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Elizabeth Holland

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Elizabeth Holland (died 1547/8), commonly known as Bess Holland, was an English courtier. She was the mistress of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk and maid-of-honour to his niece, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII of England.

Life

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Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk After Hans Holbein the Younger. An embellished portrait possibly by or after Henry Stone

The daughter or sister of the Duke's secretary, it is often said that Bess had worked for eight years as a laundress in the household of Norfolk's wife, Elizabeth Stafford, Duchess of Norfolk.[1] This is from one of the Duchess of Norfolk's letters in which she describes Bess as a "churl’s daughter who was but a washer in my nursery for eight years".[2][3] Kate Emerson points out that since she was a gentlewoman, she was probably not a laundress in the household, or the children's nurse, but may have been the children's governess. Bess was certainly on good terms with Lady Mary Howard, Norfolk's daughter.[4]

When Anne Boleyn was created Marquess of Pembroke, Bess Holland was one of her maids of honour.[4]

A book of hours belonging to Anne Boleyn and currently preserved in the British Library contains the names of Elizabeth and Henry Reppes,[5] written in the hand of Henry Reppes (d. 1558).[6] It is also inscribed by Anne Boleyn in English, Be daly prove you shall me fynde To be to yu bothe lovynge and kynde, and while her lover King Henry VIII gallantly replied in French, Si silon mon affection la sufvenance sera en voz prieres ne seray yers oblie car vostre suis Henry R. a jammays, which in English would be If you remember my love in your prayers as strongly as I adore you, I shall hardly be forgotten, for I am yours. Henry R. forever.[7]

Historian Sylvia Barbara Soberton writes:

One of the most interesting aspects of Anne’s last days is the question of the identity of the four women who accompanied her to the scaffold on 19 May 1536. Eyewitnesses described them as young, and yet the women who accompanied Anne in the Tower of London were by no means young. Is it possible that in his last act of mercy, Henry VIII allowed Anne to have her most trusted women with her in her last hours? A book of hours belonging to Anne Boleyn and currently preserved in the British Library contains the names of Elizabeth and Henry Reppes. Elizabeth Reppes served as Anne Boleyn’s maid of honour when she was known as Bessie Holland. Mistress Holland accompanied Anne to her coronation in 1533 and was placed in Anne’s household because she was mistress of the Queen’s uncle, Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk. Why does Bessie Holland’s married name appear in the book of hours that belonged to Anne Boleyn? This overlooked connection between the Queen and her maid raises the possibility that Bessie Holland accompanied Anne to the scaffold and perhaps received this book as a gift.[8]

She was still at court in 1537, when she rode in the funeral cortege of Queen Jane.[4]

Family

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The Visitations of Norfolk and The Gawdy Papers identify Holland as "Elizabeth Holland da. to Thomas Holland of Swynested";[9][10] American writer Kate Emerson, in A Who's Who of Tudor Women, claims Elizabeth Holland was the daughter (some sources[according to whom?] say the sister) of John Holland of Wortwell Hall in Redenhall, Norfolk and a kinswoman, probably a niece, of John Hussey, 1st Baron Hussey of Sleaford.[4]

Holland's brother, George, signed for her jewellery “for and in the name of my said sister” when it was returned to her in February 1547. After the Duke of Norfolk's fall the commissioners had seized rings, brooches, strings of pearls, silver spoons, ivory tables, and other treasures from her lodgings at Kenninghall, where she had at her disposal an outer chamber, a bedchamber, and an adjoining garret.[11] Her eldest brother, Thomas, was involved in a dispute with her husband over her inheritance after her death.[12]

John Holland, of Wortwell Hall, in Redenhall, trustee to the Duke of Norfolk, died 10 February 1542.[13] However, Bernard Henry Holland in The Lancashire Hollands also separates this family of Hollands from that of Elizabeth and her brother George:

