Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales

Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, KG (19 February 1594 – 6 November 1612), was the eldest son and heir apparent of James VI and I, King of England and Scotland; and his wife Anne of Denmark. His name derives from his grandfathers: Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley; and Frederick II of Denmark. Prince Henry was widely seen as a bright and promising heir to his father's thrones. However, at the age of 18, he predeceased his father, dying of typhoid fever. His younger brother Charles succeeded him as heir apparent to the English, Irish, and Scottish thrones.

Henry Frederick
Prince of Wales (more)
Portrait after Isaac Oliver, c. 1610
Born19 February 1594
Stirling Castle, Stirling, Scotland
Died6 November 1612 (aged 18)
St James's Palace, London, England
Burial8 December 1612
HouseStuart
FatherJames VI and I
MotherAnne of Denmark

Early life

edit

Henry was born on 19 February 1594 at Stirling Castle, Scotland, and became Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron of Renfrew, Lord of the Isles, and Prince and Great Steward of Scotland automatically on his birth. His nurses included Mistress Primrose and Mistress Bruce.[1] Henry's baptism on 30 August 1594 was celebrated with complex theatrical entertainments written by poet William Fowler and a ceremony in a new Chapel Royal at Stirling purpose-built by William Schaw.[2] James VI set a tax of £100,000 for the expenses. Textiles and costume for the event were bought using Anne's dowry of £100,000 Scots which had been in the safekeeping of various towns.[3] In the month before the baptism, there were rumours at the Scottish court that James VI was jealous of Anne of Denmark and thought that Ludovic Stewart, Duke of Lennox might be the father of Prince Henry.[4]

 
Elizabeth sent a miniature portrait by Nicholas Hilliard to Prince Henry

His father placed him in the care of John Erskine, Earl of Mar, and his mother Annabell Murray, at Stirling Castle, out of the care of the boy's mother.[5] James VI worried that the mother's tendency toward Catholicism might affect the son. The child's removal to Stirling caused enormous tension between Anne and James,[6][7] and Henry remained there under the care of Mar's family until 1603.[8] James VI wrote a note to the Earl of Mar in June 1595 instructing him, in the event of his death, not to deliver Henry to Anne of Denmark or the Parliament of Scotland until he was 18 and gave the order himself.[9]

Anne of Denmark was reluctant to go to Stirling and was said to be afraid that her enemies would give her a poisoned posset at the Castle.[10] James VI frequently visited the Prince,[11] and travelled to Stirling for his son's first birthday.[12] As early as August 1595, James VI encouraged the infant to hold a pen and make a penstroke on a document, which the king humorously certified, "I will testify this is the prince's own mark".[13][14]

The Prince had silver candlesticks, a silver cup and a silver plate with a salt cellar.[15] Elizabeth I contributed to the expenses at Stirling, paying £5000 Scots in 1595.[16] At this time, Patrick Gray, Master of Gray was keeper of Henry's wardrobe, and took delivery of a little coffer worth £8 Scots for the Prince's clothes.[17] Adam Newton became his schoolmaster or tutor. William Keith of Delny and then George Lauder were his legal tutors, administrators of his estates and incomes.[18][19]

In 1596 Queen Elizabeth, via Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, and his secretary Anthony Bacon, sent her miniature portrait by Nicholas Hilliard to Prince Henry, and this was received by the Earl of Mar at Stirling.[20] It was said that Prince Henry would be godfather to his younger brother Duke Robert, in May 1602, and afterwards stay at Dunfermline Palace with his mother, but James VI forbade this.[21]

Alexander Wilson became Henry's tailor.[22] In 1602 it was planned that Henry would visit his mother at Falkland Palace, but this was postponed because of her sickness.[23] The French ambassador in London Christophe de Harlay, Count of Beaumont, reported a rumour, spread by James's friends, that Anne of Denmark was cruel and ambitious, and hoped to rule Scotland as Regent or Governor for Henry after the death of her husband.[24][25]

London

edit

James became King of England in 1603 at the Union of the Crowns and his family moved south. Anne of Denmark came to Stirling to collect her son, and after an argument with the Prince's keepers, Marie Stewart, Countess of Mar and the Master of Mar, was allowed to take Henry to Edinburgh on 28 May.[26] On the following Sunday Anne took him to St Giles Kirk in her silver coach.[27] Anne and Henry arrived in England, at the fortified town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, on 1 June.[28]

