Object

Marriage Contract Between Anna of Cleves and the Heir of the Duke of Lorraine

Legal papers documenting Anna of Cleves' prior marriage contract with the heir of the Duke of Lorraine. Henry VIII confronts Cromwell in Hampton Court courtyard over their absence—Anne was supposed to deliver them to prove her eligibility. Henry declares the marriage invalid without them, his anger compounding disdain for her appearance. Cromwell dismisses it as oversight. In privy chamber, Cromwell grips the contract, arguing it persists within an unrevoked treaty as Gardiner demands revocation proof to attack him before the watchful king.
3 appearances

Purpose

Legally bind Anna of Cleves to the heir of the Duke of Lorraine through marriage

Significance

Absence blocks Henry VIII's marriage to Anne of Cleves and ignites courtyard clash with Cromwell. Ambiguous status sparks privy chamber debate where Gardiner wields it against Cromwell, eroding his influence as Henry watches amused.

Appearances in the Narrative

When this object appears and how it's used

3 moments
S2E5 · The Mirror and the Light Episode 5
Henry’s Public Critique of Anne of Cleves

The Black Jennet, the stunning horse Henry admires at the beginning of the scene, serves as a distraction and a foil to the tension between Henry and Cromwell. Its beauty and grace contrast sharply with Henry’s derisive descriptions of Anne of Cleves, underscoring the king’s dissatisfaction with the marriage alliance. The horse’s presence in the courtyard creates a false sense of normalcy, a moment of aesthetic appreciation that is swiftly shattered by Henry’s outburst. The jennet’s role is symbolic: it represents the idealized beauty and control Henry associates with his kingdom, a beauty Anne of Cleves fails to embody. The courtiers’ superficial comments about the horse’s handsomeness further highlight the performative nature of courtly life, where appearances and pleasantries mask deeper political currents.

Before: The black jennet is a prized possession of the royal stables, admired for its beauty and grace. It is the focal point of the courtyard scene before Henry’s critique of Anne of Cleves begins, serving as a distraction and a symbol of royal prestige.
After: The black jennet’s role in the scene shifts from a symbol of aesthetic appreciation to a contrastive device, highlighting the king’s displeasure with Anne of Cleves. Its beauty remains untarnished, but its presence now serves as a reminder of the gulf between Henry’s expectations and the reality of the marriage alliance.
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