Henry VIII of England, King 1509-1547
King Henry VIII was, quite probably, the most significant English political and religious figure since William the Conqueror set sail from Normandy in 1066 AD.
This article is about Henry the man – his loves, his wives, his children. Famous for having six wives, Henry VIII is said to be the only English King to have had more wives than mistresses.
Every English schoolchild knows the rhyme, “divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived”, about, in turn, Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr.
Even in his own lifetime, when his revenge could be swift and cruel, his marital history was made fun of. The beautiful 16 year old Duchess Christina of Denmark is supposed to have said in 1538 that if she had had two heads, Henry was welcome to one of them. She declined to marry him.
Henry himself died thinking that he had had only two marriages – to Jane Seymour, and Catherine Parr. The rest were not valid, in his view. That meant, also, that King Henry VIII only considered one of his children, the future King Edward VI, to be legitimate. He did not regard his daughters, Mary Tudor and Elizabeth Tudor, as being born within marriage.
Family and childhood of Catherine of Aragon, Henry VIII’s wife 1509-1533
Catherine of Aragon was born in Spain on 16th December 1485.
She was the daughter of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile. Both were monarchs of their own countries. Catherine was therefore an infanta, a Spanish princess. Her title as a child was Infanta Caterina.
Catherine was named after her maternal grandmother, the English daughter of John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster.
As you can see from the portrait to the right of this text, she looked English as well, with fair hair, fair skin, and blue eyes.
Ferdinand and Isabella were important monarchs in Europe. They were relentlessly pious and Catholic, and were awarded the titles of, “the Catholic Kings”.
Catherine had several older siblings. The eldest was called Isabella, then came Juan, and then Juana, Maria and then the baby of the family, Catherine.
Catherine had an active childhood. Ferdinand and Isabella were busy with the reconquista.
They were dedicated to expelling the last remaining Muslim Moors from Spain, and the Queen was head of her own armies. Isabella took her daughters as well as her son to the siege of Granada in 1491.
Catherine of Aragon’s marriage to Arthur Tudor, Prince of Wales
At
the age of 3, Catherine was betrothed to Arthur, Prince of Wales.
The couple were married before they even met, by proxy.
They married
firstly in Wales in May 1499, where Arthur married the Spanish
Ambassador to England, De Puebla.
There
was a second proxy marriage in December 1500, and the Ambassador
played the part of Catherine of Aragon at a wedding feast after the
proxy marriage.
Catherine
arrived in England in October 1500, at Plymouth, Devon. Catherine
and Arthur married in St Paul ’s Cathedral on 14th
November 1500.
The
young couple moved to the Welsh Marches, but their married life
together was short. Prince Arthur, Prince of Wales, died on 2nd
April 1502, leaving Catherine a young teenage widow.
It
was almost immediately proposed by Catherine ’s parents, Ferdinand
and Isabella, that Catherine marry Arthur ’s younger brother, Prince
Henry.
Henry the VII was far from sure that the marriage remained to
his advantage. And Henry the VII therefore delayed it as long as
possible, and in fact it was delayed until after he died in 1509.
Henry VIII’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon
Henry VII died on 21st April 1509.
Catherine married Henry VIII on 24th June 1509 in a very private ceremony. Henry appeared to want to marry Catherine. He had come to know her over the years that she lived in London as his brother ’s widow, and appeared to find her attractive and interesting.
Catherine was a little older than Henry. She was 24 in 1509 when they married, and Henry was 18. She was, however, universally regarded as attractive. It must have seemed like a miracle to Catherine – from impoverished, disregarded and ignored widowhood, to wife and Queen in a matter of weeks.
Catherine became pregnant quickly, but miscarried in early 1510. She became pregnant again almost immediately, and on 31st December 1510 her first living child, a son, was born. He was named Prince Henry, and was baptised and given his own royal household. Jousts and ceremonies were held all over England to celebrate.
At the age of 22 days, Prince Henry died.
In 1513, Henry the VIII set sail for France in order to fight, allied with the Spanish, on French soil. He appointed Catherine as Regent of the country while he was away, a signal honour and a sign of his confidence in her.