Henry's tutor Adam Newton continued to serve the Prince, and several Scottish servants from the Stirling household were retained, including the poet David Murray. The prince was lodged at Oatlands and Nonsuch Palace, and was relocated to Winchester during an outbreak of plague. At Winchester, in September 1603, Anne of Denmark produced a masque to welcome her son, which was controversial.[29] In November 1603 he was staying at Wilton House, and King James joked that a letter presented to Henry by the Venetian diplomats was bigger than he was.[30] Henry rode with the Earl of Nottingham and his governor Sir Thomas Chaloner to Salisbury to dine with the Venetian ambassador Nicolò Molin and other diplomats. This was the first time he had made an appearance and dined outside the royal household, and his father joked that Henry was the ambassador's prisoner.[31]

On 15 March 1604, Henry rode on horseback behind his father through the streets of London during the delayed Royal Entry.[32] From 1604 onwards, Henry often stayed at St James's Palace. The gardens were improved for him by Alphonsus Fowle.[33] The daily expenses of the Prince in England were managed by the Cofferer of the Household, Henry Cocke and after 1610 David Foulis.[34] David Murray of Gorthy was keeper of the Prince's privy purse and his accounts reveal some details of Henry's interests.[35]

Two Scottish tailors, Alexander Wilson and Patrick Black, moved to London and made the prince's clothes.[36] Wilson made him doublets and hose from cloth supplied by Robert Grigge, and a hunting coat of green chamlet lined with velvet. The prince was supplied with perfumed gloves made of stag's leather, perfumed gloves from Córdoba, and embroidered waistcoats "wrought very curiously in colour silks".[37]

Music, games and sports

edit
 
Henry, Prince of Wales, on Horseback, by Robert Peake the Elder[38]

Prince Henry was introduced to a variety of sports at Stirling Castle. In September 1600 he was bought two golf clubs, two staffs, and four rackets.[39] The handles were covered with velvet and dressed with metal passementerie.[40] In September 1601, an English visitor, Thomas Musgrave, saw Henry dance, leap, and wield a pike.[41] On Sunday 8 May 1603 Henry exercised in the castle garden, watched by his mother, played billiards after dinner, and after supper "ran and played at the boards".[42] Henry had a huntsman, Thomas Pott, who continued to serve him in England. Pott travelled abroad several times, taking gifts of dogs from the young prince to European rulers.[43]

Henry was tutored in music by Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger, Nicholas Villiard, and Walter Quinn. Thomas Giles taught him to dance.[44] In August 1604 Henry danced for the Spanish envoy, the Constable Velasco, and showed him military pike exercises in the palace garden.[45] Charles Guerolt taught Henry the "science of defence", fencing.[46] At Oatlands in 1603 Prince Henry told Scaramelli, a Venetian diplomat, about his interests in dancing, tennis and hunting.[47] George Moncrieff was his falconer and kept his hawks.[48]

In 1606 the French ambassador Antoine Lefèvre de la Boderie noted that Prince Henry played golf, which he described as a Scottish game not unlike "pallemail" or pall-mall. One of Prince Henry's biographers, "W. H.", mentioned that Henry nearly hit Adam Newton with a golf ball, and Henry said that would have paid him back.[49] Henry also played tennis, and in July 1606 played with his uncle Christian IV of Denmark at Greenwich Palace.[50] He had a court for "pall-mall", laid out at St James's Fields, north of St James's Palace. It was a long alley surfaced with cockle shells crushed into clay or loam.[51]

In 1607 Henry sought permission to learn to swim, but the Earls of Suffolk, and Shrewsbury, wrote to Newton that swimming was a "dangerous thing" that their own sons might practise "like feathers as light as things of nought", but was not suitable for Princes as "things of great weight and consequence".[52] A riding school, one of the first in England, was built for him at St James's Palace in 1607.[53] Henry competed at running at the ring with foreign visitors and diplomats including Louis Frederick, Duke of Württemberg-Montbéliard, in April and May 1610.[54]

Henry talked of the merits of various breeds of horses and his own Barbary horses to the Venetian ambassador Antonio Foscarini in 1611.[55] In March 1609, he was entertained by a man with a baboon.[56] He revealed an interest in Venetian maritime power and had a plan of the fortification of Palmanova.[57] As an indoor amusement, Henry played chess.[58]

