‘A great traveller in the world’
The man who would one day become the most powerful in England was of such humble origins that nobody can be sure when or where he was born. In his famous account of sixteenth-century martyrs, John Foxe described Thomas Cromwell as ‘a man but of a base stock and house’.1 The likeliest date for his birth is 1485, which, if true, would be satisfyingly appropriate for it was in this year that the Tudors came to power. Henry Tudor’s victory over Richard III at Bosworth Field has been hailed ever since as one of the momentous dates in history. It brought to an end the Wars of the Roses, the conflict between the rival branches of the royal House of Plantagenet (York and Lancaster), which had torn England apart for more than three decades. But, at the time, nobody could have predicted that this obscure Welshman, a Lancastrian with a dubious claim to the throne, would establish a dynasty that would dominate English and European politics, religion and society for more than a century.
Significant though it was, the dawn of a new dynasty, which took place on a remote Leicestershire field in August 1485, must have seemed a world away to the inhabitants of Putney, where Thomas Cromwell’s family lived and worked. It was probably either in this small village to the west of London or in nearby Wimbledon that Cromwell was born. John Foxe noted that Cromwell was born ‘of a simple Parentage, and a House obscure . . . at Putney or thereabouts’.2 Tradition has it that his birthplace was at the top of Putney Hill, on the edge of Putney Heath – a notorious haunt of highwaymen.3
The Cromwells were not originally from this corner of southwest London, but from Norwell in Nottinghamshire. They were then a family of wealth and status, and John Cromwell (Thomas’s grandfather) was both well-known and highly respected. By 1461, he had moved with his family and brother-in-law, William Smith, to Wimbledon, where he was granted the lease of a fulling-mill and house by the Archbishop of Canterbury.4 His eldest son, John, moved to Lambeth and became a prosperous brewer, later securing the position of cook to the archbishop.5 His second son, Walter, meanwhile, remained in Wimbledon and was probably apprenticed to his uncle because he took the name Smith.
The records suggest that Thomas was the youngest of three children, and the only boy, born to Walter Cromwell and his wife Katherine née Meverell. He may have been an unexpected child since he was considerably younger than his sisters. In the only recorded reference to his mother, Thomas made the unlikely claim that she was fifty-two when she bore him.6 The only details that can be found about Katherine in the contemporary records were that she was the aunt of Nicholas Glossop of Wirksworth in Derbyshire, and that she was living in the house of a Putney attorney, John Welbeck, at the time of her marriage around 1474. The fact that Nicholas was more than thirty years older than his cousin adds weight to the theory that Thomas was the youngest of Katherine’s children.
Walter Cromwell, meanwhile, was an enterprising man with a number of different but presumably complementary professions, as a blacksmith, brewer and fuller (cloth dresser). According to contemporary sources, Walter had served as a farrier in Henry Tudor’s contingent at the Battle of Bosworth. As such, he would hardly have been in the thick of the battle, but the fact that he chose, or was chosen, to serve the invading army, rather than the superior force of the reigning king, Richard III, is interesting. That the Cromwells should be in the Tudors’ service as soon as they landed on English soil seems very apt given the career of Walter’s son.
The Cromwell family had owned a fulling mill at Putney for fifty years. Walter also owned a hostelry, called the Anchor, and a brewery, along with two virgates (sixty acres) of land. In the Close Rolls of Henry VII’s reign, he is listed as a ‘bere-bruer’.7 His success as a local tradesman was recognised by regular calls to serve as a juryman, and then his appointment as constable of Putney in 1495. He also rapidly acquired new land, and by 1500 he owned eight virgates (an amount of land that could be ploughed by two oxen). The family home and brewery were opposite the top of the appropriately named Brewhouse Lane, which today still runs the short distance from Putney Bridge Road to the River Thames. At the river’s edge was a landing site for river-borne craft, and this was a common stopping place for people on their way from London to the towns and villages of west Surrey and the counties beyond. A house by the river in modern-day Putney would demand a premium, but the area was a good deal less salubrious in the sixteenth century. A fishery stood at the other end of Brewhouse Lane, so the Cromwells’ home would have been constantly assaulted by the pungent smells emanating from it.
