Showing posts with label Stuarts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stuarts. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 May 2020

Homosexuality and Britain’s Stuart Monarchs, 1603-1714

Dr Tony Claydon
Professor of Early Modern History
t.claydon@bangor.ac.uk

Three Stuart rulers have been suspected of having had homosexual relationships, both at the time they were ruling, and in subsequent comment and scholarship. The case for James VI and I (king of Scotland from 1587, and king of England 1603-1625) seems the most convincing. Strong evidence (in the form of personal letters, and comment by courtiers on the king’s behaviour in public), appears to suggest sexual relations between the king and two of his courtiers. First, there was Robert Carr, the royal favourite from 1607 until his scandal-driven fall from grace in 1615; and George Villiers, the duke of Buckingham, who displaced Carr in James’s affections almost immediately. It is true that platonic male friendships in the early modern period could exhibit closer physical contact than we are used to today, and that the rhetoric used to describe such friendships has shifted in the intervening four hundred years. It is therefore right to be cautious before assuming that expressions of love and desire, or descriptions by others of intimate bodily connection, automatically prove what we would call homosexual activity. However, some of the sources are very difficult to interpret any other way, and the historian Michael Young has ridiculed the determination of some scholars to deny homosexuality in the face of the facts as we have them reported. 

The case of William III (reigned 1689-1702) is more problematic. He was certainly widely accused of homosexuality. He had come to the throne in the ‘Glorious’ revolution of 1688-9, which had displaced the previous king, James II, and the ejected monarch’s supporters, the Jacobites, levelled charges against William that he was sleeping with his two favourites. First there was William Bentinck, his long-standing friend from the Netherlands; and then Arnold Joost van Keppel, the handsome courtier who became close to the king from the mid 1690s. But, one might think, Jacobites would say this. The accusation of homosexuality was part of a wider polemical campaign, denouncing William for a litany of crimes, including tyranny, usurpation, treason against the nation’s interests, and bloodlust in pursuing his war with France. It is true that Bentinck warned William that his closeness to Keppel in the last years of his reign was being noticed and was giving the king a reputation for unnatural sexual behaviour. But, again, one might think he would say this. Bentinck was, by this time, the displaced favourite. He was disappointed and jealous having been ousted from a position of influence and as the monarch’s best friend and confidant. William’s chief of propaganda, Bishop Gilbert Burnet, idolised the king, but he did say in later memoires that William was blemished by a secret vice ‘of one sort’. This is suggestive, but Burnet never expanded what he meant, and may just have fallen for court gossip. Most of the rest of the evidence is circumstantial: there may have been no smoke without fire, or perhaps there was so much smoke that the lack of clear fire is telling.


The case of Queen Anne (reigned 1702-1714) is similar to William’s. She exchanged passionate letters with her childhood friend Sarah Churchill, who became duchess of Marlborough, and later with the courtier Abigail Masham. But these were less explicitly physical in their references than the correspondence between James and his likely lovers; and as was noted above, the language of ordinary affection in the early modern world can seem more erotic to twenty-first century eyes than its original authors intended. Popular pamphlets alluded to lesbian practices at court. But by the early eighteenth century the print industry had mastered the art of libellous character assassination, and - as the 2018 film The Favourite made clear (it was far more accurate in depicting general political atmospheres, than portraying unimpeachable historical detail, especially about royal sexual activities) - this was an age of deep and hostile faction, where one side would say almost anything about another. Churchill and Masham were from the opposed Whig and Tory parties, and so may have been caught in the vicious partisan crossfire of the era. Also, as with Bentinck, Churchill may have fanned rumours about her successor to the queen’s favour out of chagrin at her loss of place. As with William, there may well have been homosexual relations in the modern sense, but the direct evidence for such activity is questionable. 

What are the deeper historical lessons of this brief survey of Stuart homosexuality? At a first and most human level, in so far as physical sex occurred between monarchs and someone of the same gender in the Stuart age - or even if some of the relationships stopped at deep non-physical love - it is a reminder of variety and ambiguity of human emotion, even at court. It can be difficult to categorise people’s sexualities into neat slots, especially with patchy source records; the ways we talk about love and sex have shifted radically since the early modern era, and it is worth noting that all the monarchs we have covered, and all the favourites, contracted heterosexual marriages, whatever their private proclivities. Many of those marriages worked at the political level, and some were personally successful too. William III was utterly distraught when his wife Queen Mary II died; Sarah and John Churchill were a formidable team; Robert Carr appears to have been prepared to murder to be with the woman of his choice (this was the scandal that ended his career). Second, the common accusation of homosexuality levelled at monarchs reminds us of the highly personal nature of rule in the Stuart era. This period has been presented as being marked by the rise of parliament, the press, and the power of the people exercised through a vigorous public sphere. This is true to an extent, but the efforts put into establishing the monarch’s personal affections, and advertising any perceived defects in them, remind us that this was a world in which politics still mostly happened at court, political action centred on a still very influential monarch, and the individual personalities of courtiers still very much mattered. The ruler’s personal reputation for virtue was essential for their rule, and attacks on it were serious. People needed to know who the monarch was close to, the basis of that relationship, and how to undermine the standing and respect given to rivals or enemies. Finally, though, the trajectory of discussion of royal sexuality may indeed point to a period where a wider public was becoming more important. James VI and I’s sexuality was mainly discussed in a narrow and elite circle, which played factional games of access, exclusion, and libel to gain influence. By Anne’s time, however, discussion was in a widely read press, and was a tool of mass political parties with supporters in every community in the land.

