fbpx
Wikipedia

Henry VII of England

Henry VII (28 January 1457 – 21 April 1509) was King of England and Lord of Ireland from his seizure of the crown on 22 August 1485 until his death in 1509. He was the first monarch of the House of Tudor.[a]

Henry VII
Henry holding a rose and wearing the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece, painted by an unknown Netherlandish artist, 1505
King of England
Reign22 August 1485 – 21 April 1509
Coronation30 October 1485
PredecessorRichard III
SuccessorHenry VIII
BornHenry Tudor, Earl of Richmond
28 January 1457
Pembroke Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales
Died21 April 1509 (aged 52)
Richmond Palace, Surrey, England
Burial11 May 1509
Westminster Abbey, London, England
Spouse
(m. 1486; died 1503)
Issue
more...
HouseTudor
FatherEdmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond
MotherLady Margaret Beaufort
Signature

Henry's mother, Margaret Beaufort, was a descendant of John of Gaunt, founder of the House of Lancaster and son of King Edward III. Henry's father, Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond, a half-brother of Henry VI of England and a member of the Welsh Tudors of Penmynydd, died three months before his son Henry was born. During Henry's early years, his uncle Henry VI was fighting against Edward IV, a member of the Yorkist branch of the House of Plantagenet. After Edward retook the throne in 1471, Henry Tudor spent 14 years in exile in Brittany. He attained the throne when his forces, supported by France, Scotland, and Wales, defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field, the culmination of the Wars of the Roses. He was the last king of England to win his throne on the field of battle. He cemented his claim by marrying Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward IV.

Henry restored power and stability to the English monarchy following the civil war. He is credited with many administrative, economic and diplomatic initiatives. His supportive policy toward England's wool industry and his standoff with the Low Countries had long-lasting benefits to the English economy. He paid very close attention to detail, and instead of spending lavishly he concentrated on raising new revenues. He stabilised the government's finances by introducing several new taxes. After his death, a commission found widespread abuses in the tax collection process. Henry reigned for nearly 24 years and was peacefully succeeded by his son, Henry VIII.

Ancestry and early life

Henry VII was born on 28 January 1457 at Pembroke Castle, in the English-speaking portion of Pembrokeshire known as Little England beyond Wales. He was the only child of Lady Margaret Beaufort and Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond. He was probably baptised at St Mary's Church, Pembroke,[1] though no documentation of the event exists.[2] His father died three months before his birth.[3] Henry's paternal grandfather, Owen Tudor, originally from the Tudors of Penmynydd, Isle of Anglesey in Wales, had been a page in the court of King Henry V. He rose to become one of the "Squires to the Body to the King" after military service at the Battle of Agincourt.[4] Owen is said to have secretly married the widow of Henry V, Catherine of Valois. One of their sons was Edmund, Henry's father. Edmund was created Earl of Richmond in 1452, and "formally declared legitimate by Parliament".[5]

The descent of Henry's mother, Margaret, through the legitimised House of Beaufort bolstered Henry's claim to the English throne. She was a great-granddaughter of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster (fourth son of Edward III), and his third wife Katherine Swynford. Swynford was Gaunt's mistress for about 25 years. When they married in 1396 they already had four children, including Henry's great-grandfather John Beaufort. Gaunt's nephew Richard II legitimised Gaunt's children by Swynford by letters patent in 1397. In 1407, Henry IV, Gaunt's son by his first wife, issued new letters patent confirming the legitimacy of his half-siblings but also declaring them ineligible for the throne.[6] Henry IV's action was of doubtful legality, as the Beauforts were previously legitimised by an act of Parliament,[which?] but it weakened Henry's claim.[citation needed] Nonetheless, by 1483 Henry was the senior male claimant heir to the House of Lancaster remaining after the deaths in battle, by murder or execution of Henry VI (son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois), his son Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales, and the other Beaufort line of descent through Lady Margaret's uncle, Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset.[citation needed]

Henry also made some political capital out of his Welsh ancestry in attracting military support and safeguarding his army's passage through Wales on its way to the Battle of Bosworth.[7] He came from an old, established Anglesey family that claimed descent from Cadwaladr, in legend, the last ancient British king.[8]

On occasion Henry displayed the red dragon.[9] He took it, as well as the standard of St. George, on his procession through London after the victory at Bosworth.[10] A contemporary writer and Henry's biographer, Bernard André, also made much of Henry's Welsh descent.[8]

 
Pembroke Castle in South Wales, the birthplace of Henry VII

In 1456, Henry's father Edmund Tudor was captured while fighting for Henry VI in South Wales against the Yorkists. He died shortly afterwards in Carmarthen Castle. His younger brother, Jasper Tudor, the Earl of Pembroke, undertook to protect Edmund's widow Margaret, who was 13 years old when she gave birth to Henry.[11] When Edward IV became King in 1461, Jasper Tudor went into exile abroad. Pembroke Castle, and later the Earldom of Pembroke, were granted to the Yorkist William Herbert, who also assumed the guardianship of Margaret Beaufort and the young Henry.[12]

Henry lived in the Herbert household until 1469, when Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick (the "Kingmaker"), went over to the Lancastrians. Herbert was captured fighting for the Yorkists and executed by Warwick.[13] When Warwick restored Henry VI in 1470, Jasper Tudor returned from exile and brought Henry to court.[13] When the Yorkist Edward IV regained the throne in 1471, Henry fled with other Lancastrians to Brittany. He spent most of the next 14 years under the protection of Francis II, Duke of Brittany.[14] In November 1476, Francis fell ill and his principal advisers were more amenable to negotiating with King Edward. Henry was thus handed over to English envoys and escorted to the Breton port of Saint-Malo. While there, he feigned stomach cramps and delayed his departure long enough to miss the tides. An ally of Henry's, Viscount Jean du Quélennec [fr], soon arrived, bringing news that Francis had recovered, and in the confusion Henry was able to flee to a monastery. There he claimed sanctuary until the envoys were forced to depart.[15]

