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Henry VIII.

Publié le 06/12/2021

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Henry VIII.
I

INTRODUCTION

Henry VIII (1491-1547), king of England (1509-1547), the image of the Renaissance king as immortalized by German artist Hans Holbein, who painted him hands on
hips, legs astride, exuding confidence and power. Henry VIII had six wives, fought numerous wars in Europe, and even aspired to become Holy Roman Emperor (see
Holy Roman Empire) in order to extend his control to Europe. He ruthlessly increased the power of royal government, using Parliament to sanction his actions. Henry
ruled through powerful ministers who, like his six wives, were never safe in their positions. His greatest achievement was to initiate the Protestant Reformation in
England. He rejected the authority of the pope and the Roman Catholic Church, confiscated church lands, and promoted religious reformers to power.

II

EARLY LIFE

Born at Greenwich Palace in London on June 28, 1491, Henry was the second son of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York. Although a willful child, Henry proved a capable
student and studied languages, philosophy, mathematics, astronomy, and writing and speaking under his first tutor, English poet and satirist John Skelton. He was an
even more capable athlete and excelled at hunting and wrestling. Henry loved music and could play, sing, and dance. When he was 11, Henry's life was transformed by
the death of his elder brother, Arthur. He was now heir to the throne and was made Prince of Wales in 1503, the year in which his mother and grandmother died. Henry
now came decisively under the influence of his father, a stern and greedy man who left his son a healthy treasury and a secure crown upon his death in 1509.

III

EARLY REIGN

For the first time in generations an English king came to the throne without the threat of a rebellion against him. Henry inherited a kingdom isolated from the rest of
Europe and poor in natural resources. It was protected on three sides by water, but to the north lived the Scots, an ancient enemy allied with France, England's bitter
rival. Henry VII's chief concerns had been to control the independence of the nobility and to enrich the crown. He accomplished the first by executing opponents and
confiscating their estates, the second by raising taxes and by avoiding involvement in expensive wars. When Henry VIII became king, he set out on a different
course--to expand England's power in Europe. To ease the dissatisfaction caused by his father's means of raising money, Henry placed blame on the royal ministers
Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley and had them beheaded. He married his brother's widow, Catherine of Aragón, and entered into an alliance with King Ferdinand of
Spain. Whereas his father had avoided war to save money, Henry and his allies were eager for confrontation. In 1513 Henry led a victorious campaign against the
French; in retaliation the Scots declared war on England. Henry's forces repelled the Scots at the Battle of Flodden Field where the king of Scotland, James IV, was
killed.
For the next decade, Henry VIII attempted to act as a mediator between France and Spain, playing the countries against each other in hopes of gaining power in
Europe. Despite his earlier military victory, Henry's subsequent diplomatic efforts and military campaigns were fruitless. In 1520 he met with Francis I, king of France, at
the Field of the Cloth of Gold in France. This spectacular event of lavish entertainment and personal diplomacy failed to prevent another round of fighting among the
European powers. Henry's wars emptied his treasury, and his efforts to raise taxes led to rioting among his subjects.
A few years after Henry took the throne, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, a man as ambitious as the king, became the leader of Henry's government. Wolsey shouldered the
burden of daily government, freeing the king from the work he least enjoyed. The cardinal was a capable administrator and diplomat and something of a social
reformer. He used the courts to prosecute the crimes of the rich, and Parliament to improve the lot of the poor. He put taxes on a new footing by having Parliament
create a subsidy financed through taxes. These taxes were based on a new assessment of lands, goods, and wages, and enhanced royal revenue. Although he could be
ruthless against his opponents, Wolsey preferred to work within the channels of the royal council and Parliament. Nevertheless, his power was based on his ability to
achieve the king's purposes, and it evaporated overnight when he could not secure the divorce that Henry demanded.

