Catherine of Aragon: Infanta of Spain, Queen of England

Posted: January 19, 2022

By: Seattle University College of Arts and Science; Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; and History; and Elliott Bay Book Company


Thursday, Feb. 3, 6-7 p.m., Online
Free event, online book purchase available, $43 (includes shipping)
Register/purchase here

Students, faculty and staff may purchase the book in person at Elliott Bay Book Company and receive the regular 20 percent SU discount.

While recently featured in pop culture with the new Broadway musical “Six,” about Henry VIII’s wives, and the 2019 Starz series “The Spanish Princess,” based on Philippa Gregory’s novels The Constant Princess and The King’s Curse, Catherine of Aragon remains an elusive subject.

Despite her status as a Spanish infanta, Princess of Wales and Queen of England, few of her personal letters have survived, and she is obscured in the contemporary royal histories. In this evocative biography, Theresa Earenfight presents an intimate and engaging portrait of Catherine told through the objects that she left behind.

Dr. Earenfight, professor and director of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Seattle University, shares her compelling picture of a multifaceted, intelligent woman and a queen of England in a lively conversation with Dr. Hazel Hahn, professor, history.

A pair of shoes, a painting, a rosary, a fur-trimmed baby blanket—each of these things took meaning from the ways Catherine experienced and perceived them. Through an examination of the inventories listing the few possessions Catherine owned at her death, Earenfight follows the arc of Catherine’s life: first as a coddled child in Castile, then as a young adult alone in England after the death of her first husband, a devoted wife and doting mother, a patron of the arts and of universities and, finally, a dear friend to the women and men who stood by her after Henry VIII set her aside in favor of another woman. Based on traces and fragments, these portraits of Catherine are interpretations of a life lived five centuries ago.

Engagingly written, this cultural and emotional biography of Catherine brings us closer to understanding her life from her own perspective.

“A refreshing and compelling modern biography of the previously shadowy figure of Catherine of Aragon. Earenfight’s innovative use of material culture offers a sophisticated methodology for apprehending Catherine’s life, motivations, and decisions.”

—Elizabeth A. Lehfeldt, author of Religious Women in Golden Age Spain: The Permeable Cloister

“Catherine of Aragon offers a unique appraisal of Catherine and an exciting and innovative approach to biography by drawing on sources—particularly material culture, economic, and Spanish sources—that are often bypassed or not fully explored to give a fresh perspective on Catherine’s life, a richer picture of Catherine as an individual, and a clearer understanding of her exercise of the queen’s office.”

—Elena Woodacre, coeditor of The Routledge History of Monarchy and editor-in-chief of Royal Studies Journal.

All Seattle University COVID-19 protocols in place at the time of the event will be followed.