tutors, nurses, and officials whose job was to care
for him and to protect him.
The main people in his household were at first Margaret Bryan (Lady
Mistress) and later Blanche Herbert, Lady Troy, while Sybil Penn served as an
important nurse and educator later in his childhood. Along with other gentlewomen,
rockers, laundresses, and attendants who watched over his daily needs.
High-ranking nobles supervised the household because raising the heir to the
throne was considered a matter of national importance. Everything around Edward
was carefully controlled, from who carried him to who could enter his rooms.
I think Henry VIII was more protective of Edward, because of the death of Jane Seymour only days
after his birth. Maybe he felt a duty to Jane as well as to the country to keep
him safe. The king had waited decades for a surviving legitimate son, and
Edward represented not just a loved son but the future of the Tudor dynasty.
To keep him safe, Henry insisted on many precautions.
Firstly, Edward’s household had to follow strict hygiene and
health rules. Rooms were to be kept warm and clean, bedding changed regularly,
and servants watched carefully. Illness in this era was terrifying, especially
diseases like the plague or the sweating sickness.
Henry also controlled who had access to the prince. Visitors
were screened and his attendants were chosen with loyalty in mind. There was
always political danger and people who
wished the boy harm, if Henry was to die a young king was an incredible tool for
others advancement, but it also made him vulnerable.
Edward was often moved between royal residences as it was
considered healthier and safer. Tudor people believed fresh air and avoiding
unhealthy locations helped to prevent
disease. Palaces such as Hampton Court Palace and Greenwich Palace were felt to
be safer.
Henry also ordered that Edward should never be left
unattended or exposed to unnecessary risk. Even when he was playing and being educated,
he was to be supervised. As Edward grew up he had tutors including Richard Cox
and John Cheke who oversaw his education but they also prioritised his physical
care.
Perhaps one of the most famous examples of Henry’s
protectiveness was his insistence that Edward’s food, drink, servants, and
surroundings be closely monitored. Poisoning at Tudor court was feared, justifiably
or not.
So Edward’s household was affectionate but also highly
controlled. He lived surrounded by privilege, but his life was not private or
free. Henry’s insistence on safety shows us both his fatherly love and the
burden of the Tudor succession.
For Edward, this carefully controlled life may have felt
restrictive, even if to him it was normal. Some historians have wondered
whether this over powering protection may have had unintended consequences.
Although Henry’s rules were designed to shield his son from diseases by
limiting his exposure to the outside world and constantly moving to avoid
illnesses, they could not guarantee his health in an age when medicine was not very
well understood. Despite every effort to protect him, Edward still faced the
same medical dangers that threatened all Tudor lives.
The Australian Wartime Nurse Who Shielded The Wounded Under Enemy Fire
Thursday, 28 May 2026
The Victorian Street Sellers Who Fed London With Eels, Pies, And Oysters
The Victorian Street Sellers Who Fed London With Eels, Pies, And Oysters
I have recently been discovering more about everyday life in
the Victorian era. I started to wonder
about the street vendors. We often picture grand Victorian buildings or the
wealthy drawing rooms, but underneath all of that was another London. A crowded
and noisy place, that was filled with the shouts of street sellers who were
trying to earn enough to survive. Among the most familiar were them were the
food vendors selling eels, pies, and oysters.
Although oysters may sound expensive to us today, in
Victorian London they were often one of the cheapest foods that were available.
There were huge oyster beds around the British coast, in particular in places like
Kent, Essex, and Colchester. They sent enormous quantities to the capital. They
could be sold cheaply and eaten quickly, which made them especially popular
with poorer Londoners. Street sellers and market traders helped turn oysters
into an everyday food rather than a luxury, and many working families relied on
them as an affordable source of food, until stocks declined later in the century due to
overfishing and pollution, which eventually made them less affordable.
During the early Victorian period, London was growing at an
astonishing speed. By the 1830s and 1840s, thousands of people had flooded into
the city searching for work. Not everyone was able to find steady employment,
and many turned to street trading instead. Selling food required very little
money to start up, but it was demanded and exhausting hours and the competition
was fierce. They often lived close to poverty. Bad weather, poor catches, or
rising prices could quickly threaten their income.
