Thehistoryjar.com

health The History Jar

WEBWhen Mary Tudor became queen Elizabeth used her health – stomach ache in particular- to avoid attending mass. After Wyatt’s Rebellion in 1554 Elizabeth began to …

Actived: 7 days ago

URL: https://thehistoryjar.com/tag/health/

Elizabeth I’s health before she became queen. The History Jar

WEBElizabeth now became ill and required the attended of Edward VI’s physicians. When Mary Tudor became queen Elizabeth used her health – stomach …

Category:  Health Go Health

February, blood letting and monasticism The History Jar

WEBOn the third day after the bloodletting, the monk joined the rest of the community for some of the offices and might start doing a spot of light reading. Monks, …

Category:  Health Go Health

Insanity, the law and asylums The History Jar

WEBThe West Riding’s asylum opened in Wakefield in 1818 though its minutes date from 1814. Further parliamentary acts defined lunacy, attempted to regulate private …

Category:  Health Go Health

Amy Robsart’s death The History Jar

WEBPoor health or not, falling the wrong way can cause a broken neck. Of course poor health or an accident is not nearly as marketable or dramatic as being …

Category:  Course Go Health

medical history The History Jar

WEBPosts about medical history written by JuliaH. Okay – so I’m a couple of days out. On the plus side at the end of January 1547 the news of Henry VIII’s death was kept …

Category:  Medical Go Health

Dr Richard Layton The History Jar

WEBBristol and Durham received a clean bill of health from Layton. Having said that it is worth remembering that Layton was related to Cuthbert Tunstall who as bishop …

Category:  Health Go Health

The children of Charles I and Henrietta Maria The History Jar

WEBJames was the Duke of York from birth and after the death of his elder brother became King James II. And yes, he’s the pretty child in the dress with the red jacket …

Category:  Health Go Health

County Asylum Act The History Jar

WEBThe West Riding’s asylum opened in Wakefield in 1818 though its minutes date from 1814. Further parliamentary acts defined lunacy, attempted to regulate private …

Category:  Health Go Health

Katherine Parr and the Pilgrimage of Grace The History Jar

WEBKatherine Parr and the Pilgrimage of Grace. Posted on May 19, 2016. In 1534 after the death of her first husband and a stay with relations at Sizergh Castle …

Category:  Health Go Health

The Stuarts – King James I of England- key events.

WEBElizabeth I died on 24 March 1603 in Richmond. She had been on the throne for nearly forty-five years. Whilst the queen had prevaricated about naming her heir, Sir …

Category:  Health Go Health

Domesday and the Salisbury Oath The History Jar

WEBNormally, in the feudal system, a king took oaths of fealty from his tenants-in-chief and they took oaths in their turn. At Salisbury William extended the oath taking …

Category:  Health Go Health

Mary Berkeley The History Jar

WEBMary Berekley lived in the Welsh Marches with her husband Sir Thomas Perrot. Thomas was keen on hunting – as was Henry VIII. It is just possible that the king …

Category:  Health Go Health

Thankful villages and the men who came home but never really …

WEBAfter the war ex-servicemen who could not return to civilian life due to mental health problems had to be dealt with differently. In some cases they were registered as …

Category:  Health Go Health

Lady Eleanor Brandon The History Jar

WEBLady Eleanor Brandon. The Act of Settlement in 1701 ensured a Protestant succession upon the deaths of King William III (That’s the William in William and Mary) …

Category:  Health Go Health

The death of Henry VII The History Jar

WEBThe death of Henry VII. Posted on March 14, 2016. King Henry VII died on 21st April 1509 at Richmond Palace. He’d not been well since the spring of 1507 when it …

Category:  Health Go Health

The Royal Book – instructions for looking like you should be on …

WEBThe royal wet nurse’s food was to be tested for poison and her health monitored by physicians. Nothing would be left to chance – no one would say that the …

Category:  Food Go Health

The death of Katherine of Aragon The History Jar

WEBPosted on January 7, 2017. On January 7 1536 Katherine of Aragon died at Kimbolton Castle in Cambridgeshire. Sir Edward Chamberlain and Sir Edmund Beddingfield, the …

Category:  Health Go Health

Robert Carr, the king’s favourite…murderer. The History Jar

WEBRobert Carr, the king’s favourite…murderer. Posted on May 27, 2014. Robert Carr was a Scotsman born in Somerset. He was the son of Sir Thomas Kerr of …

Category:  Health Go Health

Levina Teerlinc – Tudor artist The History Jar

WEBIn November 1546 Levina and her husband, George Teerlinc, arrived in London where Levina was paid forty pounds year to be Henry VIII’s court artist. Levina’s …

Category:  Health Go Health

Katherine Howard executed The History Jar

WEBKatherine Howard executed. Posted on February 13, 2017. On February 13th 1542 Henry VIII’s fifth queen, his “rose without a thorn”, was executed. Historians …

Category:  Health Go Health

Abbots The History Jar

WEBAbbots. In Benedictine abbeys abbots were responsible for the running of an abbey and its material wellbeing as well as the spiritual health of the monks in their …

Category:  Health Go Health