I will have here but one mistress and no master.' The earl of Leicester kept a
slightly lower profile after that!
The man most alarmed by the Leicester fling was William Cecil. Leicester was
married and the scandal, if the affair was exposed, might well lose Elizabeth
the throne (her first years were pretty insecure, with two serious illnesses
and a Church to sort out; see Chapter 13.) Cecil knew that Leicester wasn't
very bright and was a poor judge of character. At the very least, any marriage
would upset the Council's apple cart and Cecil had set his sights on Archduke
Charles of Spain.
Clearing the path for marriage: by foul means?
By 1560 the queen seemed to be in love. De Quadra, who'd taken over from
de Feria as Philip's watchdog, spread the rumour that Elizabeth and Leicester
were planning to poison Amy Dudley so they could marry. He called Leicester
`the king that is to be'.
On Sunday 8 September Amy told all her servants at the family home at
Cumnor, Oxfordshire to go to a local fair at Abingdon. Only three ladies
stayed with her and they `played at tables' (probably chess or backgammon).
At some point, Amy got up, left the room, tripped on her way out and fell
downstairs. Her neck was broken. What are the options?
Accident: You try walking in a heavy Elizabethan farthingale dress (on
the other hand, Amy was used to it).
Suicide: Had she heard the rumours about hubby and the queen and
decided to end it all? On the other hand, throwing yourself down the
stairs isn't a certain way to kill yourself.
Murder: If so, who? Leicester, obviously, but he wasn't there at the time.
Somebody suggested one of his cronies, Anthony Forster.
Whatever actually happened to Lady Dudley, the inquest jury returned
an accidental death verdict. But the murder rumours wouldn't go away.
Leicester didn't help himself by not going either to the inquest or the funeral,
but nevertheless, as was customary, he had to stay away from Court. There
were rumours of jury tampering and counter-claims that Amy Dudley had
breast cancer that had caused depression.
Faking it as a pale redhead
Remember that scene at the end of Elizabeth later period in her life and were supposed to
when Cate Blanchett decides to dump her make her look more attractive, not less, and
live-in lover Robert Dudley and become a pro- Dudley hung around until his death in 1588.
fessional virgin, complete with ghastly white Elizabeth only pushed the virgin queen bit when
make-up and curly red wig? Well, it never hap- it was obvious she was past child-bearing age.
pened. The make-up and wig belong to a much
If it was murder and Leicester was behind it, the whole thing backfired
because the scandal made Elizabeth see sense and the idea of marrying went
out of the window.
Even so, on paper Leicester prospered. He got his earldom in the September
of 1564 and was made a member of the Privy Council. This meant that Cecil
could keep an eye on him but it didn't stop the reckless Leicester from get-
ting involved in a coup against Cecil in 1569. It failed; he apologised to the
queen; they kissed (maybe!) and made up.
Blowing hot and cold
After 1569 the relationship between Elizabeth and Leicester changed with the
seasons. In 1578 he secretly married the countess of Essex, Lettice Knollys �
so she became Lettice Leicester! Elizabeth was very touchy about her ladies,
expecting to be told their every move and whim. After the hush-hush wed-
ding, the Leicesters were barred from Court for a while.
Later, in 1585, Elizabeth cooled down and made Leicester her agent in the
Low Countries (today's Netherlands). He was soon feathering his nest with
the local Government, the Estates General. Elizabeth recalled him in disgrace.
When Leicester died in 1588, the queen was genuinely heartbroken. She
always kept his last letter, a reminder of the nearest thing to a love affair
she'd ever known.
Riding a Cock Horse
One way in which Elizabeth kept in touch with her country in the days before
television and the queen's speech at Christmas was to go on progresses, 208 Part IV: Ending with Elizabeth
riding with half her Court through the south of England. She never went too
far from London, probably because of the risk of a coup if she did.
The old nursery rhyme goes:
Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross,
To see a fine lady upon a white horse.
Rings on her fingers and bells on her toes,
She shall have music wherever she goes.
And if the fine lady isn't Elizabeth, who is it?
The company travelled less than 10 miles a day and put up at other people's
country houses, where they expected to be fed, wined and entertained � at
ridiculous expense.
On 4 September 1566 the queen went to Oxford. What for?
She listened to sermons and disputations by the university's scholars.
She understood their Latin perfectly and this impressed the scholars �
their queen was intellectual, just like them.
