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Grandson of Mary Boleyn. Cousin to Elizabeth I. Patron to Shakespeare’s company. On 8 September 1603, George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, died, leaving a legacy that runs from court politics to the playhouse. Some even whispered he was Henry VIII’s grandson. Rumour or not, Carey stood right behind the stage that gave us Hamlet, Henry V and more.
I’m historian and author Claire Ridgway. In today’s “On This Day,” meet the steady court insider who helped shape the English Renaissance, from border forts and the Isle of Wight to the Lord Chamberlain’s Men.
What you’ll learn:
Carey’s Boleyn roots & royal connections
Missions to Scotland and a knighthood at Berwick (1570)
Roles that kept him close to Elizabeth I (Marshal of the Household, JP, Constable of Bamburgh, Captain of the Isle of Wight)
How he supported the fleet during the Spanish Armada
Why becoming Lord Chamberlain (1596) mattered to Shakespeare’s troupe
Honours (KG, Privy Council) and his late-life legacy under James I
The enduring rumour about Tudor blood in the Carey line
If you enjoyed this, please like, subscribe, and ring the bell for daily Tudor stories.
#TudorHistory #AnneBoleyn #ElizabethI #Shakespeare #LordChamberlainsMen #OnThisDay
By Claire Ridgway4.7
6868 ratings
Grandson of Mary Boleyn. Cousin to Elizabeth I. Patron to Shakespeare’s company. On 8 September 1603, George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, died, leaving a legacy that runs from court politics to the playhouse. Some even whispered he was Henry VIII’s grandson. Rumour or not, Carey stood right behind the stage that gave us Hamlet, Henry V and more.
I’m historian and author Claire Ridgway. In today’s “On This Day,” meet the steady court insider who helped shape the English Renaissance, from border forts and the Isle of Wight to the Lord Chamberlain’s Men.
What you’ll learn:
Carey’s Boleyn roots & royal connections
Missions to Scotland and a knighthood at Berwick (1570)
Roles that kept him close to Elizabeth I (Marshal of the Household, JP, Constable of Bamburgh, Captain of the Isle of Wight)
How he supported the fleet during the Spanish Armada
Why becoming Lord Chamberlain (1596) mattered to Shakespeare’s troupe
Honours (KG, Privy Council) and his late-life legacy under James I
The enduring rumour about Tudor blood in the Carey line
If you enjoyed this, please like, subscribe, and ring the bell for daily Tudor stories.
#TudorHistory #AnneBoleyn #ElizabethI #Shakespeare #LordChamberlainsMen #OnThisDay

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