Rise to the throne

 
Young Henry VII, by a French artist (Musée Calvet, Avignon)

By 1483, Henry's mother was actively promoting him as an alternative to Richard III, despite her being married to Lord Stanley, a Yorkist. At Rennes Cathedral on Christmas Day 1483, Henry pledged to marry Elizabeth of York, the eldest daughter of Edward IV. She was Edward's heir since the presumed death of her brothers, the Princes in the Tower, King Edward V and Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York.[16] With money and supplies borrowed from his host, Francis II of Brittany, Henry tried to land in England, but his conspiracy unravelled resulting in the execution of his primary co-conspirator, Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.[17] Now supported by Francis II's prime minister, Pierre Landais, Richard III attempted to extradite Henry from Brittany, but Henry escaped to France.[18] He was welcomed by the French, who readily supplied him with troops and equipment for a second invasion.[citation needed] Henry gained the support of the Woodvilles, in-laws of the late Edward IV, and sailed with a small French and Scottish force, landing at Mill Bay near Dale, Pembrokeshire.[19] He marched toward England accompanied by his uncle Jasper and John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford. Wales was historically a Lancastrian stronghold, and Henry owed the support he gathered to his Welsh birth and ancestry, being agnatically descended from Rhys ap Gruffydd.[20] He amassed an army of about 5,000–6,000 soldiers.[21]

Henry devised a plan to seize the throne by engaging Richard quickly because Richard had reinforcements in Nottingham and Leicester. Though outnumbered, Henry's Lancastrian forces decisively defeated Richard's Yorkist army at the Battle of Bosworth Field on 22 August 1485. Several of Richard's key allies, such as Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland, and also Lord Stanley and his brother William, crucially switched sides or left the battlefield. Richard III's death at Bosworth Field effectively ended the Wars of the Roses.[citation needed]

Reign

To secure his hold on the throne, Henry declared himself king by right of conquest retroactively from 21 August 1485, the day before Bosworth Field.[22] Thus, anyone who had fought for Richard against him would be guilty of treason and Henry could legally confiscate the lands and property of Richard III, while restoring his own. Henry spared Richard's nephew and designated heir, John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, and made the Yorkist heiress Margaret Plantagenet Countess of Salisbury suo jure. He took care not to address the baronage or summon Parliament until after his coronation, which took place in Westminster Abbey on 30 October 1485.[23] After his coronation Henry issued an edict that any gentleman who swore fealty to him would, notwithstanding any previous attainder, be secure in his property and person.[citation needed]

 
Queen Elizabeth, Henry's wife
 
King Henry VII's Coat of Arms

Henry honoured his pledge of December 1483 to marry Elizabeth of York and the wedding took place in 1486 at Westminster Abbey.[24][17][25] He was 29 years old, she was 20. They were third cousins, as both were great-great-grandchildren of John of Gaunt.[26] Henry married Elizabeth of York with the hope of uniting the Yorkist and Lancastrian sides of the Plantagenet dynastic disputes, and he was largely successful. However, such a level of paranoia persisted that anyone (John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, for example)[27] with blood ties to the Plantagenets was suspected of coveting the throne.[28]

Henry had Parliament repeal Titulus Regius, the statute that declared Edward IV's marriage invalid and his children illegitimate, thus legitimising his wife. Amateur historians Bertram Fields and Sir Clements Markham have claimed that he may have been involved in the murder of the Princes in the Tower, as the repeal of Titulus Regius gave the Princes a stronger claim to the throne than his own. Alison Weir points out that the Rennes ceremony, two years earlier, was plausible only if Henry and his supporters were certain that the Princes were already dead.[29] Henry secured his crown principally by dividing and undermining the power of the nobility, especially through the aggressive use of bonds and recognisances to secure loyalty. He also enacted laws against livery and maintenance, the great lords' practice of having large numbers of "retainers" who wore their lord's badge or uniform and formed a potential private army.[citation needed]

Henry began taking precautions against rebellion while still in Leicester after Bosworth Field. Edward, Earl of Warwick, the ten-year-old son of Edward IV's brother George, Duke of Clarence, was the senior surviving male of the House of York.[30] Before departing for London, Henry sent Robert Willoughby to Sheriff Hutton in Yorkshire, to arrest Warwick and take him to the Tower of London.[31] Despite such precautions, Henry faced several rebellions over the next twelve years.[citation needed] The first was the 1486 rebellion of the Stafford brothers, abetted by Viscount Lovell, which collapsed without fighting.[32]

Next, in 1487, Yorkists led by Lincoln rebelled in support of Lambert Simnel, a boy they claimed to be Edward of Warwick (who was actually a prisoner in the Tower). The rebellion began in Ireland, where the historically Yorkist nobility, headed by the powerful Gerald FitzGerald, 8th Earl of Kildare, proclaimed Simnel king and provided troops for his invasion of England. The rebellion was defeated and Lincoln killed at the Battle of Stoke. Henry showed remarkable clemency to the surviving rebels: he pardoned Kildare and the other Irish nobles, and he made the boy, Simnel, a servant in the royal kitchen where he was in charge of roasting meats on a spit.[33]

In 1490, a young Fleming, Perkin Warbeck, appeared and claimed to be Richard of Shrewsbury, the younger of the "Princes in the Tower". Warbeck won the support of Edward IV's sister Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy. He led attempted invasions of Ireland in 1491 and England in 1495, and persuaded James IV of Scotland to invade England in 1496. In 1497 Warbeck landed in Cornwall with a few thousand troops, but was soon captured and executed.[34]