There is no record of what the house was like, but given Walter’s status in the local community and his various business interests, he could probably have afforded a home with rather more comforts than most other residents of Putney. The majority of houses were built with timber and wattle and daub, rather than bricks. The timber frames were often coated with black tar to prevent them from rotting, and the walls in between were whitewashed. The predominance of wood made these houses susceptible to fire, and if Walter Cromwell’s smithy was close to the family home, theirs would have been at greater risk than most. It was common for ordinary houses to have just one room, which would serve as a kitchen, bathroom, bedroom and living room. Some of the larger houses, such as the Cromwells may have owned, would have had one or two partitions to separate these functions, and an outdoor privy was usual for most dwellings. The Tudor period saw the widespread introduction of fireplaces and accompanying chimneys in more affluent households, replacing the open hearths in the centre of the room that were normally found in medieval and poorer dwellings. Even so, houses of both classes were generally cold and draughty, and many people brought their animals inside to help generate warmth in the winter months. Furniture would be sparse and simple, such as benches, stools, tables and chests. People slept on mattresses stuffed with straw and ridden with vermin of all kinds. Carpets were the luxury of the rich, and ordinary people strewed the floor of their home with rushes, reeds and sweet-smelling herbs. The herbs were required to cover a variety of unpleasant aromas, including the tallow candles and rush lights that were made from animal fat, not to mention the smell of the infrequently washed occupants.
The London that Thomas Cromwell would have known as a youth was described by Andreas Franciscius, an Italian visitor, in November 1497: ‘Its position is so pleasant and delightful that it would be hard to find one more convenient and attractive,’ he wrote. ‘It stands on the banks of the river Thames, the biggest river in the whole island, which divides the town into two parts.’ Franciscius estimated that the city itself was no more than three miles in circumference, but added: ‘Its suburbs are so large that they greatly increase its circuit.’ He went on to describe some of the more notable landmarks:
It is defended by handsome walls, especially on the northern side, where they have recently been rebuilt. Within these stands a very strongly defended castle on the banks of the river [the Tower of London], where the King of England and his Queen sometimes have their residence. There are also other great buildings, and especially a beautiful and convenient bridge over the Thames, of many marble arches, which has on it many shops built of stone and mansions and even a church of considerable size. Nowhere have I seen a finer or more richly built bridge.
Unencumbered by modern flood barriers, the daily coming in of the tide was a spectacular event: ‘The ocean is sixty miles from the city, but notwithstanding this, its high tide is so strong and flows up the Thames with such power that it not only stops the river’s current, but even pushes it back and forces it to return upstream, which is a wonderful sight.’
Franciscius went on to describe the ‘many workshops of craftsmen in all sorts of mechanical arts’, including blacksmiths, like Cromwell’s father. Even the food met with the visitor’s approval.
They delight in banquets and variety of meat and food, and they excel everyone in preparing them with excessive abundance. They eat very frequently, at times more than is suitable, and are particularly fond of young swans, rabbits, deer and sea birds. They often eat mutton and beef, which is generally considered to be better here than anywhere else in the world. This is due to the excellence of their pastures. They have all kinds of fish in plenty and great quantities of oysters which come from the sea-shore. The majority, not to say everyone, drink that beverage I have spoken of before [ale], and prepare it in various ways. For wine is very expensive, as the vine does not grow in this island.8
Not everything was to Franciscius’s liking, however.
All the streets are so badly paved that they get wet at the slightest quantity of water, and this happens very frequently owing to the large numbers of cattle carrying water, as well as on account of the rain, of which there is a great deal in this island. Then a vast amount of evil-smelling mud is formed, which does not disappear quickly but lasts a long time, in fact nearly the whole year round. The citizens, therefore, in order to remove this mud and filth from their boots, are accustomed to spread fresh rushes on the floors of all houses, on which they clean the soles of their shoes when they come in.
He was also shocked by the ‘fierce tempers and wicked dispositions’ of the Londoners, and abhorred the contempt and neglect they showed to their children.
Walter Cromwell seemed to conform to this stereotype, particularly in his relationship with his son Thomas. He did at least secure good marriages for his daughters, although this may have been more to consolidate his own social standing than out of concern for their happiness. The elder, Katherine, married an aspiring Welsh lawyer named Morgan Williams, whose family had moved to Putney from Glamorganshire. Morgan’s brother was an important man in Putney, being the steward to John, Lord Scales of Nayland. Katherine’s younger sister Elizabeth married a sheep farmer, William Wellyfed, who later joined his business to that of his father-in-law.
