
I decided to research the story after Jennifer commented on the Bisley Boy post saying that she had read of a man turning up at the Spanish Court and claiming he was Elizabeth and Dudley’s son. I love mysteries and conspiracy theories so I just had to know more and I actually found some great research material – a chapter in Sarah Gristwood’s “Elizabeth & Leicester” and an article on the Dudley Genealogy website. So, are you sitting comfortably? Then let me begin…
Arthur Dudley – Heir to the Throne or Impostor?
The Tudor era had seen many people claiming that they were heirs to the throne – Perkin Warbeck, the famous pretender who claimed to be Richard Duke of York, one of the Princes in the Tower; Lambert Simnel who pretended to be Edward Plantagenet, Earl of Warwick, son of George, Duke of Clarence (Edward IV’s brother) ; and the madwoman Anne Burnell who claimed to be the daughter of Mary I and Philip of Spain – so there was really nothing new about Arthur Dudley and his story, particularly when there were already rumours circulating during Elizabeth’s reign that her summer progresses were cover-ups for her giving birth to illegitimate children! However, the fact that he turned up at King Philip of Spain’s court might have been worrying to Elizabeth, unless he was in fact an English spy.
Arthur’s Story
In the summer of 1587, a Spanish ship intercepted a boat off the coast of San Sebastian which was heading for France. One of the passengers aboard this boat was a young man in his 20s who claimed to be a Catholic who had undertaken a pilgrimage to a shrine at Montserrat. The Spanish officials arrested the man, suspecting that he was an English spy, and incarcerated him at San Sebastian. The man asked to Sir Francis Englefield, a Catholic who had once been an adviser to Mary I and who was now in exile at the Spanish Court, and it was then that he told his story.
The young man, claiming to be called Arthur Dudley, told of how he had been raised by Robert Southern, a man who had once been a servant of Kat Ashley, Elizabeth I’s governess and friend, in a village around 60 miles outside of London. On Southern’s deathbed, he had told Arthur that he was not his real father but refused to tell him any more. Arthur had stormed off but Smyth, a schoolmaster who was sent after Arthur by Southern, told Arthur the truth, that he was the son of Robert Dudley and the Queen.
Arthur went on to tell Englefield that Southern had been handed a baby after being summoned to Hampton Court and that he had been told to name him Arthur and raise him as his own. Southern had been told at first that the baby belonged to one of the Queen’s ladies, but, when Arthur ran away to sea as a teenager and was stopped by a letter from Elizabeth I’s privy councillors and ordered back to London with John Ashely, Kat Ashley’s husband, it became clear that he was someone important.
Arthur told Englefield of how he had taken flight abroad, fearing for his life, when it became known that Arthur knew the secret of his birth. He also told of how, at one point, he had been taken before Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, by officers named Blount and Fludd (who did exist), and that Dudley had shown him affection “by tears, words, and other demonstrations” and had said “You are like a ship under full sail at sea, pretty to look upon but dangerous to deal with”. Dudley had then ordered Arthur to be taken out of the country under the supervision of Sir Francis Walsingham. Arthur then told Englefield of how Walsingham’s manner had scared him so he escaped once again and joined a group of English soldiers who were on their way to serve in Flanders.
Arthur’s rather long and complicated story told of his many travels and his fear that he would be tracked down and murdered by Elizabeth’s agents to hush him up. It was a brilliantly told story and the fact that it contained plausible events and real people, like Fludd and Blount, must have made it seem slightly plausible but Englefield was suspicious. He sent a statement to King Philip and included a letter from Arthur with it. Arthur’s letter to the King said:-
“If God grants that his Majesty should take me under his protection, I think it will be necessary to spread a rumour that I have escaped, as everybody knows that I am here, and my residence in future can be kept secret. I could then write simply and sincerely to the Earl of Leicester all that has happened to me, in order to keep in his good graces; and I could also publish a book to any effect that might be considered desirable, in which I should show myself to be everybody’s friend and nobody’s enemy…”
Gristwood writes of how Englefield made further reports back to the King after he had questioned Arthur again and Sandy Sellers, in the article “Arthur Dudley”, writes of how Englefield tested Arthur on his education, his knowledge of the Queen’s household (because he claimed to have spent his summers at one of the Queen’s houses in Enfield) and his knowledge of the people he had mentioned in his elaborate story. Apparently, Arthur passed these tests but Englefield was convinced that he was a spy and wrote to the King:-
“I am of the opinion that he should not be allowed to get away, but should be kept very secure to prevent his escape.”
