24/03/2026
in 1603, Elizabeth I died at Richmond Palace aged 69.
Having ruled England from 1558, Elizabeth calmed England’s religious waters in the aftermath of the Marian Catholic Counter-Reformation. She was crowned in January 1559 at Westminster Abbey and the general population were ecstatic as Elizabeth had always been popular, a rebellion even rising with the intent of putting on her on the throne instead of her half-sister Queen Mary. Elizabeth had lived through a very difficult childhood, her mother had replaced Mary’s mother as Queen of England, making their relationship strained from the beginning. It improved somewhat after the death of Elizabeth’s mother, Anne Boleyn.
Having been declared illegitimate by her father Henry VIII, she still received a fine education and was restored to the line of succession by her father in 1544, behind her brother and Mary.
After the death of Henry VIII in 1547, she lived with her stepmother, Katherine Parr, until Katherine’s new husband Thomas Seymour, caused a scandal by entering the young princess’s bedchamber on several occasions. The scandal nearly ruined her.
Just before her brother King Edward VI died, he tried to disinherit both Mary and Elizabeth based on their illegitimacy. However, Henry VIII’s Third Act of Succession was watertight and enshrined in law, so despite Edward declaring his wish that their Protestant cousin Lady Jane Grey should succeed him, Mary did eventually succeed.
With Mary succeeding to the throne, old grievances and religious differences caused the sisters to become further estranged. Perhaps Mary was haunted by the fate of their mothers, or perhaps she was envious of Elizabeth’s youth and popularity. Either way, Mary had Elizabeth imprisoned in the Tower of London on suspicion of treason. Nothing could be proved and Elizabeth, protesting her innocence, was eventually sent to live under house arrest in the countryside.
On the death of Mary in November 1558, legend has it that Elizabeth was found reading under an oak tree at Hatfield Palace and declared
“This is the Lord’s doing, it is marvellous in our eyes!” And so began a relationship that defined her for the rest of her life-her marriage to England.
The only Tudor to give her name to an age, Elizabeth oversaw sea exploration, religious settlement, the golden age of arts and literature, the defeat of the Spanish Armada as well as threats from Scotland and France. She had several nicknames including Good Queen Bess, Gloriana and The Virgin Queen. She became the first woman in English history to demonstrate that a woman could rule at least as well as any man successfully and with the love of her people.
Excluding the fact that his line died with her, if he could have seen his daughter, old Henry VIII would have been proud.