
0:00
9:17
Mary Tudor is often remembered through a single, brutal label: “Bloody Mary.”
But in the summer of 1553, she revealed a very different side of herself.
In this second part of my series on the two tough cookies of 1553, I explore how Mary I faced down danger, isolation, and overwhelming odds to claim her throne - not through force of arms, but through resolve, leadership, and legitimacy.
Drawing on contemporary accounts, including Robert Wingfield’s Vita Mariae, this video looks at:
- How years of pressure under Henry VIII and Edward VI shaped Mary’s resilience
- Why her flight to East Anglia in July 1553 was a calculated act of courage, not desperation
- How she rallied men, towns, and even the royal fleet, without a pitched battle
- And how her victorious entry into London marked the triumph of legitimacy over force
Weitere Episoden von „Tudor History with Claire Ridgway“



Verpasse keine Episode von “Tudor History with Claire Ridgway” und abonniere ihn in der kostenlosen GetPodcast App.







