According to a report in yesterday’s “Daily Mail”, entitled “Did Elizabeth I’s lover have wife killed so he could wed the Virgin Queen?”, new evidence has been uncovered which supports the theory that Robert Dudley arranged the murder of his wife, Amy Dudley (nee Robsart), so that he was free to marry Elizabeth I.
Amy’s Death
Amy Dudley’s body was found at the foot of the stairs of Cumnor Place in Oxfordshire, on the 8th September 1560. She had been suffering with a “malady in her breast” (breast cancer) and was thought to be dying and Alison Weir, in “Elizabeth, the Queen”, writes of how it is known that Amy was suffering from depression in early September 1560. Weir’s sources for Amy’s depression include a statement from Amy’s maid, saying that she had heard Amy “pray to God to deliver her from desperation”, and the “Leycester’s Commonwealth” tract which tells of how the Cumnor Place household were so concerned that Lady Dudley was “sad and heavy” that they wanted a doctor to prescribe medicine for her.
Whatever, the state of Amy’s health and mind, she was found dead by her servants when they returned from “Our Lady’s Fair” at Abingdon and at the inquest the coroner ruled that Amy’s death was an accident.
New Evidence
Alison Weir writes of how Alvaro de Quadra reported on the 11th September that Elizabeth I had ordered that the news of Amy’s death should be made public, that it was attributed to accidental causes and that Elizabeth had said that Amy had broken her neck and “must have fallen down a staircase”. However, the original coroner’s report had been found and it does not mention a broken neck!
Historian Steven Gunn, a lecturer at Oxford University, found the coroner’s report in the National Archives while searching through 16th century accident records. According to the report, Amy’s head had two deep wounds caused by two impacts and even though there were no signs of other injuries, whcih one would expect if Amy fell down a flight of stairs, the coroner ruled that Amy’s death was the result of “misfortune”. Gunn copied this report to historian Chris Skidmore who reveals it in his new book “Death and the Virgin” (released on the 25th February 2010), and is quoted in the Sunday Times newspaper as saying “At the very least it [the coroner’s report] casts doubt on the accident theory”.
Did Dudley Blackmail the Jurors?
Skidmore has also uncovered evidence to suggest that Robert Dudley may have attempted to “nobble” jurors to cover up Amy’s supsicious death and that household accounts show that Dudley gave Robert Smith, a courtier and foreman of the inquest jury, several yards of velvet and black taffeta to make clothes. Skidmore also reveals how Dudley asked that the jury be made up of “discreet” men, that one member of the jury (John Stevenson) was employed by Dudley and that Dudley also paid Anthony Forster, owner of Cumnor Place where Amy died, £310 (around £65,000 in today’s money) shortly after Amy’s death.
Gossip Surrounding Amy, Dudley and the Virgin Queen
Robert Dudley had married Amy Robsart, the daughter of Sir John Robsart, in 1550 and it was said to be a love match and what William Cecil described as “a carnal marriage, begun for pleasure”, rather than an arranged marriage. However, Robert Dudley had always been close to Elizabeth I, having known her since childhood and it is thought that their shared experience of being imprisoned in the Tower of London and Dudley’s time at court, away from his wife, brought the two of them closer and drove Robert and Amy apart. As Master of the Horse, Dudley saw Elizabeth on a daily basis and it was not long before there was gossip about Dudley and Elizabeth, and how much she favoured him.
On the 18th April 1559, the Count de Feria, wrote:-
“During the last few days, Lord Robert has come so much into favour that he does whatever he likes with affairs. It is even said that Her Majesty visits him in his chamber day and night. People talk of this freely that they go so far as to say that his wife has a malady in one of her breasts, and that the Queen is only waiting for her to die to marry Lord Robert”
and there were also rumours that Dudley had “sent to poison his wife” (de Quadra) and in early 1560 de Quadra wrote of how Dudley was planning to divorce his wife so that he could be Elizabeth’s consort.
There were also rumours that the Queen had had children by Dudley and a man named Henry Hawkins was punished for saying that “My Lord Robert hath five children by the Queen, and she never goeth on progress but to be delivered.”
