ChatterBank2 mins ago
Was Queen Elizabeth the First a man?
Thank you.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by bizzylizzy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This is indeed a conspiracy theory, and highly unlikely to be valid.
Court ettiquette in those times dictated that the monarch was almost never alone - always dressed and undressed by several of her attendents. It would have been impossible to keep such a decpetion secret in such gossip-ridden places as the Queen's palaces.
Ignore the second "here" above - someting went wrong I know not what. This should be the Hever portrait.
no it is untrue
Elizabeth was er checked by privy Councillors to be a girlie before teh negatiations for marriage with the Dike of Anjou - whenever that was
Unsuccessful
the Duke - my liddle frog the Q referred to him - was ugly possibly gay possibly infected with syphilis and died a few years later.
This is not directly related to the question but to another similar story about 'mistaken gender':
Although OED gives somewhat different explanation to the origin of word 'test', this sounds more entertaining:
"Testiculos habet et bene pendentes" � "He has testicles, and they dangle nicely."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Joan
Queen Elizabeth was very much a woman! The idea that she was really a man, or half-woman/half-man, probably stems from the idea that a woman could not successfully rule a kingdom, and so she had to have been secretly a man. It may also have stemmed from the idea that every woman wanted to marry, and if she did not, there had to be a reason for it.
And she wasn't bald either, all hogwash.
You're all thinking of the Gloucestershire legend of "The Bisley Boy" which basically states that while on a visit to nearby Berkeley Castle as a child, Elizabeth suddenly died.
Panicking officials substituted the most suitable red headed child, who happened to be a boy.
Elizabeth went bald, never married, left explicit instructions forbidding a postmortem, and was fond of saying she had "the heart of a man". Hmmmm.
A skeleton of a young girl in tudor dress was found in the area a few years ago.
Solarjunkie you are a star. That's exactly what she was talking about. Many, many thanks.
And as for the rest of you. My thanks to you guys too. What an entertaining thread this has been. Starting with total *&^%$cks and ending with Virgil we arrived at the right answer. What could be better than that. :-)