When the King's agents searched the property of William Stanley (Chamberlain of the Household, with direct access to Henry VII) they found a bag of coins amounting to around £10,000 and a collar of livery with Yorkist garnishings. Stanley was accused of supporting Warbeck's cause, arrested and later executed. In response to this threat within his own household, the King instituted more rigid security for access to his person.[35] In 1499, Henry had the Earl of Warwick executed.[36] However, he spared Warwick's elder sister Margaret, who survived until 1541 when she was executed by Henry VIII.[37]

Economics

 
Groat of Henry VII

For most of Henry VII's reign Edward Story was Bishop of Chichester. Story's register still exists and, according to the 19th-century historian W.R.W. Stephens, "affords some illustrations of the avaricious and parsimonious character of the king". It seems that Henry was skilful at extracting money from his subjects on many pretexts, including that of war with France or war with Scotland. The money so extracted added to the King's personal fortune rather than being used for the stated purpose.[38]

Unlike his predecessors, Henry VII came to the throne without personal experience in estate management or financial administration.[39] Despite this, during his reign he became a fiscally prudent monarch who restored the fortunes of an effectively bankrupt exchequer. Henry VII introduced stability to the financial administration of England by keeping the same financial advisors throughout his reign. For instance, except for the first few months of the reign, the Baron Dynham and the Earl of Surrey were the only Lord High Treasurers throughout his reign.[40]

Henry VII improved tax collection in the realm by introducing ruthlessly efficient mechanisms of taxation. He was supported in this effort by his chancellor, Archbishop John Morton, whose "Morton's Fork" was a catch-22 method of ensuring that nobles paid increased taxes: those nobles who spent little must have saved much, and thus could afford the increased taxes; in contrast, those nobles who spent much obviously had the means to pay the increased taxes.[41] Henry also increased wealth by acquiring land through the act of resumption of 1486 which had been delayed as he focused on defence of the Church, his person and his realm.[42]

 
Henry VII (centre), with his advisors Sir Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley

The capriciousness and lack of due process that indebted many would tarnish his legacy and were soon ended upon Henry VII's death, after a commission revealed widespread abuses.[43] According to the contemporary historian Polydore Vergil, simple "greed" underscored the means by which royal control was over-asserted in Henry's final years.[44] Following Henry VII's death, Henry VIII executed Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley, his two most hated tax collectors, on trumped-up charges of treason.[45]

Henry VII established the pound avoirdupois as a standard of weight; it later became part of the Imperial[46] and customary systems of units.[46] In 1506 he resumed the construction of King's College Chapel, Cambridge, started under Henry VI, guaranteeing finances which would continue even after his death.[47]

Foreign policy

Henry VII's policy was to maintain peace and to create economic prosperity. Up to a point, he succeeded. The Treaty of Redon was signed in February 1489 between Henry and representatives of Brittany. Based on the terms of the accord, Henry sent 6,000 troops to fight (at the expense of Brittany) under the command of Lord Daubeney. The purpose of the agreement was to prevent France from annexing Brittany. According to John M. Currin, the treaty redefined Anglo-Breton relations. Henry started a new policy to recover Guyenne and other lost Plantagenet claims in France. The treaty marks a shift from neutrality over the French invasion of Brittany to active intervention against it.[48]

Henry later concluded a treaty with France at Etaples that brought money into the coffers of England, and ensured the French would not support pretenders to the English throne, such as Perkin Warbeck. However, this treaty came at a price, as Henry mounted a minor invasion of Brittany in November 1492. Henry decided to keep Brittany out of French hands, signed an alliance with Spain to that end, and sent 6,000 troops to France.[49] The confused, fractious nature of Breton politics undermined his efforts, which finally failed after three sizeable expeditions, at a cost of £24,000. However, as France was becoming more concerned with the Italian Wars, the French were happy to agree to the Peace of Étaples.[50] Henry had pressured the French by laying siege to Boulogne in October 1492. Henry had been under the financial and physical protection of the French throne or its vassals for most of his life before becoming king. To strengthen his position, however, he subsidised shipbuilding, so strengthening the navy (he commissioned Europe's first ever – and the world's oldest surviving – dry dock at Portsmouth in 1495) and improving trading opportunities. John Cabot, originally from Genoa and Venice, had heard that ships from Bristol had discovered uncharted newfound territory far west of Ireland. Having secured financial backing from Florentine bankers in London, Cabot was granted carefully phrased letters patent from Henry in March 1496, permitting him to embark on an exploratory voyage westerly. It is not known precisely where Cabot landed, but he was eventually rewarded with a pension from the king; it is presumed that Cabot perished at sea after a later unsuccessful expedition.[51]

Henry VII was one of the first European monarchs to recognise the importance of the newly united Spanish kingdom; he concluded the Treaty of Medina del Campo, by which his son Arthur, Prince of Wales, was married to Catherine of Aragon.[52] He also concluded the Treaty of Perpetual Peace with Scotland (the first treaty between England and Scotland for almost two centuries), which betrothed his daughter Margaret Tudor to King James IV of Scotland. By this marriage, Henry VII hoped to break the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France. Though this was not achieved during his reign, the marriage eventually led to the union of the English and Scottish crowns under Margaret's great-grandson, James VI and I, following the death of Henry's granddaughter Elizabeth I. Henry also formed an alliance with Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I (1493–1519) and persuaded Pope Innocent VIII to issue a papal bull of excommunication against all pretenders to Henry's throne.