While Henry fought battles abroad, encouraged by affectionate and admiring letters from Catherine back in England, the Scottish army led by James IV invaded England. Catherine organised the military defence. She marched out at the head of an army from Richmond, near London, and appears to have worn some form of armour.
Obviously she didn ’t exactly fight, but was nearby when the English and Scots armies clashed at the Battle of Flodden. The Scots lost badly. In the Scottish armour, the King himself was killed, there was an Archbishop, a Bishop, 2 Abbots, 12 Earls, 14 Lords and 10,000 common soldiers. Casualties on the English side were only about 1,500.
Catherine further wrote to Henry a couple of months later to inform him that she was pregnant again. This pregnancy also ended in a miscarriage. She suffered from another stillbirth in 1514. She appears to have miscarried again in early 1515.
In January 1516 Catherine was once again in childbed. At the age of 31 she gave birth to the only child which would live to adulthood. Wonderful though a living child was, the celebrations were hugely muted because the child, Mary, was a girl and not the son everybody wanted.
In 1518, in November, Catherine gave birth to another live daughter, who died a few days later.
Bessie Blount – Henry VIII’s mistress c. 1519-20
Henry the VIII ’s only confirmed mistresses were Elizabeth Blount and Mary Boleyn.
By Elizabeth Blount, Henry had a bastard son, Henry Fitzroy.
In 1525 he was formally recognised as the King ’s son, created Earl of Nottingham, Duke of Richmond, Duke of Somerset, a Knight of the Garter, and Lord Admiral and Warden General of the Marches against Scotland.
The 6 year old was given a formal household, based at Sheriff Hutton Castle, Yorkshire, and altogether set up as a royal figure.
Henry died before he reached adulthood. At one stage, bizarrely, King Henry VIII appeared to be considering a marriage between Henry Fitzroy and his half-sister, Mary Tudor, daughter of Catherine of Aragon.
Mary Boleyn – Henry VIII’s mistress c. 1520 to 1523
When
Mary Boleyn, Anne ’s older sister, became Henry ’s mistress, she
was already married to William Carey. That marriage had taken place
in February 1520. Carey was bribed, and given grants of land, titles
and other offices.
Mary
remained his mistress for some time. She had a son, Henry Carey, in
1525. It is generally thought very unlikely that this child was also
Henry ’s.
Firstly, the affair had probably ended by then.
Secondly, Henry was all too eager to recognise Henry Fitzroy as his
bastard son, in order to show that his marriage was the problem not
his virility.
The failing marriage in the 1520s
Catherine
was very short, probably only about 4 feet 9 or 10 in height. She
was pregnant 7 out of the 9 years from her marriage in 1509 to 1518,
and by the age of 35 she was really very large.
Henry VIII no longer
found her attractive. In losing her looks, and failing to produce a
male heir, Catherine also lost a great deal of her power over the King.
By
1525, Henry VIII was referring to himself as childless, despite his
healthy living heir, Mary.
In
1525 also, Mary ’s household was reorganised to be formally the
heir ’s household. She was given stewards and chamberlains who were
barons, a Lord President of the Council, who was a Bishop, and 300
assorted servants. Her household cost £5000 a year to run.
As
Princess of Wales, Mary was based in the Welsh Marches.
By
1527, however, Henry VIII had decided that the solution to the
problem of the succession was to obtain a new wife.
The King’s Great Matter
Henry
VIII convinced himself that the words in Leviticus Chapter 20 showed
that his marriage was unlawful:
If a man shall take his brother ’s
wife, it is an impurity; he hath uncovered his brother ’s nakedness:
they shall be childless
Henry
came to believe fervently that the papal disposition for the marriage
was not sufficient to make it lawful, and that the Pope could not set
aside the laws of nature and God.
Henry was therefore determined that
the marriage should be set aside.
Henry
thought it would be easy. Generally speaking, Popes were sympathetic
to Kings who lacked sons and whose wives were unable to provide them.
Ways out of marriage contracts were often found. For example,
Eleanor of Aquitaine ’s first marriage to Louis of France was
dissolved as they had only daughters.
In
the King’s Great Matter, however, things were different. Amongst
other problems, the Pope was under the practical and military control
of the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V.
