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Glossary of Tudor Words & Terms


Methinks something on The Tudors is amiss!

Surely when they speak of "codpiece,"
They speaketh not of fish!
I'm sorely troubled by the words they speak,
And have trouble figuring it out each week!

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Chapuys
Welcome to the Tudors Word Glossary
where those pesky 16th century words are defined!


A-C
Term Definition
Act of Attainder In English legality, a person condemned for a serious crime such as treason could be declared "attainted" by the court, thus depriving him/her of all civil rights such as owning property or willing it to his/her family. The property of the condemned was thus forfeit to the King as well as any titles and privileges, i.e. wardships. Thomas Cromwell, Margaret Plantagenet Pole (Lady Salisbury), and Catharine Howard were attainted in addition to being sentenced to death.
Act of Succession (1534) Passed in 1534, the Act validated the marriage of Henry and Anne, declared their offspring heirs to the throne, and effectively excluded Mary from the succession. The Act was required to be sworn to by the taking of an Oath supporting the provisions of the Act including Henry's supremacy over the Church in England. It was the refusal to take this Oath that resulted in Thomas More, John Fisher, Priors John Houghton, Augustine Webster, and Robert Lawrence along with many monks of the Carthusian order to be accused of treason, convicted, and executed.
Almoner a church official whose duty it was to distribute charity (alms) Thomas Wolsey had once been Henry VIII's almoner, that is, he oversaw the distribution of alms on his behalf.
Amiss wrong, strange, incorrect
Anon at once, immediately, straight away
Apothecary An Apothecary dispensed medicines derived from herbs, plants and roots. The apothecary was a less expensive alternative to a physician in Tudor times and was often the only source of medical care for the poor; he was usually a priest or friar.
Arras A tapestry wall hanging
Bawdes pimps
Bible book
Bodkin a dagger
Boggard, latrine, garderobe a privy
Bord dinner table
Boss a fat woman
Botcher a mender of old clothes
Buxom obedient, lively, yielding


Cake loaf of bread
Carl a fellow
Carpet-Knight a contemptuous term for a knight whose achievements belong to the carpet of a lady's boudoir than the field of battle
Changeling a half-witted person
Chapman a merchant
Clenchpoop a contemptuous term for a lout or clown
Close Stool a cabinet with a seat and cover that held a chamber pot. A gentleman of the privy chamber attended the king when he answered the call of nature on his close stool.
Cloth of estate a canopy made of cloth that hung above and behind a person of importance or nobility and royalty.
Cockshut time twilight
Cod a bag
Cod's-head a stupid fellow, a block head
Codpiece an inverted triangular piece of material sewn into the hose around a man's groin and held closed by string ties. Later it would become padded and boned and over sized and used to carry a small weapon or jewels. (hence the term "family jewels").
Consubstantiation In communion, the literal changing of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ. Protestants rejected this ideas as superstition, saying the act of communion was only symbolic.
Cornet long piece of black material which hung down the back from a headdress/hood.
Court holy-water a proverbial phrase for flattery in fine words without deeds
Coxcomb a fool's cap


















D-G
Term Definition
Daffysh foolish
Dagonet a foolish young knight
Daliance a flirtation
Dame mother
Derrick a hangman
Diego common name for a spaniard
Doublet a tight-fitting jacket
Doxy a vagabond's mistress
Duckies breasts; Henry in one of his letters to Anne Boleyn refers to her "pretty duckies"
Dutch Widow a prostitute




Farthingale a hoop worn beneath the skirt. Also referred to as Verdingales.
Favors Ladies of court sometimes gave knights "favors," usually a scarf or a ribbon, during jousting. It demonstrated that the lady's luck, or favor, was with him.
Fingle-fangle a trifle
Flat cap a London citizen
Fopdoodle a simpleton
Forepart: that piece of the underskirt that is revealed through the inverted V opening in the front of the Kirtle.


Galliard quick and lively, also the name of a dance done in triple time
Gay bright
Gentil Noble, refined
Girdle belt
Good fellow a thief
Goodly gladly
Gorebelly fat paunch











H-L
Term Definition
Happily perhaps, possibly
Harlot rascal, buffoon, jester; servant
Hench boy a page
Hochepot mixture
Hose clothing for the legs and loins


Impertinent irrelevant
Incubus evil spirit that copulates with women in their sleep
Indulgences a remittance of time in purgatory for imperfect contrition or venial ( less serious) sins in Roman Catholic doctrine. This could be accomplished by prayers to God for the soul of a deceased person, or Masses or good works offered on behalf of the soul of a deceased person, one of the reasons that people left bequests to abbeys or churches for prayers or masses for their souls.
Some clergy sold indulgences abusing the spirit of the doctrine by promising to remit punishment in purgatory for a fee; they were arrogating to themselves the power to remit punishment that was only God's. It was these abuses among others that Luther was protesting in his Ninety - Five Theses.
Infanta(fem.)
Infante (masc.)
Spanish word for for the child of a monarch. Princess/prince; Katharine of Aragon was an Infanta of Aragon and Castile
Ire anger, irritability, the deadly sin of wrath
Jangler chatterer, loud talker, teller of dirty stories
Jangles gossip
Jape to jest or joke
Jerkin a jacket worn over the doublet
Jigmaker a ballad writer
Jobbernowl a jocular term for the head, usually connoting stupidity
Joust one to one combat
Jousting A Medieval/Renaissance amusement where two men on horseback charge at each other with lances. For each hit, a point is awarded, and if a player was unseated his opponent won the game.


