The Field

Play at crystal palace

According to Sellar and Yeatman’s 1066 And All That, King Henry VIII played tennis with the King of France on the Field of Cloth of Gold, and this was the origin of the motto of the Prince of Wales: “Ich dien.” It’s a good joke but the motto Ich dien – German for “I serve” – was adopted by the Prince of Wales nearly 200 years earlier, after the Battle of Crécy (1346), along with the famous three feathers supposedly plucked from the crown of the King of Bohemia, killed in the battle fighting on the French side. There is no record of Henry playing tennis with King Francis at the Field, although they famously wrestled.

The Field of Cloth of Gold (sometimes ‘of the Cloth of Gold’) was a summit conference under sumptuous canvas, Tudor glamping on a scale never surpassed. It was a fortnight’s tournament during the summer of 1520, a friendly but serious mutual display of power, wealth and martial arts to cement the nascent friendship between England and France. For there had been little but enmity between the two for centuries.

The Field was the idea of Henry’s Lord Chancellor, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey. England in pre-Reformation Europe was a Catholic power to be wooed by other powers, notably France, Spain and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Field

The Field1 min read
The Field’s Almanac
Did you know? May is named after the Roman goddess Maia, who oversaw the growth of plants. ♦ Among the many superstitions associated with May Day was the belief that washing one’s face with the dew on the morning of 1 May would beautify the skin and
The Field4 min read
Perfection In A Pinch
The brown crab can be found all around the British Isles and is by far our biggest species. The female is impressively productive, laying between 250,000 and three million eggs a year. Pot-caught crab is the most sustainable choice, as it is species
The Field3 min read
Shining A Light On Leistering
IT MAY SURPRISE the reader to know that fishing has not always been conducted with a rod and line. Throughout history and indeed across the world, the use of multi-bladed spears or tridents was an accepted fishing practice. Such a multibladed weapon

Related Books & Audiobooks