HENRY VIII, King of England

1491–1547, king of England (1509–47), second son and successor of Henry VII.

Early Life

In his youth he was educated in the new learning of the Renaissance and developed great skill in music and sports. He was created prince of Wales in 1503, following the death of his elder brother, Arthur. At that time he also received a papal dispensation to marry Arthur's widow, Katharine of Aragón. The marriage took place shortly after his accession in 1509.

Reign

Wolsey and Foreign Policy

As king, Henry inherited from his father a budget surplus and a precedent for autocratic rule. In 1511, Henry joined Pope Julius II, King Ferdinand II of Aragón, Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and the Venetians in their Holy League against France. The campaign, organized by Henry's talented minister Thomas (later cardinal) Wolsey, had little success. A more popular conflict, which occurred during Henry's absence, was the victory (1513) of Thomas Howard, 2d duke of Norfolk, at Flodden over the invading Scottish forces under James IV.

Rapid changes in the diplomatic situation following the death of Ferdinand (1516) enabled Wolsey, now chancellor, to conclude a new alliance with France, soon expanded to include all the major European powers in a pledge of universal peace (1518). However, with the election of Ferdinand's grandson, already king of Spain, as Holy Roman Emperor Charles V in 1519, England's status as a secondary power was soon revealed. Henry joined Charles in war against France in 1522, but when Charles won a decisive victory over Francis at Pavia (1525), England was denied any of the spoils.

Henry and Wolsey tried to curb the alarming rise of imperial power by an unpopular alliance (1527) with France, which led to diplomatic and economic reprisals against England. Domestically, Henry had become less popular due to a series of new taxes aimed at providing revenue to bolster the depleted treasury. Despite the early advice of Sir Thomas More, one of Henry's councillors, Wolsey had remained the country's top minister, and by 1527 Wolsey had been forced to accept much of the blame for England's failures.

Divorce and the Reformation

Henry, determined to provide a male heir to the throne, decided to divorce Katharine and marry Anne Boleyn. English diplomacy became a series of maneuvers to win the approval of Pope Clement VII, who was in the power of emperor Charles V, Katharine's nephew. The king wished to invalidate the marriage on the grounds that the papal dispensation under which he and Katharine had been permitted to marry was illegal.

The pope reluctantly authorized a commission consisting of cardinals Wolsey and Campeggio to decide the issue in England. Katharine denied the jurisdiction of the court, and before a decision could be reached, Clement had the hearing adjourned (1529) to Rome. The failure of the commission, followed by a reconciliation between Charles and Francis I, led to the fall of Wolsey and to the initiation by Henry of an anti-ecclesiastical policy intended to force the pope's assent to the divorce.

Under the guidance of the king's new minister, Thomas Cromwell, the anticlerical Parliament drew up (1532) the Supplication Against the Ordinaries, a long list of grievances against the church. In a document known as the Submission of the Clergy, the convocation of the English church accepted Henry's claim that all ecclesiastical legislation was subject to royal approval. Acts stopping the payment of annates to Rome and forbidding appeals to the pope followed. The pope still refused to give way on the divorce issue, but he did agree to the appointment (1533) of the king's nominee, Thomas Cranmer, as archbishop of Canterbury. Cranmer immediately pronounced Henry's marriage with Katharine invalid and crowned Anne (already secretly married to Henry) queen, and the pope excommunicated Henry.

In 1534 the breach with Rome was completed by the Act of Supremacy, which made the king head of the Church of England (see England, Church of). Any effective opposition was suppressed by the Act of Succession entailing the crown on Henry's heirs by Anne, by an extensive and severe Act of Treason, and by the strict administration of the oath of supremacy. A number of prominent churchmen and laymen, including former chancellor Sir Thomas More, were executed, thus changing Henry's legacy from one of enlightenment to one of bloody suppression. Under Cromwell's supervision, a visitation of the monasteries in 1535 led to an act of Parliament in 1536 by which smaller monasteries reverted to the crown, and the others were confiscated within the next few years. By distributing some of this property among the landed gentry, Henry acquired the loyalty of a large and influential group.

Later Years

In 1536, Anne Boleyn, who had given birth to Elizabeth (later Elizabeth I) but failed to have a male heir, was convicted of adultery and incest and beheaded. Soon afterward, Henry married Jane Seymour, who in 1537 bore a son (later Edward VI) and died. Meanwhile in 1536–37 Henry had dealt brutally but effectively with rebellions in the north by subjects protesting economic hardships and the dissolution of the monasteries (see Pilgrimage of Grace). In 1536, Henry authorized the Ten Articles, which included some Protestant doctrinal points, and he approved (1537) publication of the Bible in English. However, the Six Articles passed by Parliament in 1539 reverted to the fundamental principles of Roman Catholic doctrine.