Literature in the schoolroom

edit

In England, his writing masters included Peter Bales, who practiced "small writing" and made a miniature copy of the king's book of advice, the Basilicon Doron for him to wear as a tablet book.[59] Bales encouraged Henry to copy improving Latin phrases, known as sententiae.[60] Henry translated works by Guy Du Faur, Seigneur de Pibrac and sent them to his mother, Anne of Denmark. He was a patron of Joshua Sylvester, who translated the poems of Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas. Henry started to translate Sylvester's version into Latin to present to his father.[61] He paid £100 to George Heriot for a diamond ring sent to his friend the essayist John Harington of Kelston,[62] who sent him a translation of the sixth book of the Aeneid with notes referring to his father's Basilicon Doron. Henry seems not to have studied ancient Greek authors, but told the Venetian ambassador he would learn modern Italian.[63] Esther Inglis presented him with miniature manuscript books, including A Book of the Armes of England, as a New Year's Day gift for which he rewarded her £5.[64] The Venetian ambassador, Nicolò Molin, judged that Henry learnt under the impetus of his father's spur, rather than his own inclination, and his brother, Charles, Duke of York, was more earnest in his studies.[65]

Training and personality

edit
 
Portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, c. 1603

The king greatly preferred the role of schoolmaster to that of father, and he wrote texts for the schooling of his children. James directed that Henry's household "should rather imitate a College than a Court",[66] or, as Thomas Chaloner wrote in 1607, "His Highness's household [...] was intended by the King for a courtly college or a collegiate court"[67] He passionately engaged in such physical pursuits as hawking, hunting, jousting and fencing,[68] and from a young age studied naval and military affairs and national issues, about which he often disagreed with his father. He also disapproved of the way his father conducted the royal court, disliked Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset, a favourite of his father, and esteemed Walter Raleigh, wishing him to be released from the Tower of London.[8]

The prince's popularity rose so high that it threatened his father. Relations between the two could be tense, and on occasion surfaced in public.[55] At one point, they were hunting near Royston when James criticised his son for lacking enthusiasm for the chase, and initially moved to strike his son with his cane, but Henry rode off.[69] Most of the hunting party then followed the son.[70]

"Upright to the point of priggishness, he fined all who swore in his presence", according to Charles Carlton, a biographer of Charles I, who describes Henry as an "obdurate Protestant".[66] In addition to the alms box to which Henry forced swearers to contribute, he made sure his household attended church services. His religious views were influenced by the clerics in his household, who came largely from a tradition of politicised Calvinism. Henry listened humbly, attentively, and regularly to the sermons preached to his household, and once told his chaplain, Richard Milbourne, that he esteemed most the preachers whose attitude suggested, "Sir, you must hear me diligently: you must have a care to observe what I say."[67]

Henry is said to have disliked his younger brother, Charles, and to have teased him, although this derives from only one anecdote: when Charles was nine years of age, Henry snatched the hat off a bishop and put it on the younger child's head, then told his younger brother that when he became king he would make Charles Archbishop of Canterbury, and then Charles would have a long robe to hide his ugly rickety legs. Charles stamped on the cap and had to be dragged off in tears.[66]

Investiture and leadership

edit
 
Portrait by Robert Peake the Elder, c. 1610

With his father's accession to the throne of England in 1603, Henry at once became Duke of Cornwall. In 1610 he was further invested as Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester, thus for the first time uniting the six automatic and two traditional Scottish and English titles held by heirs-apparent to the two thrones.[71] The ceremony of investiture was celebrated with a pageant London's Love to Prince Henry, and a masque, Tethys' Festival, during which his mother gave a sword encrusted with diamonds, intended to represent justice.[72][73]

As a young man, Henry showed great promise and was beginning to be active in leadership matters. Among his activities, he was responsible for the reassignment of Sir Thomas Dale to the Virginia Company of London's struggling colony in North America. The city of Henricus in colonial Virginia was named in his honour in 1611; his name also survives in Henrico County, Virginia[74] and Cape Henry.[75] He was the "Supreme Protector" of the Company of Discoverers of the Northwest Passage, and a patron of Robert Harcourt's expedition to Guiana.[76]

The Irish Gaelic lord of Inishowen, Sir Cahir O'Doherty, had applied to gain a position as a courtier in the household of Henry, to help him in his struggles against officials in Ireland. Unknown to Sir Cahir, on 19 April 1608, the day he launched O'Doherty's Rebellion by burning Derry, his application was approved.[77] Henry took an interest in the Kingdom of Ireland and was known to be supportive of the idea of a reconciliation with the former rebel Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone, who had fled into exile during the Flight of the Earls. Because of this Tyrone and his entourage mourned when the Prince met his early death.[78]

In 1611, King James gave Woodstock Palace in Oxfordshire to Prince Henry.[79] Henry had a banqueting house built of leafy tree branches in the park, in which he held a dinner for his parents and his sister Princess Elizabeth.[80] David Murray paid 110 shillings for transporting musical instruments from London to Woodstock for the event.[81]