And, of course, Charles V was
not just the Holy Roman Emperor, he was Catherine of Aragon ’s nephew.
The end of Catherine of Aragon’s marriage, and her life thereafter
In
May 1533, Cranmer declared that Henry ’s marriage to Catherine of
Aragon had been unlawful, and declared Henry ’s marriage to Anne
Boleyn valid.
In
July 1533, Henry issued a proclamation stripping Catherine of Aragon
of her title as Queen, and saying from thenceforth should she be
known as the Princess Dowager of Wales, as Prince Arthur ’s widow.
She was given a greatly reduced household and sent off to the
country.
Catherine
moved in the spring of 1534 to Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, and lived
there as a semi-prisoner. Henry had not allowed Catherine to see her
daughter for some years.
In March 1534, the Pope
finally declared that Henry ’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon was
valid in Canon Law, and that the marriage could not be challenged. This was now, in England, an irrelevancy.
Catherine
died early in January 1536 at Kimbolton. She was buried as the
Princess Dowager of Wales.
Mary
had to be dealt with. She was put under enormous pressure from after
the birth of Elizabeth to swear an oath that her parents had not been
married and that she was illegitimate.
Anne Boleyn’s family and childhood
Anne
Boleyn did not come from one of the top families in the land.
Her father ’s
family were merchants who had ascended into the landed classes. Her
great-grandfather, Geoffrey Boleyn, was a London merchant who bought
land in Norfolk and in Kent. Anne ’s grandfather and father, Thomas
Boleyn, married well, into increasingly aristocratic families.
Thomas
Boleyn ’s wife was the daughter of the second Duke of Norfolk and
sister of the third. Thomas and Elizabeth married in about 1500, and
had 3 children who lived to adulthood; Mary Boleyn, Anne
Boleyn, and George Boleyn.
The exact dates of birth of all 3
children are not known. It is likely that Mary Boleyn was the oldest
(contrary to what Philippa Gregory says in the “Other Boleyn Girl”)
Anne was the second, born between 1502 and 1507, and George was the
youngest.
Anne
was well educated, attractive, and had all the courtly skills. As a
child she went to live in the Archduchess Margaret ’s household in
Burgundy. Margaret ’s court was intellectual and cultured, and
Anne Boleyn received an extremely good education there.
When Henry
VIII ’s sister, Mary Tudor, married the King of France in 1514, Anne
Boleyn joined Mary ’s household in Paris. Mary Tudor was quickly
widowed, in 1515, but Anne Boleyn stayed at the French Court.
Anne
became perfectly fluent in French, had a very good singing voice and
played a number of instruments.
She did not look like a classic
ideal of English beauty. She was dark-haired and had very dark eyes.
She was nevertheless regarded as extremely attractive, skilled, and
interesting.
In the early 1520s, Anne returned to England and
entered the royal household as one of Catherine of Aragon ’s Ladies
in Waiting. It is likely Henry VIII became interested in Anne in
late 1524 or 1525.
Anne Boleyn’s relationship with Henry VIII
In
1525 and 1526, Henry VIII chased Anne Boleyn vigorously. He no doubt
thought it would be easier enough to make her his mistress. But she
held out.
A good number of Henry ’s love letters to Anne have survived. Many of
them were stolen and they are now in the Vatican library.
They
became engaged on New Year ’s Day, 1527.
Anne
was, by 1528, already supporting religious dissenters, Lutherans, and
Protestants. She did her best to protect them against persecution by
the Catholic establishment.
Instead, Anne favoured her Chamberlain
and Chaplain Thomas Cranmer. He was a reformist priest from
Cambridge.
Anne
brought Cranmer to Henry VIII ’s attention, and he rose steadily in
Tudor circles, eventually becoming Archbishop of Canterbury.
Anne
adopted a new motto from the Burgundian Court in 1531, “Thus it
will be, grumble who will”.
For a couple of years, bizarrely, King
Henry VIII, Queen Catherine of Aragon, and Anne Boleyn had travelled
together in a royal court.
The marriage of Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII
nry
VIII and Anne Boleyn became lovers in November or December 1532.
They had a secret marriage at the end of 1532, although Henry was
still married to Catherine of Aragon.