Another Holland, George, was secretary to the same Duke, when he was arrested for treason in 1547, and the officials found in the house Elizabeth Holland, a mistress of the Duke. But George Holland was certainly one of the Hollands of Estovening, Lincolnshire, and so, probably, was Miss Elizabeth, descendants from Sir Thomas Holland, who mostly lived in the Holy Land, and his wife, Elizabeth, the "devilish dame." In the seventeenth century the Hollands of Quidenham were for two generations trustees of the Howard estates in Norfolk.[14]

This other Holland family does have an apparent abundance of Elizabeths and an eldest son named Thomas, but lacks a George,[15] while Thomas Holland of Swinsted did have both a son named George and an eldest son named Thomas.[16]

On 3 July 1551 Thomas Holland of Swynested, Lincolnshire, wrote to Simon Lowe, Citizen and Merchant Scissor-dealer of London, regarding a statute staple for 40 pounds payable to Lowe next Bartholomew-tide. The Gawdy Papers here describes him as "son and heir apparent of Thos. Holland, Esq., sen."[17] This again fits with the father of Thomas and George.[18]

Kate Emerson writes:

Jeffrey Miles or Myles of Stoke Nayland, Suffolk, is identified as her husband by Gerard Brenan and Edward Phillips Stratham in The House of Howard (1908), but a hundred years later, the Oxford DNB states that her husband was Henry Reppes of Mendham (1509-February 10, 1558), that she married him in 1547, and that she died in childbirth in 1547/8.[4]

This confusion is again due to the mix-up of the two families. This other Holland family did have a daughter called Elizabeth Holland who married Jeffrey Miles of Stoke Nayland, Suffolk,[15] but the Duke of Norfolk's Elizabeth married Henry Reppes. Thomas Holland of Swynested was first Comptroller of the Household, and afterwards Treasurer to the Duke of Richmond, the husband of Mary and the son-in-law of Norfolk. His son, George Holland, was something of a family historian, and Francis Blomefield was given the opportunity to study his papers. George was the secretary to the Duke of Norfolk, and writes of him:[19]

Geo. Holland was Secretary to the most worthy and mighty prince, Thomas Duke of Norfolk, grandfather to the present Duke, and served him in that calling, and Clerk of the Counsail in the warrs both in France, England, and Scotland, and when he was committed to the Tower, and his son of Surrey beheaded in the last year of King Henry the VIIIth, and being most worthily delivered thence by Q. Mary, I served him in that callinge till his death, and was with him against Sir Tho. Wiatt his godson, where he was most slenderly appoynted by his own men & capt; trayterously.[19]

Thomas Holland of Swynested (1486[20]–1558[21]) was married twice, first to Jane, daughter of William Hardeby of Evedon, and secondly to Jane, daughter of Henry Smyth of Walpole in Norfolk. His son and heir Thomas Holland of Estovening (b.1512[20]) married Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Smyth of Walpole in Norfolk, sister of Jane.[20] George Holland of Croyland (1514[22]–1567/8[22]), second son, married Elizabeth Lewes and had an illegitimate daughter named Elizabeth, his heiress. Holland also had two sisters. Dorothy (d.1571[23]), wife to William Hunston of Walpole (1519/20[24]–1566[23]), and mother of William Hunston of Boston in Lincoln (1540[23]–1586[23]), Edward Hunston who drowned in saving a child, Henry Hunston, Jane who married Edward Knightbridge, and another daughter who married Tupholme of Boston. Frances married Gregory Woolmer or Woolmer of Bloxham (d.1575[25]), the son of Richard Wolmer of Swineshead and Isabel Upton (d.1564[26]). They had Sir Gregory Woolmer (d.1618/9), Jasper, Samuel, Susan, Sarah, Beatrix, Anne and Mary who married Bolle. From her father's second marriage Holland had the brothers Henry Holland of Gonville Gollege, Cambridge, Vicar of Boston (d.1584), who married Joane Fox; James Holland; and Christopher Holland of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, who was baptised at Spalding on 26 August 1546 and had Edward Holland, student at Cambridge in 1601.[16][22][20][24][27][28][25][21]

The fall of Norfolk

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Despite a relationship of fifteen years duration with the Duke, when he and his son, Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, were arrested in December 1546, Elizabeth Holland gave information which helped to seal their fates.[29] Kate Emerson points out that she probably had no choice.[4] Surrey was executed on the eve of the King's own death. Norfolk's execution was not carried out after the King's death; instead, he was kept in the Tower of London throughout the minority reign of King Edward VI, and was released in 1553, at the start of the reign of Queen Mary I, whose Catholic beliefs were similar to his.

