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Revision as of 12:37, 10 August 2005 edit81.137.32.145 (talk) * Roper's Garden← Previous edit Revision as of 02:07, 3 February 2006 edit undoMusical Linguist (talk | contribs)13,591 edits She wasn't a martyr; her father was.Next edit →
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Revision as of 02:07, 3 February 2006

Portrait of Margaret Roper, from a 1593 reproduction of a now-lost Hans Holbein portrait of all of the women of Thomas More's family.

Margaret Roper (15051544) was the daughter of Thomas More and wife of William Roper. During More's imprisonment in the Tower of London, she was a frequent visitor to his cell, along with her husband. After More was beheaded in 1535 for refusing to bless the Reformation of Henry VIII of England and swear to Henry as head of the English Church, his head was displayed on a pike for a month afterward. At the end of that period, Margaret purchased his head and preserved it by pickling it in spices until her own death at the age of 39 in 1544. She had her father's head buried with her.

William Roper ("son Roper," as he is referred to by Thomas More) produced the first biography of the statesman/martyr, but his homage to his father-in-law is not remembered as well as Margaret's efforts at comforting and honoring More. In Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Dream of Fair Women, he invokes Margaret Roper ("who clasped in her last trance/ Her murdered father's head") as a paragon of loyalty and familial love.

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