hilliard miniature - The Anne Boleyn Files
Transcription
hilliard miniature - The Anne Boleyn Files
DISCOVER THE T HILLIARD MINIATURE he miniature portrait of an Unknown Young Man with the motto “Attici Amoris Ergo”, dated 1588, has fascinated me since childhood. Who is he, why the apparently gibberish motto that translates as “by, with, from or through the love of Atticus”; and the date – 1588, coincidentally the same as the defeat of the Spanish Armada. The portrait was painted by Elizabeth I's painter 'in little', Nicholas Hilliard. of Goldsmiths in 1569 and in 1576 he married Alice Brandon, daughter of Robert Brandon. We do not know for certain who trained him in the art of painting in watercolour on vellum, but the most likely candidate is the woman artist, Levina Teerlinc, who was first recruited by Henry VIII then served Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth as limner to the Court. Hilliard’s talent for portrait painting is more famous than his goldsmithing even though we know from the records in the Goldsmith's Company that he took on apprentice Nicholas Hilliard was born in Exeter in or about goldsmiths. He probably designed and made the year 1547 and in 1555 he is sent to Europe the lockets for many of his portraits, such as the with the Bodley family eventually ending up in Drake and Lyte jewels and we know he designed Geneva with various other English Protestant Elizabeth’s second Great Seal and the Great exiles including the Knollys family. The Bodley Seal of Ireland even though this Seal was never family returned to England in 1559 after the struck. accession of Elizabeth I, but it is not known whether Hilliard returned to his family in Exeter In 1572 Hilliard comes to prominence with his first known miniature portrait of Elizabeth I or remained with the Bodleys in London. We and, as a result of royal patronage, these portraits do know that Hilliard was apprenticed to the became fashionable with the members of the London goldsmith, Robert Brandon, in 1562, Elizabethan Court and aspirational members of became a freeman of the Worshipful Company 10 - The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 society. The average cost of having your portrait painted by Hilliard was £3 to £4 and each miniature took an average of three sittings. To put this into context, at the end of the 16th century the annual rent for the lease on his property on Gutter Lane in the City of London was £30. In today's money it would have cost you about £1500 to £2000. We also know from various documents that he had close connections with Sir Francis Walsingham and Lord Burghley and there are various portraits by him of Sir Robert Dudley. Therefore we know that our artist has close connections with Elizabeth and her circle, he is famous for capturing his sitter's likeness, and there are many examples of his work with symbols and messages. In his draft Treatise dated 1598 he stresses that to be a portrait painter such as he, one must be discreet as often secrets are told to him. We will have to assume that this was in order to create the visual messages in his images. The most famous of which is Young Man Amongst Roses who Dr Roy Strong has identified this sitter as Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex. What do we know about the Unknown Young Man who clasps an unseen lady’s hand that comes from a cloud? Absolutely nothing except what we can take from the portrait itself. There are apparently two versions of this portrait, both painted by Hilliard, and this one is in our national collection at the Victoria & Albert Museum, South Kensington, London. To be able to afford to have Hilliard paint his portrait tells us immediately that this is a young man of means. Clearly he is making a statement because why else go to the trouble of devising a complex motto, let alone introducing another individual in the form of a hand. In this case, instead of showing the age of the sitter and the year their portrait was painted, we only have the year. The young man appears to be in his twenties, has sandy hair and beard, is dressed in black with a white lace collar, wears a grey hat with what appears to be jewel trim and a white feather and he holds a lady’s hand that comes from a cloud. The words Attici Amoris Ergo are written between him and the unknown woman’s hand as if to underline the connection between him, her and Atticus and on the other side are the words Anno Domini 1588 which indicates that the date is important, but unlike other portraits there is no indication of the age of the young man. There is some damage to the face, but this The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 - 11 is not so bad that it prevents us from examining his features. Hilliard was famous for capturing the likeness of his patrons and in much demand because they were painted from life which meant many of these have a fleeting smile or a twinkle in the eye. Hilliard shows a pensive young man, lost in thought. His beard is neatly trimmed and his sandy hair curls over his ears and collar. message; so much thought would have been given to how this hand was to be shown. Is the hand that of a married lover which is why she is hidden behind a cloud? If it is of his lover, why is she not responding to his touch as her fingers appear to rest inert within his? The colouring of the lace may, or may not, be deliberate; if so, why and this may be the only external clue to her identity? The only other clue to our sitter's identity is The pose is carefully constructed and our young the apparently incomprehensible motto, Attici man clasps a feminine hand whose lace on Amoris Ergo, which translates literally as her cuffs is coloured black and white; is this a 'Therefore by, with, from or through, the love of fashion statement? Might this be artistic licence Atticus'. in order to balance the portrait? Both