The DISTURBING Postmortem Of Henry VIII's Executed Fifth Wife

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2024
  • One of the most tragic young women of the Tudor Period was Henry VIII’s teenage fifth wife Catherine Howard. Many have considered the shocking age of the young victim of her husband, and Catherine was executed by axe inside the walls of the Tower of London. She was caught up in a shocking scandal which involved her allegedly cheating on the King with one of his closest friends. But after the axeman had taken her head clean off in one swing from his instrument of death, Catherine’s body was then taken inside of the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula within the Tower of London and she was then thrown into a rough grave and was allegedly covered in quicklime in an attempt to literally wipe her off the face off the earth, and to dissolve her remains in a quick manner as the King wanted to forget about his fifth wife. However Catherine’s fate was very shocking when compared to that of Henry’s second wife Anne Boleyn, who despite also being executed was allowed to be buried and was also executed by sword. But has the remains of Catherine Howard ever been found?

Komentáře • 60

  • @maryw246
    @maryw246 Před 5 dny +14

    Henry tried to erase Catherine’s memory and yet, here we are centuries later talking about her with much sympathy and sorrow. How do we remember Henry? We remember him as a cruel tyrant. Game, set, match , Catherine.

  • @ArtbyKatina
    @ArtbyKatina Před 11 dny +24

    This constant talk of her and her name being spoken is keeping the memory of her alive. She will never be totally wiped from existence.

  • @straingedays
    @straingedays Před 12 dny +23

    What Henry VIII "allegedly" ordered done to Catherine is the disturbing part, and speculation persists on why he wanted her body erased and forgotten. Henry by then was a tyrannical psychopath who'd executed thousands, yet Catherine was to be dissolved with quicklime after a shabby burial ?? IF true, it's a diabolical fate in their highly religious era.

  • @martynsmith5794
    @martynsmith5794 Před 12 dny +27

    I love the comment that DNA testing was never carried out; wasn’t this a Victorian exhumation? DNA testing didn’t come about until around 1984….

    • @bonnieabrs1003
      @bonnieabrs1003 Před 3 dny

      QEII refused any further tests on the bones of those buried in that church.

  • @v.britton4445
    @v.britton4445 Před 12 dny +40

    You mean what was done with her body..a post mortem is usually a medical procedure.

    • @annettefournier9655
      @annettefournier9655 Před 12 dny +8

      Post mortem literally just means after death. You are referring to post mortem examination of human remains. Slang shortens this .

    • @idagenova7519
      @idagenova7519 Před 12 dny +1

      @@annettefournier9655 We often refer to "the party post mortem" in our family!

    • @JM-zk9ou
      @JM-zk9ou Před 9 dny +3

      It's an analysis after something has ended. In business, we do post mortems of projects or incidents after they're done.

    • @sarah-michellejenniferking9753
      @sarah-michellejenniferking9753 Před 4 dny +1

      I don't think they had that back in Tudor times to be honest. 😅

    • @LouisaWatt
      @LouisaWatt Před dnem

      The term literally just means “after death”
      Post = after
      Mortem = death
      It can refer to a medical examination or simply what happened to the body after death.

  • @joshuafess4295
    @joshuafess4295 Před 11 dny +9

    The mere fact that Viscountess Rockford could’ve entertained being a liaison with helping her mistress she knew she was playing chess for life and death when the main player was the mercurial Henry 8

    • @user-oi6ln4eq7b
      @user-oi6ln4eq7b Před 5 dny +1

      I think you may mean Lady Jane Rochefort, wife of the executed George Boleyn. Nothing to do with The Rockford Files.

  • @theresalaux5655
    @theresalaux5655 Před 12 dny +14

    I cringe every time I hear about her execution. I wish she never would had married the king!😮😢

    • @JeanBray-cj3lu
      @JeanBray-cj3lu Před 9 dny +3

      Her uncle Norfolk drove her to marry Henry, telling her she would have a rich life.

  • @suellensheppard9734
    @suellensheppard9734 Před 11 dny +13

    Henry was a pervert.She was a child 😢

    • @user-oq5mt6rt8r
      @user-oq5mt6rt8r Před 10 dny +1

      No elaboration necessary, but... ?????????????

    • @alanandrew5279
      @alanandrew5279 Před 5 dny

      Probably not by the standards of that time 😢

    • @cdeford2
      @cdeford2 Před 4 dny +1

      No she wasn't. She was 17 when they married and even if an affair had started earlier she still wasn't a child. 14 was the accepted age of adulthood. Our age of adulthood is entirely arbitrary and is not a 'fact'.

  • @maryjackson1194
    @maryjackson1194 Před 5 dny +2

    The difference in treatment between Anne and Catherine was because Anne was not guilty; her charges were all trumped up because she hadn't produced a son...and Jane was waiting. Catherine most likely was more interested in young men than her old husband.

  • @lianefehrle9921
    @lianefehrle9921 Před 11 dny +5

    She actually didn’t get removed from the face of the earth. She went to dust into the earth.

  • @user-gz3pj5np6h
    @user-gz3pj5np6h Před 10 dny +3

    All his wife's will never be forgotten rip beautiful young queen

  • @J.MacInnes
    @J.MacInnes Před 12 dny +8

    Henry's midlife crisis was murder.

