Lady Arundel wished to join her husband abroad but was dissuaded from doing so. Alethea and her husband accompanied the
Elector Palatine Frederick V and his bride
Princess Elizabeth Stuart to
Heidelberg on their marriage in 1613. Lady Arundel used her own money to buy back
Arundel House and financed their trip to Italy in 1613–1614, travelling with
Inigo Jones. The Earl of Arundel was one of the first Englishmen to buy antique statues. She met him in
Siena. Then they travelled to Rome, Naples, Padua, Genoa, Turin, and Paris. They reached England in November 1614. Alethea's father died in 1616; she inherited a third of the estate and her husband's serious collecting started. On 30 August 1618 Anne of Denmark provided a grand reception for the Venetian ambassador
Piero Contarini at
Oatlands Palace. Arundel sat next to the ambassador and talked of her time in Venice. At the end of the dinner there were sweetmeats, then they stood and toasted
Elizabeth, Electress Palatine and
Frederick V. Around 1619 Lord Arundel sent his two elder sons to Padua. In 1620
Rubens painted Alethea Talbot, and her retinue,
jester,
dwarf and dog in
Antwerp when she was on her way to Italy. (The male figure, called lord Arundel, was added many years later by an unknown hand.) He wished to visit his sons but decided that Lady Arundel should go alone. Lady Arundel was accompanied by
Francesco Vercellini. She stayed in
Spa and engaged apartments. Lady Arundel moved to Milan and Padua. In 1622 she lived in
Venice in the
Palazzo Mocenigo facing the
Canal Grande, and also in a villa at
Dolo.
Antonio Priuli's election to office as
Doge of Venice began a brutal process of ferreting out individuals suspected of plotting against Venice. Hundreds were arrested, with or without cause, with attention specially focused on foreign soldiers and sailors. The manhunt led to the arrest of many actual plotters, but also of many innocent victims, such as
Antonio Foscarini, a patrician and Venetian Ambassador to England (1611–15), who was executed on 21 April 1621, after attending an event at the English Embassy. The hysteria ended in 1622, and on 16 January 1623, the Venetian government issued an apology for Foscarini's execution, thus marking a scaling back of the manhunt.
Sir Henry Wotton warned her to leave Venice. She declined the advice and went straight to Venice. Insisting on appearing the next day, with Wotton, before
Doge Priuli and the
Senate she was completely justified. Lady Arundel left Venice with letters from Priuli ordering every favour to be shown to her on her journey through Venetian territory. She spent the winter in Turin together with her two sons. She met with
Anthony van Dyck, the painter. Together they went to Mantua. In 1623 she attempted to go to Spain to woo the
Infanta, sister of
Philip IV of Spain. She started for England, intending to visit the Queen of Bohemia at the Hague on the way. In 1624 her eldest son Maltravers died of
smallpox in Ghent. In 1626 her husband was put in the
Tower of London by Charles because their elder son Maltravers had secretly married Elisabeth Stuart (daughter of Esme Stuart, 1st Duke of Lennox), a kinswoman of Charles, without permission.
Joachim von Sandrart gave his opinion on the collection and copied the works by
Holbein. The King
Charles I and Queen
Henrietta Maria visited
Arundel House to see the collections. Birth of another grandson to Lord Arundel. The king refused to allow Lady Arundel to accompany her husband on a special embassy to Holland, to invite the
Winter Queen, his sister, to England. ==Return to England==