IV

DIVORCE AND REFORMATION

To Henry's mind, the greatest failure of his reign was his inability to produce a male heir. This he blamed on his Spanish wife, Catherine. Although Catherine had many
pregnancies, only one daughter, Princess Mary (who became Queen Mary I), survived infancy. Henry had affairs with ladies of his court until he fell in love with Anne
Boleyn, one of the great beauties of the age and a woman of strong will, shrewd political instincts, and Protestant religious beliefs. From 1527 Henry was looking for a
way out of his marriage, arguing from biblical authority that the union with his brother's widow was invalid. Henry sent Wolsey to Rome to present the English case
before the papacy, and when this failed Wolsey was forced from power. He was replaced with Sir Thomas More, whom Henry had made lord chancellor. More then
enlisted the aid of scholars throughout Europe in seeking support for Henry's case. Whatever the merits of the case, however, the divorce was a political impossibility.
Catherine's nephew was Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor and the most powerful ruler in Europe, and the pope would not take sides against Charles. Henry would
have to find another way to accomplish his goal.
Beginning in 1529, Henry used Parliament to exert pressure on the pope. Claiming that they were correcting abuses, the Reformation Parliament, as it came to be
called, voted to ban payments from English bishops to Rome and to end the independence of the English clergy. Previously the clergy had owed allegiance only to the
pope. By these acts Henry gained the power to appoint his own bishops; he used it to appoint one of Anne Boleyn's friends, Thomas Cranmer, as archbishop of
Canterbury.
When Anne became pregnant in 1532, the "King's Great Matter" could no longer await legal resolution. Thomas Cromwell, one of the king's advisers, led a circle of
powerful politicians associated with Anne in counseling Henry to break with Rome. In addition to the laws Parliament had already passed shifting religious authority to
Henry, Parliament passed a law prohibiting appeals to the pope in matters of marriage. Such questions were now to be decided by the archbishop of Canterbury,
Cranmer, who declared Henry's union with Catherine void. Henry officially married Anne and made her queen. In September, Anne gave birth to a girl, Princess
Elizabeth.
In response to Henry divorcing Catherine, the pope excommunicated the king and, by extension, the nation. Although this had little effect on the king, it displeased
practicing Catholics. Following the break with Rome, Henry and Cromwell undertook a reorganization of church and state. Henry was declared supreme head of the
church in England, and all of the payments normally made to the pope now went to the crown. Parliament altered the succession to exclude Princess Mary in favor of
the children of Anne Boleyn, in hopes a boy would eventually be born. It was treason to question either Henry's new title or the succession. The king accepted small
changes in Catholic religious beliefs and practices. The Bible was translated into English, priests were allowed to marry, and the shrines of saints were destroyed.
Henry's own religious beliefs remained Catholic, despite the growing number of people at court and in the nation who had adopted Protestant religious beliefs (see
Reformation). He prevented the more fervent of these Protestants from making radical changes to religious doctrine by instituting the Six Articles of 1539. This
document outlined the tenets of the Church of England, all of which were Catholic in nature.
In 1534 Cromwell began a wholesale confiscation of the enormous wealth of the Catholic Church, estimated at three times that of the crown. A survey of the buildings,
lands, and possessions of the English religious houses was completed in 1535, and thereafter Parliament began passing laws dissolving these Catholic groups, a process

that was completed by 1540. The crown then took possession of all their property, paying small pensions to the approximately 10,000 monks and nuns who were
deprived of their homes. In a reversal of roles, many towns were forced to assist the same people who had once provided charity to the less fortunate. To pay for his
continued wars, Henry sold the former monastic lands to nobles and gentry, who thereby gained an interest in the success of Henry's reformation and became
dependent upon the king.
The king's motives for dissolving the religious houses were mostly financial, and his motives for breaking with Rome were both political and personal; however, these
actions fed into the widespread hostility against the Catholic Church that was becoming common throughout Europe. A growing number of Catholics were opposed to
the activities of the papacy, the wealth of the clergy, and the corruption of the religious orders. They wanted these institutions to be reformed. English people who
favored these views supported Henry's reformation. Henry also received support from people who were adopting the new religious views of German reformer Martin
Luther. His ideas, which were very different from some of the major tenets of the Catholic Church, had filtered into England through merchants and had begun to find
adherents, especially in cities. These Protestant religious views were also becoming popular at both Oxford and Cambridge universities.
The Reformation in England was not accomplished without opposition. Despite the legislation of king and Parliament, most of the nation clung to the Catholic Church.
Throughout the 1530s and into the 1540s more than 300 people were executed for treason, most for rebelling against the new religious order. Among Henry's
councilors, Sir Thomas More refused to recognize the king as supreme head of the church and was executed for his Catholicism, along with a number of bishops and
prominent nobles. In 1536 a serious rebellion, known as the Pilgrimage of Grace, occurred in the northern counties. The rebellion combined economic grievances with an
attachment to the institutions of the Catholic Church. It represented the most serious threat to Henry's reign, although it was ultimately quelled. In most parishes,
however, there was a sullen acceptance of Protestant innovations.