By early December, Anne was
pregnant, and the expected heir made the marriage even more urgent.
The
Act of Succession 1534, passed at the end of March, cited
Thomas Cranmer ’s verdict that the marriage to Catherine was
unlawful, and affirmed the lawfulness of the marriage between Henry
and Anne Boleyn.
The succession to the throne was to go to Henry ’s
heirs male by Anne or any subsequent wife, and if no such sons were
born, the throne was to pass to Elizabeth. Mary I was not mentioned
at all.
On
7th
September 1533, Anne gave birth to a healthy child. This heir is
exactly what was wanted, apart from one terrible error.
The baby,
Elizabeth, was a girl and not the son for which Henry had risked
everything.
There is a fantastic article on this site by Teresa McGurk, about Elizabeth as Queen – Elizabeth I: A Difficult Job For an Aging, Single Woman.
More
Acts were passed setting out the reformation, the Act of Supremacy
1534 appointed the King as Supreme Head of the Church of England, and
the Act of Obedience 1534 made any attribution of power to the Pope
treason.
In
January 1536, Anne Boleyn was pregnant again. In a jousting event,
Henry had an accident and fell badly. Anne Boleyn was not there, but
was badly shocked when told.
On the day of Catherine of Aragon ’s
funeral, 5 days after the accident in jousting, Anne miscarried a
male foetus.
This
was the third pregnancy for Anne. She ’d had the healthy Elizabeth
I in 1533, a miscarriage in 1534 (or possibly a stillbirth) and a
further male miscarriage in early 1536.
By
the time of this miscarriage, Henry ’s eye already seems to have
turned to Jane Seymour.
In early May, Anne Boleyn was arrested and
was taken to the Tower of London. Her chief prosecutor and
interrogator was her Uncle, the Duke of Norfolk.
Anne was accused of
adultery with numerous gentlemen at the Court, and of incest with her
brother. The 5 men, including George Boleyn, were executed on Tower
Hill near the Tower of London on 17th
May.
Anne Boleyn ’s marriage to the King was annulled on the 18th
May, and Anne Boleyn herself was executed on the 19th
May. She was buried in the Chapel of St Peter ad
Vincula.
After the execution, the 2 year old Princess Elizabeth joined her sister Mary in a state of legally-proclaimed bastardy.
Jane Seymour
Jane
Seymour was a complete contrast to Anne Boleyn. She spoke very
little, and when she did she was extremely meek, submissive and calm.
After the exciting and rollercoaster relationship with Anne Boleyn,
Henry VIII appears to have been attracted to a woman who was frankly
seen as pretty dull.
The day after Anne Boleyn ’s execution on 19th
May, Henry VIII and Jane Seymour were betrothed, and they married on
30th
May at York Place, now Whitehall, in Central London.
Not much is
known about how Jane Seymour formed a relationship with Henry VIII.
Jane was a member of Anne Boleyn ’s household, just as Anne Boleyn
had been a member of Catherine of Aragon ’s household.
The
relationship appears to have started in about February 1536. Like
Anne Boleyn, Jane was from a good but not top-notch aristocratic
family.
Jane soon became pregnant, and on the 12th
October 1537, gave birth to a healthy son, named Edward. After a
long and difficult labour, Jane appeared to be recovering, but then
became infected with childbed fever, and died late on the 24th
October. It appears that Henry was absent.
Anne of Cleves
King
Henry ’s fourth marriage was an arranged marriage of State.
With
the reformation in full swing in England, fiercely Catholic
princesses could not be considered, nor would they consider Henry.
The
Duchy of Cleves was in present day Northern Germany, and had its
capital at Düsseldorf. The Duke had 2 unmarried younger sisters,
Anne and Amelia. Anne was 25 when the marriage took place, and Henry
was nearly 50.
The famous portrait of Anne of Cleves was painted by
Hans Holbein, in order that Henry could see what she looked like
before they married.
Anne
was not well educated. She came from a suitably non Catholic
country, but could only speak and understand her own language, a type
of German, and could not speak English, French or even Latin.
Anne
arrived in England right at the end of December 1539, and first met
Henry by surprise on New Year ’s Day. Anne of Cleves failed to
recognise Henry VIII, who was offended by this.
his type of
humiliation set him against her from the beginning. In addition, he
decided that she was unattractive and unsuitable.