Another food that became closely linked with London’s
working-classes was the eel. Eels thrived in the Thames and nearby waterways
and were sold alive or cooked. Many street sellers prepared stewed eels, while
others specialised in hot eel pies.
By the later Victorian period, pie and eel shops had becime
increasingly common, especially in East London. Sellers worked long hours in
smoke, rain, and cold, competing for customers.
These people were not just part of the colourful Victorian
backdrop. They were just everyday people who were trying to survive in a city
that could be generous but also unforgiving.
Do you think that the people who sold food on the streets od
Victorian London were valued, or simply ignored?
Did Henry VIII Truly Isolate Himself After Jane Seymour’s Death?
Did Henry VIII Truly Isolate Himself After Jane Seymour’s Death?
I want to discover a little bit about the aftermath of the
death of Jane Seymour and what it may have really meant for Henry VIII. One
question that often comes up is whether Henry really went into isolation after
she died. I wonder whether his grief was exaggerated. The answer seems to sit
somewhere in the middle.
Date:1540–1547
Collection:Walker Art Gallery
Artist: After Hans Holbein the Younger
Jane Seymour died on the 24th of October 1537, only days
after giving birth to the long-awaited Prince Edward. For Henry, this should
have been a moment of enormous triumph. After years of desperately desiring a
healthy legitimate son, he finally had his male heir. But tragically his joy soon
turned to tragedy.
Jane most likely died from complications following
childbirth, something that was tragically common in Tudor England. Henry
appeared to have been genuinely devastated by her loss. Contemporary accounts
suggest he withdrew from court life for a period and he even cancelled many
celebrations. He dressed in black mourning and avoided the usual entertainments
and festivities that were such a large part of his court. This has led some
people to believe he shut himself away completely.
Artist: Hans Holbein the Younger
Date: 1536 and 1537
Collection: Kunsthistorisches Museum
The idea that Henry lived in total isolation is probably
overstated. Tudor kings rarely had the luxury of simply disappearing entirely.
Government still had to function, ambassadors needed audiences, and decisions
affecting the kingdom could not stop because of his grief. Henry continued to
rule, even if he was more subdued and more withdrawn than he usually was.
Jane’s death may have
hit him very hard. Jane had given him what Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn
had not, a surviving son. She also seems to have caused him a lot less
political and emotional conflict than some of his earlier wives. Whether Henry
loved her more than his other wives is impossible to know, but he certainly
treated her memory differently. Unlike his marriages to Anne or Catherine,
Jane’s reputation remained largely untarnished after her death.
Henry remained unmarried for over two years, which was
unusual for a king that was so concerned with the succession. Some historians
see this as evidence of genuine mourning. Others argue that politics and the
complicated search for another suitable bride played just as big a role.
Perhaps both are true. Human emotions and political necessity rarely exist
separately, especially for kings.
What is especially telling is that when Henry died in 1547,
he chose to be buried beside Jane Seymour. That decision suggests that whatever
mixture of love, gratitude, and grief he felt, her place in his life seems to
have remained significant until the very end.
Do you think Henry really loved Jane Seymour the most, or do
you think her death and the birth of Edward was what influenced how he
remembered her?
The Complicated Reality Of American GIs In Wartime Britain
The Complicated Reality Of American GIs In Wartime Britain
I have been learning about the GIs arrivals in Britain. It
must have caused excitement and curiosity, but there would have be cultural challenges. But today I want
to talk about something a that is a little more uncomfortable. While many of
the American servicemen were warmly welcomed and even formed lasting
friendships with the British public, not every encounter was a positive one.
Crimes involving some GIs and the sensational newspaper stories surrounding
them reveals a more complicated side to wartime Britain.
When large numbers of American troops began arriving from
1942 onwards, Britain was already under enormous strain. Cities had been
bombed, families were separated, and rationing was biting hard. For many
people, the Americans seemed to be glamorous but unfamiliar. They often seemed to be well supplied compared to many British
civilians. They seemed to have easy
access to cigarettes, chewing gum, chocolate, and nylons that were difficult or
impossible to get locally. This helped some to see them with awe, they came
from far away were things, seemed at least, to be plentiful. But with this came
the inevitable jealousy and resentment in others.