In 1506, Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller Emery d'Amboise asked Henry VII to become the protector and patron of the Order, as he had an interest in the crusade.[53] Later on, Henry had exchanged letters with Pope Julius II in 1507, in which he encouraged him to establish peace among Christian realms, and to organise an expedition against the Turks of the Ottoman Empire.[54]

Trade agreements

Henry VII was much enriched by trading alum, which was used in the wool and cloth trades as a chemical fixative for dyeing fabrics.[55] Since alum was mined in only one area in Europe (Tolfa, Italy), it was a scarce commodity and therefore especially valuable to its landholder, the Pope. With the English economy heavily invested in wool production, Henry VII became involved in the alum trade in 1486. With the assistance of the Italian merchant banker Lodovico della Fava and the Italian banker Girolamo Frescobaldi, Henry VII became deeply involved in the trade by licensing ships, obtaining alum from the Ottoman Empire, and selling it to the Low Countries and in England.[56] This trade made an expensive commodity cheaper, which raised opposition from Pope Julius II, since the Tolfa mine was a part of papal territory and had given the Pope monopoly control over alum.[citation needed]

Henry's most successful diplomatic achievement as regards the economy was the Magnus Intercursus ("great agreement") of 1496. In 1494, Henry embargoed trade (mainly in wool) with the Burgundian Netherlands in retaliation for Margaret of Burgundy's support for Perkin Warbeck. The Merchant Adventurers, the company which enjoyed the monopoly of the Flemish wool trade, relocated from Antwerp to Calais. At the same time, Flemish merchants were ejected from England. The dispute eventually paid off for Henry. Both parties realised they were mutually disadvantaged by the reduction in commerce. Its restoration by the Magnus Intercursus was very much to England's benefit in removing taxation for English merchants and significantly increasing England's wealth. In turn, Antwerp became an extremely important trade entrepôt (transhipment port), through which, for example, goods from the Baltic, spices from the east and Italian silks were exchanged for English cloth.[57]

In 1506, Henry extorted the Treaty of Windsor from Philip the Handsome, Duke of Burgundy. Philip had been shipwrecked on the English coast, and while Henry's guest, was bullied into an agreement so favourable to England at the expense of the Netherlands that it was dubbed the Malus Intercursus ("evil agreement"). France, Burgundy, the Holy Roman Empire, Spain and the Hanseatic League all rejected the treaty, which was never in force. Philip died shortly after the negotiations.[58]

Law enforcement and justices of the peace

Henry's principal problem was to restore royal authority in a realm recovering from the Wars of the Roses. There were too many powerful noblemen and, as a consequence of the system of so-called bastard feudalism, each had what amounted to private armies of indentured retainers (mercenaries masquerading as servants).[citation needed] Following the example of Edward IV, Henry VII created a Council of Wales and the Marches for his son Arthur, which was intended to govern Wales and the Marches, Cheshire and Cornwall.[59][60][61]

 
Late 16th-century copy of a portrait of Henry VII

He was content to allow the nobles their regional influence if they were loyal to him. For instance, the Stanley family had control of Lancashire and Cheshire, upholding the peace on the condition that they stayed within the law. In other cases, he brought his over-powerful subjects to heel by decree. He passed laws against "livery" (the upper classes' flaunting of their adherents by giving them badges and emblems) and "maintenance" (the keeping of too many male "servants"). These laws were used shrewdly in levying fines upon those that he perceived as threats.[citation needed]

However, his principal weapon was the Court of Star Chamber. This revived an earlier practice of using a small (and trusted) group of the Privy Council as a personal or Prerogative Court, able to cut through the cumbersome legal system and act swiftly. Serious disputes involving the use of personal power, or threats to royal authority, were thus dealt with.[62]

Henry VII used justices of the peace on a large, nationwide scale. They were appointed for every shire and served for a year at a time. Their chief task was to see that the laws of the country were obeyed in their area. Their powers and numbers steadily increased during the time of the Tudors, never more so than under Henry's reign.[63] Despite this, Henry was keen to constrain their power and influence, applying the same principles to the justices of the peace as he did to the nobility: a similar system of bonds and recognisances to that which applied to both the gentry and the nobles who tried to exert their elevated influence over these local officials.[citation needed]

All Acts of Parliament were overseen by the justices of the peace. For example, they could replace suspect jurors in accordance with the 1495 act preventing the corruption of juries. They were also in charge of various administrative duties, such as the checking of weights and measures.[citation needed]

By 1509, justices of the peace were key enforcers of law and order for Henry VII. They were unpaid, which, in comparison with modern standards, meant a smaller tax bill for law enforcement. Local gentry saw the office as one of local influence and prestige and were therefore willing to serve. Overall, this was a successful area of policy for Henry, both in terms of efficiency and as a method of reducing the corruption endemic within the nobility of the Middle Ages.[citation needed]

Later years and death

 
Scene at the deathbed of Henry VII at Richmond Palace (1509) drawn contemporaneously from witness accounts by the courtier Sir Thomas Wriothesley (d.1534) who wrote an account of the proceedings. British Library, Add.MS 45131, f.54
 
Tomb effigies of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York, by Pietro Torrigiano, Westminster Abbey
 
Posthumous portrait bust by Pietro Torrigiano made using Henry's death mask

In 1502, Henry VII's life took a difficult and personal turn in which many people he was close to died in quick succession. His first son and heir apparent, Arthur, Prince of Wales, died suddenly at Ludlow Castle, very likely from a viral respiratory illness known at the time as the "English sweating sickness".[64] This made Henry VII's second son, Henry, Duke of York, heir apparent to the throne. The King, normally a reserved man who rarely showed much emotion in public unless angry, surprised his courtiers by his intense grief and sobbing at his son's death, while his concern for the Queen is evidence that the marriage was a happy one, as is his reaction to Queen Elizabeth's death the following year, when he shut himself away for several days, refusing to speak to anyone.[65] Henry VII was shattered by the loss of Elizabeth, and her death impacted him severely.[66]