Another temporary peace (1538) between France and the empire seemed to pose the threat of Catholic intervention in England and helped Cromwell persuade the king to ally himself with the German Protestant princes by marrying (1540) Anne of Cleves. However, Henry disliked Anne and divorced her almost immediately. Cromwell, now completely discredited, was beheaded. The king then married Catherine Howard, but in 1542 she met the fate of Anne Boleyn. He married his sixth wife, Catherine Parr, in 1543.

In 1542 war had begun again with Scotland, still controlled through James V by French and Catholic interests. The fighting culminated in the rout of the Scots at Solway Moss and the death of James. Henry forced the Scots to agree to a treaty (1543) of marriage between Mary Queen of Scots and his own son, Edward, but this was to come to nothing. In 1543, Henry once more joined Charles in war against France and was able to take Boulogne (1544). The expensive war dragged on until 1546, when Henry secured a payment of indemnity for the city. When he died in 1547 he was succeeded, as he had hoped, by a son, but it was his daughter Elizabeth I who ruled over one of the greatest periods in England's history.

Character and Legacy

Henry was a supreme egotist. He advanced personal desires under the guise of public policy or moral right, forced his ministers to pay extreme penalties for his own mistakes, and summarily executed many with little excuse. In his later years he became grossly fat, paranoid, and unpredictable. Nonetheless he possessed considerable political insight, and he provided England with a visible and active national leader.

Although Henry seemed to dominate his Parliaments, the importance of that institution increased significantly during his reign. Other advances made during his reign were the institution of an effective navy and the beginnings of social and religious reform. The navy was organized for the first time as a permanent force. Wales was officially incorporated into England in 1536 with a great improvement in government administration there.

In 1521, Henry had been given the title "Defender of the Faith" by the pope for a treatise against Martin Luther, and he remained orthodox in his personal doctrinal views throughout his reign. However, the Six Articles were only fitfully enforced, the use of the English Bible was cautiously increased, seizure of church property continued, and the destruction of relics and shrines was begun. The way had been opened for Protestantism, and Henry presided over the dissolution of Irish monasteries and assumed (1541) the titles of king of Ireland and head of the Church of Ireland. At Henry's death, the council that he had appointed for the minority of Edward VI leaned toward the new doctrines.

Bibliography

See biographies by J. Bowle (1965), J. J. Scarisbrick (1968), C. Erickson (1984), and J. Ridley (1985); H. M. Smith, Henry VIII and the Reformation (1948); J. A. Kelly, The Matrimonial Trials of Henry VIII (1976); D. Starkey, The Reign of Henry VIII (1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Henry VIII King of England  - 2984 results

