12/29/2025

The Only English Queen Never to Have Married


'First there is trust, then passion, then death': Why the 'Virgin Queen' never married.


Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII, is the only English queen never to have married. The iconic Tudor monarch's last visit to Kenilworth 450 years ago may hold some clues to her solo reign – as revealed in a new art installation at the castle, depicting betrayal, beheadings and an elaborate declaration of love.

On a July evening in 1575, 41-year-old Queen Elizabeth I arrived at Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire, UK, for what would be her longest and last visit. She had given the castle to Robert Dudley in 1563 and granted him the title of Earl of Leicester the following year. Dudley was a great favourite of the Queen and is thought to have been her childhood friend. The precise nature of their close relationship was the subject of much gossip. 

Prior to the unmarried Queen's arrival, Dudley had given the magnificent castle a major refurb. New buildings had gone up, a new garden had been created and the estate had been landscaped. And the earl pulled out all the stops to lay on extraordinary entertainment in the form of music, dancing, acrobatics, spectacular fireworks and dramatic interludes performed by costumed actors. On the huge mere surrounding the castle, there was a moving island inhabited by the "Lady of the Lake". There was a 24ft (7.3m) dolphin that concealed musicians, and an 18ft-(5.5m) long swimming mermaid.

No expense was spared. It cost Dudley £1,000 ($1,400) a day – millions in today's money, and the whole extravaganza has been interpreted as an elaborate and expensive courtship display; the 16th-Century ruling class's equivalent of hiring a plane to fly a "Marry Me" banner. "The 1575 festivities were an attempt to woo Elizabeth – marriage is a theme in some of the events," Jeremy Ashbee, head curator of properties at English Heritage, tells the BBC. "Dr Elizabeth Goldring, who has made a detailed study of Lord Leicester, has called it 'his last throw of the dice'."

Dudley's gamble seemed to be going swimmingly, but then everything changed. The highlight of the stay was to have been a masque – or performance – on Wednesday 20 July. It never took place. Was it simply a case of bad weather preventing the event, as the official version had it? Or had the monarch got wind of the subject matter and been angered? The masque featured Diana, goddess of chastity, searching for one of her chaste nymphs, pointedly called Zabetta –  a version of the name Elizabeth.

It concluded with a messenger of Juno, goddess of marriage, directly addressing Elizabeth, and imploring her not to follow the path of Diana but to marry instead. Dudley had a certain amount of leeway with the Queen, but this perhaps was going too far. Whatever the reason, the masque never took place, and the revelries were over. The Queen remained in her quarters for a few more days before leaving on 27 July.

'Proud and fiery'

Now, the artist Lindsey Mendick has marked the 450th anniversary of the visit by creating Wicked Game, a large sculptural installation at the castle. Wicked Game takes inspiration from ancient mythology as well as from the events of Elizabeth's visit, and the way in which she used her unwed state in her shrewd political manoeuvres throughout her 45-year reign. There are 13 different tableaux. Some are sinister, others are suffused with dark humour. The fragmented ceramic sculptures strikingly depict the Queen and those around her as animals. In the central piece, Elizabeth is a lion and Dudley is a bear. The tableaux are positioned on pieces of an exploded giant chessboard.

"Playing chess is the perfect analogy for what Elizabeth had to do to survive," Mendick tells the BBC. "I think she is incredibly interesting and that she's a great way of looking at how we treat women today. This event [that Dudley planned] at Kenilworth was meant to be this massive celebration for Elizabeth; it was meant to be decadent and enjoyable. But then also at the same time it was so loaded with something else. For powerful women like Elizabeth, refusing to marry or have children was a radical act of self-preservation and autonomy."


Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII, is the only English queen never to have married. She came to power in 1558 at the age of 25, inheriting religious, political and financial problems from her two predecessors, her half-brother, Edward VI (1537-1553), and her half-sister, Mary I (1516-1558).

Advisers and members of Parliament repeatedly urged her to marry to protect England's security. A woman ruling alone? Inconceivable. A queen needed to marry, it was believed, not just to produce a male heir in order to avoid succession disputes but also so that a man could take charge of political and military matters. The entreaties to marry were ceaseless, and numerous matrimonial candidates were suggested or suggested themselves. Elizabeth repeatedly parried, deflected and refused. Why?

'No master'

It's entirely possible that she simply found the idea of having to obey or defer to a husband – any husband – intolerable. After all, she was very well educated (she learned five languages – French, Italian, Spanish, Latin and Flemish – and had studied history and rhetoric), highly intelligent, proud and fiery. She is said to have declared: "I will have but one mistress here and no master."