are In his book, ‘The Secret Life of Elizabeth I’, Dr feasible suggestions. However, symbolism and imagery were often used to convey an unspoken Paul Doherty put forward the documentary evidence he had unearthed in Madrid, of a young man at the Court of Philip II of Spain calling himself Arthur Dudley and claiming to be the illegitimate son of Elizabeth, Queen of England and her favourite courtier, Robert Dudley. Walsingham and Lord Burghley had the best spy network in Europe and there were spies embedded within the Spanish Court just as Philip had his spies in London. When Elizabeth had first come to the throne, there had been gossip regarding her and Dudley’s behaviour and rumours that she had carried his child. Their behaviour was such that the Spanish Ambassador had reported their scandalous behaviour to his master. That September, when Dudley was with the queen at Windsor celebrating her birthday, his wife had a convenient accident and died. The inquest finds Dudley innocent of being implicated in a murder plot, but his reputation is sullied to the point that he can never be anything more than a close friend to the Queen. The story of the death of Amy Dudley (nee Robsart) is cloaked in mystery and the subject of many conspiracy theories, but it does seem to happen at a very convenient time. During my researches into the life and work of Levina Teerlinc I researched the various Ps on the front sheet of the Coram Rege rolls which were the recording of the proceedings of the Queen’s Bench and always showed an image of the monarch as God’s purveyor of justice and mercy. For the Michelmas Law term of 1560, the anonymous illuminator has taken the trouble to show the Queen’s expression. She appears concerned and perhaps worried. It appears the illuminator is portraying the state of mind of the monarch at this crisis. The Michelmas Law term runs from October to December, which in 1560 is the term where the very monarchy is threatened by the scandal of Lady Dudley's death and the international gossip regarding Elizabeth and Dudley's scandalous behaviour. It is probable that one of Teerlinc’s duties was to create the image of the monarch within the P on these Rolls. My question is why make the queen’s expression anything other than usual. Why make a very specific expression at all? Perhaps it is a comment on Elizabeth’s concern for Dudley? Or is it because Teerlinc knows of a darker, more personal, crisis and is taking the opportunity to record Elizabeth's anxiety on this P? Over the centuries the debate about a possible royal bastard has continued and it seems The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 - 13 unbelievable that the Queen of England might have hidden a pregnancy from the Court. If she had, this would have required the absolute loyalty of those close to her. Lord Burghley had always been loyal to the Protestant Elizabeth and her first appointment on becoming queen had been to appoint him her Secretary of State. Kat Ashley, whom Elizabeth had known since childhood, was appointed as her first lady of the bedchamber and as loyal to her as anyone could be. Kat was married to Sir John Ashley and Elizabeth awarded him the stewardship of her hunting lodge at Enfield. Elizabeth’s image changes from what it had been since the beginning of her reign. No longer is she shown as the Virgin Queen with her hair flowing over her shoulders, but with her hair now hidden as if she were a married woman. Her expression is concerned, but no longer worried. Has Teerlinc recorded the fact that the queen is pregnant by changing her hair style to that of a married woman? If so is it because the queen is pregnant and not because she is married? The Trinity term P shows a very smug Queen. This expression makes you wonder what the queen is smug about and why has the illuminator chosen to portray here thus? Where is there a better place to record such an explosive secret than where the monarch is shown as God’s representative and who sits During 1561 it was observed Elizabeth suffered from dropsy and swelled and was evidently unwell during this year. Elizabeth was recorded as suffering from all sorts of complaints which, for me, conflicts with other observations of her being a good and enthusiastic horsewoman who enjoyed the hunt as demonstrated in the woodcuts illustrating a book on hunting showing the queen being at a kill. This suggests she was anything but sickly by the time this woodcut were executed. The next law term was the Hilary term starting in January 1561 and here 14 - The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 on the throne by divine right? These rolls have a formulaic front detailing who is on the throne, what law term it is and are usually only looked at by lawyers, so the content of the roll is what would be of interest to them, not the front sheet. If Elizabeth were pregnant, there is no better place to make such a statement. The only suggestion I can make as to why someone might have even thought about making these visual statements is that human nature being as it is, when someone knows a secret of such importance they had to let it out somewhere. Perhaps it was even ordered that the event be recorded here. Walsingham and Lord Burghley would both have known about the Coram Rege Rolls and the image of the sovereign in these Ps, knowing that the content rather than the formulaic front sheet would be the main interest to those who consulted them. It is also now that she appoints William Cecil as Chancellor of the Court of Wards. Is this another coincidence or is it because Elizabeth shows she may well have reason to use the Court of Wards herself ? You may ask if there is precedence for this type of image change. Again, call it coincidence, but a similar device is used in the Michelmas term of 1554 when Mary I marries Philip II of Spain. A virginal Mary sits on a