Marriage negotiations

edit

In between 1610 and 1612, potential brides from across Europe were considered for Henry. In particular, Cosimo II de' Medici of the House of Medici, and the ruler of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany in what is now Italy, hoped to arrange a royal marriage between Henry and his sister, Caterina de' Medici.[82] To this end, Cosimo II sent fifteen small bronze statutes, including one of a trotting horse, as well as Giambologna, a famous sculptor, to the English court in 1611.[83][84] However, Henry unexpectedly died in 1612, before the marriage negotiations could be finalized. Caterina instead married Ferdinando Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua and Montferrat in 1617.[85]

In May 1612, the Duke of Bouillon came to London as the ambassador of Marie de' Medici, dowager queen of France, and cousin to Cosimo II de' Medici through their paternal grandfather, Cosimo I de' Medici. According to the Venetian ambassador, Antonio Foscarini, his instructions included a proposal of marriage between Christine of France, the daughter of King Henry IV of France and sister of King Louis XIII of France, and Henry, the Prince of Wales. Anne of Denmark, the queen consort and Henry's mother, told one of the Duke's senior companions that she would prefer Henry married a French princess without a dowry than a Florentine princess (Caterina de' Medici) with any amount of gold.[86][87]

With Henry Frederick's death in 1612, Christine of France instead married Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy on 10 February 1619 at the Louvre in Paris, France.[88] Charles, Duke of York, who became the heir apparent to the throne of England and Scotland on his brother's death, fulfilled their mother's wishes by wedding Henrietta Maria of France in 1625.[89]

Death

edit

Henry died from typhoid fever at the age of 18 on 6 November 1612, during the celebrations that led up to the wedding of his sister Elizabeth. (The diagnosis can be made with reasonable certainty from written records of the post-mortem examination, which was ordered to be carried out in order to dispel rumours of poisoning.)[90] His mother, Anne of Denmark, had sent requests to Walter Raleigh in the Tower of London for his special "great cordial", which failed to effect a cure.[91] It was reported that his last words were to ask for his sister Princess Elizabeth,[92] who was discouraged from visiting him by their parents' order for fear of contagion.[93]

After Henry's death, his brother Charles fell ill but was the chief mourner at the funeral, which King James (who detested funerals) refused to attend.[66] The body lay in state at St. James's Palace for four weeks. On 7 December, over a thousand people walked in the mile-long cortège to Westminster Abbey. On top of the coffin there was a wooden effigy of the prince made by Richard Norris, with lifelike features modelled in wax by Abraham van der Doort,[94] clothed in robes of crimson velvet edged with fur.[95] The Archbishop of Canterbury, George Abbot, gave a two-hour sermon. As Henry's body was lowered into the ground, his chief servants broke their staves of office at the grave.[96]

Prince Henry's death was widely regarded as a tragedy for the nation. According to Charles Carlton, "Few heirs to the English throne have been as widely and deeply mourned as Prince Henry."[97] Henry's titles of Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay passed to Charles, who until then had lived in Henry's shadow. Four years later, Charles, then 16 years old, was created Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester.

Literature and music occasioned by the prince's death

edit

Sermons

edit
 
Portrait aged 13 or 14. He stands on a shield bearing his Prince of Wales's feathers.

Henry's chaplain, Daniel Price, delivered a series of sermons about the young man's death. (Price borrowed from John Donne's unrelated The first Anniversary, published in 1611, and The second Anniversary, published in 1612, for some of his language and ideas.):[98]

  • Lamentations for the death of the late illustrious Prince Henry [...] Two Sermons (1613; see 1613 in literature): "Oh, why is there not a generall thaw throughout all mankinde? why in this debashed Ayre doe not all things expire, seeing Time looks upon us with watry eues, disheveld lockes, and heavie dismall lookes; now that the Sunne is gone out of our Firmament, the ioy, the beautie, the glory of Israel is departed?"[98]
  • Spirituall Odours to the Memory of Prince Henry. In Four of the Last Sermons Preached in St James after his Highnesse Death (Oxford, 1613; see 1613 in literature) From "Meditations of Consolation in our Lamentations": "[...] his body was so faire and strong that a soule might have been pleased to live an age in it [...] vertue and valor, beauty and chastity, armes and arts, met and kist in him, and his goodnesse lent so much mintage to other Princes, that if Xenophon were now to describe a Prince, Prince HENRY had been his Patterne. [...] He hath gon his Passover from death to life, where there is more grace and more capacity [...] where earthly bodies shalbe more celestiall, then man in his Innocency or Angels in their glory, for they could fall: Hee is there with those Patriarchs that have expected Christ on earth, longer than they have enjoyed him in heaven; He is with those holy Penmen of the holy spirit, they bee now his paterns, who were here his teachers [...]"[98]
  • Teares Shed over Abner. The Sermon Preached on the Sunday before the Prince his funerall in St James Chappell before the body (Oxford, (1613; see 1613 in literature): "He, He is dead, who while he lived, was a perpetuall Paradise, every season that he shewd himselfe in a perpetuall spring, eavery exercise wherein he was scene a special felicity: He, He is dead before us [...] He, He is dead; that blessed Model of heaven his face is covered till the latter day, whose shining lamps his eyes in whose light there was life to the beholders, they bee ecclipsed until the sunne give over shining. [...] He, He is dead, and now yee see this [...]"[98]