Also, Elizabeth knew that a woman could govern perfectly well without a man looking over her shoulder. In the summer of 1544, at Hampton Court, she witnessed the scholarly Katherine Parr, Henry's sixth wife, ruling with full authority while the king was on campaign in France. Katherine was a more than capable regent, and Elizabeth seems to have been profoundly influenced by seeing her stepmother exercising power, and accepting as her due the humble deference of powerful male ministers and courtiers.

Besides, her own immediate family had hardly furnished her with an image of the joys of marriage. Her father had her mother, Anne Boleyn, arrested on trumped-up charges of adultery and conspiracy, and then, shockingly, had her beheaded when Elizabeth was just three years old. One of Mendick's sculptures is an interpretation of this execution, showing Anne as a fox kneeling in prayer, before the executioner, who takes the form of a vicious dog.

Some commentators have suggested that Elizabeth might have been afraid of sex. Alison Weir, for example, in her book, Elizabeth, the Queen, wonders if the monarch "may have made the equation that sexual involvement was inextricably linked with death". The BBC's 2005 series The Virgin Queen portrayed "a monarch terrified of sex", according to the Telegraph. Paula Milne, who wrote the screenplay, told them at the time: "If I was asked to write a piece about a contemporary woman whose mother had been killed by her father, I would be expected to examine the psychological impact."

In fact, Elizabeth enjoyed the company of handsome men, and could be flirtatious with them. However, she had plenty of reasons to fear pregnancy and childbirth. Childbirth was a very high-risk enterprise in the Tudor era. Jane Seymour, Henry's third wife, died in childbirth, and Katherine Parr died of an illness shortly after giving birth, as had Elizabeth's grandmother, Elizabeth of York.

- Author: Neil Armstrong, BBC

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SCIENCE* LAB SCHEME : TRY THE SALMON




FOR the killer whales' dinner - dolphins help set the table. In the waters off British Columbia, killer whales trail Pacific white-sided dolphins to hunt Chinook salmon and may even share fish scraps with them, a new study finds.

From a boat, the interaction between the orcas and dolphins looks like organized chaos, the study authors said. But underwater an opportunistic alliance gives orcas access to prey that would otherwise be less accessible.

'' Sometimes you can have an unlikely friend that helps guide you to a buffet or takes you to an underground speakeasy,'' said Sarah Fortune, a marine ecologist at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia and the lead author of the study.

Pacific white-sided dolphins are often seen alongside orcas in Pacific Northwest waters. The orcas appear to tolerate them, showing no evasive or aggressive behavior.

Scientists had thought the dolphins mobbed orcas or stole their prey. But the new study documents  cooperative foraging between the species - showing that dolphins earn their share.

The Publishing continues to Part [ 2 ]. 

The World Students Society thanks Alexa Robles-Gil.


Both of These Influencers Are Successful - But Only One is Human



In some ways, Gigi is like any other young social media influencer.

With perfect hair and makeup, she logs on and talks to her fans. She shares clips: eating, doing skin care, putting on lipstick. She even has a cute baby who appears in some videos.

But after a few seconds, something may seem a little off.

She can munch on pizza made out of molten lava, or apply snowflakes and cotton candy as lip gloss. Her hands sometimes pass through what she's holding.

That's because Gigi isn't real. She's the AI creation of University of Illinois student Simone Mckenzie - who needed to make some money over the summer.

Ms Mckenzie, 21, is part of a fast-growing cohort of digital creators who churn out a stream of videos by entering simple prompts into AI chatbots, like Google Veo 3. Experts say this genre, dubbed "AI slop" by some critics and begrudging viewers, is taking over social media feeds.

And its creators are finding considerable success.

"One video made me $1,600 [£1,185] in just four days," Ms Mckenzie said. "I was like, okay, let me keep doing this."

After two months, Gigi had millions of views, making Ms Mckenzie thousands through TikTok's creator fund, a programme that pays creators based on how many views they get. But she's far from the only person using AI to reach easy virality, experts said.

"It's surging right now and it's probably going to continue," said Jessa Lingel, associate professor and digital culture expert at the University of Pennsylvania.

Its progenitors - who now can generate videos of literally anything in just a few minutes - have the potential to disrupt the lucrative influencer economy.

But while some say AI is ruining social media, others see its potential to democratise who gains fame online, Lingel said. Those who don't have the money or time for a fancy background, camera setup or video editing tools can now go viral, too.

- Author: Sakshi Venkatraman, BBC

HOPE DEMANDS WORK : PURE ESSAY



ACROSS - the Great Lord's - world, stories that shape this Human Rights Day unfold quietly on !WOW!, in homes, settlements, villages, neighbourhoods where rights become urgent needs.

In these places, in some places for sure, girls are sometimes withdrawn from school long before adulthood.

WOMEN weigh the risk of reporting abuse against the danger of staying silent. Families negotiate impossible choices shaped by economic hardship, honour, patriarchy, or fear.