In April, 1547 or earlier, Edmond of Sybeton, Suffolk, sent to Elizabeth Holland, a receipt for 100 pounds from Mrs. Holland by hands of Mr. Henry to be paid unto my Lord of Norfolk his Grace. It appears that Elizabeth sent money to the Duke of Norfolk whilst he was incarcerated in the Tower.[12]

In 1547 Elizabeth Holland married Henry Reppes (d.1558) of South Reppes, Norfolk,[30] She was given a pardon on July 1547, but by November she had died in childbirth. Her nephew, Thomas Holland, was made her heir.[31]

The arms of Smyth of Walpole St. Peter, Norfolk

Henry Reppes (d.1558) was the son of Henry Reppes of Thorp Market in Norfolk and Elizabeth, daughter of Edmond Grymston of Rushangles in Suffolk, Esq. His paternal uncle John Reppes of West Walton in Norfolk, Esq. (d.1561[32]), was married to Margaret, daughter and one of the heirs of Henry Smyth of Walpole in Mershland, gentleman.[33] Margaret was the sister of Bess Holland's mother or stepmother Jane, and her sister-in-law Elizabeth, making the two families related through several connections.

In 1547 or 1548 Symon Lowe of London wrote to William Andros, Beeball. The nature of their correspondence is recorded in The Gawdy Papers:

Andros’ son Edmond, who is with Lowe, is in good health. Harry Reppes married Elizabeth Holland of Mendham, who died in childbed, the Caesarean operation being performed. Reppes says the child was born alive and claims tenancy by the curtesy in her lands. Lowe thinks it impossible and, fearing foul play, asks Andros or his friends about Mendham or Harleston to make cautious enquiry. Thomas, Elizabeth’s eldest brother and heir, sold the land to Lowe, but unthriftily spent the money and more (to the amount of 1,000 l.) within a year, so cannot defend the title except at Lowe’s charges. Phillipa Oon, of Mendham, was the midwife; Richard Spayne of Harleston was the surgeon who operated; Edmond Halle, another surgeon of Mendham or Harleston, was present but refused to operate. One William Rochester of Mendham or Harleston has been tampering with the witnesses; he is “truly the falsest and craftiest man in the country,” for “a forty shilling” he will confess all, if well handled. Get the witnesses to a tavern, make them talk, and have men by to hear them.[12]

After her death, Henry Reppes remarried to Anne Wootton or Wotton (1536[34]–1587[35]). Anne was the daughter of John Wootton of North Tuddenham in Norfolk and[34] the great-niece of Henry Wotton. Anne was the widow of Henry Reppes's nephew Thomas Woodhouse of Hickling, Norfolk, the son of his sister by her husband Sir William Woodhouse.[33][36] After the death of Henry Reppes on 10 February 1557/8,[17] Anne married thirdly Bassingbourne Gawdy (d. 1590).[34]

Mistress Holland's jewels and costume

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An inventory of jewels belonging to Elizabeth Holland survives. It includes a diamond ring, which had been a gift from Mary Shelton and a sapphire ring given to by Mistress Freeston. She had a brooch with a picture of Cupid, one with the Trinity, and another of Our Lady of Pity with Christ in her lap. She owned a gold pin case, and three gold button clasps for partlets each set with two "counterfeit" stones. A girdle of gold chain links had a "tablet" or locket of gold with the Virgin Mary holding the "vernacle" or veil with the image of Jesus, and a jacinth stone on its other side. She owned four pairs of billiments, upper and nether, of goldsmith's work for her French hoods, and a velvet-covered prayer book with gold mounts.[37]