However,
in terms of arranged royal marriages it was impossible for him to
reject her now.
The
couple married on 6th
January 1540, greatly against Henry ’s will.
The day after the
marriage, Henry declared he ’d been unable to consummate it and was
not impotent but unable to rise to the occasion with Anne.
By early
July 1540, Henry was already talking about divorce. Anne of Cleves
was distinctly upset by this, but was wise enough to realise that
opposing the King in such matters was bad for her health.
She
therefore wrote to the King accepting that the marriage should be
tried and found invalid, and signing the letter, “Your Majesty ’s
most humble sister and servant, Anne, daughter of Cleves.”
As
Anne had been so accommodating, Henry VIII was generous to her and
gave her an income of £4000 a year and 2 houses, Richmond and
Bletchingley, both near London. She was to be considered an honoured
member of the royal court.
Catherine Howard’s family and childhood
Catherine
Howard was English, from the same family as Anne Boleyn. The Duke of
Norfolk, the man who had prosecuted and supervised the execution of
Anne Boleyn, was Catherine ’s Uncle as well as Anne ’s.
Catherine
was one of the younger children of Edmund Howard, a younger son.
There was not a great deal of money.
Edmund Howard married Jocasta
Culpepper, who already had several children. She and Edmund Howard
were married for about 15 years and had 10 more children.
No-one is
sure exactly when Catherine Howard was born. The earliest possible
date of birth is about 1520, and the latest about 1525. When she
married Henry, therefore, she was almost certainly aged between about
14 and 19.
Catherine spent a lot of her childhood in the household
of her step grandmother, the powerful Dowager Duchess of Norfolk.
She formed a relationship as a very young teenager with a music
master, but this relationship does not appear to have been
consummated.
Later, she formed another relationship with Francis
Dereham, also a member of the Howard clan and a gentleman. It
appears very likely that they had a sexual relationship when
Catherine was about 13 or 14.
In
late 1539 Catherine Howard was appointed as a Lady of Waiting for the
future Queen Anne of Cleves.
The marriage between Henry VIII and Catherine Howard
By
spring 1540, there was a fully fledged love affair between Catherine
Howard and Henry VIII. The relationship was heavily pushed and
encouraged by Catherine ’s Uncle, the Duke of Norfolk.
Catherine
appears to have had red hair, pale skin, and dark eyes. They married
on 8th
August 1540 at Hampton Court, Henry ’s second marriage in 8 months.
Henry
was besotted with Catherine. He described her as his, “rose
without a thorn”.
In 1541, Henry VIII undertook a progress to the
north of England. A progress was a royal journey around all or part
of a King ’s kingdom. The Court arrived after the progress at
Hampton Court at the end of October.
Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury, had received
allegations against Catherine, and told the King. Henry did not believe a
single one of the allegations. He did agree that the matter should
be investigated, but said it should be utterly confidential to
protect Catherine ’s reputation.
A number of members of Catherine ’s
step grandmother ’s household were interviewed, and confirmed
Catherine ’s earlier relationships.
On
5th
November, Henry summoned his councillors, including Catherine ’s
Uncle the Duke of Norfolk. He then left secretly for London and
never saw Catherine again.
On 7th
November, the Archbishop Cranmer arrested and interrogated Catherine,
who appears to have fallen apart when confronted with the evidence.
She made a full written confession, and begged for the King’s
Mercy.
The punishment for Catherine ’s pre-marital relationships
was, Henry decided a couple of days later, that she be banished to a
former Nunnery, at Syon, but was still to be treated as a Queen.
A
more dangerous allegation then came about. Catherine had been unwise
enough to appoint Francis Dereham to her household, and the Council
suspected the love affair might have continued after she married
Henry. Dereham was tortured, but did not admit it, although he did
go on to say that Thomas Culpepper and Catherine Howard had formed a
relationship.
Thomas
Culpepper was arrested the following day. He was taken to the Tower
and tortured.