Despite being a man of some standing in the local community, Walter was often in trouble with the law. He was fined six pence by the manor court on no fewer than forty-eight occasions between 1475 and 1501 for ‘breaches of the assizes of ale’, which meant that he had been watering down the beer he sold.9 Such offences had become increasingly common as the fifteenth century progressed, which prompted the Brewers’ Company to issue a set of stringent ordinances to ensure that all those ‘occupying the craft of brewing’ should make ‘good and hable ale, according in strength and fineness to the price of malt’. Official tasters were appointed to carry out random checks on the city’s brewers, so Walter’s attempts to increase his profits in this way were soon discovered.10 It is possible that he had been assisted in this business by his wife: brewing was one of the few professions in which wives were actively encouraged to participate. The poet John Skelton created a satirical portrait of a harridan ale-wife, whose drunken antics won such women notoriety – often ill-deserved. Although there were local entrepreneurs like Walter and his wife, it was England’s monastic communities that were the real centre of brewing excellence. It is ironic that the son of a brewing family would orchestrate their downfall, which in turn had a devastating impact upon the country’s brewing industry.
Brewing was not the only activity that landed Walter Cromwell in trouble with the law. He was frequently reprimanded for allowing his cattle to graze too freely on public land. His most serious conviction came in 1477 when he was found guilty of assault. He had ‘drawn blood’ from a man named William Michell and was fined twenty pence. Walter and his father John were also regularly brought before the local court on charges of ‘overburthening’ the public land in Putney with their cattle, and cutting more than their share of the furze and thorns there.11 Increasingly unpopular with the local community, Walter was finally evicted from his manorial tenancy in 1514, after ‘falsely and fraudulently’ altering documents concerning his tenure.12 All his lands were forfeited, and the fact that he is mentioned no more in the records suggests that he may have died shortly afterwards.
An intriguing remark made by Walter’s son Thomas many years later hints that he had inherited some of his father’s less admirable traits. He would confide to Archbishop Thomas Cranmer what a ‘ruffian he was in his young days’.13 The Imperial ambassador, Eustace Chapuys, claimed that ‘Cromwell was illbehaved when young, and after an imprisonment was forced to leave the country.’14 Although there is no other evidence to corroborate this, it was possible for a father to have his son imprisoned without legal process in this period.
There are no other details of Thomas’s childhood and education. Given Walter’s standing in the community, and his various sources of income, it might be reasonable to assume that he had invested in some schooling for his son. But according to an account of Cromwell’s life published in 1715, ‘this Great Man’s Father, being of so low a Vocation, was not in a Capacity to bestow much on his Son’s Education.’ That Cromwell was self-taught is also suggested by the Elizabethan chronicler Ralph Holinshed, who claimed that he had a ‘bely of knowledge, gathered by painefull trauaile’. It was common for children to leave the family home between the ages of seven and nine in order to enter ‘hard service in the houses of other people’. These apprenticeships would generally last for a further seven or nine years, ‘and during that time they perform all the most menial of offices’. There is no record of Cromwell having been an apprentice, but Holinshed records that ‘few are born who are exempted from this fate.’15
The records hint at a difficult relationship between the two male members of the Cromwell household. If Thomas was a chip off the old block, this apparently did little to endear him to his father, and it may have been a row between them that prompted his decision to leave Putney around 1503. The contemporary Italian novelist Matteo Bandello claims that Cromwell was fleeing from his father.16 John Foxe paints a rather rosier picture, claiming that ‘in his growing years, as he shot up in age and ripeness, a great delight came into his mind to stray into forreign Countries to see the World abroad, and to learn experience.’17
Not content with simply escaping the family home, Thomas left England altogether. In an age when people rarely ventured beyond the boundaries of their immediate locality, and those from other counties were viewed as ‘foreigners’, this was an extraordinarily daring and adventurous enterprise, especially for one of his lowly status. A play written about his life and published in 1602 has the young Cromwell already dreaming of making his fortune, and telling his father: ‘The time will come when I shall hold gold as trash . . . Why should my birth keep down my mounting spirit?’18 This image of youthful ambition is seductive. It is possible that Cromwell had already secured employment abroad before he left London. The capital was full of merchants from overseas, as Franciscius describes:
not only Venice but also Florence and Lucca, and many from Genoa and Pisa, from Spain, Germany, the Rhine valley and other countries meet here to handle business with utmost keenness, having come from the different parts of the world. But the chief exports from the island are wool and fabrics, considered the best in the world, and white lead, for the island is more freely endowed with these commodities than any other country. By sea and the Thames goods of all kinds can be brought into London and taken from the city to other destinations.19
Cromwell may have made contact with one of these merchants through his father’s businesses.
