UNKNOWN MASTER, English
(active 1540s)

Portrait of Catherine Parr

c. 1545
Oil on wood, 63,5 x 50,8 cm
National Portrait Gallery, London

Catherine Parr (1512-48) was the sixth and last wife of King Henry VIII of England (ruled 1509-47). This portrait is her only authentic depiction. She was admired by contemporaries for her eloquence and goodness; she interceded for the victims of Henry's religious persecutions and supervised the upbringing of Edward, Henry's only male heir.

She was a daughter of Sir Thomas Parr of Kendall, an official of the royal household. Catherine had been widowed twice - in marriages to Edward Borough (died c. 1529) and to John Neville, Lord Latimer (died 1542 or 1543) - by the time she married Henry on July 12, 1543.

Her tactfulness enabled her to exert a beneficial influence on the King during the last years of his reign. She developed close friendships with the three children Henry had by previous marriages and devoted herself to their education.She took care of Edward's half sisters Mary and Elizabeth, who, as daughters of Catharine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn respectively, had been declared bastards. Thanks to Catherine, they were both acknowledged as princesses again.

A Humanist, she was friendly with Protestant reformers. Timely access to the King saved her from conservatives, especially Stephen Gardiner, who were bent on her destruction in 1546.

After Henry's death in January 1547 she married a former suitor, Thomas, Lord Seymour of Sudeley, who was admiral of England from 1547 to 1549, but she died shortly after giving birth to a daughter. A learned and deeply religious woman, she wrote A Lamentacion or Complaynt of a Sinner in the last year of her life.