Episodes

  • A Vile and Incestuous Intercourse
    Mar 8 2022

    The story of Louisa Turton's marriage, and the circumstances which led to her petitioning Parliament for a divorce, becoming the second woman to be successful in her petition for a Parliamentary divorce.

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    12 mins
  • Guilty of so Atrocious a Crime
    Feb 28 2022

    This is the story of the first Parliamentary divorce granted to a woman, Mrs Jane Addison in 1801. TW: Listeners should note that a 1696 pamphlet is quoted during this episode in which married women are equated with enslaved "negroes". This a direct quote from the pamphlet, reflecting the language of the time.

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    25 mins
  • Without Shame or Modesty
    Feb 8 2022

    The story of the Earl of Macclesfield, who obtained the second Parliamentary divorce in England; before exploring the story of the Duke of Norfolk who, despite being a man 'without shame or modesty' who carried on his own notorious affair, secured the third divorce in England.

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    26 mins
  • An Impudent, Infamous, and Lascivious Way
    Jan 12 2022

    Concluding the story of the first divorce in England, that of Lord Roos from Lady Anne Manners. In this episode, we hear of how the parliamentary debates were observed by Charles II, as he considered the possibility of his own divorce. 

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    24 mins
  • The Curious Case of Adulterine Bastardy
    Jan 4 2022

    The story of the first divorce in England. After the Archbishop of Canterbury made divorce almost impossible in 1601, though some, including the poet John Milton, would speak out about the inability to divorce and bring a marriage to an end, it would take decades before one man would attempt to attain a divorce from his adulterous wife. This man was Lord Roos, who was heir to the earldom of Rutland. 

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    26 mins
  • As is Notoriously Known
    Dec 14 2021

    In this episode we explore the two marriages of William Parr, the brother of Catherine Parr, and how he almost (but not quite) achieved the first divorce in England. We also explore the divorce à mensa et thoro , a legal separation from 'bed and board', which allowed married couples to live separately and apart, but unable to end their marriages, or marry again.

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    24 mins
  • Scandalum Magnatum
    Dec 1 2021

    The story of the short-lived marriage of Henry VIII to Anne of Cleves, and how that too ended in an annulment, not divorce. This episode begins to explore how the legislation Henry enacted to end his marriages would shape the development of the law of divorce in England for centuries to come.

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    29 mins
  • Utterly Void and Annulled
    Nov 26 2021

    This episode brings to a conclusion the story of Catherine of Aragon as she struggled to salvage her marriage in the face of Henry VIII's determination to 'divorce' her.

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    26 mins