She watched a play, Palomon and Arcite, performed in Christ Church
College, proving how much she loved the theatre and could identify with
classical drama.
She honoured Robert Dudley whom she'd appointed as chancellor of the
University in September of 1564.
Most importantly of all, she made sure that the town and the university
accepted her as supreme governor of the English Church and let them
know what she thought of heretics.
Just like her father, Elizabeth enjoyed glittering social occasions. In Coventry
in 1565 she `won the hearts of all her loving subjects', according to the town's
mayor, but the high points of her progresses came in the mid-1570s.
The queen was in Warwick in 1572 and Bristol in 1574, and in 1575 she
pulled out all the travelling stops by visiting Worcester, Lichfield, Reading,
Woodstock and Windsor. In Warwick the entire town turned out to see their
monarch and the recorder of the town read out a five-page (count them!)
history of the place. At the end Elizabeth sent for the man: `Come hither,
little recorder.' He knelt and kissed her hand. She said, `It was told me that
you would be afraid to look upon me or to speak boldly, but you were not so
afraid of me as I was of you.'
Next time you're in Warwickshire, check out Kenilworth Castle. It's a ruin today
and if you stand in the low ground to the south of the curtain wall and shout,
you'll hear your voice come back to you � that's because you're in Echo Fields.
The area was deliberately flooded in 1575 by Lord Leicester who lived there,
and when the queen arrived there was boating on the lake and the whole place
was lit up by fireworks. The knot garden where they walked is still there. Okay,
so Leicester had the hots for the queen and wanted to marry her, but the three-
week stay must have seriously damaged his bank balance. Leicester put on
poetry by George Gascoigne, top poet of the day, bear baiting, hunting, music,
dancing and incredible banquets. Somebody painted Elizabeth and Leicester
dancing the Volta; the cheeky nobleman is throwing the queen in the air to wild
clapping and music � and she's loving every minute of it!
But the progresses weren't just remembered for their lively parties. It was
very unfortunate that the queen's progress to Norwich in 1579 went horribly
wrong. Norwich was delighted with the usual speeches, music, hunting and
frivolities. But it was a bit like hosting the Olympic Games today � huge pres-
tige but at a price. Thousands of townsfolk caught bubonic plague � the Black
Death � from somebody in the entourage and thousands died before the dis-
ease burnt itself out.
For about six years before the Armada (1588; see Chapter 15) the progresses
stopped. But they started again in the 1590s when the queen was old and
perhaps wanted to recapture her youth � because she was worth it. She often
ordered her coachman to drive her into the thickest of the crowds to talk to
the ordinary people and she stood up on the carriage steps and thanked them.
On one of her later progresses Elizabeth took the opportunity to kiss and
make up with an old acquaintance. She'd once put Edward Seymour, earl
of Hertford, in prison for daring to marry Catherine, the sister of Jane Grey.
When she arrived at his home in Odiham in Hampshire in September 1591, all
seemed forgiven. After three days of fireworks, feasts and fun, a choir sang
`Come Again, Fair Nature's Treasure' as the queen left.
Elizabeth made her last progress, through Middlesex and Buckinghamshire,
in the last year of her life.
Sailing in New Directions
Ever since Christopher Columbus had gone West in 1492, Europe had been
poised on the brink of a brave new world. Henry VII had famously backed the
wrong ship (Cabot rather than Columbus � see Chapter 2), and government 210 Part IV: Ending with Elizabeth
investment in overseas trade and exploration was slow to take off under
Edward VI. Under Mary, the investment had ground to a halt because she
had no interest in the trade and exploration and had clashed with the largely
Protestant merchants of the City of London on religious grounds.
The livery companies of the City were like stockbrokers today. They made
huge profits buying and selling and often lent money to the Crown. Leaders
of the mercers', goldsmiths' and fishmongers' companies were also courtiers,
so close government links existed. Thomas Gresham continued as the crown
agent in the Low Countries so business picked up again under Elizabeth (see
Chapter 9).
Slaving with Hawkins
John Hawkins was the son of a Plymouth merchant who moved to London
in 1554 to work closely with the Navy Board and the City, both of which
invested in overseas voyages. He was determined to cash in on one of the
biggest money spinners in history � the slave trade (see the nearby sidebar).