It is not clear how he raised the money for the voyage: the notion of him as a penniless young stowaway is appealing, but he might equally have taken a job on the ship. A large vessel, such as Henry VIII’s ill-fated flagship, the Mary Rose, could have a crew of up to 400 men. This included servants, cooks, pursers and surgeons, as well as the sailors and officers. Cromwell could have secured one of the lowlier positions. As Foxe later observed: ‘Nothing was so hard which with wit and industry he could not compass.’20
Cromwell went first to the Netherlands, and travelled from there to France. The records provide little clue as to where precisely he lived, or how he earned money enough to survive. The first recorded mention of him is in late autumn 1503, when he joined an expedition to Italy as part of the French army. It is not clear how long he had served by this time. The fact that he would later demonstrate an unusually detailed knowledge of the French military system suggests that he may already have gained some experience by the time that he embarked for Italy. According to his future adversary, Cardinal Reginald Pole, Cromwell served as a ‘gregarium militem’ or ‘common soldier’. Although Scottish soldiers often fought for France, it was very unusual for English ones to do so in this period. Cromwell may have been inspired by examples from the fourteenth century, when English mercenaries made their fortunes fighting in Italy. If he thought service with the French was a path to riches and glory, however, he was to be disappointed.
Since the late fifteenth century, the Italian states had been the focus of a bitter power struggle between France and Spain. The latest set of wars had begun four years earlier when the French king, Louis XII, had pressed his claim to the duchy of Milan and Naples. Until then, the French and Spanish forces had been allied in their campaign to take the latter city, but they had argued over its partition and war had broken out. The Spanish had won a crushing victory over the French at Cerignola in April 1503. Undeterred, in mid-November the French army gathered at the mouth of the Garigliano River, some sixty kilometres north of Naples. The Spanish made several attempts to cross the river, and finally succeeded during the night of 28–29 December, taking the French by surprise. Camped in marshy and unhealthy conditions, the French army was depleted by sickness and no match for the pikemen, swordsmen and arquebusiers of the Spanish infantry. Despite the heroic defence of the bridge over the Garigliano by the celebrated French knight, the Chevalier de Bayard, the French were pushed back into Gaeta and surrendered.
The defeat, and the miserable conditions that the French had endured during the weeks leading up to it, may have convinced Cromwell to abandon the military life as quickly as possible. He deserted his post soon afterwards but decided to stay in Italy, rather than return – defeated – to England. That he was living in Italy during one of the most culturally vibrant periods of its history would have a profound impact on his character, beliefs and interests. This was the age when Raphael, Bellini and Titian were crafting their masterpieces in Florence and Venice, when the Borgias were dominating the political and religious life of the Papal States, and Niccolò Machiavelli was beginning to exert his influence in the government of Florence. The Italy of the High Renaissance still retained its individualism and its society was devoted more to aesthetics than to morals. But the glories of its artistic and intellectual achievements starkly contrasted with the violence and bloodshed that the climate and native temperament made common. The beautiful piazzas to which the cultural and political elite flocked in the daytime were the scenes of brawls, stabbings and murders at night. For the young Cromwell, it would be a training-ground as brutal as it was enlightened.
Cromwell is next recorded in Florence, which was the birthplace of the Renaissance, an explosion of cultural and intellectual ideas that drew upon classical influences and transformed art, literature, philosophy, politics and religion across Europe. Such was its influence that the Renaissance is commonly viewed as the bridge between the medieval and modern world. One of its central ideas was the search for realism and human emotion in art, and the highly stylised paintings and sculptures of the medieval period were replaced by works of startlingly precise detail that brought subjects vividly to life.