Prose memorials

edit
 
Posthumous portrait by George Geldorp

Price also wrote two prose "Anniversaries" on the death:

  • Prince Henry His First Anniversary (Oxford, 1613; see 1613 in literature): "in HIM, a glimmering light of the Golden times appeare, all lines of expectation met in this Center, all spirits of vertue, scattered into others were extracted into him [...]"[98]
  • Another "Anniversary", published in 1614[98]

Verses

edit

Within a few months of the prince's death, at least 32 poets had versified on it. In addition to those listed below, the writers included Sir Walter Raleigh (a friend), John Donne, Edward Herbert, Thomas Heywood and Henry King.[66]

These poems were published in 1612 (see 1612 in poetry):

  • Sir William Alexander, An Elegie on the Death of Prince Henrie[99]
  • Joshua Sylvester, Lachrimae Lachrimarum; or, The Distillation of Teares Shede for the Untimely Death of the Incomparable Prince Panaretus, also includes poems in English, French, Latin and Italian by Walter Quin[99]
  • George Wither, Prince Henries Obsequies; or, Mournefull Elegies Upon his Death[99]

These poems and songs were published in 1613 (see 1613 in poetry):

  • Thomas Campion, Songs of Mourning: Bewailing the Untimely Death of Prince Henry, verse and music; music by Giovanni Coperario (or "Copario"), said to have been John Cooper, an Englishman[99]
  • George Chapman, An Epicede or Funerall Song, On the Most Disastrous Death, of the Highborne Prince of Men, Henry Prince of Wales, &c., the work states "1612" but was published in 1613[99]
  • John Davies, The Muses-Teares for the Losse of their Hope[99]
  • William Drummond of Hawthornden, Tears on the Death of Moeliades[99]
  • Mary Oxley, or Oxlie, a Scottish poet living in Morpeth, wrote a response to William Drummond of Hawthornden's Moeliades, which was published in 1656.[100]

Music

edit

In addition to the above verse-setting by Coperario, both Thomas Tomkins and Thomas Weelkes composed settings of "When David heard", a Biblical passage in which King David laments the loss of his son Absalom in battle; it is thought that both settings were directly inspired by the death of the prince.[101]

The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography refers to a mourning song in memory of Prince Henry by John Ward remaining unpublished during the composer's lifetime;[102] however, a "newly composed" song on the same subject was included in his First Set of Madrigals (1613).[103]

Honours and arms

edit
 
Coat of arms of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales

Honours

edit

Arms

edit

Henry Frederick as Prince of Wales bore the arms of the kingdom, differenced by a label of three points argent.[104]