However silly or unfounded these rumours, one can only imagine the distress caused to Amy Dudley. Even though she was away from court she must have heard some of these rumours and she must have worried at the closeness shared by her husband and the Queen. No wonder she was described as “sad and heavy” in the late summer of 1560, she was dying and her husband was living it up at court with another woman. Did she believe that her husband was just waiting for her to die?
Theories on Amy’s Death
- Accident – Alison Weir mentions the theory of Professor Ian Aird from 1956, in which he suggests that Amy’s death could have been an accident caused by a spontaneous fracture of the vertebrae as she walked down the stairs. Professor Aird bases this theory on the fact that breast cancer can cause a weakening of the bones.
- Suicide – On the day of her death, Amy ordered all of her servants out of the house, giving them permission to go to Abingdon’s “Our Lady’s Fair” for the day. When some of them protested that it was not “fitting” to go to a fair on a Sunday, Amy was said to have been quite sharp with them, asking them to obey her orders. A Mrs Odingsells refused to go, much to Amy’s displeasure, but Mrs Odingsells did eventually retire to her room, leaving Amy alone. Did Amy arrange to be alone so that she could commit suicide, after all, she was said to be very depressed? Amy’s maid said that she wondered if Amy “might have an evil toy in her mind”, in other words suicide.
In those days, it was believed that suicide was a mortal sin, one that led to eternal damnation, so would Amy have risked her soul to shorten her life? Who knows? Perhaps if she was in enough pain and distress, and felt abandoned by her husband. - Murder arranged by her husband – Did Robert Dudley get rid of Amy so that he could marry Elizabeth? See above for Chris Skidmore’s evidence.
- Murder arranged by William Cecil – This is a theory put forward by Alison Weir. On p108 of my paperback version of “Elizabeth, the Queen”, Weir says:- “One man did profit from the death of Amy Dudley, and that was William Cecil. He was swiftly restored to favour as soon as the news was known and his rival banished from the court, and when he visited Dudley at Kew he did so in the comfortable knowledge that their positions had been reversed and that he now had the upper hand.” His motive for orchestrating the murder was, according to Weir, to stop Elizabeth marrying Dudley and risking her crown and popularity. Suspicion would surround Dudley and Elizabeth would not risk her reputation by marrying him. However, I find it hard to believe that Cecil would have risked the reputation of his beloved Queen for such a plot. I agree with Weir when she says that Cecil was a “perceptive man and he could foresee that if she died in suspicious circumstances, as many people expected her to do, then the finger of suspicion would point inexorably to her husband – as indeed it did. Cecil also knew that Elizabeth , who was very conservative at heart, would be unlikely to risk her popularity and her crown to marry a man whose reputation was so tainted” but I just can’t see Cecil acting on this belief.
- Murder by an enemy of the Crown – I have to agree with Elizabeth Files visitor, Rochie, and “Virgin and the Crab” author, Robert Parry, who both believe that the most plausible explanation, if it was not an accident, is that it was murder committed by an enemy of Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley. There were many people who were against Elizabeth marrying her Master of the Horse and what better way to stop a future marriage than cause scandal and make Robert Dudley look like a murderer? Dudley had already been surrounded by scandal due to his family’s past and due to him being Elizabeth’s favourite and now they could use Amy’s death to bring him down. Did Mrs Odingsells stay behind on that day because she was an accomplice?
- An aortic aneurism – A modern theory that Amy was killed by the terminal enlargement of one of the arteries from the heart. Symptoms of this include depression, fits of anger, mental aberrations and pain and swelling in the chest. According to Alison Weir “sudden slight pressure can cause the bursting of the aneurism, bringing instantaneous death”.
Conclusion
What I don’t get is why the fact that a coroner’s report stating that Amy Robsart suffered two head injuries should implicate Robert Dudley. Even the extra “evidence” of him paying the foreman with material and the owner of Cumnor Place does not necessarily mean that he was guilty, he could have simply been paying off debts and he would have been downright stupid to murder his dying wife! She was ill enough for people to be talking about it so it did appear that she was terminally ill. Surely he would have known that a fall would have looked suspicious seeing as there were already rumours that he was poisoning her. He may have been in love but he still had a brain!
