Edwin Lerner

King Henry I of England, The Forgotten Monarch

There have been eight kings of England called Henry and maybe the least well known was the first to hold that name. King Henry I of England was the fourth son of William the Conqueror and, as such, would not have been expected to come to the throne. Nevertheless, when his brother, the little-loved William Rufus died in a suspiciously convenient hunting accident in the New Forest, Henry was ready to quickly claim the crown and dashed up to London for a quick coronation at Westminster Abbey.

King Henry I of England. Photo Credit: © Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

King Henry I of England. Photo Credit: © Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons.

 

Although he had numerous illegitimate children, there was only one son from Henry the First’s marriage to Matilda of Scotland. This was William Adelin, who perished in the White Ship tragedy of 1120. This was a kind of medieval Titanic, a supposedly state of the art vessel brought down by the forces of nature together with human arrogance and carelessness. Not only William but all of his drunken friends and the crew drowned while the captain reportedly went down with the ship rather than report to the king that his only son and heir had perished. King Henry I of England was said never to have smiled again after his loss.

The following year he founded Reading Abbey and arranged to be buried there. The Abbey Quarter has recently been reopened after a period of restoration. However, the site of the king’s grave can only be guessed at and there are no actual bones, which might be identified as his through DNA analysis, in the way that those of Richard the Third were when they were uncovered in a Leicester car park in 2012. He is the only king of England since William the Conqueror to have no definitely identifiable grave – although a plaque, unveiled in 1921 800 years after the Abbey was founded, marks where he is believed to have been buried.

Plaque marking grave site of King Henry I of England. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

Plaque marking gravesite of King Henry I of England. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

 

Why was the tomb of King Henry I lost? He was after all a king of England and might have expected better treatment. However, the last English king to carry that name, Henry the Eighth, fell out with the Pope over the issue of his desire for a divorce from his first wife Catherine of Aragon. Catherine had been married to Henry’s elder brother, Prince Arthur, and Henry used this as a pretext for the divorce as their union had involved breaking the biblical law which forbade men to marry their brother’s widow. One Pope had set aside this rule and another could enforce it. However, Pope Clement the Seventh was under the thumb of the Aragon family, who would not allow him to authorise a humiliating divorce. And, after all, who was Henry the eighth’s grandfather but some obscure Welsh squire?

This, “the King’s great matter”, led to a break with the Roman Catholic church and eventually the establishment of an independent Church of England. Collateral damage in the wars and disputes which followed included the monasteries of England and their inhabitants, the holy men who entered the monastery at a young age and took vows of obedience, celibacy, and poverty. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the mid-sixteenth century, they became beggars and their buildings – havens of peace, learning and piety in a violent world – became ruins. Reading, despite being the last resting place of a king who had many similarities with his namesake was not spared and the grave of King Henry I of England was destroyed by the officers of the eighth. What one king Henry established, a later one destroyed.

Cross commemorating King Henry I at Reading Abbey. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

Cross commemorating King Henry I at Reading Abbey. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

 

Abbey with Reading Gaol (where Oscar Wilde was imprisoned) in the background. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

Abbey with Reading Gaol (where Oscar Wilde was imprisoned) in the background. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

 

Modern Reading behind the medieval Abbey. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

Modern Reading behind the medieval Abbey. Photo Credit: © Edwin Lerner.

 

Edwin Lerner

Named Edwin (an early king of Northern England) but usually called ‘Eddie’, I conducted extended tours around Britain and Ireland for many years and now work as a freelance guide and tour manager with a little writing and editing on the side.  I specialise in public transport and walking…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Queen Elizabeth II, Britain’s Longest-Reigning Monarch Dies at 96

Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second’s long reign as monarch of the United Kingdom and Head of the Commonwealth came to an end on the afternoon of 8th September, 2022. Elizabeth was born in Mayfair in London on 21st April 1926 in a house since demolished. She ascended to the throne on 6th February 1952 whilst in Kenya on a tour of African countries. Her reign of 70 years and 214 days was the longest of any British monarch, as she had passed the previous record of 63 years and seven months held by Queen Victoria in 2015.

Read more

13 British Monarchs: From Queen Anne to King Charles III

The British Royal Family can trace their lineage right back to Cerdic of Wessex (519-534), founder and first king of Saxon Wessex, which is not bad for a family tree. As with all royal families, they inter-married with other European Royals over the years, and many fought and died to retain the English crown (merged with the Scottish crown on the ascent to the throne in 1603 of James VI of Scotland as James I of England).

Read more