Wednesday, 8 January 2020

Charles I: An Absolute Downfall

William Luke Flanagan
BA History
Charles I is seen by many as the ultimate example of England’s final absolutist monarch. His reign lasted from 1625 until 1649, however, in those 24 years the status of the monarchy’s legitimacy had radically shifted due to the growth of pro-republicanism. Despite the gradual increase in parliamentary influence during the Tudor Dynasty, the monarch was still seen as the sovereign ruler of England. Even King James I of England managed to stabilise a relatively uneasy relationship with Parliament despite opposition from Puritan and Arminian Members of Parliament. The question is how did Charles fall from grace? And how did the concept of absolutism die in England with him? This can be attributed to several factors. Firstly, Charles’s unenlightened thinking reinforced by his Catholic sympathies after marriage with Henrietta Maria. Secondly, his dictatorial means of raising money. Thirdly, his expensive foreign policy failings and, ultimately, the English Civil War resulted in his absolute downfall which had long term consequences on the role of Parliament in the future.
On religious policy, Charles was particularly out of touch with the House of Commons as he was a heavily influenced Catholic due to his marriage with Henrietta Maria and the birth of his sons Charles and James. This combined with the appointment of William Laud as Archbishop of Canterbury, and the announcement of a new Anglican Book of Prayer to the Presbyterian Church in Scotland, made many in England suspect that Charles wanted to return England back to Catholicism gradually. Charles I’ s belief in divine right to rule was critiqued in the Commons which demonstrates the modernising ideals of English politics compared to the situation in Europe at the time. Parliament feared this mostly because of the threat of papal dominance, and also of the monarch exercising dictatorial powers on the country with justification of religion like in the medieval era, which would undermine Parliament’s authority. With these policies being enacted by Charles relatively early in his reign, it is arguably understandable why Parliament quickly turned on him and openly rebelled against him.
King Charles I (van Dyck, oil on canvas,
1635-1636, NPG 843, https://www.npg.org.uk/
Charles-I, CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)
Foreign policy failings like the wars against Spain and France along with Thomas Wentworth’s poor leadership against the Scottish Covenanters and Irish rebels proved that Charles was incompetent. His foreign policy however demonstrated his contra-dictory tendencies, as he supported the Swedish and German Protestant states against the Catholic Habsburgs with mercenaries despite himself being Catholic. It clearly demonstrated that he didn’t truly care about religion so long as he maintained power. His war with France, despite being married to a French Catholic, is more evidence to suggest that Charles prioritised prestige and wealth over religious principle.
His financial policies, however, were the most important factor in his demise, as he behaved like a ruthless tyrant in attempting to raise money. After dissolving Parliament in 1629, which began the ‘personal rule’ - or the ’11-year tyranny’ as coined by Whig historians like S. R Gardiner - Charles needed new methods to raise money. These included forced loans, the ‘Distraint of Knighthood’, which was the selling of knighthoods to wealthy nobles in return for payment, and Ship Money where coastal towns provided either warships or money to build said ships to the
Crown for national defence. All of these were enacted under obscure medieval laws ensuring that they weren’t classified as taxes, because, since Magna Carta, only Parliament had the authority to raise them. Failure to meet the quotas imposed by the King saw people prosecuted by his own Court of the Star Chamber with executions being common. This goes to show Charles’s authoritarian attitude and resulted in his popularity completely faltering by the time Parliament was recalled in 1640, ending his ‘personal rule’. This was more important than the other factors as it clearly demonstrated Charles’ ambition to avoid Parliament at all cost, in a similar fashion to the medieval kings of England, so that he could retain his power. After all, Charles recalled Parliament to get money and the ‘Grand Remonstrance’ passed due to John Pym, Oliver Cromwell and other radical Puritans in 1641 highlighting his dubious financing methods.
In conclusion, Charles’ fate was almost doomed from the start since his marriage to Henrietta Maria. His methods of raising money made him incredibly unpopular amongst the gentry, and his religious policies indirectly threatened civil war sooner rather than later. His foreign policy disasters proved his incompetence in war management as was demonstrated in the English Civil War where he squared off against Parliament. Defeats at Marston Moor, Newbury, Naseby and Preston (1644 – 48) guaranteed that Charles would be shown no mercy at the hands of Parliament after causing the deaths of thousands. Charles’ execution and the later brief Republic under the ‘Barebones Parliament’ and Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell transformed the legacy of monarchical rule in England forever. Charles I’s reign is the greatest example of how clashes between tradition and modernity are at odds with each other, and can lead to change. After Charles, there was never another monarch who tried to challenge the role of Parliament in much the same manner. It is an example of how England, and later the British political system, was way ahead of other European nations like France in terms of its conceptualisation of a robust Parliament: this would only be realised elsewhere during the so called ‘long nineteenth century’, as coined by British historian Eric Hobsbawm. These 24-years of British history guaranteed Parliament’s place in politics for the foreseeable future. It also epitomised the fears of religious differences and dominance, along with how crucial constitutionality and limitations are to prevent human beings exploiting royal powers for personal use.