Thanks in no small part to the patronage of the powerful Medici family, de facto rulers of the republic, Florence had become the most vibrant of all the Italian Renaissance cities, boasting such masters as Giotto, Fra Angelico and Botticelli. Adorned with exquisite paintings, frescos, sculptures and buildings, it was a city of incomparable beauty, famous throughout the world. The precise date of Cromwell’s arrival there is not known but it would have been some time before June 1504, by which time he had entered the household of the powerful Florentine merchant banker, Francesco Frescobaldi. The Frescobaldis had been renowned financiers since the twelfth century. As well as becoming prominent in the public affairs of Florence, they had established an extremely profitable business in England, and by the end of the thirteenth century they had risen to the position of royal bankers, financing the wars of Edward I and II. Described as ‘a very loyal and honourable merchant’, Francesco was ‘very rich’ and ‘carried on a great business’ in trade across Europe. He lived mostly in London, although Cromwell encountered him on one of his returns to Florence. The contemporary novelist Bandello tells of how the merchant saw Cromwell (‘a poor youth’) begging for alms in the streets. When he stopped to speak to him, Cromwell pleaded ‘for the love of God’ for him to help. Observing that he was ‘ill accoutred’ but showed ‘signs of gentle breeding in his countenance’, Frescobaldi took pity on him. When he learned that the youth was from England, a country he knew and loved well, he asked who he was. ‘I am called Thomas Cromwell,’ he replied, ‘the son of a poor clothdresser.’21 He went on to recount how he had escaped from the Battle of Garigliano. The wealthy merchant apparently needed no further persuasion: he took Cromwell into his household, where he gave him food, clothes and shelter.
Although unauthenticated, the account is credible. Bandello’s stories were based upon real-life events, and Cromwell’s later history would prove his remarkable ability to win favour with members of the elite. It is corroborated by the accounts of Chapuys and Reginald Pole, both of whom knew Cromwell personally. The only inconsistency was that Bandello has Cromwell stating that his father was a shearman (a shearer of wool), rather than a blacksmith or one of his other professions. This confusion could have arisen from the fact that after Walter’s death Cromwell’s mother had married a wool shearer.22
Cromwell evidently justified Frescobaldi’s faith in him and served him loyally and ably. Bandello describes him as ‘a youth of exceeding high spirit, quick-witted and prompt of resolution, knowing excellent well to accommodate himself to the wishes of others, and could, whenas himseemed to the purpose, dissemble his passions better than any man in the world.’23 These character traits, honed during his time in Italy, would serve Cromwell extremely well upon his return to England. He would also gain invaluable experience and knowledge while serving Frescobaldi. Florence was at that time a republic, and the politician, diplomat and humanist scholar Niccolò Machiavelli was an active member of its government. Credibility might just be stretched far enough to say that Cromwell learned of, and possibly admired, his methods, but the two would almost certainly never have met: Cromwell was far too lowly a resident of the republic to cross paths with such a distinguished leader.
Frescobaldi was renowned for his ‘great hospitality’ and lived ‘very splendidly’, so Cromwell enjoyed a very comfortable life in his household. It may also have inspired the future hospitality for which he himself became famous. As one of the richest and most prominent members of the Florentine nobility, Francesco employed the finest cooks, musicians and players to feed and entertain his guests. Among the family’s most profitable businesses was the production of Tuscan wine, at which they had been expert since the early fourteenth century. They would later supply the court of Henry VIII himself. Frescobaldi was a great lover of art and had established a mutually beneficial arrangement with the celebrated Michelangelo, whereby he traded wine for paintings. Cromwell would therefore have been surrounded by some of the finest works of the Renaissance. Little wonder that he became such a lover of art from that time onward.
The merchant took his English protégé with him when he travelled on business in Italy, and on the last occasion he left him in the service of a Venetian merchant. There was no hint of a disagreement, however, for Frescobaldi gave Cromwell a handsome parting gift of sixteen gold ducats and a strong horse. Cardinal Pole confirms that Cromwell was subsequently employed as an accountant to a Venetian trader whom Pole knew well.24
Cromwell’s movements after that time are not certain, but it is likely that he soon left Italy and spent some time travelling in other parts of Europe. He was certainly in the Netherlands for a time, where he worked as a cloth merchant. There were strong trading links between Venice and Antwerp, so it is possible that these prompted his travels. There could have been no better training-ground for a future English statesman than the greatest commercial capital in the world. Antwerp was a vibrant and cosmopolitan city, with thousands of businessmen from all the trading nations of Europe. Half of all the English wool and cloth exports passed through the city, and Cromwell would have experienced first-hand the economic struggle as the Merchant Adventurers, a company of London’s leading overseas merchants, tried to convert these raw exports into the finished article, thus deriving the maximum possible profit. After a time, Cromwell entered the service of some merchants of the English House, and he subsequently established himself as a trader in his own right.
