The House of Tudor
her socially undesirable husband were left in peace to enjoy the all too brief period of their married life. When Katherine retired into the Abbey of Bermondsey some time in 1436 there is no evidence at all that this was due to anything but the ‘long and grievous illness’ which finally killed her on 3 January 1437.
    After the Queen’s death, her second family broke up. Edmund and Jasper were placed in the care of the Abbess of Barking, who looked after them for the next three years. The two younger children have no part in this story, but Owen later became a monk at Westminster, surviving into his nephew’s reign, and the girl is said to have gone into a nunnery. As for their father, the remainder of his career has a distinct flavour of melodrama.
    Shortly after Katherine’s death, a summons was issued by the Council requiring ‘one Owen Tudor which dwelled with the said Queen Katherine’ to come into the King’s presence. Owen evidently suspected a trap, for he declined to accept the invitation unless he was first given an assurance, in the King’s name, that he might ‘freely come and freely go’. A verbal promise to this effect was duly delivered by one Myles Sculle, but Owen was not satisfied. He did, however, make his way secretly to London where he went into sanctuary at Westminster, resisting the persuasions of his friends to come and disport himself in the tavern at Westminster gate. After a period of time described as ‘many days’, days no doubt spent in reconnoitring the situation, Owen emerged from his lair to make a sudden appearance in the royal presence. He had heard, he said, that the King was ‘heavily informed of him’ and was anxious to declare his innocence and truth. But almost certainly Henry, now fifteen years old, had just wanted to take a look at his unknown stepfather and Owen was allowed to depart ‘without any impeachment’. In fact, he had freely come and freely gone - but not for long.
    Like so much else about him, the reason for Owen Tudor’s arrest and committal to ward in Newgate gaol remains a mystery. Polydore Vergil says it was ordered by the Duke of Gloucester because Owen ‘had been so presumptuous as by marriage with the Queen to intermix his blood with the noble race of kings’, but there is absolutely no evidence to support this assertion. In two obscurely worded documents, one of which is dated 15 July 1437, the Council were at considerable pains to establish the legality of the arrest, having regard to the King’s recent promise of safe conduct and also, it may be assumed, to the prisoner’s royal connections. In neither of these documents is any specific charge mentioned, but from the very meagre information they do contain, it looks as if Owen was involved in a private quarrel - probably of a financial nature - with some person or persons unknown.
    The next news of him appears in the Chronicle of London, which records that he ‘brake out of Newgate against night at searching time, through help of his priest, and went his way, hurting foul his keeper; but at the last, blessed be God, he was taken again.’ This exploit took place early in 1438, for in March of that year Lord Beaumont received twenty marks to cover his expenses in guarding the fugitives and bringing them before the Council. Owen, his priest and his servant were sent back to Newgate in disgrace, but a sum of eighty-nine pounds which was found on the priest was confiscated and handed over to the Treasury. Who this enterprising cleric was, where that quite sizeable amount of money came from, and why Owen had been so desperate to escape are three more unanswered questions.
    The belief that Owen broke prison twice seems to have arisen from a nineteenth-century misreading of the documents. He was transferred from Newgate to Windsor Castle in July 1438, a move which is again unexplained but which seems to have marked the beginning of an improvement in his fortunes. In July of the following year he

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