Did King Henry VIII stand on this spot to watch the Mary Rose sink... |
Sir Anthony
Knyvet, 22 Oct 1544
Southsea Castle (centre, in the distance to the left of the lighthouse) Seen form Southsea Common. |
On a perfect summer’s day, I fed my
history addiction by visiting Southsea Castle and then the Mary Rose museum,
Portsmouth.
Indeed, Southsea Castle is perhaps most well-known for being the place from which, on 19th July, 1545, King Henry VIII witnessed the sinking of the Mary Rose. My aim was to revisit the spot where Henry stood…
Indeed, Southsea Castle is perhaps most well-known for being the place from which, on 19th July, 1545, King Henry VIII witnessed the sinking of the Mary Rose. My aim was to revisit the spot where Henry stood…
The Mary Rose - flying green and white Tudor pennants. |
The entrance to Southsea Castle. |
Henry appointed Sir Anthony Knyvet, Governor of Portsmouth, to oversee
the construction. Knyvet took care to report regularly to his majesty. In one
letter, some idea of the pressure to complete the build is hinted at when he
bemoans a 10 day period in June 1544 when the weather was too poor to ship
building supplies over from the Isle of Wight. Just a week later he reports
construction will be far enough advanced, 12 days hence, to support weaponry. However, on 8th July he wrote again,
anxious to correct the king who had been told the castle was fully defensible, “the which [sic] is not.” Again, supplies seem to have been the problem:
“Only a small quantity of gunpowder and the
two sacres [small brass canon firing 6 pound shot]had been delivered, along with a good store of bows, arrows, bills and
pikes.”
The keep - an original part of Henry's Castle. |
‘I dare say your Majesty had never so great
a piece of work done and so substantial, in so little time, as all skilful men
that have seen it do report.’
Sir Anthony
Knyvet.
When completed Knyvet wrote to Lord Wriothesely, the High Chancellor,
that never had such a fortress been built at so little cost. He also hoped the
king would be pleased “which was of his
Majesty’s own device” – that is to say, Henry himself had been responsible
for the design.
Standing on the ramparts, looking west across the entrance to Portsmouth harbour. |
It is hard to imagine how Southsea Castle looked in Tudor times but part of Henry’s original castle can still be seen at the keep, as well as East and West gun platforms. The keep, its walls up to 3 metres thick, was blissfully cool inside on the hot summer’s day of my visit. Whilst I’m not convinced I found the exact spot where King Henry VIII stood on that fateful day in 1545 – I hope the photos give some flavour of the view. Most of the photographs were taken from the ramparts – which were built in the early 1800’s as canon placements during the Napoleonic wars.