Henry wanted to maintain the Spanish alliance. Accordingly, he arranged a papal dispensation from Pope Julius II for Prince Henry to marry his brother's widow Catherine, a relationship that would have otherwise precluded marriage in the Church. Elizabeth had died in childbirth, so Henry had the dispensation also permit him to marry Catherine himself. After obtaining the dispensation, Henry had second thoughts about the marriage of his son and Catherine. Catherine's mother Isabella I of Castile had died and Catherine's sister Joanna had succeeded her; Catherine was, therefore, daughter of only one reigning monarch and so less desirable as a spouse for Henry VII's heir-apparent. The marriage did not take place during his lifetime. Otherwise, at the time of his father's arranging of the marriage to Catherine of Aragon, the future Henry VIII was too young to contract the marriage according to Canon Law and would be ineligible until age fourteen.[67]

Henry made half-hearted plans to remarry and beget more heirs, but these never came to anything. He entertained thoughts of remarriage to renew the alliance with Spain – Joanna, Dowager Queen of Naples (a niece of Queen Isabella of Castile), Queen Joanna of Castile, and Margaret, Dowager Duchess of Savoy (sister-in-law of Joanna of Castile), were all considered.[68] In 1505 he was sufficiently interested in a potential marriage to Joanna of Naples that he sent ambassadors to Naples to report on the 27-year-old Joanna's physical suitability.[69] The wedding never took place, and the physical description Henry sent with his ambassadors of what he desired in a new wife matched the description of his wife Elizabeth.

After 1503, records show the Tower of London was never again used as a royal residence by Henry VII, and all royal births under Henry VIII took place in palaces.[70] Henry VII falls among the minority of British monarchs that never had any known mistresses, and for the times, it is very unusual that he did not remarry: his son Henry was the only male heir left after the death of his wife, thus the death of Arthur created a precarious political position for the House of Tudor.

During his lifetime the nobility often criticised Henry VII for re-centralizing power in London, and later the 16th-century historian Francis Bacon was ruthlessly critical of the methods by which he enforced tax law, but it is equally true that Henry VII was diligent about keeping detailed records of his personal finances, down to the last halfpenny;[71] these and one account book detailing the expenses of his queen survive in the British National Archives, as do accounts of courtiers and many of the king's own letters. Until the death of his wife, the evidence is clear from these accounting books that Henry was a more doting father and husband than was widely known and there is evidence that his outwardly austere personality belied a devotion to his family. Letters to relatives have an affectionate tone not captured by official state business, as evidenced by many written to his mother Margaret. Many of the entries show a man who loosened his purse strings generously for his wife and children, and not just on necessities: in spring 1491 he spent a great amount of gold on a lute for his daughter Mary; the following year he spent money on a lion for Elizabeth's menagerie. With Elizabeth's death, the possibilities for such family indulgences greatly diminished.[72] Immediately afterwards, Henry became very sick and nearly died himself, allowing only his mother Margaret Beaufort near him: "privily departed to a solitary place, and would that no man should resort unto him."[73] Further compounding Henry's distress, his older daughter Margaret had previously been betrothed to King James IV of Scotland and within months of her mother's death she had to be escorted to the border by her father: he would never see her again.[74] Margaret Tudor wrote letters to her father declaring her homesickness, but Henry could do nothing but mourn the loss of his family and honour the terms of the peace treaty he had agreed to with the King of Scotland.[75]

Henry VII died of tuberculosis at Richmond Palace on 21 April 1509 and was buried in the chapel he commissioned in Westminster Abbey next to his wife, Elizabeth.[76] He was succeeded by his second son, Henry VIII (reigned 1509–47), who would initiate the Protestant Reformation in England.[77][78] His mother died two months later on 29 June 1509.[79]

Appearance and character

Amiable and high-spirited, Henry was friendly if dignified in manner, and it was clear that he was extremely intelligent. His biographer, Professor Stanley Chrimes, credits him – even before he had become king – with "a high degree of personal magnetism, ability to inspire confidence, and a growing reputation for shrewd decisiveness". On the debit side, he may have looked a little delicate as he suffered from poor health.[25][80]

Legacy and memory

Historians have always compared Henry VII with his continental contemporaries, especially Louis XI of France and Ferdinand II of Aragon. By 1600 historians emphasised Henry's wisdom in drawing lessons in statecraft from other monarchs. In 1622 Francis Bacon published his History of the Reign of King Henry VII. By 1900 the "New Monarchy" interpretation stressed the common factors that in each country led to the revival of monarchical power. This approach raised puzzling questions about similarities and differences in the development of national states. In the late 20th century a model of European state formation was prominent in which Henry less resembles Louis and Ferdinand.[81]

Family

 
Henry VII (centre left) with his family, as depicted at Hampton Court Palace

Henry VII and Elizabeth had seven children:[b]

Family tree of the principal members of the house of Tudor
Red text indicates Monarch of England. Blue text indicates Monarch of Scotland.
 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a Royal house of Welsh-French origin
  2. ^ Roland de Velville (or Veleville), who was knighted in 1497 and was Constable of Beaumaris Castle, is sometimes presented as the clear "illegitimate issue" of Henry VII of England by "a Breton lady whose name is not known". The possibility this was Henry's illegitimate son is baseless.[82]

