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Henry VIII (1491 – 1547)
Henry VIII was the second Tudor monarch, who famously had six wives,
broke off from the Roman Catholic Church, established the Church of
England and set about the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
Henry
was the second son of Henry VII, when his elder brother Arthur died in
1503, Henry became the heir to the throne. Henry was a larger than life
character even before he was crowned. An athletic youth of six foot and
fine build, Henry was a keen sportsman and hunter and later developed a
taste for battle.
Following the death of his father
Henry VIII succeeded the throne in 1509 and shortly afterwards married
his first wife, Catherine of Aragon – the wife of his dead brother. The
motive was politics, Catherine was the daughter of a powerful Spanish
King and England needed to maintain its alliance with Spain.
But
despite giving birth to a daughter; Mary, Catherine could not give
Henry a male heir, she had one stillbirth, one miscarriage, and two
short-lived infants. The king was desperate for a divorce, especially
as he had became infatuated by Anne Boleyn, the sister of his mistress.
Henry asked the Pope to have his marriage annulled, but the Pope, who
was closely tied with the King of Spain, refused.
In
an act that was to have a dramatic effect on the history of the British
Isles, Henry VIII split
from Rome, converted to Protestantism and
established himself as the head of the Church of England. The
Reformation as it is known, allowed the king to marry Anne Boleyn,
which he did in 1533.
With Anne, Henry had another
daughter, Elizabeth, but after three years, the king tired of Anne,
accused her of adultery and therefore treason and had her beheaded at
the Tower of London. Soon after, Henry married Jane Seymour, who died shortly after giving birth to their son Edward VI.
Henry’s
next wife was Anne of Cleves and she lasted just seven months! The
marriage was arranged by Thomas Cromwell who chose a suitable
protestant lady for the now protestant king. When Henry did meet Anne
of Cleves, he told Cromwell he had found a ‘flanders mare’ and had him
executed. Anne fated somewhat better, the marriage was annulled and she
was granted a generous settlement.
Catherine Howard,
Henry’s next wife wasn’t to be so lucky, after two years of marriage,
she like Anne Boleyn before her was accused of adultery, tried for
treason and beheaded at the Tower. Henry’s sixth wife was Katherine
Parr, who herself had been married four times. Katherine Parr almost
faced the chop at the tower after an arrest warrant was issued for
treason, but she managed to talk the King round and eventually outlived
him.
Henry’s reign left many of the churches in England and Wales
in the romantic ruins they are today, following the Dissolution of the
Monasteries and his split from Rome and the establishment of the Church
of England, left a religious legacy throughout the British Isles.
What
Henry didn’t leave was a clear line of succession. His son Edward VI
was just a boy when he became king of England and reigned for just 5
years, leaving England in dispute between his two daughters, the
Catholic Mary and the Protestant Elizabeth.
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