Transcript
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Gonzalo Velasco Beranga (1:12)
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Maria Hayward (1:16)
Our time from BBC Radio 4 and this is one of more than a thousand episodes you can find on BBC Sounds and on our website. If you scroll down the page for this edition, you find a reading list to go with it. I hope you enjoyed the program. Hello. Catherine of Aragon, 1485-1536, was born to greatness, with her parents ruling most of Spain and her siblings marrying into the great royal families of Europe. At the age of three, she was engaged to Arthur, heir to the Tudor crown, and for the next decade she was educated for her role and developed her formidable skills and powers. Widowed at 16, she later married her brother in law, Henry VIII and loyally supported the Tudor and Spanish interests and above all remained true to herself even when her husband of 23 years and father of their six babies tried to end their marriage. With me to discuss Catherine of Aragon, a Gonzalo Verrasco Berenga, Lecturer in Global Medieval and Early Modern History at the University of Bristol Maria Hayward, professor of Early Modern History at the University of Southampton and Lucy Wooding Langford Fellow and Tutor in History at Lincoln College, University of Oxford and professor of Early Modern History at Oxford. Lucy, I've said she was born to greatness. Who were Catherine's parents? Why do we use the word greatness?
Gonzalo Velasco Beranga (2:39)
Well, she had two very formidable parents and we remember Ferdinand and Isabella as the monarchs who laid the foundation for a united Spain, who went some way to ensuring that Spain would eventually become, if you like, the early Modern superpower. So Ferdinand is King of Aragon and in many ways the lesser partner in this partnership. I mean, we always talk about Ferdinand and Isabella, at least we do in English textbooks, but really Isabella was in many ways the more important member of that duo. And Isabella and Ferdinand married when they were teenagers. And although they had this reputation for later greatness, they really had to fight to establish themselves on their respective thrones. Particularly, Isabella literally had to fight to establish herself as queen of Castile.