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Tudor Pembroke | Ymddiriedolaeth Harri Tudur | Henry Tudor Trust". www.henrytudortrust.org.uk.; Breverton, Terry (2016). Henry VII: The Maligned Tudor King. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1445646060 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "BBC Wales – History – Themes – Pembroke The Main Street". British Broadcasting Corporation.
  3. ^ Rogers & Turvey 2000.
  4. ^ Kendall 1973, p. 13.
  5. ^ Williams 1973, p. 17.
  6. ^ Kendall 1973, p. 156.
  7. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 3; Davies, Norman. The Isles – A History. pp. 337–379.
  8. ^ a b Mackie 1952, p. 47.
  9. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 3.
  10. ^ Mackie 1952, p. 54.
  11. ^ Starkey 2006, p. 4.
  12. ^ Marilee Mongello. "Tudor Monarchs – Henry VII, one". Englishhistory.net. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  13. ^ a b Williams 1973, p. 19.
  14. ^ Soden, Iain (2013). "Rooms with no view". Royal Exiles: From Richard the Lionheart to Charles II. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445612034.
  15. ^ Breverton, Terry (2016). Henry VII: The Maligned Tudor King. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445646060.
  16. ^ Chrimes 1977, p. 65
  17. ^ a b Williams 1973, p. 25
  18. ^ Kendall 1973, p. 297
  19. ^ "Henry Tudor's landing site". History Points. Retrieved 14 January 2019.
  20. ^ Rees, David (1985). The Son of Prophecy: Henry Tudor's Road to Bosworth. Black Raven Press. ISBN 978-0-85159-005-9.
  21. ^ Kendall 1973, p. 361; Williams 1973, p. 31
  22. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 50
  23. ^ "Westminster Abbey website: Coronations, Henry VII and Elizabeth of York". Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  24. ^ Weir 2007, p. 7
  25. ^ a b Chrimes 1999, p. 53
  26. ^ Morgan 1988, p. 709
  27. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 72
  28. ^ Penn 2011, pp. 22–23
  29. ^ Weir 1995, p. 190
  30. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 72
  31. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 51
  32. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 69
  33. ^ Williams 1973, p. 62
  34. ^ Chrimes 1999, pp. 69–70
  35. ^ Arthurson, Ian (2009). The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy. History Press Limited. ISBN 978-0750939898.[page needed]
  36. ^ Arthurson, Ian (1997). The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy, 1491–1499. Sutton. p. 215. ISBN 978-0750916103.
  37. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Blessed Margaret Pole". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  38. ^ Stephens 1876, pp. 176–177
  39. ^ Chrimes 1977, p. 119
  40. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 121
  41. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 203
  42. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 123
  43. ^ Penn 2011, pp. 371
  44. ^ Guy 1988, pp. 272–273
  45. ^ Elgin 2013, p. 55
  46. ^ a b "pound avoirdupois". Sizes, Inc. 17 April 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2016. 1497–1558 – Henry VII authorizes standard. & A unit of mass = 453.592 37 grams (now, technically, the international pound), now used chiefly in the United States, but since the 16th century the most commonly encountered unit of mass throughout the English-speaking world. The magnitude of the pound avoirdupois has varied less than 1% since the middle of the 14th century.
  47. ^ Hunt & Towle 1998, p. 88
  48. ^ Currin, John M. (1996). "Henry VII and the Treaty of Redon (1489): Plantagenet Ambitions and Early Tudor Foreign Policy". History. Curry. 81 (263): 343–358. doi:10.1111/1468-229X.00015. JSTOR 24423267.
  49. ^ Mackie 1952, p. 97
  50. ^ Currin 2000, pp. 379–412
  51. ^ Chrimes 1999, pp. 228–230
  52. ^ Warnicke 2000, p. 103.
  53. ^ Setton 1976, p. 47.
  54. ^ Setton 1976, p. 50.
  55. ^ Penn 2011, pp. 201
  56. ^ Penn 2011, pp. 203–204
  57. ^ Williams 1973, pp. 167–168.
  58. ^ Williams 1973, p. 198–201.
  59. ^ Horrox, Rosemary (2004). "Arthur, prince of Wales (1486–1502)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/705. Retrieved 7 October 2013. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) (subscription required)
  60. ^ Griffiths, Ralph (1972). "Wales and the Marches in the Fifteenth Century". In Chrimes, Stanley; Ross, Charles; Griffiths, Ralph (eds.). Fifteenth Century England, 1399–1509: Studies in Politics and Society. Bristol: Sutton Publishing. pp. 145–172. ISBN 978-0064911269.
  61. ^ Chrimes 1999, pp. 249–256
  62. ^ Williams 1973, p. 178.
  63. ^ MacCulloch 1996, pp. 39–42.
  64. ^ Penn 2011, p. 70.
  65. ^ Chrimes 1999, pp. 302–304.
  66. ^ Weir 2013, p. 404.
  67. ^ Penn 2013, p. 204.
  68. ^ Bergenroth, G A. "Calendar of State Papers, Spain: Supplement To Volumes 1 and 2, Queen Katherine; Intended Marriage of King Henry VII To Queen Juana". British History Online. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  69. ^ Schwarz, Arthur L. (2009). "Henry's Father Searches for a New Wife". VIVAT REX! An Exhibition Commemorating the 500th Anniversary of the Accession of Henry VIII. The Grolier Club. p. 58. ISBN 978-1605830179.
  70. ^ Herman, Peter C. (2011). A Short History of Early Modern England. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1444394993.[page needed]
  71. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 June 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  72. ^ "Henry VII Winter King". Queen to History.
  73. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 304; Penn 2013, pp. 110–113
  74. ^ "Queen Margaret's Arch | York Civic Trust". Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  75. ^ "Tudor Times". Tudor Times. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  76. ^ Chrimes 1999, pp. 313–314, n5
  77. ^ Hunt & Towle 1998, p. 69
  78. ^ Lockyer 2014, p. 88
  79. ^ "Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  80. ^ Seward, Desmond (2010). "The Wars of the Roses". Nature. 467 (7316): 318. Bibcode:2010Natur.467..744B. doi:10.1038/467744a. S2CID 4350364.
  81. ^ Gunn 2009, pp. 380–392
  82. ^ Chrimes 1999, p. 67 n3
  83. ^ Wagner & Schmid 2011, p. 1104.
  84. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Somerset, Earls and Dukes of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 385.
  85. ^ Chrimes 1972, Select Pedigrees: I & II