According to the Venetian ambassador in Madrid, Arthur Dudley was then sent to the castle of Lameda, proof that he was thought to be an English spy. Sellers writes of how Englefield believed that Elizabeth was planning to acknowledge Arthur as her son and nominate him as heir to the throne to obstruct the claims of James VI of Scotland and King Philip. In Englefield’s opinion, Arthur Dudley was both an English spy and a English tool:-
“I think it very probable that the revelations that this lad is making everywhere may originate in the queen of England and her Council, and possibly with an object that Arthur himself does not yet understand. Perhaps, if they have determined to do away with the Scottish throne, they may encourage the lad to profess Catholicism, and claim to be the queen’s son, in order to discover the minds of other princes as to his pretensions, and the queen thereupon acknowledge him, or give him such other position as to neighbouring princes may appear favourable. Of perhaps in some other way they may be making use of him for their iniquitous ends.”
Englefield also wrote:-
“It also manifests that he has had much conference with the Earl of Leicester, upon whom he mainly depends for the fulfillment of his hopes. This and other things convince me that the queen of England is not ignorant of his pretensions; although, perhaps, she would be unwilling that they should be thus published to the world.”

Gristwood believes that Englefield thought that Arthur was a “stooge” of Elizabeth I and her government, and the Venetians thought him to be a spy. Historian Martin Hume wondered if Arthur had actually been on a secret mission to report back to the English government on Spain’s preparations for war and was forced to concoct his story as a cover when he was arrested.
Whoever we believe Arthur to be, historical evidence shows him to have definitely existed and we even know from a letter sent to William Cecil in May 1588 that Arthur was costing the King of Spain 6 crowns a day to keep imprisoned. In 1590 a report to England mentioned a man purporting to be Leicester’s son being imprisoned in Alcantara, but Arthur is never mentioned again.
Could his Story Have Been True?
Sarah Gristwood writes of how Arthur’s story has been given credence in “The Secret Life of Elizabeth I”, a book by Paul Doherty who is an historian and novelist, and in novelist Robin Maxwell’s “The Queen’s Bastard”. But could Elizabeth really have had an illegitimate son by the Earl of Leicester or anyone else?
The letter written to William Cecil in 1588 about Arthur Dudley described him as being 27 which would give him a date of birth in 1561, a year where, according to Gristwood, records of Elizabeth’s movements are somewhat scanty. Gristwood goes on to write of how there are reports from the summer of 1561 of how Elizabeth looked like she had come from her childbed and how, according to the Spanish ambassador, she was “swelling extraordinarily” and was “dropsical”. When you put this together with:-
- The fact that Elizabeth would have conceived in the winter of 1560/61, when marriage to Robert Dudley would have been impossible because of the scandal surrounding his wife’s death.
- The fact that the name Arthur was in both the Dudley and Tudor trees
- The fact that in 1562, when she was gravely ill, Elizabeth wanted to appoint Dudley as Lord Protector.
then you may begin to wonder if this is more than a conspiracy theory or tall tale.
But how on earth could Elizabeth have hidden a pregnancy?
I for one cannot believe that she could have hidden her pregnancy or childbirth from her council. Her ladies would have certainly noticed her weight gain and swelling and such scandal would surely have got out somehow, however hushed up Elizabeth tried to keep it. As Sarah Gristwood says:
“Do we really believe that someone as closely watched, as incessantly accompanied, as Elizabeth could have carried a pregnancy to term and given birth with no one knowing? Do we really believe that her ladies and councillors, her chambermaids and doctors were in on the act? And that no one, ever, would have breathed a word about the most saleable secret of the century?”
A resounding no!
