• The Manosphere vs Tudor England: Have We Heard This Before?
    Mar 24 2026
    I recently watched Louis Theroux' documentary "Inside the Manosphere", in which he interviewed several members of the online Manosphere, a community of influencers promoting controversial views of women. And I couldn’t stop thinking about Tudor England, because as I listened to these modern influencers, their ideas about women - what they expect, how they judge, and how they define women’s roles - felt strangely familiar. It connected directly with something I’ve been exploring recently: how women like Anne Boleyn and Elizabeth Woodville have been labelled as the seductress and the witch, and how history is full of women branded as she-wolves, unnatural, or dangerous. In this video, I explore:
    • How Manosphere views on women compare to attitudes in the medieval and Tudor periods
    • The historical roots of double standards around sex, power, and control
    • Whether these modern ideas are echoes of the past, or something even more extreme
    And I ask:
    • Are these attitudes really new, or have we heard them all before?
    • And why are some voices trying to turn back the clock?
    A big thank you to my Privy Council channel members for their insights during our recent Zoom discussion, some of which helped shape this video. Sources: Louis Theroux: Inside The Manosphere, Netflix Adultery in the Middle Ages by Jo Geisen - https://sites.up.edu/earlybritishsurvey/adultery-in-the-middle-ages/ Women in Early Modern England by Sara Mendelson and Patricia Crawford
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    18 mins
  • The Myth of the Seductress and the Witch: Anne Boleyn & Elizabeth Woodville
    Mar 17 2026

    For centuries, two queens have carried damaging reputations. Anne Boleyn has often been portrayed as the ambitious seductress who trapped King Henry VIII, while Elizabeth Woodville has been accused of using witchcraft to ensnare Edward IV. But how much truth is there in these stories? In this podcast, I explore how both women have been vilified in remarkably similar ways, and consider how the myths about seductive queens and magical manipulation developed, and why they continue to shape how we see powerful women in history. They're not the only queens to have suffered in this way! Join me as we look beyond the myths to the far more complex reality behind two of England’s most famous queens. #AnneBoleyn #ElizabethWoodville #TudorHistory #WomenInHistory #HistoryMyths #MedievalHistory #BritishHistory #WarsoftheRoses

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    12 mins
  • Did Anne Boleyn Seduce Henry VIII? The Truth About His Obsession
    Mar 11 2026

    For centuries, Anne Boleyn has been portrayed as the great seductress of Tudor history, the ambitious woman who bewitched Henry VIII and destroyed his marriage to Catherine of Aragon. But when we examine the evidence, the surviving sources tell a very different story. Henry VIII’s own love letters reveal that he pursued Anne relentlessly, writing to her repeatedly and even worrying that she did not return his affection. Anne refused to become the king’s mistress and, at times, even withdrew from court to avoid him. In this video, I explore what we actually know about Henry VIII’s pursuit of Anne Boleyn: • When the courtship may have begun • The famous love letters Henry wrote to Anne • The gift that may have signalled Anne’s acceptance • The terrifying sweating sickness outbreak of 1528 • And the myth that Anne Boleyn deliberately seduced the king This relationship would ultimately lead to the king’s Great Matter, the break with Rome, and the English Reformation, transforming the course of English history. #anneboleyn #henryviii #tudorhistory #tudors #englishhistory #britishhistory #history #historyyoutube #reformation #historydocumentary

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    20 mins
  • The Scandal That Nearly Destroyed Young Elizabeth I
    Mar 6 2026
    Before Elizabeth I became one of England’s greatest monarchs, she faced a scandal that could have destroyed her reputation , and possibly her future. In 1547, after the death of Henry VIII, the young Princess Elizabeth went to live with her stepmother, the dowager queen Catherine Parr. Catherine had secretly married Thomas Seymour, the ambitious uncle of the new king, Edward VI. What followed became one of the most troubling and controversial episodes of Elizabeth’s youth. According to sworn testimony later given to the government, Thomas Seymour repeatedly entered the teenage princess’s chamber early in the morning and behaved in ways that alarmed members of the household. Rumours spread, servants were questioned, and eventually the government became involved. When Seymour was arrested for treason in 1549, Elizabeth herself was interrogated. In this video, we explore the evidence, the testimonies, and the political crisis surrounding the Thomas Seymour scandal, and examine how this early experience may have shaped Elizabeth’s famous caution and determination to control her own life. #ElizabethI #TudorHistory #ThomasSeymour #EdwardVI #TudorScandal #HistoryExplained
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    11 mins
  • Elizabeth I Before the Crown: From Princess to Prisoner
    Mar 2 2026

