OK, apes, which live only in Africa and SE Asia, and then, very deep in the woods, and in populations that were pretty small even 600 years ago, were unknown to Europeans. There are monkeys in Europe, and probably in the menageries, going back to Roman times. Old world monkeys are fairly trainable. They are primates, but they are not apes. Now, I suppose a non-zoologist could confuse an incomplete adult monkey skeleton, missing the tail and skull, for a juvenile ape, because juvenile apes are startlingly human looking, and adult Old world monkeys are not. There are New world monkeys that are rather human/juvenile ape-looking, but I doubt there were many New World monkeys around.
When were the bones identified as an ape? It would have to be after the late 17th century for there to be genuine ape bones in England, and for someone to use that term.
The only exception I can think of is that a tailless monkey (yes, there are, in spite of the song) called a Macaque-- they have stubby tails that aren't visible-- have been around for a long time, are native to the Mediterranean area, well-known to medieval Europe, and sometimes called apes, so maybe they were Macaque bones.
Please tell me you mean Ted, jr. He gets a lot of sympathy, because of the leg, but he's really kind of a jerk, and a conspiracy-monger, who is right now promoting the idea that vaccines cause autism, and because he's styling himself as a handicapped guy, just trying to help handicapped children, his opinion carries weight, even though he has no medical or professional training.
Well, I think the idea, and what Henry VII actually did, was to have the Eleanor Butler marriage retroactively annulled, thus making Edward free to marry Elizabeth Woodville when he did the first time. I know it seems like the church doesn't go around handing out annulments, but the reason Henry VIII couldn't get one was that Catherine of Aragon had connections (her sister was the mother of the Holy Roman Emperor), not because the Pope had a moral objection to giving Henry one. It wasn't as though Edward and Eleanor Butler had been living as husband and wife.
I can certainly see why Henry wanted to marry a Plantagenet. His claim to the throne was held together with chewing gum. You could throw a dart at a gathering of almost and European court, and hit someone with a better claim. It's probably the reason that he kept Catherine of Aragon practically a prisoner after Prince Arthur died, "saving" her for Henry VIII; her claim to the throne was as strong as his, and not through an illegitimate line.
When were the bones identified as an ape? It would have to be after the late 17th century for there to be genuine ape bones in England, and for someone to use that term.
The only exception I can think of is that a tailless monkey (yes, there are, in spite of the song) called a Macaque-- they have stubby tails that aren't visible-- have been around for a long time, are native to the Mediterranean area, well-known to medieval Europe, and sometimes called apes, so maybe they were Macaque bones.
Originally posted by Errata
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But here's a thing. Eleanor Butler died in 1468. Assuming he married Elizabeth Woodville again at the time of Eleanor's death, both the boys would still have been legitimate, as would their older sister Cecily, and all who came after Cecily, but not Mary, and not the Elizabeth who married Henry VII. Which certainly could have blown Titulus Regis out of the water, but still puts Henry VII in more of a bind than Richard III.
I can certainly see why Henry wanted to marry a Plantagenet. His claim to the throne was held together with chewing gum. You could throw a dart at a gathering of almost and European court, and hit someone with a better claim. It's probably the reason that he kept Catherine of Aragon practically a prisoner after Prince Arthur died, "saving" her for Henry VIII; her claim to the throne was as strong as his, and not through an illegitimate line.
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