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Here follow two translated extracts from letters written in June, 1528, by Monsieur du Bellay, French Ambassador to the court of 
King Henry VIII. They offer a contemporary account 
of the onset and course of the Sweating Sickness epidemic of that year; 
the fourth major outbreak of the disease. Du Bellay details the members of court who suffered or died from 
it and comments on the King's relationship with Anne Boleyn, who had the 
sickness at her father's house.
  
The original manuscript, Bethune MS v. 8602, has not yet been digitized. I have made these translations from the 
transcriptions printed in J. LeGrand's Preuves de l'Histoire du Divorce de Henry VIII, vol III, 1688. 
The transcription, as printed, has a few minor errors, which I have corrected and noted below. —AJ
  
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 Letters of Monsieur du Bellay, Bishop of Bayonne, 
 to the Grand Master,1 and Marshal of France.
  
 
  
June 18, 1528. 
"One of the ladies of the chamber, Monseigneur, of Mademoiselle de Boulan found herself infected with the sweat, 
in great haste the King departed and went twelve miles from hence, & I am told that the Lady was sent, as suspected, 
to the Viscount, her father,2 who is in Kent. As for now, Monseigneur, the love has not diminished. I do not know 
if the absence, combined with the difficulties with Rome, can bring this about. 
  
 This sweat, of which I speak is, Monseigneur, a sickness which has taken hold here over the past four days, 
and is the easiest to die of; one has a slight headache & ache in the heart, suddenly one begins to sweat, and 
there is no point to calling the Doctor, because if one covers oneself the least bit in the world, or covers 
oneself a little too much, within four hours, or sometimes in two or three, one is dispatched without delay, 
as one does with those terrible fevers, but it is no big thing, for there have not been those infected in 
London during this time more than around two thousand. 
  
 Yesterday, having gone to swear the truce,3 they could be seen, like flies, rushing from the streets and 
shops into their houses to suffer the sweat as the sickness overtook them. I found the Ambassador of Milan 
departing his lodgings in great haste, because two or three had suddenly been taken ill with it. If it must be, 
Monseigneur, that all the ambassadors have their share of this, at least in my case, you will not have gained 
your objective, because you will not be able to boast that you have starved me to death, & the King will have gained 
the advantage of nine months of my service at no cost, though it has not gained him the least profit.
  
 By God in Paradise, Monseigneur, if this fire & fury should visit me, & if I should have to pass through 
the pit and the fire, I should not regret it so much as those who have it easier than me,4 but may God keep them 
so.  To get back to London, I assure you that the priests have a better time of it than the doctors, except 
they cannot accommodate all the burials; if this continues, wheat will soon sell at a bargain.5 It has been 
twelve years since the last epidemic, in which ten thousand people died in the course of ten or twelve days, 
it is said, but that was not as severe as it is starting to be now; Monsieur the Legate6 had come 
for the term, but soon rebridled his horses again, & there will be neither summons nor term, everyone is so 
terribly afraid."  
 
 
  
 
June 30th, 1528. 
"The Lady is still with her father; the King keeps changing lodgings due to this pestilence, a good many of 
his people having died of it in three or four hours. Of those you know, only Poowitz7, Carey8, 
and Compton are dead, but Fitzwilliam, the marquess 
[Henry Courtenay, Marquess of Exeter], my lord William,9 
Brown, Carew, Bryant, 
who, at present, is a part of the privy chamber, Norris, Wallop,10 Chesney,11 
Kingston, Paget, and generally all those 
of the bedchamber except one, have either had the infection, or presently have it. It was said yesterday that 
some of them were at the point of death; I do not know if they shall escape it. The King has shut himself away 
alone, to protect himself; God willing, no difficulties will befall him.
  