One problem was that Spain and Portugal had got the jump on the English
and had already grabbed several markets. That would all change in 1562
when Hawkins hijacked a slave ship.
The queen is in her counting house
Elizabeth seems to have inherited her grandfa- Chapter 16) came back from his expedition to
ther Henry VII's careful ways with money (see Cadiz she wanted an account of every penny
Chapter 2). Her prudence was quite handy in the spent. She worked out that in 1599 the king of
Protestant days of Edward because she could France owed her 401,734 pounds 16 shillings
wear the dull clothes that were the fashion of and 5� pence! She told her Parliament in 1566,
the time and these were cheap. Under Mary `I thank God that I am imbued with such quali-
she was genuinely strapped and got used to ties that if I were turned out of my realm in my
checking her figures herself. She saved �1,500 petticoat, I were able to live in any place in
in 1552 largely because she only gave away 7 Christendom.'
pounds 15 shillings and 8 pence to charity.
Elizabeth borrowed more and more from the
In the year of the Armada (1588 � see Chapter City of London and less from Antwerp, but she
15) Elizabeth actually sold bullets to her own always had ongoing cash flow problems.
soldiers, and when the earl of Essex (see Chapter 12: Dancing with Elizabeth 211
The slave trade Slavery was widespread in the ancient world slaves were taken to the Americas, mostly from of Greece and Rome, which Renaissance men West Africa (then called, for obvious reasons, looked back on with a mixture of awe and the Slave Coast). fondness. In Tudor England men like Hawkins
Arabs and Europeans benefited from the slave were muscling in on an institution that was
trade and African development was held up. already making serious money in the Middle
Nobody, even devout Christians, seems to have East, Africa and the Americas � the movement
had a moral problem with buying, selling and of black Africans, in chains, to wherever they
owning somebody else in the Tudor period. were needed for back-breaking manual labour. Between 1450 and 1870 an estimated 11.5 million
Voyage #1 (1561)
Hawkins got hold of slave cargoes on two ships and sailed them to Tenerife
in the Canary Islands (a gorgeous holiday destination now � check the islands
out!). He sold all his slaves to Spanish colonists in exchange for hides, sugar,
ginger and pearls. The sales were illegal because Hawkins wasn't a Spaniard
(see Chapter 11 for Philip II's ruling on this) and his goods were confiscated
in Seville. The Spaniards called him a pirate (which is fair enough), but
Hawkins still made a huge profit.
Voyage #2 (1564)
Nothing succeeds like success and suddenly everybody wanted in on
Hawkins' second trip. Several councillors, like Cecil and the earl of Pembroke,
invested and the queen, ever with an eye to the main chance, gave Hawkins a
fully armed ship stuffed with provisions � `God bless all who sail in her'.
This voyage took royal involvement to a new level. Monarchs had leased ships
to merchants occasionally in the past, always going to European ports, but
Elizabeth now showed a new commitment to sea power.
Once again the Spaniards and the Portuguese objected, and once again
Hawkins bullied people into buying from him. At various places in the
Caribbean, Hawkins claimed to be trading on behalf of the queen (not true)
and his chat placed Elizabeth and England in troubled waters. But because
most people were making loads of money out of the voyages, they thought it
was worth the hassle. 212 Part IV: Ending with Elizabeth
The not-so-common market
Nearer to home Elizabeth faced commercial Margaret of Parma, the regent of the Low
problems. After the slump in the 1550s English Countries, put an embargo on English cloth
cloth exports had picked up a bit but not in 1564, so trade now switched to Emden
enough. Why? in Germany. Cecil thought the move would
widen the market; the merchant adventur-
Dutch Protestants were complaining about
ers disagreed. The embargo ended in 1566
Philip's high-handed government of the
but others had now grabbed the markets,
Spanish Netherlands and England sym-
and when Margaret was replaced by
pathised with them. This in turn niggled
Philip's hardliner, the duke of Alba (see
with the merchants of Antwerp, who put
Chapters 10 and 11), the English had to
petty restrictions on cloth being shipped
leave again.
through the port.
Giving Lovell a go
Anglo�Spanish relations were at a low in 1566 and the Spanish ambassador
demanded that the queen stop Hawkins from his slave-trading raids by not
letting him sail. A voyage by the inexperienced John Lovell was entirely
backed by private enterprise and came back in September 1567 with a small
profit. At least Lovell's trip didn't worsen the diplomatic situation.