Even when we consider that there are often stories today of teenage girls giving birth in secret after hiding their pregnancy under baggy clothes or the fact that Anne Vavasour, one of Elizabeth’s ladies, was able to keep her condition secret, I just can’t see how someone who was always in the public eye and always the centre of scandal and rumour could have given birth to an illegitimate child without anyone knowing, or without the story getting out. Also, can we really believe that Spanish officials managed to capture Elizabeth I’s illegitimate son just by chance? As Gristwood concludes, ” In the end I feel like the White Queen in “Alice”, asked to believe too many impossible things before breakfast”!
So, who was Arthur Dudley?
We just don’t know.
Gristwood wonders if he was in fact an English agent. She points out that Walsingham made good use of “agents provocateurs”, sending them undercover to gather information on foreign enemies, and that this may explain why Arthur Dudley suddenly disappears from history, perhaps he escaped and resumed his own identity. Whoever he was, it is very unlikely that he was the son of Dudley and the Queen.
Gristwood concludes her examination of the story of Arther Dudley by saying that we actually don’t know that Elizabeth slept with anyone, never mind giving birth to an illegitimate child, and by saying:
“In the world of fact, not fiction, I still believe that the “Virgin Queen” as more than just mythology”
and I have to agree with her. For me, there is no reason to believe that Elizabeth was not the person she said she was. Why is it so difficult for us to believe that she was a virgin and why, if we do believe in her virginity, do we have to explain it by implying that there was something wrong with her? I think Elizabeth made a life choice and stuck to it – period, end of story. What do you think?
More Conspiracy Theories
While browsing on the internet, I found a press release about a book called “Oxford, Son of Queen Elizabeth I” by Paul Streitz which claims that the Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, (AKA William Shakespeare) was the illegitimate son of Elizabeth I. The press release goes on to say:
“”Oxford, Son of Queen Elizabeth I” is the result of seven years of painstaking, meticulous historical research. Mr. Streitz reveals that historians have omitted or ignored historical documents that throw doubt on the myth of the Virgin Queen. He further uses new historical documents that show John de Vere, 16th Earl of Oxford, was forced into
marriage to provide a foster home for the newborn. The result of this research is a remarkable story of royal scandal, sex, murder, betrayal and incest with all the hallmarks of a gripping Elizabethan drama.The book reveals:
- How Elizabeth gave birth to the first of several illegitimate children and how that first child came to be known as ‘William Shakespeare.’
- How ‘Shake-speare’s Sonnets’ reveals the relationship between Oxford, the Queen and the Earl of Southampton.
- How Oxford’s story is found in the character of Hamlet and in Shakespeare’s Sonnets.
- How there is line of descendants from Queen Elizabeth and the rightful King of England should be a descendant of the Tudor line of monarchs and of William Shakespeare.”
Has anyone read this book? Sounds intriguing!
Sources
- “Elizabeth and Leicester:The Truth about the Virgin Queen and the Man She Loved” by Sarah Gristwood
- “Arthur Dudley” – an article by Sandy Sellers.









I have read Robin Maxwell’s book, and I am a personal fan of Sarah Gristwood’s research and writing, but this book I have not yet read.
Like you, I am perplexed at why people simply cannot believe that Elizabeth was a virgin or childless. Is it because so many find it disturbing, even horrifying that a woman could be a Virgin her entire life? Is it because it is uncomfortable to think that Elizabeth did not give way to “maternal desires” and procreate like her contemporaries? I think it is a little bit of both of these things, and a lot more that drive people to invent children for Elizabeth.
I think Arthur very likely could have been an English spy. His story certainly hints at a Walsingham-like agenda. I have aquired a book on Elizabeth’s spy network-I will have to page through it and see if I can find anything relevant to “Arthur Dudley”
Semper Eadem,
Ashlie (@ERITudor)
It’s an interesting thought that Elizabeth really did have a child, but a part of me also thinks it’s not very likely. As a queen, there would have been very, very little chance of her having a child without rumours starting to circle around.
I just finished the The Queen’s Bastard. I had never heard of Arthur Dudley until Robin Maxwell wrote this book, the story does seem plausible. However, we will most likely never know for sure if he was Elizabeth’s son.
As for being able to hide a pregnancy, a slim woman could get away with it. When I was pregnant with my daughter I actually lost 6lbs. No one except my husband and myself knew I was pregnant and when I went to the hospital for delivery, the nurse asked me what was wrong with me. I told her I was delivering and she told me I probably just had gas. My daughter was born 3 min. after arriving at the hospital.
