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  1. 1. Catherine of Aragon was Henry's first wife, having previously been the wife of his younger brother, Arthur. She married Henry in 1509, after Arthur's death, and this was Henry's longest marriage. Catherine and Henry had a daughter, Mary, but none of their sons survived infancy. In 1533, desperate for a male heir and in love with Anne Boleyn ...

  2. Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. From Tudor Queens to Pop Princesses, the SIX wives of Henry VIII take the mic to reclaim their identities out of the shadow of their infamous spouse—remixing five hundred years of historical heartbreak into an exuberant celebration of 21st century girl power. The female cast are backed by an all-female band, the “Ladies in Waiting ...

  3. The BBC began the 1970s with the colour costume drama The Six Wives of Henry VIII. The first episode, broadcast on 1 January, was devoted to Catherine of Aragon, played by Annette Crosbie.

  4. Catherine of Aragon finally died on 7th January 1536. Henry VIII and Anne “celebrated” by dressing up in yellow. But even as her death came near, she refused to accept she was nothing less than Henry VIII’s wife. Her final letter, written in December 1535 is heartbreaking stuff.

  5. 4 de nov. de 2021 · 6th January 1540. Despite the fact that he did not like his bride, Henry VIII married Anne of Cleves at Greenwich Palace. He had instructed Thomas Cromwell to find a loophole in the treaty to prevent it going ahead, but there was none and Henry could not risk upsetting the German Duke.

  6. 17 de nov. de 2019 · When Louis died, Mary secretly married Henry VIII's friend, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. After surviving Henry's angry reaction, they had three children. One, Lady Frances Brandon, married Henry Grey, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, and their child, Lady Jane Grey, was briefly Queen of England in the dynastic squabbles when Henry VIII's only male ...

  7. 21 de jan. de 2022 · The Six Wives of Henry VIII. By Alison Weir. Amazon. Apple Books. Barnes & Noble. On Friday, 22 June 1509, the King and Queen went by royal barge from Greenwich to the Tower of London, where custom decreed the King must spend the night before his coronation.