";s:4:"text";s:4921:" Previously sponsored memorials or famous memorials will not have this option.Share this memorial using social media sites or email.Save to an Ancestry Tree, a virtual cemetery, your clipboard for pasting or Print.Edit a memorial you manage or suggest changes to the memorial manager.Thanks for using Find a Grave, if you have any feedback we would love to hear from you.You may not upload any more photos to this memorialThis photo was not uploaded because this memorial already has 20 photosThis photo was not uploaded because you have already uploaded 5 photos to this memorialThis photo was not uploaded because this memorial already has 30 photosThis photo was not uploaded because you have already uploaded 20 photos to this memorialAlso an additional 2 volunteers within fifty miles.You have chosen this person to be their own family member.Enter a valid email address and a feedback message.We were unable to submit your feedback at this time. In fact, Hoare (2016) provides us with other possible diseases that the Prince might have suffered from (there is a chance that the ‘sweating disease’ was confused with other maladies): 1. The sweating disease was a virus that made its victims feel ‘intense heat, to the extent that in the delirium it inflicted they felt as if their blood was actually boiling, whilst sweating so profusely that it soaked through bedclothes’ (English Monarchs).Catherine of Aragon had, of course, witnessed the decline of her husband, and she recounted how the illness affected him: ‘[Arthur suffered from] the most pitiful disease and sickness that with so sore and great violence had battled and driven in the singular parts of him inward; that cruel and fervent enemy of nature, the deadly corruption, did utterly vanquish and overcome the pure and friendful blood, without all manner of physical help and remedy’ (Hoare 2016).Although both Catherine and Arthur contracted it, the former managed to survive thanks to her strong physical health, whereas the latter died.There are different accounts on how Arthur contracted the disease: some state that he started becoming ill on his post-wedding journey from London to Ludlow; others claim that he became sick after the Christmas season; and others state that during the springtime the Prince was afflicted by the disease due to ‘a malign vapour which proceeded from the air’ (Hoare 2016). In an effort to strengthen the Tudor claim to the throne, Henry had royal genealogists trace his lineage back to the ancient British rulers and decided on naming his firstborn son after the legendary King Arthur. Arthur died the following spring from a fever caused by the damp climate.