    • @billredding2000
      @billredding2000 Před 6 dny

      He was the worst king ever: A godless/profane murder, adulterer and thief.
      -- BR

  • @elisabethblackwood3921
    @elisabethblackwood3921 Před 12 dny +7

    Poor Katherine, she didn't deserve her end

  • @ginaandseason2774
    @ginaandseason2774 Před 8 dny +5

    You are not forgotten katherine

  • @georgiefacchinni3429
    @georgiefacchinni3429 Před 12 dny +2

    Great video thank you. ☮️💜☯️

  • @susancaleca4796
    @susancaleca4796 Před 7 dny +4

    Where was Queen Jane Grey buried?

  • @wednesdayschild3627
    @wednesdayschild3627 Před 6 dny +2

    Cranmer was such a tool. I am surprised he clung to his protestant faith at the end.

  • @OswaldoLafee
    @OswaldoLafee Před 5 dny +1

    Mel brooks said it best: “it’s good to be the king…”

  • @grassfedmilkmomma
    @grassfedmilkmomma Před 12 dny +9

    why a postmortem? we know how she died.

  • @stephaniemabee2830
    @stephaniemabee2830 Před 3 hodinami

    Quick lime actually slows down decomp so I think they may have just missed her body during the initial exhumation. She may have been buried a bit more north than the other bodies.

  • @James-ow7qi
    @James-ow7qi Před 11 dny +2

    If a post mortem was carried out today ,the cause of death would be undetermined,

    • @joiedevivre2005
      @joiedevivre2005 Před 9 dny +1

      "Postmortem" simply means "after death" - meaning what happened to her following death. You are thinking of a "postmortem examination" that is sometimes shortened to just postmortem. The word "postmortem" can refer to anything that happens after death, not just an autopsy.

  • @williamlane4805
    @williamlane4805 Před 5 dny

    Mad hatter episodes were excellent. I think the fact he brought his Shakespearian acting skills is what made it so good

  • @RetiredVDI
    @RetiredVDI Před 4 dny +1

    Does anyone else think her portrait looks like Scarlett Johansson?

  • @tdecker2937
    @tdecker2937 Před 4 dny +1

    Why would anyone willingly marry a king when the wives before met their death by execution?? He was an awful king as well as husband

    • @barbara1407
      @barbara1407 Před 4 dny +3

      Pressure would have been applied to her by her family, in order to increase the family prestige by a Royal marriage. She would have had no say in the matter, in those days.

    • @A5xxxxx
      @A5xxxxx Před 3 dny +3

      It really didn't matter if the women/girls were willing or not. They had no choice

  • @DLR300
    @DLR300 Před 7 dny +1

    Love the text on this the “chuda period” 🙄

  • @keepitsimple4629
    @keepitsimple4629 Před 10 dny +2

    I didn't hear anything DISTURBING.

  • @SusanneButler
    @SusanneButler Před 11 dny +5

    The title is misleading

  • @user-xw7ie6jv2x
    @user-xw7ie6jv2x Před 12 dny +7

    So where's the DISTURBING Postmortem then ? Clickbait once more. Come on CZcams sort out these wasters of our time.

    • @joiedevivre2005
      @joiedevivre2005 Před 9 dny +3

      I think dumping a brutally murdered teenage girl unceremoniously into a shallow grave & then covering her with quicklime to dissolve her remains is pretty disturbing.

    • @user-xw7ie6jv2x
      @user-xw7ie6jv2x Před 9 dny +2

      @@joiedevivre2005 Yes. Henry VIII was a pretty disturbing person. The stuff of which nightmares are made. I would be fascinated to have met him . I would not like the experience though. He was also , I think, a great coward as he let & made others perform the atrocious executions that he ordered . Never present himself at these horrific events.

  • @yvonne3903
    @yvonne3903 Před 5 dny

    And what about the postmortem?

  • @mareecarlick3467
    @mareecarlick3467 Před 23 hodinami

    Henry VIII used & abused women..
    Just like any man did in that time, but Henry was cruel how he went about it...
    Katherine Howard was just a nieve child & you cannot help but feel sympathy for her !

  • @user-su8qw9dw6d
    @user-su8qw9dw6d Před 8 dny +1

    She looks so old in those pics

  • @blacksmithbest1
    @blacksmithbest1 Před dnem

    Like his predecessors, King Henry Vlll believed he stood in the place of God on earth, and the inexorable power of life and death rested solely within his perogative. Executions for him were no more troublesome than a persistent fly on his drum stick or a gnat in his chalice of wine. The quickest and most permanent solution to any gnawing annoyance that piqued his pride and disgraced his glory was blood dripping from the axe's whetted edge or sword. Guts and gore were was his daily bread and water; he had no more consternation for countless people he sentenced to death than for his numerous dalliances, flirtations, fornications and adulteries. A megalomaniac of the first magnitude. The one good that issued forth from his loins was his daughter, Queen Elizabeth the First, that "bright and occidental star."

  • @vgovger4373
    @vgovger4373 Před 11 dny +1

    She looks like Scar-Jo

  • @colinglen4505
    @colinglen4505 Před 4 hodinami

    Henry was a monster!

  • @PRettyPInk53100
    @PRettyPInk53100 Před 12 dny +1

    This is about the movie 🍿 goood stuff

  • @mirrorblue100
    @mirrorblue100 Před 3 dny

    Nice guy.

  • @davidsmith8728
    @davidsmith8728 Před 11 dny +3

    No buggering about with divorce courts in those days. Something to be said for the old traditional ways.

    • @ryancarper595
      @ryancarper595 Před 2 dny

      Dont like the broad, find any old reason, true or not and off with their heads. Despicable, I loath my ex wife - but I could never do what this tyrant king did. Besides that sort of behavior would make me as bad as her...