An inventory of her clothes includes French-style gowns of black velvet, satin, and damask, some with "placards" (stomachers) of the same fabric. She had two farthingales made of red Bruges satin. Her partlets were made of lawn or of black velvet. She owned a velvet side-saddle, and practised embroidery and had a cushion cover on a frame, another was worked with her own initials "E.H".[38]

References

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  1. ^ Michael A. R. Graves, ‘Howard, Thomas, third duke of Norfolk (1473–1554)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 accessed 21 Aug 2009
  2. ^ Tudor Life – The Tudor Society Magazine (PDF).
  3. ^ "Henry VIII: June 1537, 26-30 | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Emerson, Kathy Lynn (11 October 2020). A Who's Who of Tudor Women. Kathy Lynn Emerson. pp. Entry for ‘Elizabeth Holland (by 1512 – before 1557)’.
  5. ^ "The British Library MS Viewer". www.bl.uk. Archived from the original on 11 March 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  6. ^ Sylwia Sobczak Zupanec, "An Overlooked Connection of Anne Boleyn's Maid of Honour, Elizabeth Holland, with BL King's MS. 9", British Library Journal (2017).
  7. ^ Wight, C. "Details of an item from the British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts". www.bl.uk. Archived from the original on 28 June 2022. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  8. ^ Soberton, Sylvia Barbara (21 August 2022). "In Search of the Ladies-in-Waiting to Anne Boleyn". History News Network. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  9. ^ The Publications of the Harleian Society. Harleian Society. 1891. p. 231.
  10. ^ Manuscripts, Great Britain Royal Commission on Historical (1885). Report on the Manuscripts of the Family of Gawdy, Formerly of Norfolk. Eyre and Spottiswoode. p. 2. Edmond . . . of Sybeton, Suffolk, to Elizabeth Holland [daughter of Thos. Holland of Swinested, Linc.]
  11. ^ David M. Head, The Ebbs and Flows of Fortune: The Life of Thomas Howard, Third Duke of Norfolk (University of Georgia, 1995), p. 253.
  12. ^ a b c Manuscripts, Great Britain Royal Commission on Historical (1885). Report on the Manuscripts of the Family of Gawdy, Formerly of Norfolk. Eyre and Spottiswoode. p. 2.
  13. ^ Bayne, A. D. Royal illustrated history of eastern England, civil, military, political, and ecclesiastical : from the earliest period to the present time, including a survey of the eastern counties: physical features, geology and natural history of Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, description of antiquities including an account of agriculture, manufactures, trades, &c., memoirs of county families and eminent men of every period. Getty Research Institute. Great Yarmouth [England] : J. Macdonald. p. 147.
  14. ^ Holland, Bernard Henry (1917). The Lancashire Hollands. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. London : J. Murray.
  15. ^ a b Blomefield, Francis; Parkin, Charles (1805). An essay towards a topographical history of the county of Norfolk : containing a description of the towns, villages, and hamlets, with the foundations of monasteries, churches, chapels, chantries, and other religious buildings ... likewise, an historical account of the castles, seats, and manors, their present and ancient owners. University of California Libraries. London : Miller. pp. [to face page 344.
  16. ^ a b Cook, Robert; Arms, England-College of (1881). The Visitation of the County of Lincoln in 1562-4. George Bell. p. 67.
  17. ^ a b Manuscripts, Great Britain Royal Commission on Historical (1885). Report on the Manuscripts of the Family of Gawdy, Formerly of Norfolk. Eyre and Spottiswoode. p. 3.
  18. ^ Cook, Robert; Arms, England-College of (1881). The Visitation of the County of Lincoln in 1562-4. George Bell. pp. 66–67.
