Born: 16 December 1485
Archbishop of Toledo's Palace, Alcalá de Henares, Spain
Married to Prince Arthur: 14 November 1501
St. Paul's Cathedral, London
Married to King Henry VIII: 11 June 1509
Franciscan Church at Greenwich
Marriage to Henry VIII dissolved: 1533
Died: 7 January 1536
Kimbolton Castle
Buried: 29 January 1536
Peterborough Abbey (now Peterborough Cathedral)
Catherine of Aragon was the youngest surviving child of
Ferdinand and Isabella, the joint rulers of Spain, and as was common for
princesses of the day, her parents almost immediately began looking for a
political match for her. When she was three year old, she was betrothed to
Arthur, the son of Henry VII of England. Arthur was not even quite two at the
time.
When she was almost 16, in 1501, Catherine made the journey
to England. It took her three months, and her ships weathered several storms,
but she safely made landfall at Plymouth on October 2, 1501. Catherine and
Arthur were married on 14 November 1501 in Old St. Paul's Cathedral, London.
Catherine was escorted by the groom's younger brother, Henry.
After the wedding and celebrations, the young couple moved
to Ludlow Castle on the Welsh border. Less than six months later, Arthur was
dead, possibly of the 'sweating sickness'. Although this marriage was short, it
was very important in the history of England, as will be apparent.
Catherine was now a widow, and still young enough to be
married again. Henry VII still had a son, this one much more robust and healthy
than his dead older brother. The English king was interested in keeping
Catherine's dowry, so 14 months after her husband's death she was betrothed to
the future Henry VIII, who was too young to marry at the time.
By 1505, when Henry was old enough to wed, Henry VII wasn't
as keen on a Spanish alliance, and young Henry was forced to repudiate the
betrothal. Catherine's future was uncertain for the next four years. When Henry
VII died in 1509 one of the new young king's first actions was to marry
Catherine. She was finally crowned Queen of England in a joint coronation
ceremony with her husband Henry VIII on June 24, 1509.
Shortly after their marriage, Catherine found herself
pregnant. This first child was a stillborn daughter born prematurely in January
1510, but this disappointment was soon followed by another pregnancy. Prince
Henry was born on January 1, 1511 and the was christened on the 5th. There were
great celebrations for the birth of the young prince, but they were halted by
the baby's death after 52 days of life. Catherine then had a miscarriage,
followed by a another short-lived son. On February 1516, she gave birth a
daughter named Mary, and this child lived. There were probably two more
pregnancies, the last recorded in 1518.
Henry was growing frustrated by his lack of a male heir, but
he remained a devoted husband. He had at least two mistresses that we know of:
Elizabeth "Bessie" Blount and Mary Boleyn. By 1526 though, he had
begun to separate from Catherine because he had fallen in love with one of her
ladies (and sister of one of his mistresses): Anne Boleyn.
It is here that the lives of Henry's first and second wives
begin to interweave. By the time his interest in Anne became common knowledge,
Catherine was 42 years old and was no longer able to conceive. Henry's main
goal now was to get a male heir, which his wife was not able to provide.
Somewhere along the way Henry began to look at the texts of Leviticus which say
that if a man takes his brother's wife, they shall be childless. As evidenced
above, Catherine and Henry were far from childless, and still had one living
child. But that child was a girl, and didn't count in Henry's mind. The King
began to petition the Pope for an annulment.
At first, Catherine was kept in the dark about Henry's plans
for their annulment and when the news got to Catherine she was very upset. She
was also at a great disadvantage since the court that would decide the case was
far from impartial. Catherine then appealed directly to the Pope, which she
felt would listen to her case since her nephew was Charles V, the Holy Roman
Emperor.
The political and legal debate continued for six years.
Catherine was adamant in that she and Arthur, her first husband and Henry's
brother, did not consummate their marriage and therefore were not truly husband
and wife. Catherine sought not only to retain her position, but also that of
her daughter Mary.
Things came to a head in 1533 when Anne Boleyn became
pregnant. Henry had to act, and his solution was to reject the power of the
Pope in England and to have Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury grant
the annulment. Catherine was to renounce the title of Queen and would be known
as the Princess Dowager of Wales, something she refused to acknowledge through
to the end of her life.
Catherine and her daughter were separated and she was forced
to leave court. She lived for the next three years in several dank and
unhealthy castles and manors with just a few servants. However, she seldom
complained of her treatment and spent a great deal of time at prayer.
On January 7, 1536, Catherine died at Kimbolton
Castle and was buried at Peterborough Abbey (later Peterborough Cathedral,
after the dissolution of the monasteries) with the ceremony due for her
position as Princess Dowager, not as a Queen of England
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