At Monsieur the Legate's they play the same game, but, when all is said, those who are not exposed to 
the wind, do not die. Of the more than forty thousand infected in London, less than two thousand
have died; it is true that he who puts even a hand out of bed during the twenty-four hours, suddenly 
becomes as stiff as a wall."12 
  
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AJ Notes:
  
1. Anne de Montmorency. As Grand Master, he was the head of the Royal Household of French King Francis I.  
2. The published transcription reads "brother" instead of "father." This is a clear error in transcription, which should 
    read "pére" instead of "frére", 
because Sir Thomas Boleyn was Viscount Rochford until 8 December 1529, when 
    he was created Earl of Wiltshire and Ormonde. It was at this time that the title was 
granted to Anne's brother, 
    George Boleyn. That she was "still with her father" in 
the second letter supports this conclusion, as does the fact 
    that George Boleyn was not in Kent at this time, but with the King at Waltham, where he had the illness. 
3. The truce between England and France, for "an abstinence of war for eight months" beginning June 15, 1528; 
    it went into effect on June 20. 
4. Unlike the plague, the Sweating Sickness did not kill 
more of the poor or elderly; rather, it seemed to affect 
    the wealthy, who had a rich diet, more than the lower classes. Du Bellay means that, since he was not wealthy,  
    he should not have as much to fear from it as those who lived lives of ease. 
5. The price of wheat was high in 1528; Du Bellay means that, if large numbers were to die of the 
disease, there 
    would soon be more supply than demand, causing the high price of wheat to decline. 
6.  Cardinal Wolsey, who had had 'The Sweat' during the 1517 outbreak. 
7. Error in transcription. It should read 'Poointz' for Sir Francis Poyntz, 
Esquire of the Body to King Henry VIII. 
    He died on June 25, 1528, of the sweating sickness. He had just returned to England from a mission to Spain. 
8. William Carey, of Aldenham, Gentleman 
of the Privy Chamber and Esquire of the Body to Henry VIII, husband 
    to Mary Boleyn, Anne Boleyn's sister. 
9. Sir William Brereton (c1487-1536), Groom of the Privy Chamber. 
10. Sir John Wallop (c1490-1551). 
11. Sir Thomas Cheney (var. sp. Cheyne, Chesney, Cheyney), (c1485-1558); Treasurer of the Household and 
      a member of Henry VIII's Privy Council. 
12. "Roide comme un pan," reads the source. D'Aubigné, in Histoire de la Réformation  (1853) 
expands this to 
      "roide comme un pan de mur," meaning "stiff as a section of wall."
 
 
  
  
      To cite this page:
  
      Jokinen, Anniina, trans. "Two Letters by Monsieur du Bellay, June 1528." 
      Luminarium. 16 Mar 2018. [Dated you accessed this page]. 
      <http://www.luminarium.org/encyclopedia/dubellaysweat.htm>
  
 
 
  
	
		
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Site ©1996-2023 Anniina Jokinen. All rights reserved. 
This page was created on March 16, 2018. Last updated May 11, 2023.
 
 
  
		
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The Sweating Sickness
  
Dissolution of the Monasteries 
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Robert Aske 
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Oath of Supremacy 
The Act of Supremacy, 1534 
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Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich 
Sir Christopher Hatton 
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Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland 
Thomas Radcliffe, 3. Earl of Sussex 
Henry Radcliffe, 4. Earl of Sussex 
Robert Radcliffe, 5. Earl of Sussex 
William Parr, Marquis of Northampton 
Henry Wriothesley, 2. Southampton 
Henry Wriothesley, 3. Southampton 
Charles Neville, 6. E. Westmorland 
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Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk 
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Images: 
 
Chart of the English Succession from William I through Henry VII
  
Medieval English Drama
  
London c1480, MS Royal 16 
London, 1510, the earliest view in print 
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Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596 
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Visscher's View of London, 1616 
Larger Visscher's View in Sections 
c. 1690.  View of London Churches, after the Great Fire 
The Yard of the Tabard Inn from Thornbury, Old and New London 
 
 
 
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