Sources

Further reading

  • Anglo, Sydney (1987). "Ill of the dead. The posthumous reputation of Henry VII". Renaissance Studies. 1 (1): 27–47. doi:10.1111/j.1477-4658.1987.tb00121.x. JSTOR 24410008.
  • Ashley, Mike (2002). British Kings & Queens. Carroll & Graf. pp. 280–286. ISBN 978-0-7867-1104-8. OL 8141172M.
  • Cooper, J. P. (1959). "Henry VII's Last Years Reconsidered". Historical Journal. 2 (2): 103–129. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00022056. JSTOR 3020534. S2CID 162609810.
  • Cunningham, Sean (2007). Henry VII. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-26620-8.
  • Elton, G. R. (1961). "Henry VII: A Restatement". Historical Journal. 4 (1): 1–29. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00022184. JSTOR 3020379. S2CID 159982738.
  • Fritze, Ronald H. (1991). Historical Dictionary of Tudor England, 1485–1603. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0313265983.
  • Gunn, Steven (2007). "Henry VII in Context: Problems and Possibilities". History. 92 (307): 301–17. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.2007.00397.x.
  • Morrill, John (1996). The Oxford Illustrated History of Tudor and Stuart Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Stubbs, William (1886). "The Reign of Henry VII. (1): (April 24, 1883.)". Seventeen lectures on the study of medieval and modern history and kindred subjects: 334–352. Wikidata Q107248208.
    —— (1886). "The Reign of Henry VII.: (April 25, 1883.)". Seventeen lectures on the study of medieval and modern history and kindred subjects: 353–371. Wikidata Q107248250.
  • Towle, Carolyn; Hunt, Jocelyn (1998). Henry VII. New York: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-29691-6.
  • Ward, Kevin (2006). A History of Global Anglicanism. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00866-2.
  • Weir, Alison (2011). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. London: Vintage. ISBN 978-1-446-44911-0.
    —— (2002). Henry VIII: King and Court. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-0-7126-6451-6.
    —— (1966). Before the Armada: the growth of English foreign policy, 1485–1588. OCLC 530462.

External links

Henry VII of England
Born: 28 January 1457 Died: 21 April 1509
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of England
Lord of Ireland

1485–1509
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
Preceded by Earl of Richmond
1457–1461
Forfeit

