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Letter of Katharine of Aragon
to her father, King Ferdinand II of Aragon
2 December 1505
Background
The following letter was written in Spanish by Katharine while she was
Princess Dowager of Wales. Katharine only wrote in English after her marriage
to King Henry VIII. Her mother, the famous Queen Isabella of Castile,
had died in the previous year; her father was beset by diplomatic troubles,
particularly with the English (he was unable to force Castilian acceptance
of a trade agreement with England, which resulted in loss of money for
the parsimonious King Henry VII.)
In 1502, Katharine's husband and Henry VII's heir,
Prince Arthur, had died. Katharine was put in an untenable position, and
spent seven years of miserable widowhood in England before Arthur's brother
married her. Her father was never able to pay the full amount of her
dowry to Prince Arthur. This issue became even more pressing when she
was then betrothed to Prince Henry. Ferdinand and Henry VII were equally
wily monarchs, each unwilling to compromise in order to make Katharine's
life in England bearable.
The marriage to Prince Henry, though formally
recognized in 1504, was not to be celebrated until two years later when
the prince came of age. The Spanish ambassador Dr De Puebla had negotiated
the contract, and assumed Henry VII would gladly support Katharine for
those two years. But Henry gave her barely enough money for food; she
had no money to pay servants' wages or buy clothing, among other things.
She lived in extreme poverty and with a frightening lack of attention
or respect. Henry VII made it clear that if her dowry was not paid, he
would renege on the marriage to Prince Henry. And Ferdinand made it clear
that he lacked the funds to pay the dowry; indeed, it was not even a priority
in his tumultuous life.
In this letter, Katharine mentions an 'Infanta
Isabel'; this was her older sister Isabella. She also unfairly maligns
the amiable Dr De Puebla. Katharine's duenna Dona Elvira despised De Puebla
for political reasons and poisoned the young woman's mind against him.
This letter, a litany of complaints - all politely
phrased - is fascinating, and offers invaluable insight into Katharine's
life as Princess of Wales. She was poor, hungry, and desperately ill;
'I shall soon die,' she wrote to her father in despair. She survived,
of course, but these conditions explain why she considered her marriage
to King Henry VIII to be so miraculous. This letter
also offers a funny glimpse into Henry VII's miserly nature.
Most high and most puissant lord,
Hitherto I have not wished to let your highness know the affairs here,
that I might not give you annoyance, and also thinking that they would
improve; but it appears that the contrary is the case, and that each
day my troubles increase; and all this on account of the doctor de Puebla,
to whom it has not sufficed that from the beginning he transacted a thousand
falsities against the service of your highness, but now he has given
me new trouble; and because I believe your highness will think I complain
without reason, I desire to tell you all that has passed.
Your highness shall know, as I have often written to you, that since
I came into England, I have not had a single maravedi, except a certain
sum which was given me for food, and this such a sum that it did not
suffice without my having many debts in London; and that which troubles
me more is to see my servants and maidens so at a loss, and that they
have not the wherewith to get clothes; and this I believe is all done
by hand of the doctor, who, notwithstanding your highness has written,
sending him word that he should have money from the king of England, my
lord that their costs should be given them, yet, in order not to trouble
him, will rather entrench upon and neglect the service of your highness.
Now, my lord, a few days ago, donna Elvira de Manuel asked my leave
to go to Flanders to be cured of a complaint which has come into her
eyes, so that she lost the sight of one of them; and there is a physician
in Flanders who cured the infanta donna Isabel of the same disease which
which she is affected. She labored to bring him here so as not to leave
me, but could never succeed with him; and I, since if she were blind
she could not serve me, durst not hinder her journey. I begged the
king of England, my lord, that until our donna Elvira should return
his highness would command that I should have, as a companion, an old
English lady, or that he would take me to his court; and I imparted
all this to the doctor, thinking to make of the rogue a true man; but
it did not suffice me - because he not only drew me to court, in which
I have some pleasure, because I had supplicated the king for an asylum,
but he negotiated that the king should dismiss all my household, and
take away my chamber-equipage, and send to place it in a house of his
own, so that I should not in any way be mistress of it.
And all this does not weigh upon me, except that it concerns the service
of your highness, doing the contrary of that which ought to be done.
I entreat your highness that you will consider that I am your daughter,
and that consent not that on account of the doctor I should have such
trouble, but that you will command some ambassador to come here, who
may be a true servant of your highness, and for no interest will cease to
do that which pertains to your service. And if in this your highness
trusts me not, do you command some person to come here, who may inform
you of the truth, and then you will have one who will better serve you.
As for me, I have had so much pain and annoyance that I have lost my
health in a great measure; so that for two months I have had severe tertian
fevers, and this will be the cause that I shall soon die. I supplicate
your highness to pardon me that I presume to entreat you to do me so
great favor as to command that this doctor may not remain; because he
certainly does not fulfill the service of your highness, which he postpones
to the service of the worst interest which can be. Our Lord guard the
life and most royal estate of your highness, and ever increase it as
I desire. From Richmond, the second of December.
My lord, I had forgotten to remind your highness how you know that
it was agreed that you were to give, as a certain part of my dowry,
the plate and jewels that I brought; and yet I am certain that the king
of England, my lord, will not receive anything of plate nor of jewels
which I have used; because he told me himself that he was indignant that
they should say in his kingdom that he took away from me my ornaments.
And as little may your highness expect that he will take them in account
and will return them to me; because I am certain he will not do so, nor
is any such thing customary here. In like wise the jewels which I brought
from thence [Spain] valued at a great sum. The king would not take
them in the half of the value, because here all these things are esteemed
much cheaper, and the king has so many jewels that he rather desires
money than them. I write thus to your highness because I know that
there will be great embarrassment if he will not receive them, except
at less price. It appears to me that it would be better if your highness
should take them for yourself, and should give to the king of England,
my lord, his money. Your highness will see what would serve you best,
and with this I shall be most content.
The humble servant of your highness, who kisses your hands.
to Letters of the Six
Wives of Henry VIII
to Primary Sources
to
Tudor England
to Katharine
of Aragon website
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