This year, however, the Developing world enters Human Rights Day with a shift both significant and delicate.

Most countries have taken formidable steps acknowledging long-standing harm. In Pakistan, for example, Balochistan passed a law prohibiting child marriage, setting the minimum age at 18 years.

Islamabad proudly enacted its own child marriage restraint law earlier this year. Most recently, Pakistan's parliament adopted the Domestic Violence :

[ Prevention and Protection ] Bill, 2025, defining abuse in its full breath and recognising at a federal level that violence inside the home is not a private matter but a public concern.

THESE measures arise directly from the experiences of women and children who have carried the weight of silence for decades.

The significance of these laws lies in what they validate.

FOR YEARS, Human Rights Organizations, health professionals, feminists and educators have documented the consequences of early-marriage girls forced into adulthood before their bodies or minds are prepared ; interrupted schooling; increased health risks.

Likewise, studies on domestic violence have shown how women face cycles of harm that leave lasting consequences.

TO SUM, Human Rights Day should continue to focus on what remains at stake and not solely on what has been achieved.

The World Students Society thanks Rabiya Javeri Agha. The writer is the chairperson of the National Commission for Human Rights.

IQBAL'S GLORIOUS IMBIBE : IQRA



'' Founder Haly, Oh, God, Yes! Proud Pakistan and Philosopher Iqbal would be ever, sterling proud of you, and your very beautiful family. Please, accept my heartfelt wishes and prayers.''

THE REST ? : READ AGAIN! [ KHUDI voh behr hai jis ka koi kinara nahi''. [ The self is an ocean without a shore ].

This is Iqbal's rejoinder to Nietzsche, yes, '' God is dead '' in the modern imagination but the divine pulse still throbs in the human self.

The Ubermensch becomes the Mard-i-Momin, the believer whose creative will is not nihilistic but sacred.

Iqbal's Bergsonian inheritance is clear ; being, for him, is elan vital, creative movement, the ceaseless surge of divine life. 

But where Bergson stops at intuition, Iqbal goes further, intuition : intuition must become the love  ['ishq'] not mere effect, but a metaphysical energy that propels being into creation.

His sources are not exclusively European. His imagination is also rooted in the Persian mystic tradition - in Rumi's dance of becoming, in Hafez's intoxicated love, in the luminous defiance of Mansour aI-Hallaj. 

From Rumi he inherits the doctrine that the soul must burn its veils to unveil God ; from Hafez, the audacity to seek union through joy.

Rumi's verse, '' Az khudi ba knudi raw, ta beh khuda rasi,'' [ From the self, travel through the self, until you reach God ] anticipates the whole structure of Iqbal's Khudi.

This spiritual publishing is dedicated to esteemed Founder Haly and Family.

BEST AUTHOR BEST : JOHN DARNIELLE


The musician and novelist sets out reading goals [ '' only books in translation '' ] but enjoys '' transgressing when something juicy turns up.''

In '' This Year, '' he annotates the literary lyrics to 365 of his songs.

.-  Describe your ideal writing experience.

Midmorning; either on my back porch or on an airplane, a book in translation by an author I hadn't heard of but whose book is knocking me over; within an earshot of my wife, who is very patient with my need to read the parts I like out loud.

.-  What books might people be surprised to find on your shelves?

Maybe this copy of '' A Grammar of Middle Welsh,'' which was given to me by a friend who thought, rightly, that I Would be pleased to have a book like it on my shelf.

.-  Who are your favorite musician writers?

Charles Mingus only wrote the one book, and what we have of it went through heavy editing, but even one page tells you he could have just written prose and his name would still be remembered.

.-  Is there a songwriter you wish would annotate his or her lyrics, the way you have in '' This Year '' ?

Meshell Nidegecello. Daniel Higgs. Ghostface from Wu-Tang Clan is one of the best writers alive. His stuff is so lyrically dense that you could do it like an illuminated manuscript.

.-  What's your favorite book no one else has heard of?

Paola Drigo's novel '' Maria Zef '' is flat-out incredible. Everybody should read it.

.-  You confess that several of your songs are inspired by Matthew Arnold's '' Dover Beach.'' Is it actually a poem you like?

Oh, God, yes, I cite it almost habitually. I have a complete Matthew Arnold I got in Edinburgh [ one of the best second-hand books cities in the world].

'' Dover Beach '' is remarkable even within his own corpus; it's so modern and forward-looking.

But I think it's one of those poems whose truth is so communicable, so graspable, and still so available to personal application - he's asking about constructing meaning in the absence of God, or, more fairly, in the absence of Faith in God.

And he's locating that in love of another. Takes my breath away.

The Post and Publishing continues to Part [ 2 ].

The World Students Society thanks. The New York Times.