Many years later, a merchant named George Elyot would recall that he had enjoyed Cromwell’s ‘love & trew hartt . . . sensse [since] the syngsson Martt at medelborow in anno 1512’.25 The city of Middelburg was in the south-western Netherlands and had become a powerful trading centre in the commerce between England and Flanders during the Middle Ages. The importance of English trade to the city makes it entirely plausible that Cromwell had secured employment there. His time spent in the household of one of Italy’s most powerful mercantile families would have further recommended him. Cromwell may also have gained experience in the law during this time. Although untrained, he must have had a natural aptitude for this profession because he would soon become famed for his knowledge and skill in legal matters.
Cromwell probably returned to England in the late summer or early autumn of 1512. Within two years, by which time he was in his late twenties, he had become firmly established in London mercantile and legal circles. A chance reference in the official papers of Henry VIII suggests that he had almost immediately started work as a lawyer. Cromwell’s signature is found on a document of around November 1512, concerning the ownership of a manor and associated lands in Great and Little Kimble, Buckinghamshire.26 Conveyancing would be a specialism of Cromwell throughout his legal career, and during these early years many of his clients were drawn from his mercantile contacts.
But Cromwell’s travelling days were not yet over. In 1514 he returned to the Netherlands and journeyed to some key centres of trade, notably Bruges and Antwerp, where he is found dealing on his own behalf that year. As well as building up experience of commerce, he also developed an important network of contacts that would prove useful in the years to come. At the same time, he gained an excellent grounding in European economic and political affairs. He learned several languages, becoming fluent in French and Italian, and competent in Spanish and possibly also German. His love of Italian would stay with him for life, and many of the letters he received from abroad were in this language. The Imperial ambassador, Eustace Chapuys, who was grudging in his praise, would later admit: ‘Cromwell is eloquent in his own language, and, besides, speaks Latin, French and Italian tolerably well.’27 Cromwell had also become well versed in the classics and was proficient in Latin and Greek – the latter being a highly unusual accomplishment. Stephen Gardiner, who would become his mortal enemy, admitted that Cromwell was often ‘very stout’ towards him ‘for that conceat he had, what so ever he talked with me, he knewe ever as much as I, Greke or Laten and all’.28
Although the contemporary sources offer only the patchiest of details for this period of Cromwell’s life, it seems that he also returned to Italy in 1514. The records of the English Hospice of the Most Holy Trinity and St Thomas in Rome show that he stayed there in June that year. Founded in 1362 with the stated aim of caring for ‘poor, infirm, needy and wretched persons from England’, by the time Cromwell was a guest the hospice had grown into the major centre for English visitors to Rome. It received many thousands of pilgrims each year, but Cromwell’s visit was more likely to have been motivated by mercantile rather than spiritual matters. Documents from the archives of the Vatican City suggest that by now Cromwell was an agent for Cardinal Reginald Bainbridge and handled English ecclesiastical issues before the Papal Rota, the highest ecclesiastical court constituted by the Holy See.
Cromwell was back in England by the summer of 1514. A signature on a document dated 26 August is thought to be his. It is regarding the archbishopric of York, and is endorsed with what the editor of the volume describes as ‘some lines, apparently intended as an exercise of penmanship’.29 This offers a beguiling (though unauthenticated) image of a young Cromwell practising his signature so that it appears suitably elegant and learned. If it was indeed his penmanship, however, it presents a conundrum. How could this newly returned adventurer, virtually unknown in his native country, be involving himself in the affairs of one of the foremost ecclesiastics in the land? It suggests that Cromwell had a greater network of contacts than are revealed in the contemporary sources.
Certainly, Cromwell’s years on the Continent had transformed him from a poorly educated, if precocious and streetwise ‘ruffian’, to a cultured, well-connected and successful merchant. It was with some justification that he later described himself as ‘a great Traveller in this World’.30 His natural intelligence had served him well, as Foxe observed: ‘Neither was his capacity so good but his memory was as great in retaining whatsoever he had attained.’31 Holinshed likewise described him as being ‘of such an incomparable memorie, so bold of stomach and hardie, and could doo so well with his pen . . . that being conversant in the sight of men, he could not long continue unespied.’32 He had experienced active military service, worked in some of the greatest trading centres in the world, witnessed first-hand the extraordinary flowering of culture and ideas during the Italian Renaissance, and had absorbed some of the radical religious ideas that were starting to take hold in northern Europe. It had been an extraordinary training-ground.