It would be interesting for a pathologist or someone with expertise to look at the coroner’s report and to look at the statements given by Amy’s household and to come up with a conclusion. As someone who does not have any medical knowledge or expertise in pathology, apart from watching CSI or Silent Witness (!), I can’t come up with a solid theory. All I can say is that I don’t believe that it makes sense for either Dudley or Cecil to get rid of Amy and that leaves accident, natural causes or murder by someone unknown.
Anyway, it does sound like Chris Skidmore’s book will be an interesting read but I will take it all with a fairly large pinch of salt!
Sources
- “Elizabeth, the Queen” by Alison Weir
- “Death and the Virgin Queen: Elizabeth, Dudley and the Mysterious Fate of Amy Robsart”
- “Suspicious death that made the Virgin Queen” – An article in “The Sunday Times”
- Did Elizabeth I’s lover have wife killed so he could wed the Virgin Queen? – Article in “The Daily Mail”
Three months ago I fell backwards down a flight of five stone steps while drinking coffee in a cafe virtually unscathed except for a painful arm injury. I’ve also been hit head on at 60 mph by a car while riding a motoorbike ( and several other accidents in 26 years). Amongst other things I ‘ve experienced a hang gliding accident and fallen 15 feet down a mine shaft. My point is humans are more robust than people imagine and having an accidentin the manner of Amy Robsart’s or Princess Diane (assasination conspiracy theory) doesn’t guarantee a fatal outcome.
My good friend and I have been just discussing this subject, she actually is normally endeavouring to prove me incorrect! I will present her this particular blog post and rub it in a little!
The question is who stood to gain from the death ?…..answer …no one ! a suspisous death looks bad on the Queen and Dudley , a death in general would have mean’t the end of Cecil and others at court ,her death was bad news for everyone …apart from her ,she clearly had something wrong with her . If, in her mind she decided to take her own life, she would have known the shame of suicide and made it look like an accident with the benefit of knowing the
Robert Dudley had to have known that “doing away” with his wife would certainly not have made Elizabeth any more enamored of him. In fact, I think he would have really risked her ire, her mis-trust of him, and her sorrow. She was a Queen of the people…and I believe that included ALL of the people of England. She was not a heartless, unfeeling woman OR Queen. He would have just been tossing away ANY chance he had with her. It would have been sheer folly on his part, to even plan his wifes death.
There is one thing that Lord Dudley coveted even more than Queen Elizabeth-The crown! Dudley was ruthlessly ambitious and he desperately wanted to be King Robert of England. Dudley did love Elizabeth(although he may not have been IN love with her), but his first love was POWER. Elizabeth was being courted by many suitors around 1559-60, and Elizabeth was a Woman who played her cards close to her chest; she liked to keep people guessing. She probably never took any of her suitors seriously(she once told Robert when they were children that she would never marry), but, wanting to make Robert jealous, she perhaps gave the impression that she MIGHT actually marry. Elizabeth was deeply in love with Robert Dudley, but he knew that she was under increasing pressure from all sides to marry and produce an heir. Dudley was not about to let his Queen AND the crown get away from him! I believe he was behind his wife’s murder; he may not have carried it out, but I think he was behind it. One of the wounds in Amy’s head was 2 thumbs deep according to the report-that is a very deep injury; Amy was obviously knocked over the head. There is one other very intriguing puzzle; the day before Amy’s death , on the Queen’s birthday sept. 7th, the Queen told the spanish ambassador De Quadra, that Lady Amy Dudley was dead! Did the Queen have PRIOR knowledge of Amy’s impending doom? were she and Robert Dudley in fact in the plot to murder Amy together? and afterwards, when everyone was talking about the scandal, the two lovers realised that they could NEVER marry now? it wouldn’t be the first time that people have done wicked and stupid things in the name of love–even Kings and Queens; and let’s not forget who Elizabeth’s parents were; Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn; when Henry fell in love he let NOTHING stand in his way, and neither did Anne in her quest for power. They were strong, ruthless and mercenary; perhaps their
child was the same. I adore Anne Boleyn and her daughter Queen Elizabeth, who I think is the greatest monarch we have ever had–and Will ever have; but I am not blind to their faults! Or Dudley’s.