V

LAST YEARS

Cromwell, who now had more power than Wolsey, was capable of crushing resistance, but not of gaining support. In order to deal with the problems of administering
and selling the church lands confiscated by the crown, he initiated important changes in the way government business was conducted, creating greater efficiency and
control. He established separate departments of state, with their own collectors, secretaries, and judges, to receive the wealth confiscated from the church. These
courts, as they were called, were able to resolve disputes quickly and prevented the traditional royal courts from being overburdened with cases. Cromwell served as
the effective head of Henry's government for eight years, and Henry left him to run the business of government. Ultimate power, however, remained in the king's
hands, and Henry used it to become involved in the series of matrimonial disasters for which he is famous. By 1536 Henry had tired of Anne Boleyn, and Cromwell
joined with several councilors to turn the king decisively against her. In less than a month she was tried on trumped-up charges of adultery, executed, and replaced by
Jane Seymour. Jane finally provided Henry with his male heir, the future Edward VI, although she died in childbirth. Henry's next three marriages occurred in rapid
succession. The king married Anne of Cleves as part of Cromwell's plan for a Protestant union with German princes, but divorced her after only six months--Henry's
displeasure with Cromwell over this match led to Cromwell's execution. Henry then married Catherine Howard, had her executed within a year, and finally settled down
with Catherine Parr in 1543, the wife who survived him.
As Henry aged he became bitter and angry. One by one he had either killed his old councilors or driven them from royal service. In 1542 he again entered into
continental warfare, joining Emperor Charles V in his war against France. That same year the Scots invaded England and were again defeated, this time at Solway Moss
where their king, James V, received mortal wounds. James's death freed England from the threat of invasion for the next generation. The wars of Henry's old age were
no more successful than those of his youth, and to pay for these wars Henry had to sell the richest of the monastic lands, raise taxes, and debase the coinage. His
popularity diminished with his strength. He died on January 28, 1547, and was succeeded by his ten-year-old son, Edward VI.

VI

ASSESSMENT

Viewed by some as the embodiment of the warrior king who restored England's honor, by others as a tyrant who ruled by the chopping block, the life of Henry VIII has
been a source of continuous fascination. Catholic writers pictured him as the devil, English Protestants credited him as the founder of their religion. His appetites became
legendary, whether he was wrestling with Francis I, eating and drinking enormous meals, or marrying six women. After the civil wars of the preceding century that had
weakened the monarchy, Henry VIII reestablished the power of the English crown. This was done largely through the work of his powerful ministers Wolsey and
Cromwell. They made use of the new Privy Council (the former royal council) and Parliament, whose members included the aristocracy and gentry. As these groups
were brought into government, their individual ability to challenge the king diminished. The confiscation of church wealth enabled Henry's heirs to rule without new
revenues for the rest of the century. The dual defeat of the Scots made his kingdom safe from armed invasion while his strengthening of the navy made it safe from
attacks by sea. Henry's break with Rome was a critical step in the development of English national identity. His vision of an English empire encouraged successive
generations to look outward with the spirit of enterprise that eventually led to England's expansion overseas.

Contributed By:
Mark Kishlansky
Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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