Ancestry

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Cunningham 1971, pp. xvii–xviii.
  2. ^ Bath, Michael (2012). "Rare Shewes, the Stirling Baptism of Prince Henry". Journal of the Northern Renaissance (4).
  3. ^ Masson, David (1882). Register of the Privy Council. Vol. 5. Edinburgh. pp. 116, 131–132, 151–154 (for details of the expenditure see National Records of Scotland E35/13).
  4. ^ Colville, John (1858). Laing, David (ed.). Letters of John Colville. Edinburgh: Bannatyne Club. pp. 109, 115. OL 24829656M.
  5. ^ Meikle, Maureen (2000). "A meddlesome princess: Anna of Denmark and Scottish court politics, 1589-1603". In Goodare, Julian; Lynch, Michael (eds.). The Reign of James VI. East Linton: Tuckwell. pp. 134–136. ISBN 978-1-8623-2095-6. OL 6822492M.
  6. ^ Meikle 2000, pp. 134–137.
  7. ^ Dunn-Hensley, Susan (2017). Anna of Denmark and Henrietta Maria: virgins, witches, and Catholic queens. Queenship and power. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 57–59. ISBN 978-3-3196-3226-1. OL 30907463M.
  8. ^ a b Fritze, Ronald H.; Robison, William B.; Sutton, Walter, eds. (1996). Historical Dictionary of Stuart England, 1603–1689. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-3132-8391-8. OL 1113345M.
  9. ^ Halliwell-Phillipps, James Orchard (1848). Letters of the Kings of England. Vol. 2. London. pp. 91–92. OL 7186944M.
  10. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, 1595–1597. Vol. 12. Edinburgh. 1952. p. 18 no. 17.
  11. ^ Colville 1858, p. 164.
  12. ^ Bain, Joseph (1896). Calendar of Border Papers. Vol. 2. Edinburgh. p. 15, no. 26.
  13. ^ Steeholm, Clara; Steeholm, Hardy (1938). James I of England: The Wisest Fool in Christendom. New York. p. 195.
  14. ^ Kerr-Peterson, Miles; Pearce, Michael (2020). James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts. Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI. Woodbridge. p. 90.
  15. ^ Kerr-Peterson, Miles; Pearce, Michael (2020). James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts. Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI. Woodbridge. p. 90, 92.
  16. ^ Kerr-Peterson, Miles; Pearce, Michael (2020). James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts. Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI. Woodbridge. p. 83.
  17. ^ Letter and Papers Relating to Patrick Master of Gray. Edinburgh. 1835. pp. xiii, xxvi.
  18. ^ "The Bass Rock in History". Transactions of the East Lothian Antiquarian and Field Naturalists' Society. 5: 55. 1948.
  19. ^ Smith, Jane Stewart (1898). The Grange of St. Giles. Edinburgh. p. 196.
  20. ^ Goldring, Elizabeth (2019). Nicholas Hilliard: Life of an Artist. London. p. 216.
  21. ^ Mackie, John Duncan (1969). Calendar State Papers Scotland. Vol. 13. Edinburgh. pp. 945, 948, 962.
  22. ^ Charles Watson, Roll of Edinburgh Burgesses (Edinburgh: SRS, 1929), p. 529.
  23. ^ Bergeron, David M. (1991). Royal Family, Royal Lovers: King James of England and Scotland. University of Missouri Press. pp. 60–61.
  24. ^ Teulet, Jean Baptiste Alexandre Théodore (1862). Relations Politiques de la France Et de L'Espagne Avec L'Ecosse (in French). Vol. 4. Paris. pp. 279–280.
  25. ^ Burton, John Hill (1873). History of Scotland. Vol. 5. Edinburgh. p. 381.
  26. ^ Akkerman, Nadine (2021). Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts. Oxford. pp. 26–30, 417 fn.54.
  27. ^ Dalyell, John Graham (1798). "The Diarey (sic) of Robert Birrell". Fragments of Scottish History. Edinburgh. p. 59–60. OL 12908152W.
  28. ^ Lawson, Lesley (2007). Out of the Shadows: The Life of Lucy, Countess, Countess of Bedford. London: Hambledon. p. 49.
  29. ^ Wiggins, Martin; Richardson, Catherine Teresa (2015). British Drama, 1533–1642: 1603–1608. Vol. 5. Oxford. pp. 51–52.
  30. ^ Brown, Horatio (1900). Calendar State Papers. Venice: 1603–1607. Vol. 10. London. pp. 116–117 no. 164.
  31. ^ Brown 1900, pp. 119–121 nos. 167, 169.
  32. ^ Brown 1900, pp. 139–140 no. 201.
  33. ^ Shepperd, Edgar (1904). Memorials of St. James's Palace. Vol. 1. London. pp. 66–67.
  34. ^ Green, Mary Anne Everett (1872). Calendar State Papers Domestic, Addenda 1580–1625. London. pp. 499–500.
  35. ^ Cunningham, Peter (1971) [1842]. Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels. Malone Society. pp. x–xviii. ISBN 978-0-4040-1885-6. OL 7473101M.
  36. ^ Hayward, Maria (2020). Stewart Style. Yale. p. 68.
  37. ^ Bray, William (1796). Extracts from the Wardrobe Account of Prince Henry. Archaeologia. Vol. 11. London. pp. 88–96.
  38. ^ Weigl, Gail Capitol (2007). "The Equestrian Portrait of Prince Henry". In Wilks, Timothy; Renaissance Society of America (eds.). Prince Henry revived: image and exemplarity in early modern England. Southampton: Southampton Solent University. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-9034-7057-2.
  39. ^ Letters to King James the Sixth from the Queen, Prince Henry, Prince Charles etc (Edinburgh, 1835), p. lxxvii
  40. ^ Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), p. 65.
  41. ^ Mackie 1969, pp. 878–879 no. 719..
  42. ^ William Fraser, Memorials of the Earls of Haddington, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1889), p. 210
  43. ^ Issues of the Exchequer (London, 1836), p. 22.
  44. ^ Strong 1986, pp. 27–29; Ashbee 1991, pp. 12, 36, 211.
  45. ^ Brown 1900, p. 178 no. 266.
  46. ^ Frederick Devon, Issues of the Exchequer of the Reign of James I, (London, 1836), pp. 17, 34.
  47. ^ Brown 1900, p. 74 no. 104.
  48. ^ Frederick Devon, Issues of the Exchequer (London, 1836), 34.
  49. ^ Marcia Vale, The Gentleman's Recreations: Accomplishments and pastimes of the English Gentleman, 1580–1630 (Cambridge, 1977), p. 115.
  50. ^ Ambassades de M. de La Boderie en Angleterre, vol. 1 (Paris, 1750), p. 225