I don’t think Dudley had anything to do with Amy’s death. Say what you might about the man, he wasn’t stupid, and he knew Elizabeth well. She would never have risked her reputation or her crown to marry a man who would be assumed a murderer, whether he’d killed his wife or not. Besides, if Amy was as ill and depressed as various people claimed, all he would have had to do is wait for her to die naturally.
Amy’s maid mentioned that she might have had “an evil toy in mind”, i.e., might be suicidal. Given that she was a deeply religious woman, I doubt she actually committed suicide, since it was considered a mortal sin. I tend to lean more toward the theory of a genuine accidental death.
However, there are plenty of people who could have murdered her, people who would want to sabotage any chance Dudley might have of marrying Elizabeth. Nobody wanted Dudley on the throne, so any number of people could have killed Amy to prevent it.
The sad thing is, it might not have been necessary to sabotage it at all. Elizabeth had vowed over and over that she would never marry, and she seemed serious about it. So long as Dudley remained a suitor, she had total control over their relationship, whereas in Elizabethan times a married woman, even a queen, would be expected to defer to her husband. I think she would have kept stringing him along for the rest of his life, just as she did with all her other, much more appropriate suitors. Poor Amy could easily have been left alone, without fear of Dudley gaining anything.
Have just been reading about Amy Robsart and all the theories put forward and have to say that I do think it was probably an accident. Having fallen down a flight of stairs myself with a dogleg landing and ending up hitting a stone floor, I consider myself very lucky that all I had was a cut that didn’t need stitches and a lump the size of a large fist to the back of my head, concussion and a stay in hospital. It is quite possible to fall down stairs and not be injured but i also know from experience that the opposite can happen especially if like me you are not well for whatever reason at the time. Robert Dudley may not have been kind to his wife but he would have been stupid to murder her and stupid he was not.
I have given much thought to Amy Robsart Dudley’s death and I am so pulled by all of the theories surrounding her death. Accidentt…Murder…Suicide? I do tend to agree with the murderer or accident theories…definitely NOT suicide.Simply because throwing yourself down a flight of stairs ESPECIALLY with a landing or several of them (if you consider the painting to be historically correct) is simply not a viable or feasible conclusion…at least not in my befuddled brain! It would be a very unreliable way to do away with yourself and at the very least would require bravery of a very special kind!! Why not just drink deeply of the opium liquid that you have ready access to? Given the propensity for which we of the female persuasion not to mar our looks in death I would think suicide would be highly improbableand unlikely. I was in a motorcycle accident in which I was thrown headfirst onto the hood of an automobile and suffered no head injury at all. I DID have compound fractures of both legs…tibia and femur. Perhaps it was because of my helmet but the young man I was riding with unfortunately did die of a head injury because the impact destroyed his helmet but not mine. If I were to throw myself down some stairs in a misguided futile attempt to commit suicide I would…please forgive me…be “royally pissed” to find myself with only a broken wrist or leg huddled at the bottom of the stairs feeling and looking sheepish at my husband! Just my opinion for what it’s worth…
Again I apologize for my errors. I meant for my comment to read “Given the propensity for which we of the female persuasion are known to not wish our looks be marred in death”.
I love my fellow Tudor obsessees b/c you really have to make sure your comments are on target! Love to all of you!
Sorry to keep coming back to this, but Amy had 2 head wounds. The ORIGINAL report says that one of them was ‘two thumbs deep’. This is an incredibly bad head injury to sustain simply by falling down some stairs; she was obviously hit over the head. And Elizabeth DEFINITELY is historically recorded as telling the Spanish ambassador De Quadra that Amy was dead-the DAY BEFORE Amy actually died! And whilst Lord Dudley was certainly not stupid, he WAS ruthlessly ambitious. And ruthless ambition often makes people do stupid things! Amy was dying, but perhaps not fast enough for Dudley.