| King Henry
VIII was the second son of King
Henry VII and his wife Elizabeth of York. Henry had planned on
following a career in the Church, but when his elder brother, Arthur, died
in 1502, Henry became first in line to the throne and had to prepare for
a future as King. His father died in 1509, and at eighteen years of age,
Henry became King of England. Soon after his accession, he married his
brother's widow, Catherine of Aragon. For many years the couple hoped for
a son and heir, but the only child that survived infancy was a daughter,
Mary.
For most of his life, Henry was a devoted Roman Catholic, and a book he
wrote against Protestant leader Martin Luther earned him the title of Defender
of the Faith from the Pope.
However, Henry's desire for a son forced
him to embrace the "new religion" when the Pope would not give him a divorce
from Catherine. Henry was aware that his wife was unlikely to have any
more children, and he felt he had to marry again to sire a legitimate son
to succeed him. After separating the Church of England from the Roman Catholic
Church, Henry got his divorce, and married the woman he had been in love
with for some years, Anne Boleyn. It is uncertain when exactly they
married, but sometime between late autumn 1532 and the first few weeks
of 1533. Anne may have been already pregnant when they married, but was
certainly pregnant by the time she was crowned in the summer of 1533. Both
she and Henry were sure that the child they were expecting was a boy, but
to their disappointment, the baby born on the 7th of September 1533 was
a girl: the future Queen
Elizabeth I.
Anne bore the King no more living children,
and believing that she would never provide him with a son, Henry had Anne
executed (probably falsely) for adultery in the May of 1536. Anne was even
accused of having an affair with her brother, George Boleyn. Within days
of her death, Henry married Jane Seymour. To Henry's joy, she gave birth
to his much longer for son, Edward,
the following year, but to his grief, she died a few days later. Henry
married three more times, but only his last marriage to Katherine Parr
was a success. His fourth marriage to Anne of Cleves ended before it had
begun as the King did not find her attractive, and his fifth wife, Katherine
Howard, was executed for adultery.
Henry showed no more compassion to his
long-serving ministers than he did his wives. Thomas Wolsey (c.1475-1530),
the King's chief minister for several years, died facing accusations of
treason, and Thomas More (1478-1535), once one of the King's closest friends,
was executed for refusing to accept the religious changes in the land.
Thomas Cromwell (1485-1540) was executed for arranging the King's
disastrous union with Anne of Cleves.
While Henry was a popular monarch with
the people, the break with Rome caused immense upheaval in the land. All
monasteries and convents were closed, meaning that monks and nuns who had
lived in confinement for years were suddenly forced into society, and many
lands belonging to these religious houses were granted to the aristocracy.
The break with Rome, known as the Reformation, changed the country
forever, and while many families prospered from it, others were destroyed.
The Reformation also left Henry's children, Edward,
Mary
and Elizabeth,
with an England deeply divided over religion.
Henry died in the January of 1547 and was
succeeded by his young son Edward. |
| Born: |
28
June 1491 at Placentia Palace |
| Reigned: |
1509-1547 |
| Coronation: |
24 June 1509 |
| Parents |
Henry
VII (1547-1509)
Elizabeth
of York (1466-1503) |
| Spouse: |
1.
Catherine
of Aragon
(1485-1536)
Married:
1509
Divorced:
1533
2.
Anne
Boleyn
(c.1504-1536)
Married:
1532/3
Beheaded:
1536
3.
Jane
Seymour
(c.1507-1537)
Married:
1536
Died:
1537
4.
Anne
of Cleves
(1515-1557)
Married:
1540
Divorced:
1540
5.
Katherine
Howard
(c.1522-1542)
Married:1540
Beheaded:
1542
6.
Katherine
Parr
(c.1512-1548)
Married:1543 |
| Children: |
Mary
I (1516-1558)
Elizabeth
I (1533-1603)
Edward
VI (1537-1553) |
| Religion: |
1. Roman Catholic
2. Protestant |
| Died: |
28
January 1547
Whitehall
Palace |
| Buried: |
Windsor
Castle |
| Successor: |
Edward
VI |
|