man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.
Born ‎ Jun 28, 1491 at Greeenwich Palace, London, Middlesex, England, died ‎ Jan 28, 1546/47 at Palace At Whitehall, London, England‎, approximately 54 years, buried ‎ at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire, England
King of England (1509-47), who presided over the beginning of the English Renaissance and the English Reformation. His six wives were, successively, Catherine of Aragon (the mother of the future queen Mary I), Anne Boleyn (the mother of the future queen Elizabeth I), Jane Seymour (the mother of Henry's successor, Edward VI), Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard, and Catherine Parr.
Accession to the throne.
Henry was the second son of Henry VII, first of the Tudor line, and Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV, first king of the short-lived line of York. When his elder brother, Arthur, died in 1502, Henry became the heir to the throne; of all the Tudor monarchs, he alone spent his childhood in calm expectation of the crown, which helped give an assurance of majesty and righteousness to his willful, ebullient character. He excelled in book learning as well as in the physical exercises of an aristocratic society, and, whe n in 1509 he ascended the throne, great things were expected of him. Six feet tall, powerfully built, and a tireless athlete, huntsman, and dancer, he promised England the joys of spring after the long winter of Henry VII's reign.
Henry and his ministers exploited the dislike inspired by his father's energetic pursuit of royal rights by sacrificing, without a thought, some of the unpopular institutions and some of the men that had served his predecessor. Yet the unpopular means for governing the realm soon reappeared because they were necessary. Soon after his accession, Henry married Catherine of Aragon, Arthur's widow, and the attendant lavish entertainments ate into the modest royal reserves.
More serious was Henry's determination to engage in military adventure. Europe was being kept on the boil by rivalries between the French and Spanish kingdoms, mostly over Italian claims; and, against the advice of his older councillors, Henry in 1512 joined his father-in-law, Ferdinand II of Aragon, against France and ostensibly in support of a threatened pope, to whom the devout king for a long time paid almost slavish respect.
Henry himself displayed no military talent, but a real victory was won by the Earl of Surrey at Flodden (1513) against a Scottish invasion. Despite the obvious pointlessness of the fighting, the appear ance of success was popular. Moreover, in Thomas Wolsey, who organized his first campaign in France, Henry discovered his first outstanding minister. By 1515 Wolsey was archbishop of York, lord chancellor of England, and a cardinal of the church; more important, he was the King's good friend, to whom was gladly left the active conduct of affairs. Henry never altogether abandoned the positive tasks of kingship and often interfered in business; though the world might think that England was ruled by the Cardinal, the King himself knew that he possessed perfect control any time he cared to assert it, and Wolsey only rarely mistook the world's opinion for the right one.
Nevertheless, the years from 1515 to 1527 were marked by Wolsey's ascendancy, and his initiatives set the scene. The Cardinal had some occasional ambition for the papal tiara, and this Henry supported; Wolsey at Rome would have been a powerful card in English hands. In fact, there was never any chance of this happening, any more than there was of Henry's election to the imperial crown, briefly mooted in 1519 when the emperor Maximilian I died, to be succeeded by his grandson Charles V. That event altered the European situation. In Charles, the crowns of Spain, Burgundy (with the Netherlands), and Austria were united in an overwhelming complex of power that reduced all the dynasties of Europe, with the exception of France, to an inferior position. From 1521, Henry became an outpost of Charles V's imperial power.

Married ‎ Jun 3, 1509 (approximately 24 years married) to:

woman Catherine of Aragon‏‎, daughter of II Ferdinand, King of Aragon and Isabella I De Castile‏.
Born ‎ Dec 15, 1485 at Aragon, Spain, died ‎ Jan 7, 1534/35‎, approximately 48 years

Children:

1.
man Henry Tudor, Duke of Cornwall‏‎
Born ‎ Jan 1, 1509/10‎
2.
man Henry Tudor, Duke of Cornwall‏‎
Born ‎ Nov 1513‎
3.
woman Mary Tudor, Queen of England‏‎
Born ‎ Feb 18, 1514/15‎


2nd marriage
man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.

Married ‎ Jan 25, 1532/33 (approximately 14 years married) to:

woman Anne Boleyn, Queen of England‏‎

Children:

1.
woman I Elizabeth, Queen of England‏‎
Born ‎ Sep 7, 1533‎
2.
man Henry Tudor, Duke of Cornwall‏‎
Born ‎ 1534‎


3rd marriage
man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.

Married ‎ May 20, 1536 (approximately 9 years married) to:

woman Jane Seymour‏‎
Born ‎ 1509‎

Child:

1.
man VI Edward, King of England‏‎
Born ‎ Oct 12, 1537‎


4th marriage
man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.

Married ‎ Jan 6, 1539/40 (approximately 7 years married) to:

woman Anne of Cleves, Queen of England‏‎


5th marriage
man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.

Married ‎ Aug 8, 1540 (approximately 5 years married) to:

woman Katherine Howard, Queen of England‏‎


6th marriage
man VIII Henry, King of England‏‎, son of Henry VII King of England and Elizabeth Plantagenet‏.

Married ‎ Jul 10, 1543 (approximately 2 years married) to:

woman Katherine Parr, Queen of England‏‎