Courage and Consequence – The Interrogation Transcript That Outlived the Interrogators
One Lincolnshire gentlewoman. Three arrests for heresy. Both shoulders pulled from their sockets by the Lord Chancellor of England. A condemned prisoner racked illegally by two of the highest officers of the realm, with their own hands, to extract the names of the queen’s friends. Anne Askew named no one. From a Newgate cell, with her hands ruined, she wrote down every question and every answer. She got the manuscript out of England. Bale printed it in Wesel under a false imprint. Foxe placed it at the center of his Book of Martyrs. The men who tortured her are remembered today as characters inside her narrative. She turned the mechanics of Tudor coercion into evidence against the regime that used them. Anne Askew needs to be remembered.
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