As for the queen denying it, she might not have wanted to get married as in that time women were considered property of her husband or father and she didn’t want to share her rule or lose her head because her husband wanted all the power.
I also think it’s possible she was exactly like her father, vain, cruel and manipulative and insane. If so, she would think nothing of dumping a baby with no thought to its future. After all, she came from an inbred family of murderers. she certainly had her cousin, friends and lovers beheaded just as Henry did.
One more thing, there are quite few spelling mistakes in the comments, are you just bad at typing, too lazy to fix the errors or just unable to learn to spell.
There’s a portrait of Elizabeth 1 in Hampton court of her in a birthing gown and 3 reports from 3 different embasadors reporting that she was ready to give birth , that were recently discovered , so I do think it was possible that she could have covered it up. No body knows really.
What if HenryVIII had Mary and Elizabeth enoculated at the time Edward VI was conceived? It was said that Lady Jane Seymour had great sway with the pugnant King and soon after Henry banished Mary and Elizabeth as illegitimates and stated they would never rule or challenge young Edward VI for the throne.
It seemed to cast out his 2nd and 3rd heir to the throne and create a void in the Tudor Dynasty should Edward VI die young would not sound like something Henry would want.
So maybe Lady Jayne Seymour did have enough sway to make the King keep her son on the throne and to make sure that Mary & Elizabeth or their future heirs could not challenge Seymour’s son & future heir Edward and any of his future heirs. Therefore keeping the Seymour line firmly on the throne and isn’t it funny how both Mary and Elizabeth never had children. Maybe Jane Seymour saw to that?! Just a guess.
John
* Typo Mistake on above comment. (Not enoculated spelt inoculated) What am I talking about?.. I meant made sterile
John
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1394759/Discovery-of-grave-may-solve-mystery-death-of-Henry-VIIIs-brother-at-15.html
This is a great site, with a great discussion. Thanks!
I’d like to refer to one of the often quoted arguments against Elizabeth having had a child, namely that the news of it would have somehow got out. Because as far as I know, it did. Only in rumours, perhaps. But just like today when scandals about the royal family start of as rumours in the tabloids, rumours often have an element of truth at their core. Such true rumours (like those concerning the extra marital affairs of Princess Diana and Prince Charles) are at first always denied by the palace – only to be conceded later when the truth can no longer be hidden. In the old days, such stories could be quashed in infancy by sending the spreaders of them off to the tower (and I’m sure many royals today wish they could do the same with troublesome journalists). But rumours that were true had a habit of sticking around nonetheless, as they did with Elizabeth’s pregnancy. Beyond rumours, I’d love to know if there is any stronger evidence linking Elizabeth to her love child. For instance, did Arthur Dudley’s step parents actually receive any money from the crown? Is there any evidence of that?
Thanks.
Hi
I have just stumbled onto this forum and I am as always captivated by such stories. I love reading about the Tudors but am not a great researcher myself but I wondered what people’s thoughts were about Francis Bacon being the son of Elizabeth and Robert Dudley. There seems to be good evidence that he was not the real son of Nicolas Bacon and his wife. I remember reading that Elizabeth and Robert Dudley were imprisioned in the tower together for about 2 years. Sorry I don’t know facts but my writing is simply to get opinion from informed people who can piece things together better than myself. It is possible to conceal pregnancies as my mum on two occasions had babies where people who knew her wondered where she was one week ! Also Francis Bacon is meant to have been the writer of Shakespear’s works. My dad’s cousin’s mother was a ‘bacon’ from St Albans which is why we have great interest in this rumour. Well, I look forward to some help in thinking about all this. Ps I cannot buy the Arthur story myself.
Has anyone actually worn a 16 century dress??? I personally made one and one could hide a pregnancy up to several months, the hoop skirt itself is really large and the corsets do not go down past the waist. It’s a possibility but again none of her ladies ever spoke of it. It’s just a thought.
I think that even if the pregnancy could have been hidden by clothing, there’s no way that she could have hidden it from her ladies who bathed and dressed her and the news would have leaked out, somebody would have talked.