  51. ^ Simon Thurley, Palaces of the Revolution, Life, Death & Art at the Stuart Court (William Collins, 2021), p. 72.
  52. ^ Nadine Akkerman, Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia: 1603–1631, vol. 1 (Oxford, 2015), p. 75.
  53. ^ Strong 1986, p. 64.
  54. ^ William Brenchley Rye, England as Seen by Foreigners in the Days of Elizabeth & James the First (London, 1865), pp. 59, 62.
  55. ^ a b Strong 1986, pp. 14–15.
  56. ^ Leila Parsons, 'Prince Henry as a Patron of Literature', Modern Literature Review, 47:4 (October 1952), 504.
  57. ^ Brown 1900, p. 194 no. 301.
  58. ^ Bray 1796, p. 93.
  59. ^ M. S. Giuseppi, HMC Salisbury Hatfield (London, 1933), p. 402.
  60. ^ Aysha Pollnitz, 'Humanism and Education', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 47.
  61. ^ Aysha Pollnitz, 'Humanism and Education', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 48.
  62. ^ Leila Parsons, 'Prince Henry as a Patron of Literature', Modern Literature Review, 47:4 (October 1952), 503–7.
  63. ^ Aysha Pollnitz, 'Humanism and Education', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 43.
  64. ^ Heather Wolfe, 'Manuscripts in Early Modern England', A Concise Companion to English Renaissance Literature (Blackwell, 2006).
  65. ^ Aysha Pollnitz, 'Humanism and Education', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 48.
  66. ^ a b c d e Carlton, Charles (1995). Charles I: The Personal Monarch (2nd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4151-2565-9.
  67. ^ a b McCullough, Peter E. (1998). Sermons at Court: Politics and Religion in Elizabethan and Jacobean Preaching. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-5215-9046-4.
  68. ^ Oxford DNB[better source needed]
  69. ^ Bergeron, David M. (2022). The Duke of Lennox, 1574–1624: A Jacobean Courtier's Life. Edinburgh. p. 82.
  70. ^ Brown, Horatio F., ed. (1905). Calendar of State Papers Relating To English Affairs in the Archives of Venice. Vol. 12, 1610–1613. London. p. 140-148 – via British History Online.
  71. ^ Clare Jackson, Devil-Land: England under Siege, 1588–1688 (Penguin, 2022), p. 133.
  72. ^ Nichols, John (1828). Progresses, Processions, and Magnificent Festivities, of King James the First. Vol. 2. London. p. 351.
  73. ^ Dunn-Hensley 2017, p. 99.
  74. ^ Henricus Historical Park. "1611 Settlement". Archived from the original on 25 October 2014. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  75. ^ National Park Service (16 March 2016). "Cape Henry Memorial Cross". Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  76. ^ Butler, Martin (2008). The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture. Cambridge. p. 175.
  77. ^ McCavitt, John (2005) [2002]. The Flight of the Earls. Gill & MacMillan. pp. 136–137. ISBN 978-0-7171-3936-1. OL 39495855M.
  78. ^ McCavitt 2005, p. 203.
  79. ^ Brown 1900, p. 207 no. 324.
  80. ^ Green, Mary Anne Everett; Lomas, Sophia Crawford (1909). Elizabeth, Electress Palatine and Queen of Bohemia. London. p. 23. OL 7040880M.
  81. ^ Ashbee, Andrew (1991). Records of English Court Music, 1603–1625. Vol. 4. Routledge. p. 215. ISBN 978-1-0001-5220-3. OL 44011908M.
  82. ^ Clare Jackson, Devil-Land: England under Siege, 1588–1688 (Penguin, 2022), p. 139.
  83. ^ "Prince Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales (1594-1612)". Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  84. ^ "Pietro Tacca (1577-1640): Trotting horse 1600". Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  85. ^ Parrott 1997, p. 37.
  86. ^ "Venice: May 1612, 16-31 | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
  87. ^ Clare Jackson, Devil-Land: England Under Siege, 1588–1688 (Penguin, 2022), p. 139.
  88. ^ Parrott 1997, p. 36.
  89. ^ Gregg 1981, p. 114; Hibbert 1968, p. 86; Weir 1996, p. 252.
  90. ^ Robert L. Martensen; James a Knight Chair in Humanities and Ethics in Medicine and Professor of Surgery Robert L Martensen (2004). The Brain Takes Shape: An Early History. Oxford University Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-1951-5172-5. OL 7390038M.
  91. ^ Olivia Bland, The Royal Way of Death (London: Constable, 1986), p. 38.
  92. ^ Elizabeth McClure Thomson, The Chamberlain Letters (London, 1966), p. 70.
  93. ^ Olivia Bland, The Royal Way of Death (London: Constable, 1986), p. 39.
  94. ^ Elizabeth Goldring, 'Sorrowe so well expressed', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 283–284.
  95. ^ Gregory McNamara, 'Prince Henry's Funeral', Timothy Wilks, Prince Henry Revived (Paul Holberton, 2007), 275.
  96. ^ Norman E. McClure, ed. The Letters of John Chamberlain, vol. 1 (Philadelphia, PA: 1939), 391–392.
  97. ^ Carlton, Charles (1995). Charles I, the Personal Monarch. Psychology Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-4151-2141-5. OL 1275422M.
  98. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Albert James, ed. (1995). John Donne: The Critical Heritage. Routledge. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-4151-3412-5. OL 7483735M.
  99. ^ a b c d e f g Cox, Michael, editor, The Concise Oxford Chronology of English Literature, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-1986-0634-6
  100. ^ Germaine Greer, 101 Poems by 101 Women (London: Faber & Faber, 2001), pp. 21–22.
  101. ^ Graham Ross, notes to Harmonia Mundi recording Remembrance, HMU907654 (2016).
  102. ^ "Ward, John (bap. 1590, d. 1638)", Ian Payne in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, See online ed., ed. Lawrence Goldman, Oxford: OUP (subscription or UK public library membership required). Accessed 14 November 2014.
  103. ^ Carlyle, E. I. "Ward, John (fl.1613)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. pp. 319–320.
  104. ^ Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family