Most GIs behaved themselves well and just wanted
companionship and a brief escape from the war. But with hundreds of thousands
of young men suddenly stationed across Britain, problems were inevitable.
Fights sometimes broke out in pubs and dance halls, usually fuelled by alcohol,
cultural misunderstandings, or rivalry over the local women. There were also
thefts, assaults, and more serious crimes committed by a minority of
servicemen.
These incidents quickly attracted attention. Wartime
newspapers were censored and officials on both sides of the Atlantic worried
about damaging morale or harming the Anglo-American relationship. Because of
this, reports were sometimes softened. Even so, rumours spread through
communities. A single incident could become much more.
Some cases became impossible to ignore and newspapers
occasionally reported them in sensational ways. Stories involving violence or
scandal sold papers and it sparked fierce discussion. Ordinary people must have
had conflicting feelings. Many were grateful to the American troops for helping
Britain fight Germany, but they may have also felt a certain amount of protectiveness
about their communities.
It must have been complicated for the GIs too. Many were
very young, thousands of miles from home, living under the pressure of war.
Loneliness, fear, homesickness, and wartime stress could sometimes erupt in
destructive ways, though of course this never excused any criminal behaviour.
Wartime life was rarely simple. The Americans were seen as
liberators and allies, and rightly so, but they were also human beings living
through extraordinary circumstances. Behind the headlines and gossip were
frightened young men and anxious communities trying to navigate life in a world
at war.
Do you think that the newspapers should have reported these
crimes in a more open way, or was protecting morale simply more important?
Wednesday, 27 May 2026
Before Refrigerators: How Victorian Families Kept Food Fresh and Survived
Before Refrigerators: How Victorian Families Kept Food Fresh and Survived
I have recently been trying to find out a little about
everyday life in Victorian Britain. It made me start ti wonder how families
managed to keep their food fresh before refrigerators. Today we take for
granted that we can easily open a fridge without really thinking about it, but
for Victorian families preserving food must have been a constant concern. I was
often a matter of health, money, and even
survival.
During the early Victorian period, beginning in 1837, most
households had no mechanical refrigeration at all. Food would have spoiled very
quickly, especially in warmer weather. Families would have had to plan
carefully. For poorer households, wages were often limited and food could not
be wasted.
One of the oldest and most common methods of preservation
was salting. Meat and fish were packed with a large amount of salt. The salt
drew out the moisture and slowed down decay. Salted pork, beef, and herrings
became familiar foods in many homes. The taste could often be quite strong and
the texture was often tough, but it allowed families to store food for weeks or
even months.
Smoking was another method. Meat and fish were hung above
smoke from slow fires, which helped to dry and preserve them. In coastal
communities and rural areas this remained particularly important. Smokehouses
and kitchen chimneys often carried the distinctive smell of food being prepared
for future use. If you go in to one even today, the smell is still there, even
when it is no longer in use as a smoker. There was preparation involved, they
knew that the work today might well prevent hardship later.
Pickling was also extremely popular, vegetables, eggs, and
sometimes fish were preserved in vinegar and spices. Jars were filled with
onions, cabbage, beetroot, and gherkins and carefully sealed. A well-stocked
pantry could provide a feeling of security.
As sugar became cheaper later in the nineteenth century preserving
fruit by jam-making grew increasingly common. Housewives would boil fruit with
sugar to create jams and preserves that would last through the colder months.
By the later Victorian period, wealthier households
sometimes used iceboxes. Ice was imported from cold countries like Norway,
where workers would cut huge blocks from frozen lakes during the winter. It was
packed in sawdust to slow down the melting, the ice was then shipped to Britain
and stored in ice houses or iceboxes to keep food cool. It helped to keep dairy, meat, and other foods
cooler for longer. But these remained beyond the reach of many ordinary
families.
I find it remarkable how much planning, labour, and
knowledge preserving food would have required. Regular Victorian families lived
with the constant awareness that food could not be taken for granted, and
perhaps that made every meal feel more valuable.
Do you think that modern convenience has made us appreciate
food less than many Victorian families may well have done?
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