Voyage #3(1567)
Elizabeth changed her mind (she was good at that) and backed another
Hawkins trip in October 1567. He sailed from Plymouth (one of the major
ports in the West Country � check out the town's links with Francis Drake
and see his statue on the Hoe) with four of his own ships and two provided
by the Crown. Again, he claimed to be sailing under the queen's commission
and again, it wasn't true.
Things got tough for Hawkins in Guinea late in 1567. The Portuguese authori-
ties there had had a tip-off and he lost men in a fire fight before getting
involved in black tribal warfare in today's Sierra Leone. He still got his slaves,
though, and sold them at Cartagena in Columbia before heading home.
Harassing Hawkins
On the way back to England from his third voyage, Hawkins' luck ran out.
One of the ships in his fleet, the Jesus of Lubeck, belonged to the queen. It was
leaking badly and Hawkins put in to San Juan d'Ulloa, the port of Mexico City.
Unfortunately, a Spanish fleet arrived at the same time, bringing the new vice-
roy of the Indies, Don Martin Enriquez.
All hell broke loose and Hawkins had to cut and run, leaving the Jesus and
her crewmen behind. At sea, Hawkins' remaining ships became separated, Chapter 12: Dancing with Elizabeth 213
Francis Drake's Judith making so much headway that Hawkins accused him of
desertion (hot tempered lot, these sea dogs!). Hawkins limped into Vigo and
got back to England in January 1569 with only a handful of his original crew.
Hawkins had a go at Drake and the Spanish authorities in Mexico, demand-
ing huge compensation via the Admiralty Court. He hadn't got a leg to stand
on of course, because he shouldn't have been in San Juan d'Ulloa in the first
place.
Elizabeth had shot herself in the foot and relations with Philip went further
down the tubes.
Menacing from Spain
Hawkins and Drake's `Boys' Own Adventures' (see the nearby sidebar `El
Draco') didn't impress the Spaniards. Philip demanded compensation for the
looting of the Spanish colonies and this renewed aggression may have been
why Elizabeth started smarming around France and the duke of Anjou again
(see the earlier section `Toying with the talent').
Elizabeth continued the complicated dance of diplomacy and marriage nego-
tiations. She knew that her navy was fast becoming (thanks to John Hawkins �
see Chapter 15) the best in the world and that Philip was probably behind
various plots on her life (see Chapter14).
Turning a blind eye to the privateers Since the 14th century ships had sometimes acted famous names (mostly from the stroppy on behalf of the crown with letters of marque, the West Country) who attacked Spanish and official green light to attack foreign ships and Flemish ships in the Channel and the Western steal their goodies. A slice of the action went to Approaches. (See the map in Chapter 15). these pirates, who called themselves privateers,
Nearer to home, the captain of the Isle of Wight, and to the rest to the Crown. If challenged, as
Edward Horsey, was taking a cut from French Elizabeth frequently was by Spain, she'd deny all
smugglers and pirates operating out of Mead knowledge and tut tut about her unruly subjects.
Hole on the island (it's now a tourist spot in the The Hawkinses of Plymouth were at the cutting
grounds of Queen Victoria's Osborne House � edge of this privateering and Elizabeth's attitude
check it out). Elizabeth turned a blind eye to all was typical of her fence-sitting for England.
of this, knowing that much of it would annoy Philip II had said that England couldn't take part Philip and that later, when the Dutch revolt in in the American trade, which was exactly what the Spanish Netherlands broke out, he'd keep Hawkins did. Francis Drake, Walter Ralegh, John his warships elsewhere. Hawkins and Martin Frobisher were among the 214 Part IV: Ending with Elizabeth
El Draco
Francis Drake was making a name for himself insubordination and hit the Spanish colonies'
by the 1570s. He hit a Spanish silver convoy towns on the West Coast of South America. He
near Nombre de Dios on the coast of Panama got to Southern California, looking for the mythi-
in 1573 with French Huguenots (Protestants), cal Straits of Anian, which were said to link the
neatly offending Spain, Catholics and the Atlantic with the Pacific. Good seamanship
French Government in one swift movement. and luck brought him across the Indian Ocean,
Both his brothers were killed, but he was now round the Cape of Good Hope to Sierra Leone
feared by the Spaniards. El Draco was a clever by July 1580.
pun on his name � in Spanish it means The