Further reading

edit
  • Birch, Thomas (1760). Life of Henry Prince of Wales. London.
  • Cornwallis, Charles (1738). Life and Character of Henry-Frederic, Prince of Wales. London.
  • Fraser, Sarah (2017). The Prince Who Would Be King: The Life and Death of Henry Stuart. London: William Collins.
  • Gregg, Pauline (1981), King Charles I, London: Dent, ISBN 0-4600-4437-0
  • Hibbert, Christopher (1968), Charles I, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
  • Parrott, David (1997). "The Mantuan Succession, 1627–31: A Sovereignty Dispute in Early Modern Europe". The English Historical Review. CXII, Issue 445, February (445). Oxford Academic: 20–65. doi:10.1093/ehr/CXII.445.20.
  • Plowden, Alison (2001), Henrietta Maria: Charles I's Indomitable Queen, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 978-0-75091-882-4
  • Strong, Roy (1986). Henry, Prince of Wales and England's Lost Renaissance. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Timothy Wilks, ed. (2007). Prince Henry Revived: Image and Exemplarity in Early Modern England. Southampton Solent University: Paul Holberton Publishing.
  • Weir, Alison (1996), Britain's Royal Families: A Complete Genealogy (Revised ed.), London: Pimlico, ISBN 978-0-7126-7448-5
  • Williamson, J. W. (1978). The Myth of the Conqueror: Prince Henry Stuart, a Study in 17th Century Personation. New York: AMS Press.
edit
Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales
Born: 19 February 1594 Died: 6 November 1612
British royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Edward Tudor
Prince of Wales
1610–1612
Succeeded by
Duke of Cornwall
1603–1612
Preceded by Duke of Rothesay
1594–1612