throne next to her husband. In the next P for the Hilary Term of 1555 Mary is shown with her hair hidden under her familiar head-dress. In the November of 1554 Mary had announced she was pregnant. What better way to declare that the first English queen regnant is carrying an heir than to portray her as no longer a virgin by the way she wears her hair? There was no precedence as to how to show this, so perhaps the illuminator used the device of how a married woman was portrayed as a way of recording the forthcoming event. It is subtle and should, as was often the case, there be a miscarriage, then it was unlikely anyone would make a comment. Mary was married and therefore considered to be no longer a virgin. Since Elizabeth never married why change her image on the front of these documents and why portray specific expressions on her face? accession. After appointing William Cecil her Secretary of State, Elizabeth appointed Robert Dudley her Master of Horse. Is our young man making a statement of who his parents are in an arcane and subtle way? What of the lady’s hand from the cloud? Is the black and white lace a clue as to her identity? Is the hidden woman really his mother rather than a lover? If it is a reference to his mother then this would explain the black and white lace as these were the colours of Elizabeth’s livery which would be a subtle way of identifying her. And what about the date of 1588? Dr Doherty's book references letters from one of Walsingham's Let us return to our portrait and the Latin motto – Attici Amoris Ergo. Why put apparent spies that a young man calling himself Arthur Dudley was at the Spanish Court until 1588. Latin gibberish on an expensive portrait He had been shipwrecked on the northern coast miniature? Perhaps it was a code between the youth and his lady and by inclusion of the name, of Spain and when arrested, claimed he was Arthur Dudley, son of Elizabeth I of England the code must therefore relate to the Roman and Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester. It appears citizen, Atticus. This piqued my curiosity as that Philip II believed his story and paid Arthur to what it was that was ‘therefore by, with, from’ a stipend even though, in effect, Arthur was a or even ‘through’ the love of Atticus. Perhaps the young man and the lady shared a friendship prisoner. Philip had known both Elizabeth and Dudley from his time in England married to in a similar way to that between Cicero and Mary I and Dudley had served in Philip's armies Atticus as declared in Cicero’s famous writing after he was released from the Tower. In the on friendship? If so, why hide the woman’s autumn of 1588 it is reported by Walsingham's identity and it still does not explain why their spies that this young man, Arthur, dies. For the relationship is “therefore, by, with, from or full story of this evidence you need to read The through” this friendship. Secret Life of Elizabeth I by Dr Doherty where Perhaps the meaning is metaphorical rather than he cites all his sources at the end of each chapter. a literal translation? So we have a young man at the Spanish Court who is accepted by the King of Spain as being This led me to widen my research to explore Arthur Dudley. In August 1588 the English the relationship between Cicero and Atticus navy defeat the Spanish Armada so what better and still this motto was meaningless until I way to wreak vengeance on your enemy than discovered that Atticus was a Roman citizen holding the rank of an equestrian knight. Here to murder the only son (albeit illegitimate) we might re-examine the meaning of this motto and possible heir to the English throne, of the for another interpretation – therefore, by, with, Elizabeth, Queen of England and the Earl of Leicester, whom you have in your grasp? from or through the love of a man who is of equestrian rank. In early September 1588 we know from documentary evidence that Elizabeth was At this point we return to 1558 and Elizabeth’s 16 - The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 celebrating the defeat of the Spanish Armada when she received the news that her beloved Dudley had died on his way to Buxton. We know that she locked herself in her room consumed with inconsolable grief until the door was forced. This is pure conjecture, but what if there had also been news from Spain that the young man calling himself Arthur Dudley was also dead? How could she have functioned having lost both her adored Robin and her child; a child the world did not know existed. A child who perhaps was supposed to rise from the ashes of her death, like a phoenix (another of Elizabeth's emblems) and claim the English throne to become King Arthur, who, according to legend, will be England’s once and future king - Rex Quondam, Rex Futuris. It was a legend that was already linked with the Tudor dynasty and one that Elizabeth loved. eye. We all look at family photographs and see family resemblances in each generation so perhaps we should compare our Unknown Youth with the 1572 miniature portrait of Elizabeth I and a 1576 portrait of Robert Dudley. All three portraits are by Hilliard so each is seen with the same Is this Unknown Young Man a portrait of Arthur Dudley, the illegitimate heir to the throne of England? If so, did Hilliard know this and paint a second portrait? Did he paint the date of Arthur’s death, 1588? Perhaps Hilliard had been let into the secret, but by whom? It is unlikely to have been Elizabeth or Dudley. Perhaps he had guessed, or maybe the young man told him. Perhaps it is all just a coincidence? I only suggest an identity for Hilliard's Unknown Young Man; you will have to examine these three portraits for family resemblances, study the evidence, consider my theory regarding the meaning behind the Latin motto and draw your own conclusions. MELANIE. The Anne Boleyn Fellowship February 2013 - 17