Yahoo Web Search

  1. The Six Wives of Henry VIII

    1971 · Historical drama · 1 season

Search results

  1. Episode Guide


  2. Jan 28, 2020 · 1. Catherine of Aragon (1485-1536): Demoted for Bearing No Son. Imagno/Getty Images. Catherine of Aragon. Henry took the throne in 1509, at age 17. Six weeks later, he married Catherine of...

    • Crystal Ponti
    • Catherine of Aragon. Catherine is best known today for her role in sparking the King’s excommunication from the Catholic Church and the Reformation. Married to Henry for a quarter of a century, however, there is much more to her.
    • Anne Boleyn. With the extraordinary events of her life unparalleled in British history, Anne Boleyn is undoubtedly the most famous of Henry’s wives. Henry may have endured a seven-year courtship and far-reaching political and religious upheavals in order to marry his second wife, but that didn’t stop him having her executed less than three years later.
    • Jane Seymour. Henry’s love for – or at least infatuation with – Anne may have sparked the Reformation, but Jane is commonly thought to have been his favourite wife.
    • Anne of Cleves. Henry’s last three wives are less famous than his first three, a matter not helped by the fact that each shares their name with a predecessor.
  3. The Six Wives of Henry VIII is a historical miniseries produced by the BBC, originally aired in 1970. This series consists of six episodes, with each episode dedicated to one of the six wives of King Henry VIII, providing an in-depth exploration of their lives and fates.

    Armiger(date As Queen)
    Notes
    Catherine of Aragon1509–1533
    The Royal Arms, impaled with that of her ...
    Anne Boleyn1533–1536
    The Royal Arms, impaled with that of her ...
    Jane Seymour1536–1537
    The Royal Arms, impaled with that of her ...
    Anne of ClevesJanuary–July 1540
    The Royal Arms, impaled with that of her ...
  4. Aug 15, 2024 · Henry VIII may have presided over the beginnings of the English Renaissance and the English Reformation and incorporated Wales within the realm of England, but he is largely remembered for having six wives. Read on to learn about each queen and what events led to her divorce, beheading, death, or survival.

    • Catherine of Aragon (queen consort: 1509-1533) Henry VIII had been on the throne for only a few weeks when he married Catherine of Aragon. The daughter of Spanish rulers Ferdinand and Isabella, Catherinewas six years older than Henryand was seen as a good match for the young monarch.
    • Anne Boleyn (queen consort: 1533-1536) Remembered as “Anne of a Thousand Days,” Anne Boleyn is perhaps the most famous of Henry’s wives, in part because of the grisly end she met just three short years after marrying the king.
    • Jane Seymour (queen consort: 1536-1537) Having served as a lady-in-waiting to both Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour was well aware of Henry’s desire for a male heir.
    • Anne of Cleves (queen consort: 1540) Having lost Jane to complications from childbirth, Henry sought to form a political alliance with William, Duke of Cleves,the ruler of a Protestant territory in Germany, by marrying one of his sisters.
  5. Apr 28, 2020 · In his search to secure the continuation of the Tudor line, Henry VIII of England (r. 1509-1547 CE) married an incredible six times. Some marriages were the result of passion while others were arranged for political reasons.

  6. Aug 10, 2020 · Henry VIII’s six wives: your guide to the Tudor king's queen consorts. Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. It’s a mnemonic device many of us learned as children to remember the fates of the six women – Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard and Katherine Parr – who became ...

  1. People also search for