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...bibliographical references and index. 1. Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547 Drama. 2. Great Britain--Kings and rulers Drama. I. Fletcher...III. Title. IV. Title: King Henry VIII. V. Title: All is true. VI...
...SUFFOLK 1485-1545 -- Henry VIIIs close friend...first wife of Henry VIII, after death of...Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain...Spanish ambassador to England. Friend of Catherine...Refused to grant Henry an annulment of his...
...monarchs writing : the poetry of Henry VIII, Mary Stuart, Elizabeth I...History and criticism. 2. Kings and rulers writings, Scottish...History and criticism. 4. Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547-Literary art...
...essential to, keep France at war with England. The Emperor, however, did not wish to antagonize Henry lest England make her own peace with Francis, and...their own skins, and both Francis and Henry were showing signs that they might accept...
...praise of the king. The tone of...reformist, praising Henry for bringing England out of the darkness...celebrate the kings title but accepted...concede. The king, he wrote, hath...were his types. Henry thus became David...Craig, Henry VIII and King David, in Early Tudor England, ed. Daniel...
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Dress at the Court of King Henry VIII. by Dale Hoak Maria Hayward. Dress at the Court of King Henry VIII. Oakville: The David R. Brown...costly display. In The Governance of England (1470-71), an advice book for...
...G. W. Bernard. The Kings Reformation: Henry VIII and the Remaking of the...University Press, 2005. viii + 736 pp. + 12 b/w...10908-3. The image of Henry VIII as a monarch swayed...This picture of the king as a waffling reformer...
...day, always with the two young kings in the vanguard. The pages of...Rare Glories of the Courts of Henry VIII and Francis I, Made Poetic by...Dancing and Games to be Given by King Henry VIII of England and King Francis I of France...
...fact that Henry VIII is a Kings Men play...Unlike Henry Frederick...faction. The king inadvertently...Scotland and England met with...Fletcher), King Henry VIII (All is...Shakespeare, the Kings Playwright...Early Modern England, ed. Paul...
...Jerusalem (2 Kings 23.2). Much of what Henry did with the Church of England once lie had...presented Henry VIII as Josiah...appeal to a king who had already...Cromwell 1543 Kings Book stresses...Books on Henry VIII and Religion...Protestant England: Religious...London 1988) J King, English...
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...Pettegree The Kings Reformation Henry VIII and the Remaking...architect was the King himself...much the Kings Reformation...church in England was remade...of Tudor England are at some...establish Henry VIII as the mind...It was the King who secured...
...emperor and the king of Spain. He...XII, allowed Henry to feel that controlling...anything which Henry VIII had accomplished in 1513 and both kings knew it. By 1517...alliances had isolated England and he now wanted Tournai back. Henry was desperate...
...The court of Henry II in England provided a model...the court of Henry II that produced...court of Henry VIII, proves on...relationship with the king, it is claimed...representatives of the kings person on diplomatic...wished to show a kings wealth or royal...happens with King Arthur in Sir...Squires Tale, or Henry VIII in Edward Halls...
...four-year-old king stopped at Stony...bride from France. Henry VIIIs marriage to...Cardinals back, the King committed himself...Parr, were also the Kings personal selection...of Edward IV and Henry VIII on a totally novel...she had arrived in England. Any choice had...
...waiting their turn. Henry taking a breather...Europe had long seen Henry that way. In Donizettis...the landscape of England. At your age in...unerring virtue: with Henry VIII bearing the sceptre...bloweth. This noble King Henry won great victories...
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...Inset: As King Henry VIII. Byline: Chrissy...beardy, gouty Henry VIII. Rhys Meyers is...was the best king England ever had, he saysloyally...wrestle(with the King of France) or romp...Everyonewanted the kings attention. When...
...Appointment to King Henry VIII. Byline: JONGRIFFIN...Britains most famous king. Half a millennium on from Henry VIIIs accession to...pieces of pewter for the Henry VIII exhibition at the palace...pewter to decorate the Kings top table in the Great...
Sporting Dynasty That Just Keeps on Running; Junior Sport SPOTLIGHT ON KING HENRY VIII. Byline: By Derek Brown KING HENRY VIII SCHOOL in Coventry has a proud sporting tradition and its talented pupils have enhanced that...
WHAT A RESULT! Pupils Hard Work and Determination Sees 100% Exam Pass Rates at Top City School: KING HENRY VIII SCHOOL. KING HENRY VIII School has enjoyed a year of achievement which has seen its students celebrate even more 100 per cent...
...Katherine marries Henry.Though she gives birth to a girl, Henry badly wants a male...complexpolitical tangle between England and Scotland. But...the young prince Henry. A friendship forms...coronation of Henry VIII. But it isnt long beforel the king has a bone to pick...quickly gains the kings confidence, but...
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encyclopedia articles on: Henry VIII King of England  - 64 results

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HENRY VIII , king of England 1491 1547, king...and successor of Henry VII . Early Life...1533) of the kings nominee, Thomas...secretly married to Henry) queen, and...which made the king head of the Church of England (see England...
...from the Scottish king, James IV . James...1496) to invade England, but the next year...1497) between England and Scotland was...the monarchies of England and Scotland. Another...was surrendered to Henry by Philip of Burgundy...Henry (later Henry VIII ). On the death...
...III , king of England 1207 72, king of England (1216 72...Reign Early Years Henry became king under a regency...Roches was the kings guardian. At...Henrys accession, England was torn by civil...later King Louis VIII ). In 1217...
LOUIS VIII , king of France 1187 1226, king of...king, John , to become king of England, he invaded (1216) England, although his action caused...of John and the accession of Henry III as king of England lost Louis much support among...
ALFONSO VIII , Spanish king of Castile (Alfonso the Noble...married to Eleanor, daughter of Henry II of England. Their children included Henry, who succeeded his father as...Blanche, who married Louis VIII of France; and Berenguela...
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