    Queen Elizabeth I is remembered as Gloriana, England’s Virgin Queen and ruler of a golden age. But before the crown came danger. Born the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth went from celebrated princess to declared illegitimate, from royal heir to political suspect. Under her half-sister Mary I, she was imprisoned in the Tower of London, interrogated for treason, and at one point believed she would not survive the night. This video explores Elizabeth’s extraordinary journey before her accession in 1558 - her upbringing, education, political dangers, imprisonment, and the lessons that shaped one of England’s greatest monarchs. #ElizabethI #TudorHistory #BritishHistory #MaryI #AnneBoleyn #HenryVIII #HistoryDocumentary #EnglishHistory #WomenInHistory

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    28 mins
  • History Got This Wrong: Anne Boleyn Was Never “Too Low” for Henry Percy
    Feb 23 2026

    Was Anne Boleyn really too socially inferior to marry Henry Percy, heir to the powerful Earldom of Northumberland? For centuries, Anne Boleyn has been portrayed as an ambitious social climber, a woman of comparatively humble origins who dared to reach beyond her station. According to popular tradition, her relationship with Henry Percy was doomed because she was simply too low. But the historical evidence tells a very different story. In this video, I examine the truth behind one of the most persistent myths in Tudor history and reveal why Anne Boleyn was not an outsider at court, but a woman firmly embedded within England’s elite aristocratic networks. Discover: • Anne Boleyn’s powerful Howard and Butler ancestry • The overlooked importance of the Ormond inheritance • Why Anne arrived at court as a prospective countess • How Tudor society actually viewed rank, lineage, and marriage • Why Henry Percy’s proposed marriage was politically dangerous, not socially impossible • How post-1536 propaganda reshaped Anne Boleyn’s reputation Far from being a middle-class newcomer, Anne Boleyn was the granddaughter of the Duke of Norfolk and connected to one of the most influential noble dynasties in Ireland. At the very moment Percy considered marriage, royal policy itself was preparing her for an aristocratic match. So why has history continued to describe her as “too low”? #AnneBoleyn #TudorHistory #HenryPercy #HenryVIII #Tudors #BritishHistory #RoyalHistory #HistoryDebunked #TudorCourt #WomenInHistory #EnglishHistory #HistoryDocumentary

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    7 mins
  • Anne Boleyn’s Last 18 Days: The Fall That Shocked Tudor England
    Feb 19 2026

    In May 1536, Anne Boleyn went from Queen of England to execution in just eighteen days. It remains one of the most shocking political collapses in English history - a moment that destroyed families, reshaped the Tudor court, and sent shockwaves across Europe. Having researched Anne Boleyn’s life and fall since 2009, I still find these events deeply affecting. Each return to the primary sources - letters, trial records, ambassadorial reports and eyewitness accounts - raises the same question: Was Anne Boleyn’s fall truly a tragedy… or had her fate already been decided? To mark the 490th anniversary, I’m hosting a live anniversary intensive exploring Anne Boleyn’s final weeks through contemporary evidence and Tudor political reality. If you’d like to study these events in depth with me, you can find full details here: https://claireridgway.com/events/last-18/ Early Bird Offer ends 27 February Use code AB2026 for $20 off. Thank you for supporting my work and for continuing to explore Tudor history with me.

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    5 mins
  • The Secret Promise, The Poet, and the Myths: Anne Boleyn Before Henry VIII
    Feb 17 2026
    In 1522, Anne Boleyn returned to the English court, and within a few years, she was already at the centre of political tension, whispered promises, and poetic legend. Long before Henry VIII began his pursuit, Anne was linked to two influential men: Henry Percy, heir to the Earl of Northumberland, and Sir Thomas Wyatt, courtier and poet. Did Anne Boleyn and Henry Percy secretly promise to marry? Was there a binding precontract, something that, under Tudor canon law, could have invalidated a later royal marriage? Why did Cardinal Wolsey intervene? And what really lies behind Wyatt’s famous poem “Whoso List to Hunt” and its haunting line: “Noli me tangere, for Caesar’s I am”? In this episode, I explore:
    • Anne Boleyn’s place in the Tudor marriage market
    • The political implications of a precontract
    • The Cavendish account of Percy and Anne
    • The later denials in 1532 and 1536
    • The myths surrounding Thomas Wyatt
    • The Spanish Chronicle story
    • How Anne’s reputation began forming long before she became queen
    Subscribe for more Tudor history deep dives, myth-busting, and documentary-style episodes on Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII, and the Tudor court. #AnneBoleyn #TudorHistory #HenryPercy #ThomasWyatt #HenryVIII
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    25 mins