  19. ^ a b "Hundred of Giltcross: Quidenham | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  20. ^ a b c d Maddison, A. R. (Arthur Roland); Larken, Arthur Staunton (1902). Lincolnshire pedigrees. University of Michigan. London. pp. 505–506.
  21. ^ a b Catalogue description: Will of Thomas Hollande of Spalding, Lincolnshire. Reference: PROB 11/40/74. Date: 10 February 1558. Held by: The National Archives, Kew. 10 February 1558. Item I geve unto Gregory Woollmer my sonne in lawe one horse gelding or mare by the discrecion of [...] unto of Thomas Hollande my sonne and ffrannces Woolmer wife of Gregory Woolmer all my wifes gownes
  22. ^ a b c Maddison, A. R. (Arthur Roland); Larken, Arthur Staunton (1902). Lincolnshire pedigrees. University of Michigan. London. p. 507.
  23. ^ a b c d Maddison, A. R. (Arthur Roland); Larken, Arthur Staunton (1902). Lincolnshire pedigrees. University of Michigan. London. p. 523.
  24. ^ a b "HUNSTON, William (1519/20-66), of Walpole St. Peter, Norf. | History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org. Retrieved 26 October 2023.
  25. ^ a b Maddison, Arthur Roland (1888). Lincolnshire Wills ...: A.D. 1500-1600. J. Williamson printer. p. 67.
  26. ^ Maddison, Arthur Roland (1888). Lincolnshire Wills ...: A.D. 1500-1600. J. Williamson printer. p. 78.
  27. ^ Maddison, A. R. (Arthur Roland); Larken, Arthur Staunton (1902). Lincolnshire pedigrees. University of Michigan. London. pp. 523–524.
  28. ^ A R (Arthur Roland ) Maddison, Arthur Staunton Larken (1904). Lincolnshire Pedigrees. University of Michigan. Mithcell & Hughes. p. 1105.
  29. ^ Hart
  30. ^ "Reppes, Henry, gentleman, of Mendham, Suffolk - Norfolk Record Office Online Catalogue. Date(s): 1558 (Creation)". nrocatalogue.norfolk.gov.uk. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  31. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1548–1549 (London, 1924), pp. 92, 140: Oxford DNB, Howard, Thomas, third duke of Norfolk (1473–1554), magnate and soldier, by Michael A. R. Graves
  32. ^ Society, Monumental Brass. "John Repps & wives Margaret & Thomasene | Portfolio of Brasses". Monumental Brass Society. Retrieved 27 October 2023.
  33. ^ a b 'Reppes', in Rye (ed.), The Visitacion of Norfolk, pp. 230-31 (Internet Archive).
  34. ^ a b c 'Hundred of Giltcross, West-Herling', in F. Blomefield, ed. C. Parkin, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk, Volume I (William Miller, London 1805), pp. 297-312, at pp. 305-06; 'St Cleere's Manor, North Tudenham', Volume X (William Miller, London 1809), pp. 263-64 (Google).
  35. ^ "Mrs Anne Gawdye ye wife of mr Bassingborne Gawdy se.[nior] was buried ix° Junij 1587". Parish Registers of West Harling, Norfolk, commencing 1538: Norfolk Record Office, Norwich, ref. PD 27/1 (Norfolk Record Office).
  36. ^ 'Woodhouse', in W. Rye (ed.), The Visitacion of Norfolk, made and taken by William Hervey, Clarencieux King of Arms, anno 1563, enlarged with another Visitacion made by Clarenceux Cook: with many other descents (etc.), Harleian Society XXXII (London 1891), pp. 320-23, at p. 321 (Internet Archive).
  37. ^ George Nott, Works of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey and of Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder, vol. 1 (London, 1815), pp. cxvii–cxix.
  38. ^ George Nott, Works of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey and of Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder, vol. 1 (London, 1815), pp. cxvi–cxvii.

Further reading

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  • House of Treason: the Rise and Fall of a Tudor Dynasty by Robert Hutchinson, 2009
  • A Tudor Tragedy: Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk by Neville Williams, 1989
  • The Ebbs and Flows of Fortune: Life of Thomas Howard, the Duke of Norfolk by David M. Head, 1995
  • Henry VIII's Last Victim: The Life and Times... by Jessie Childs, 2008