Elizabeth Barton
Elizabeth Barton (c. 1506 – 20 April 1534), known as the Holy Maid of Kent or Nun of Kent, was an English woman whose reported ecstatic visions and prophecies against King Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn attracted widespread support among clergy and laity opposed to the royal supremacy, culminating in her conviction for treason and public execution.[1][2]
Born in Aldington, Kent, Barton served as a domestic in the household of Thomas Cobb, steward to the Archbishop of Canterbury, where in 1525 she suffered fits of illness accompanied by trance-like states in which she delivered prophecies, including admonitions against sin and predictions of future events.[1] These experiences drew the attention of local priests, leading her to enter a Benedictine convent and gain promoters such as the monk Edward Bocking, who helped publicize her revelations through writings and sermons.[2]
Barton directly confronted Henry VIII in 1528, warning of divine punishment for his marital intentions, and reiterated her prophecies in 1532 at Canterbury, foretelling that the king would cease to rule within a month or even an hour of marrying Anne Boleyn.[1][2] Her activities, viewed as fomenting sedition and conspiring with papal agents, prompted her arrest in September 1533 under Thomas Cromwell's orders; she confessed to fabricating her visions, was attainted by Parliament, and on 20 April 1534 was hanged at Tyburn, her head subsequently displayed on London Bridge.[1][2] Barton's case exemplified the Henrician regime's suppression of prophetic opposition to the Reformation, with her supporters, including several clerics, facing similar executions for treason rather than formal heresy trials.[2]