Catherine actually wrote to him, a letter which
survived and was used against her, in which she said,
I have never
longed for so much for a thing as I do to see you and speak with you,
the which I trust shall be shortly now … it makes my heart to die
to think what fortune I have that I cannot always be in your company
…Yours as long as life endures, Catherine.
Catherine and
Culpepper both admitted to meeting secretly late at night on the
northern progress. Neither admitted actually committing adultery,
but both admitted that there was an intention to do so.
Dereham
and Culpepper were both tried for treason. Culpepper was beheaded on
10th
December, and Dereham was dragged to Tyburn, hanged, castrated,
disembowelled, beheaded and quartered ,all because he had slept with
a teenage girl who had that point had not even met her future
husband, the King.
Catherine
herself was not even tried. An Act of Parliament was passed in early
1542 with retrospective clauses saying that a loose-living woman who
married the King without declaring it was guilty of treason, as were
people who knew that she was not a virgin and allowed her to marry
the King anyway.
Catherine
was executed on 13th
February 1542, and buried next to her cousin, Anne Boleyn.
Catherine Parr
Future
wives were going to be quite to come by.
The Act of Attainment meant
that any woman who had not been married was greatly at risk if she
married the King. As were her relatives, in case the King later
discovered something about her past that he didn ’t like.
Fortunately,
Henry VIII ’s eye lit on a widow.
Catherine Parr was born as the
first child of Thomas Parr and Maud Green, in 1512. Catherine of
Aragon was her Godmother. In 1517, Catherine ’s father died of the
plague, leaving Catherine ’s mother a widow at 22 and Catherine
fatherless at the age of 5.
Catherine was married at some time
before 1529, when she was 17. She married Sir Edward Burgh, son and
heir to Lord Burgh of Gainsborough in Lincolnshire. Edward died in
1533 leaving Catherine a childless 21 year old widow. Her mother had
also died during her brief marriage.
Within months, Catherine Parr
married again, to John Neville, Lord Latimer, again a much older man,
20 years older than her, who had had 2 previous wives and 2 young
adult children. Catherine, and her husband Lord Latimer, were both
reformists. They did their best to encourage the reformation and the
downfall of Catholicism.
Lord Latimer was in increasing ill health
in 1542 and 1543. He died in early March 1543, leaving his wife well
provided for, and once again a widow. She was still only 31 years
old. She formed a relationship with Sir Thomas Seymour, younger
brother of Queen Jane Seymour and Prince Edward ’s Uncle.
But the
King was interested in her, and offered to marry her just after her
husband died. She agreed, although she did not appear to want to be
Queen. The marriage took place on 12th
July 1543.
Catherine
Parr did her best to bring together Henry ’s disparate family, and
brought Mary, Elizabeth and Edward together in the royal household
with herself and Henry VIII. Catherine got on particularly well with
Mary I.
Catherine also formed a close relationship with Elizabeth I, and Elizabeth lived with Catherine after Henry ’s death.
Like Henry ’s
first wife but unlike any of the others, Catherine Parr was appointed
Regent when Henry journeyed abroad to supervise war in France. She
appears to have done a good job as Regent, and was admired by Henry
for it.
Catherine was well-educated, pious in reformist religion,
and interested in religious and social affairs. She wrote a book,
published in June 1545, called, “Prayers or Meditations”
For
a New Year ’s present, in 1546, Elizabeth decided to flatter both her parents
by sending to Henry VIII a copy of Prayers or Meditations by Queen
Catherine. Elizabeth translated it into Latin, French and Italian
and dedicated it to her father, and impressive feat for a 12 year old.
Henry appears to have been a little
bit irritated by this, and appears to have thought that Catherine
Parr was getting above herself in terms of religion. Catherine
narrowly escaped being arrested and executed for heresy by some
clever work.
After
Henry VIII died, Catherine was finally able to marry Thomas Seymour,
and to have Elizabeth and Elizabeth ’s cousin, Lady Jane Grey, to
live with her. She married Thomas Seymour very shortly after Henry
VIII died on 28th
January 1547, and became pregnant for the first time in 4 marriages.
Catherine
Parr survived Henry VIII, but not for long. Her child, a girl named
Mary, was born in 1548, and Catherine Parr died of childbirth fever.
Her husband was then accused of treason and executed.
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