Cromwell’s experience in Italy had had the most profound impact. It had fostered in him a love of art, literature, music and fine objects that would last a lifetime. His passion for the country was infectious. Many years later, Edmund Bonner, Cardinal Wolsey’s chaplain, wrote to him: ‘As you wished to make me a good Italian some time since, by promising to lend me the “Triumphs of Petrarch,” I beg you to send it by Mr. Augustine’s servant, and specially if you have it, the Cortigiano in Italian.’33 One Italian author who has been credited with particular influence over Cromwell was Niccolò Machiavelli. It is possible that Cromwell acquired an early manuscript copy of his most famous work, Il Principe (The Prince). This book, which was eventually published in 1532, made Machiavelli’s name synonymous with ruthless, unprincipled statecraft.34
Cromwell’s love of all things Italian was highly unusual for a Londoner. Andreas Franciscius had been aghast to discover on his visit to the capital that its inhabitants ‘not only despise the way in which Italians live, but actually curse them with uncontrolled hatred’.35 This was corroborated by another Italian visitor of the period: ‘The English are great lovers of themselves, and of everything belonging to them; they think that there are no other men than themselves, and no other world than England; and whenever they see a handsome foreigner they say that “he looks like an Englishman” . . . They have a great antipathy to foreigners, and imagine that they never come into their island, but to make themselves master of it, and to usurp their goods.’36 How much more broad-minded was Cromwell, whose travels had given him an altogether more cultured, inquisitive and enlightened outlook than the vast majority of his countrymen. He was a true Renaissance man, in all respects.
Cromwell’s years abroad had been a far cry from the apprenticeship that he would have received at his father’s brewery in Putney. Armed with a knowledge of places, people and affairs that precious few monarchs, let alone ministers, would have gained in a lifetime, Cromwell was free from the usual preconceptions and prejudices of his fellow countrymen. His travels had expanded both his mind and his ambition. He had learned to question everything, defy convention and seek new ways of doing things. His experiences had taught him to trust slowly (if at all), but he had also developed a genuine interest in other people and an accessibility that few men of his profession could boast. That he had clawed his way out of obscurity and stood on the cusp of a brilliant career was entirely thanks to his own merits, as the Elizabethan chronicler Holinshed later observed. ‘Notwithstanding, the basenesse of his birth and lacke of maintenance [which proved] a great hinderance for vertue to shew hir selfe . . . yet through a singular excellencie of wit joined with an industrious diligence of mind . . . hee grewe to suche a sufficient ripenesse of understanding and skill, in ordering of weightie affaires, that hee was thought apt and fitte to anye roomth or office whereunto hee should be admitted.’ Holinshed was in no doubt that Cromwell’s travels had been a great benefit to his future career, for he had observed ‘the courses of states and gouernements as wel of his natiue countrey at home, as in foraine parties abroade’.37
Soon after his return to England in 1514, Cromwell married Elizabeth Williams, née Wykys. It was a sign of how far he had come that he was able to make such a good match. Elizabeth was the widow of Thomas Williams, a yeoman of the guard. Her father, Henry Wykys, was of the same profession as Cromwell’s stepfather, being a shearman in Putney, and it may have been the two men who arranged the marriage – or at least introduced the couple. Henry Wykys had formerly served as a gentleman usher to Henry VII, which gave Thomas a tenuous but valuable link to the court. His father-in-law also helped him to obtain a foothold in the English cloth trade. The records suggest that Elizabeth was a woman of wealth and property, and this could have been Cromwell’s chief motivation in marrying her. Certainly, his own wealth increased rapidly in the early years of their marriage – more so than it would have done as a result of his own enterprises.
Ever the polymath, as well as serving in his father-in-law’s house as a wool and cloth merchant, Cromwell also established himself as a business agent, an undefined role that apparently required no formal training and may have comprised several different facets, such as money-lending. It also introduced him into English legal circles. He made the most of this entrée to pursue law as his main career. That he should so quickly prove a success at it is remarkable, given that any experience he had gained so far had been in countries with a very different legal system than England. Rather than studying at university, Cromwell may have gained his knowledge from the printed law books that were available in London, or learned from men who are not mentioned in the contemporary sources. Together with his European connections and training, he was perfectly poised for a flourishing career.
Thomas and Elizabeth had at least three children: two daughters, Anne and Grace, and a son, Gregory.38 Their dates of birth are not recorded, but as is common throughout much of history, there is more evidence relating to the son’s age than those of the daughters. He is believed to have been born around 1520.39 The fact that Anne tends to be mentioned first in the contemporary records may suggest that she was the elder of the daughters.