Kill-cow a butcher, a murderous fellow, a great fighter
Kim-kam crooked, perverse
Kirtle consisted of a bodice and skirt sewn together and fell in ample folds which trailed on the ground.
Knacker a harness maker


Leche physician, healer
List please (see Thomas Wyatt Poetry page -" who list to hunt")
Luxury lechery




M-Q
Term Definition
Maidenhead virginity
Mayhap maybe, perhaps
Mead An alcoholic drink made from fermenting honey
Methinks Another way to say, "I think."
Mummery a peformance of Mummers (masked or costumed merrymakers/actors)
New Learning, the Humanism; the study of the ancient writers on every aspect of life spread thoroughout Europe by the invention of the printing press making such studies available to more of the population. Both Katharine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn were patrons of the New Learning.


Oratory a chapel
Papal Bull a decree from the Pope
Paramour mistress, concubine
Partlet a high necked chemise
Privy Chamber Private apartment
Physick/phisik a medicine, especially a purgative
Poke bag, sack ( "pig in a poke")
Popet little doll
Potage soup


Praemunire In England a charge of appealing to a foreign power, e.g. the Pope for matters in England that were under the King's jurisdiction. Henry used the charge and the threat of this charge to abrogate the English clergy's loyalty to the Pope after he asserted his supremacy over the Church of England.
Precontract a previous contract, esp. one which bars the making of another, as, formerly, a betrothal, which in the Tudor era was as binding as marriage.
to bind by a previous contract. Henry tried to raise this issue to rid himself of Anne Boleyn, (Henry Percy), Anne of Cleves (the Duke of Lorraine), and Catherine Howard (Francis Dereham). It was never a successful strategy for him.
Privy/privee in private, discreet, secretive
Purgatory In Roman Catholic doctrine, a place of temporary punishment (as distinct from hell) where less serious (venial) unconfessed sins or imperfect contrition (being sorry not for the offence, but for fear of punishment) are expiated and the soul purified before entering heaven
Qualm plague
Quit free
Quoth said











R-Z
Term Definition
Reformation An attempt begun by Martin Luther in 1517 to reform the abuses that were rife within the Roman Catholic Church and ending in separation of several reform groups from the Catholic Church; the basis of Protestantism.
Revelry delight, pleasure
Ribaldry coarse jesting
Rood crucifix; often people would take an oath 'by the rood'.
Salic Law a law originating with the Salian Franks that excluded females from ruling a kingdom in their own right among other rules affecting female inheritance. Oddly enough England did not have that law, but the English people were distrustful of queens regnant, thus Henry's desperate quest for a male heir. In Spain, Salic law applied in Ferdinand's Aragon, but in Isabella's Castile, women could, as she did, rule in their own right.
Simony the sale of Church positions
Sire father
Sobre serious, grave
Sojourn remain
Sooth/ soothly truth, truely
Sorely very
Sumptuary Laws Laws which governed what each class could or could not wear and only persons of a certain rank could wear velvet or silk. Sumptuary laws are defined as "Laws made for the purpose of restraining luxury or extravagance, particularly against inordinate expenditures in the matter of apparel, food, furniture, etc." These laws dictated what color and type of clothing, furs, fabrics, and trims were allowed to persons of various ranks or incomes. In the case of clothing this was intended, amongst other reasons, to reduce spending on foreign textiles and to ensure that people did not dress "above their station".
Sweating sickness a virulent disease characterized by alternating bouts of cold chills and fever accompanied by excessive sweating and often resulting in death. The Sweat occured in several epidemics between 1485 and 1551. Henry's older brother Arthur may have died of The Sweat. Henry lived in terror of it and fled the city whenever The Sweat emerged. Anne and George Boleyn became ill with it but survived. Anne's sister Mary's husband, William Carey did not


Te Deum To you O God (latin) - sung in church
Tempest storm
Thou You
Tilting see "jousting"
Tiltyard Area where jousting took place.
Trencher a plate or bowl made of hard, stale bread


Usury Money lending with interest tacked on.
Wardship care and protection of a ward ; the right to the custody of an infant heir of a feudal tenant and of the heir's property. Wardships were valuable prizes bestowed by the king, nuponupon deserving courtiers, e.g. Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, the boon companion of Henry VIII was granted the wardship of Catherine Willoughby, the daughter of Katharine of Aragon's Spanish lady in waiting, Maria de Salinas. Suffolk married Catherine Willoughby after the death of his wife, Mary, sister of Henry VIII. Margaret Giggs Clement was the ward of Thomas More who raised her with his children.
Wench girl or maid, female servant
Whelp dog or a pup


Yeoman free born servant