Cromwell's struggle with his past actions and the moral consequences of his ambition, particularly regarding Anne Boleyn and his daughter Jenneke.
Cromwell's struggle with his past actions and the moral consequences of his ambition, particularly regarding Anne Boleyn and his daughter Jenneke.
Events in This Arc
In the cold, unyielding light of day at Austin Friars, Thomas Cromwell stands frozen at the main gate, his political armor momentarily stripped bare. His illegitimate daughter, Jenneke, is led …
In the candlelit intimacy of his study, Thomas Cromwell is confronted by Jenneke, a composed young woman whose existence he never suspected. Her revelation—that her mother deliberately concealed her to …
In a harrowing, disorienting flashback—triggered by Cromwell’s feverish delirium—we witness the immediate aftermath of Anne Boleyn’s execution. The scene unfolds in grotesque, visceral detail: Anne’s women, clad in mourning black, …
In the quiet of his study, Cromwell grapples with the fallout of abandoning John Lambert—a reformist ally—to political expediency. His frustration with Gardiner’s sabotage of the reformation and his own …
During a tense dinner at Lambeth Palace, Stephen Gardiner and the Duke of Norfolk orchestrate a calculated attack on Thomas Cromwell, using veiled accusations about Cardinal Wolsey’s alleged involvement in …
Cromwell moves through the Queen’s outer rooms at Hampton Court, his gaze drawn to the closed door of the bedchamber where Jane Seymour died. The tied-back curtain—once a barrier—now exposes …
In the King’s private chamber, Henry VIII—frustrated by Anne of Cleves’ failure to produce a son—probes Cromwell’s willingness to dissolve the marriage, revealing his own desperation and Cromwell’s waning influence. …