The family lived in Fenchurch, on the eastern side of the City of London, and may have leased a house near the small parish church of St Gabriel. This area was frequented by numerous merchants – close by were the Clothworkers, Pewterers and Ironmongers Halls – so Cromwell would have had easy access to many of his business clients.
Although he rapidly became established back in England, Cromwell was soon on his travels again. In 1517 he received a request for assistance from an acquaintance, John Robinson, alderman of Boston in Lincolnshire. The two men may have met through Cromwell’s activities in trade, Boston being part of the Hanseatic League, a powerful conglomeration of merchants that dominated trade in northern Europe. Robinson’s fellow townsman, Geoffrey Chambers, was due to travel to Rome on behalf of Boston’s Guild of Our Lady in St Botolph’s Church (affectionately referred to by locals today as the ‘Boston Stump’) in order to obtain permission from the Pope to sell indulgences. This had become a lucrative business for the town, so its leaders were anxious to ensure its continuation. Robinson asked if Cromwell would accompany Chambers. The fact that Cromwell had ‘no sound taste or judgement of religion’ with which to impress the Pope was less of a consideration than that he was an experienced traveller who was well versed in the affairs and language of Italy.40 Cromwell, perhaps restless for adventure, readily acquiesced. He met Chambers in Antwerp and the two men travelled to Rome together.41 They evidently did so in some style, since the whole expedition cost a staggering £1,200 – more than £450,000 in today’s money.
The Vatican City was at the height of its beauty when Cromwell and his companion visited it in 1517. Michelangelo had finished painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel five years earlier – a masterpiece that would have a profound impact on the progress of Western art. Another great Renaissance master, Raphael, had begun the task of decorating Pope Julius II’s apartments in 1508. This lavish series of frescos adorned four reception rooms in the papal palace and was so exquisite that Julius’s successor, Leo X, retained the artist and his team to complete the work when he became Pope in 1513. Work would still have been under way when Cromwell and Robertson arrived in Rome, but it is possible that they saw some of the completed frescos when they paid court to Leo.
Cromwell hatched a plan to bypass the usual long and tedious wait for an audience with the Pope. When they arrived in Rome, he found out that the pontiff was due to go on a hunting expedition, so he lay in wait for his return and surprised him with a performance of an English ‘three man’s song’. Knowing the Pope’s weakness for ‘new fangled strange delicates and dainty dishes’, he then presented him with a selection of English sweetmeats and jellies ‘such as Kings and Princes only, said he, in the Realm of England use to feed upon’.42 The Pope was so impressed that he immediately granted all the guild’s requests. A bull dated 24 February 1518 gave the Boston guild permission to continue its profitable sale of indulgences. Although the details of this tale are provided by John Foxe some fifty years after the event, it is certain that Cromwell worked to secure the grant and was ultimately successful. This would be the first indication of his skill and audacity in dealing with the most exalted members of society. His experience had given him a confidence that belied his humble origins, but there must have been a natural irreverence – a swagger, almost – that persuaded powerful men to do his bidding.
This episode may have had a still more significant impact. By demonstrating the ease with which the Pope could be charmed into acquiescing, Cromwell may have developed a contempt for the papacy and religious orders which would deepen into a profound antipathy during his later career. He would, as the chronicler Hall famously put it, come to harbour an intense hatred of ‘the snoffyng pride of some prelates’.43 Moreover, Foxe claims that Cromwell eased the tedium of the long journey home by learning by heart the Latin translation of the New Testament that had been recently published by Erasmus. Certainly, from that time onwards Cromwell knew the Bible exceptionally well and would retain the knowledge for the rest of his days. Becoming so intimately acquainted with the teachings of the New Testament may also have sown the seeds of Cromwell’s later evangelical beliefs. This is somewhat ironic, given that it occurred during a visit to the heart of Roman Catholicism to secure a grant for the sale of indulgences – a practice that the reformists found particularly objectionable.
But for now, the story of what passed in Rome considerably enhanced Cromwell’s credentials when he and Chambers returned to England in triumph. Foxe recounts that Cromwell was ‘a great doer . . . in publishing and setting forth the pardons of Boston everywhere’.44 He was determined to spread the word about his success in order to establish a reputation for dealing effectively with the mightiest potentates of the age. If the Pope could be manipulated so effectively, then so might the King of England.