As the dust
settled on the English Civil War, the government of England found itself in an
almost unimaginable situation. The killing of Charles I on a scaffold in
Whitehall, though by no means the first example of a King of England meeting
his end at the hands of his enemy, was unprecedented in the sense that he was
the first king to be executed for treason. No less than three kings since the
Norman Conquest – Edward II, Richard II, and Richard III – had met their maker
in some way at the hands of their successor, but up to this point monarchy had
always survived.
And prospered.
View across the battlefield of Edgehill - even today it is soaked in atmosphere |
The Battle Obelisk at Naseby, the decisive battle of the Civil War |
The outcome of
the Civil War will forever be remembered as a decisive moment in England’s
history, and not just for the death of the king. Many of England’s mighty
castles, trademarks of the lost dynasties, now lay in ruin, destined for
destruction or decay, while the king’s personal possessions were commandeered,
many finding a new home under the watchful eye of the new ruler. The symbol of
the monarch, so long used to authenticate acts of Parliament, was removed from
the great seal and as Cromwell’s forces took over the city of London, the
coronation regalia that remained scattered within The Palace of Westminster,
Westminster Abbey and the Tower of London were removed from the public eye.
Documents from the time confirm the majority of the items were sold, and melted
down.
Like the king
and the institution they represented, the original crown jewels of England ceased
to exist.
Edward the Confessor enthroned at Westminster Abbey, as recorded in the Bayeux Tapestry |
The idea that
the Crown jewels of England could ever have been destroyed seems almost
unthinkable. Anyone who has seen the present collection behind thick glass in
the Jewel House of The Tower of London, watched over by the loyal Yeoman
Warders, will undoubtedly acknowledge that there is something unique about
them, as if their very appearance is inseparable from that of the monarch,
including the kings and queens of the past. The term Crown jewels is itself worthy
of further explanation. The term incorporates every item connected with the
ceremony from metal to vestments, not merely the crown. Coronation regalia has
always played a vital and, at times, dramatic part in England’s history. As
recently as 1988, archaeologists discovered crowns from the 2nd century BC.
Similar finds have also been recorded from the Saxon era.
William the Conqueror |
William the
Conqueror’s invasion in 1066 culminated with his being crowned King of England
in Westminster Abbey. The Bayeux Tapestry shows both Edward the Confessor and
Harold Godwinson wearing a gold crown, and according to the Anglo-Saxon
chronicle, that records the history of Britain from around 60BC up until about
1154, William wore a crown on no less than three occasions a year. There are
few, if any, surviving records of what exactly the Crown jewels consisted of at
that time. Around 15 October 1216, just four days before his death, King John’s
entire baggage train was wiped out by a tide in The Wash as he prepared to
cross into Norfolk. There is a good deal of uncertainty about what precisely
was lost. At his coronation at Gloucester Cathedral on 28 October, John’s son,
Henry III, was crowned with a plain hoop of gold, property of Henry’s mother.
The usual crown was apparently missing, though whether this was because it had
been among the valuables washed away on the east coast or because the
circumstances of the war made it inaccessible remains unclear.
The first coronation of Henry III, from a window at Gloucester Cathedral |
In 1220, when
Henry was crowned for a second time, the ceremony, attended by notably more
prelates and barons than on the first occasion, was described in much more
detail. Records of that event have identified the crown used on that occasion
as the Diadem of Edward the Confessor. That this was the same one as used by
Edward himself and later William the Conqueror and his successors is quite
probable. An inventory of the Crown jewels by a monk at Westminster in the
mid-1400s makes further reference to ‘an excellent golden crown’, along with
other items apparently used at Edward the Confessor’s coronation, including ‘a
tunicle…golden comb and spoon’, and for his wife, Edith, a crown, two rods, an
onyx stone chalice and a paten. The spoon, along with the golden ampulla first
used at the coronation of Henry IV to pour holy oil over the king, are two of
the few pieces from the set that have survived.
King Alfred the Great with crown, from a statue located in his home city of Winchester |
Precise
references to the diadem’s existence can be found from Henry III’s coronation
right up to the reign of Charles I. To confuse matters, there has been some
suggestion that the Diadem of Edward the Confessor was renamed King Alfred’s
Crown at some point following the dissolution of the monasteries. Prior to that
point another crown, referred to commonly as Alfred the Great’s state crown, is
also recorded as having existed. Descriptions are vague, but appear different
enough to confirm the existence of two crowns. An early description of King
Alfred’s state crown referred to it being ‘set with slight stones and two
little bells’, while a parliamentarian named Sir Henry Spelman writing during
the civil war referred to Alfred’s crown as ‘of very ancient work, with flowers
adorned with stones of somewhat plain setting’. One of the few surviving
accounts of the diadem states it was a ‘gold crown decorated with diverse
stones’. Cromwell’s agents are recorded as having found at least three crowns
in Westminster Abbey, Whitehall Palace and the 14th century Jewel
Tower, whilst an inventory into the property of Edward II made reference to the
existence of ten crowns.
The Jewel Tower - once part of the Palace of Westminster |
Among those
might have been a series of rare finds from the reign of Edward I. In 1282, in
preparation for his war against Edward I, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd deposited many
of his jewels with the monks of Cymer Abbey. In 1284, with the war over, the
jewels were handed over to Edward, including the ‘coronet Arthur’, a crown that
supposedly belonged to the legendary king.
Later in
Edward’s reign, the Stone of Destiny was brought from Scotland and kept in the
Tower following the King’s victory over William Wallace in 1296. The stone was
added to the coronation chair, but the appearance of the stone that now resides
at Westminster Abbey does not fit with the original description.
Charles I alongside the Tudor State Crown |
By the reign of
Henry VII another crown, commonly referred to as the Tudor State Crown, had
been added to the collection. Descriptions of this have survived in greater
numbers, and it has also been shown in a number of portraits. The frame of this
crown was also gold and embedded with pearls, rubies, sapphires and diamonds. It
was decorated with a figure of the Virgin Mary, at least three crosses and as
many as four fleurs-de-lis. The Tudor Crown was independently valued as the
most precious of the original jewels at approximately £1,100, worth just under
£2m in the present day.
A copy of St Edward's Crown, apparently created using gold from the original diadem |
Of the original
items only the ampulla, the spoon, the coronation chair and possibly some of
the swords have survived. It is believed that gold from the Diadem of St Edward
may have have been used in the construction of the new St Edward’s Crown – the
official coronation crown that has been used at most coronations since that of
Charles II, including Elizabeth II. According to the official receipts, the
remainder of the jewels were destroyed; however, during the civil war, a story
told that one of the original crowns, possibly the diadem, had been salvaged by
a band of Cavalier soldiers, its whereabouts never divulged. Is it possible one
of the original jewels could still exist, waiting to be discovered?
The fate of the
missing jewels is a central feature of The Cromwell Deception, available now
from Amazon UK and US.
THE CROMWELL DECEPTION - OUT NOW |
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