I’d always wanted to visit St George’s Chapel at Windsor
Castle. When researching for my current work in progress, (about Henry VII’s
daughter Mary Tudor), I realised Charles Brandon’s tomb is there so I decided to
visit and take a look at it.
St George’s Chapel is within the grounds of Windsor Castle
and was founded by King Edward III. Many
successive royals have made their own ‘improvements’ and the chapel was
seriously damaged by looters during the English Civil War.
There is a real sense of being at the heart of English
History as you enter, as it is the spiritual home of the Order of the Garter
and burial place of many kings. I spotted the portcullis badge of Margaret
Beaufort everywhere, as well as the Dragon and Greyhound of King Henry VII.
The chapel is also full of surprises. I found I was looking
at the tomb of King Edward IV, buried with ‘Elizabeth Widvile’. The tomb had been ‘lost’ then rediscovered during
restoration work in 1789, which explains its modern appearance. (When the tomb
was found many ‘relics’ were taken, including locks of Edward's hair – and liquid
from the bottom of the coffin!)
I was listening to the audio tour as I entered the quire and
was amazed when I was asked to look up to the left of the altar. That morning I’d been writing about Catherine of
Aragon watching Henry VIII’s jousting from an ornate wooden gallery. There above
me was another - the wooden gallery from where Queen Catherine would sit to watch services in
the chapel, as well preserved as if she was expected to arrive at any moment.
Henry VIII’s tomb occupies the middle of the quire and is
surprising both for its simplicity and the company we’ve chosen for him to keep
in eternity – as well as Jane Seymour, Henry is buried with the beheaded body of
King Charles Ist and a stillborn son of Queen Anne. (If you’d like to know what
Henry’s tomb was supposed to be like, there is a useful post here.)
Having failed to find the tomb of Charles Brandon, I sked a
guide and discovered it in the south transit, half covered by a wooden bench
seat and under a life-sized portrait of King Edward III adjacent to the tomb of
King Henry VI. Interestingly, it refers
to Mary Tudor as ‘Married Mary daughter of Henry VII, Widow of Louis XII King
of France.
And what about Mary Tudor’s tomb? She died in Suffolk on 25
June 1533 and Charles Brandon paid for a fine tomb Bury St Edmunds Abbey. When the abbey was destroyed
during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, her remains were taken to St. Mary’s
Church, also in Bury St Edmunds, and placed under a modest slab – another long trip from Wales!
Tony Riches
I cried when I knelt at Brandon's grave. I have some beautiful photos xx
ReplyDeleteThe whole place is totally surreal and it takes quite an effort not to be overcome by so much history...
DeleteThanks for the interesting post! I do think I spotted an error- Edward the Confessor was an Anglo Saxon king. The timeline doesn't seem to match up.
ReplyDeleteOops I meant Edward the third - thanks Sara :)
DeleteYeah, Edward the Confessor died a few centuries prior to the 13th Century.
ReplyDeleteyes 1066 - it was Westminster Abbey he founded
DeleteThere's a bench half covering Charles Brandon's tomb?
ReplyDeleteYes you can see it in the photo above - I pushed it as far back as I could but Brandon would not have been impressed...
DeleteThat seems rather disrespectful.
DeleteWhen I visited I picked the whole bench up and moved it!! I wasn't having a bench over Brandon's grave!
DeleteI will speak to the chapel staff about it next time I'm there!
Deletelistening to the boys choir there is an amazing experience. Almost made me religious.
ReplyDeleteI will be going thus year. My Grandfather was Queen Victoria's Head gardener at Windsor and was confirmed and Married there.
ReplyDelete