The Tudor Heart: Romance or Propaganda? cover art

The Tudor Heart: Romance or Propaganda?

The Tudor Heart: Romance or Propaganda?

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

A pendant linked to Catherine of Aragon has reportedly been discovered — and it’s more than just Tudor jewellery. It’s a window into one of the most dramatic marriages in English history, the break with Rome, and the personal cost of power.


In this episode of Mark and Pete, we explore the significance of a newly identified Tudor pendant associated with Henry VIII’s first wife, Catherine of Aragon. Was it a romantic gift? A royal emblem? A symbol of legitimacy? Or a silent witness to the collapse of a marriage that changed the course of England forever?


Catherine of Aragon was not merely a discarded queen. She was a Spanish princess, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, regent of England during Henry’s campaigns, and a woman of formidable intelligence and deep Catholic faith. Her refusal to accept Henry’s annulment triggered the English Reformation and the establishment of the Church of England under royal supremacy.


We examine how Henry VIII used Scripture to justify his desire for a male heir, how the Tudor court turned marriage into political theatre, and how Catherine’s dignity in exile reshaped the moral narrative of the Reformation. The discovery of a Catherine of Aragon pendant invites fresh discussion about Tudor history, royal authority, marriage, conscience, and the abuse of power.


With Mark’s poetic reflections and Pete’s Christian commentary, this episode asks: what happens when rulers bend truth to serve appetite? And what does this Tudor drama teach modern Britain about covenant, leadership, and integrity?


This is history, faith, politics, and cultural reflection — all wrapped in one small piece of gold.


Topics include: Catherine of Aragon pendant, Henry VIII marriage crisis, Tudor England, English Reformation, Church of England origins, royal divorce, Catholic vs Protestant history, biblical marriage, power and conscience, British history podcast.

No reviews yet