Object
Don Diego de Mendoza’s Diplomatic Letter to Lady Mary (Black-Ribboned, Sealed with Double-Headed Eagle)
A letter from Don Diego de Mendoza to Lady Mary, delivered by Eustace Chapuys during Evensong and later presented in her privy chamber. It is black-ribboned, sealed with a double-headed eagle (symbolizing Spanish imperial ties), and contains a hidden coded message. Serves as both a romantic overture and a diplomatic pretext for covert communication, with Cromwell initially dismissing its relevance but later engaging with it.
7 appearances
Purpose
Romantic overture from Don Diego de Mendoza to Lady Mary with diplomatic undertones
Significance
Cromwell rejects it to pursue the Seymour alliance through Gregory's marriage to Bess Oughtred, underscoring his isolation and ambition's personal cost
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used