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| Blessed Margaret Pole, Pray for us ! |
βͺ Saint of the Day : May 28
βͺ Born :
β’ 14 August 1473 in Somerset, Wilshire, England as Margaret Plantaganet
βͺ Died :
β’ Beheaded 28 May 1541 on Tower Hill, London, England β’ Buried at Saint Peter ad Vincula, Tower of London
Countess of Salisbury, martyr; born at Castle Farley, near Bath, 14 August 1473; martyred at East Smithfield Green, 27 May 1541. She was the daughter of George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence, and Isabel, elder daughter of the Earl of Warwick (the king-maker), and the sister of Edmund of Warwick who, under Henry VII, paid with his life the penalty of being the last male representative of the Yorkist line (28 Nov., 1499). About 1491 Henry VII gave her in marriage to Sir Richard Pole, whose mother was the half-sister of the kingβs mother, Margaret Beaufort. At her husbandβs death in 1505 Margaret was left with five children, of whom the fourth, Reginald, was to become cardinal and Archbishop of Canterbury, and also the indirect cause of his motherβs martyrdom. Henry VIII, on his accession, reversed her brotherβs attainder, created her Countess of Salisbury, and an Act of Restitution was passed by which she came into possession of her ancestral domains: the king considered her the saintliest woman in England, and, after the birth of the Princess Mary, Margaret of Salisbury became her sponsor in baptism and confirmation and was afterwards appointed governess of the princess and her household. As the years passed there was talk of a marriage between the princess and the countessβs son Reginald, who was still a layman. But when the matter of the kingβs divorce began to be talked of Reginald Pole boldly spoke out his mind in the affair and shortly afterwards withdrew from England. The princess was still in the countessβs charge when Henry married Anne Boleyn, but when he was opposed in his efforts to have his daughter treated as illegitimate he removed the countess from her post, although she begged to be allowed to follow and serve Mary at her own charge. She returned to court after the fall of Anne, but in 1530 Reginald Pole sent to Henry his treatise βPro ecclesiasticΓ¦ unitatis defensioneβ, in answer to questions propounded to him in the kingβs behalf by Cromwell, Tunstall, Starkey, and others. Besides being a theological reply to the questions, the book was a denunciation of the kingβs courses. Henry was beside himself with rage, and it soon became evident that, failing the writer of the βDefensioβ, the royal anger was to be wreaked on the hostages in England, and this despite the fact that the countess and her eldest son had written to Reginald in reproof of his attitude and action.
In November, 1538, two of her sons and others of their kin were arrested on a charge of treason, though Cromwell had previously written that they had βlittle offended save that he [the Cardinal] is of their kinβ, they were committed to the Tower, and in January, with the exception of Geoffrey Pole, they were executed. Ten days after the apprehension of her sons the venerable countess was arrested and examined by Fitzwilliam, Earl of Southampton, and Goodrich, Bishop of Ely, but these reported to Cromwell that although they had βtravailed with herβ for many hours she would βnothing utterβ, and they were forced to conclude that either her sons had not made her a sharer in their βtreasonβ, or else she was βthe most arrant traitress that ever livedβ. In Southamptonβs custody she was committed to Cowdray Park, near Midhurst, and there subjected to all manner of indignity. In May Cromwell introduced against her a Bill of Attainder, the readings of which were hurriedly got over, and at the third reading Cromwell produced a white silk tunic found in one of her coffers, which was embroidered on the back with the Five Wounds, and for this, which was held to connect her with the Northern Uprising, she was βattainted to die by act of Parliamentβ. The other charges against her, to which she was never permitted to reply, had to do with the escape from England of her chaplain and the conveying of messages abroad. After the passage of the Act she was removed to the Tower and there, for nearly two years, she was βtormented by the severity of the weather and insufficient clothingβ. In April, 1541, there was another insurrection in Yorkshire, and it was then determined to enforce without any further procedure the Act of Attainder passed in 1539. On the morning of 28 May (de Marillac; Gardner, following Chapuys, says 27) she was told she was to die within the hour. She answered that no crime had been imputed to her; nevertheless she walked calmly from her cell to East Smithfield Green, within the precincts of the Tower, where a low wooden block had been prepared, and there, by a clumsy novice, she was beheaded.
In November, 1538, two of her sons and others of their kin were arrested on a charge of treason, though Cromwell had previously written that they had βlittle offended save that he [the Cardinal] is of their kinβ, they were committed to the Tower, and in January, with the exception of Geoffrey Pole, they were executed. Ten days after the apprehension of her sons the venerable countess was arrested and examined by Fitzwilliam, Earl of Southampton, and Goodrich, Bishop of Ely, but these reported to Cromwell that although they had βtravailed with herβ for many hours she would βnothing utterβ, and they were forced to conclude that either her sons had not made her a sharer in their βtreasonβ, or else she was βthe most arrant traitress that ever livedβ. In Southamptonβs custody she was committed to Cowdray Park, near Midhurst, and there subjected to all manner of indignity. In May Cromwell introduced against her a Bill of Attainder, the readings of which were hurriedly got over, and at the third reading Cromwell produced a white silk tunic found in one of her coffers, which was embroidered on the back with the Five Wounds, and for this, which was held to connect her with the Northern Uprising, she was βattainted to die by act of Parliamentβ. The other charges against her, to which she was never permitted to reply, had to do with the escape from England of her chaplain and the conveying of messages abroad. After the passage of the Act she was removed to the Tower and there, for nearly two years, she was βtormented by the severity of the weather and insufficient clothingβ. In April, 1541, there was another insurrection in Yorkshire, and it was then determined to enforce without any further procedure the Act of Attainder passed in 1539. On the morning of 28 May (de Marillac; Gardner, following Chapuys, says 27) she was told she was to die within the hour. She answered that no crime had been imputed to her; nevertheless she walked calmly from her cell to East Smithfield Green, within the precincts of the Tower, where a low wooden block had been prepared, and there, by a clumsy novice, she was beheaded.
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