henry, england, king, henry, redirects, here, other, uses, henry, disambiguation, henry, january, 1457, april, 1509, king, england, lord, ireland, from, seizure, crown, august, 1485, until, death, 1509, first, monarch, house, tudor, henry, viihenry, holding, r. King Henry VII redirects here For other uses see Henry VII disambiguation Henry VII 28 January 1457 21 April 1509 was King of England and Lord of Ireland from his seizure of the crown on 22 August 1485 until his death in 1509 He was the first monarch of the House of Tudor a Henry VIIHenry holding a rose and wearing the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece painted by an unknown Netherlandish artist 1505King of England more Reign22 August 1485 21 April 1509Coronation30 October 1485PredecessorRichard IIISuccessorHenry VIIIBornHenry Tudor Earl of Richmond28 January 1457Pembroke Castle Pembrokeshire WalesDied21 April 1509 aged 52 Richmond Palace Surrey EnglandBurial11 May 1509Westminster Abbey London EnglandSpouseElizabeth of York m 1486 died 1503 wbr Issuemore Arthur Prince of Wales Margaret Queen of Scots Henry VIII King of England Elizabeth Tudor Mary Queen of France Edmund Duke of SomersetHouseTudorFatherEdmund Tudor 1st Earl of RichmondMotherLady Margaret BeaufortSignatureHenry s mother Margaret Beaufort was a descendant of John of Gaunt founder of the House of Lancaster and son of King Edward III Henry s father Edmund Tudor 1st Earl of Richmond a half brother of Henry VI of England and a member of the Welsh Tudors of Penmynydd died three months before his son Henry was born During Henry s early years his uncle Henry VI was fighting against Edward IV a member of the Yorkist branch of the House of Plantagenet After Edward retook the throne in 1471 Henry Tudor spent 14 years in exile in Brittany He attained the throne when his forces supported by France Scotland and Wales defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field the culmination of the Wars of the Roses He was the last king of England to win his throne on the field of battle He cemented his claim by marrying Elizabeth of York daughter of Edward IV Henry restored power and stability to the English monarchy following the civil war He is credited with many administrative economic and diplomatic initiatives His supportive policy toward England s wool industry and his standoff with the Low Countries had long lasting benefits to the English economy He paid very close attention to detail and instead of spending lavishly he concentrated on raising new revenues He stabilised the government s finances by introducing several new taxes After his death a commission found widespread abuses in the tax collection process Henry reigned for nearly 24 years and was peacefully succeeded by his son Henry VIII Contents 1 Ancestry and early life 2 Rise to the throne 3 Reign 3 1 Economics 3 2 Foreign policy 3 3 Trade agreements 3 4 Law enforcement and justices of the peace 3 5 Later years and death 4 Appearance and character 5 Legacy and memory 6 Family 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksAncestry and early lifeHenry VII was born on 28 January 1457 at Pembroke Castle in the English speaking portion of Pembrokeshire known as Little England beyond Wales He was the only child of Lady Margaret Beaufort and Edmund Tudor 1st Earl of Richmond He was probably baptised at St Mary s Church Pembroke 1 though no documentation of the event exists 2 His father died three months before his birth 3 Henry s paternal grandfather Owen Tudor originally from the Tudors of Penmynydd Isle of Anglesey in Wales had been a page in the court of King Henry V He rose to become one of the Squires to the Body to the King after military service at the Battle of Agincourt 4 Owen is said to have secretly married the widow of Henry V Catherine of Valois One of their sons was Edmund Henry s father Edmund was created Earl of Richmond in 1452 and formally declared legitimate by Parliament 5 The descent of Henry s mother Margaret through the legitimised House of Beaufort bolstered Henry s claim to the English throne She was a great granddaughter of John of Gaunt 1st Duke of Lancaster fourth son of Edward III and his third wife Katherine Swynford Swynford was Gaunt s mistress for about 25 years When they married in 1396 they already had four children including Henry s great grandfather John Beaufort Gaunt s nephew Richard II legitimised Gaunt s children by Swynford by letters patent in 1397 In 1407 Henry IV Gaunt s son by his first wife issued new letters patent confirming the legitimacy of his half siblings but also declaring them ineligible for the throne 6 Henry IV s action was of doubtful legality as the Beauforts were previously legitimised by an act of Parliament which but it weakened Henry s claim citation needed Nonetheless by 1483 Henry was the senior male claimant heir to the House of Lancaster remaining after the deaths in battle by murder or execution of Henry VI son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois his son Edward of Westminster Prince of Wales and the other Beaufort line of descent through Lady Margaret s uncle Edmund Beaufort 2nd Duke of Somerset citation needed Henry also made some political capital out of his Welsh ancestry in attracting military support and safeguarding his army s passage through Wales on its way to the Battle of Bosworth 7 He came from an old established Anglesey family that claimed descent from Cadwaladr in legend the last ancient British king 8 On occasion Henry displayed the red dragon 9 He took it as well as the standard of St George on his procession through London after the victory at Bosworth 10 A contemporary writer and Henry s biographer Bernard Andre also made much of Henry s Welsh descent 8 nbsp Pembroke Castle in South Wales the birthplace of Henry VIIIn 1456 Henry s father Edmund Tudor was captured while fighting for Henry VI in South Wales against the Yorkists He died shortly afterwards in Carmarthen Castle His younger brother Jasper Tudor the Earl of Pembroke undertook to protect Edmund s widow Margaret who was 13 years old when she gave birth to Henry 11 When Edward IV became King in 1461 Jasper Tudor went into exile abroad Pembroke Castle and later the Earldom of Pembroke were granted to the Yorkist William Herbert who also assumed the guardianship of Margaret Beaufort and the young Henry 12 Henry lived in the Herbert household until 1469 when Richard Neville Earl of Warwick the Kingmaker went over to the Lancastrians Herbert was captured fighting for the Yorkists and executed by Warwick 13 When Warwick restored Henry VI in 1470 Jasper Tudor returned from exile and brought Henry to court 13 When the Yorkist Edward IV regained the throne in 1471 Henry fled with other Lancastrians to Brittany He spent most of the next 14 years under the protection of Francis II Duke of Brittany 14 In November 1476 Francis fell ill and his principal advisers were more amenable to negotiating with King Edward Henry was thus handed over to English envoys and escorted to the Breton port of Saint Malo While there he feigned stomach cramps and delayed his departure long enough to miss the tides An ally of Henry s Viscount Jean du Quelennec fr soon arrived bringing news that Francis had recovered and in the confusion Henry was able to flee to a monastery There he claimed sanctuary until the envoys were forced to depart 15 Rise to the throne nbsp Young Henry VII by a French artist Musee Calvet Avignon By 1483 Henry s mother was actively promoting him as an alternative to Richard III despite her being married to Lord Stanley a Yorkist At Rennes Cathedral on Christmas Day 1483 Henry pledged to marry Elizabeth of York the eldest daughter of Edward IV She was Edward s heir since the presumed death of her brothers the Princes in the Tower King Edward V and Richard of Shrewsbury Duke of York 16 With money and supplies borrowed from his host Francis II of Brittany Henry tried to land in England but his conspiracy unravelled resulting in the execution of his primary co conspirator Henry Stafford 2nd Duke of Buckingham 17 Now supported by Francis II s prime minister Pierre Landais Richard III attempted to extradite Henry from Brittany but Henry escaped to France 18 He was welcomed by the French who readily supplied him with troops and equipment for a second invasion citation needed Henry gained the support of the Woodvilles in laws of the late Edward IV and sailed with a small French and Scottish force landing at Mill Bay near Dale Pembrokeshire 19 He marched toward England accompanied by his uncle Jasper and John de Vere 13th Earl of Oxford Wales was historically a Lancastrian stronghold and Henry owed the support he gathered to his Welsh birth and ancestry being agnatically descended from Rhys ap Gruffydd 20 He amassed an army of about 5 000 6 000 soldiers 21 Henry devised a plan to seize the throne by engaging Richard quickly because Richard had reinforcements in Nottingham and Leicester Though outnumbered Henry s Lancastrian forces decisively defeated Richard s Yorkist army at the Battle of Bosworth Field on 22 August 1485 Several of Richard s key allies such as Henry Percy 4th Earl of Northumberland and also Lord Stanley and his brother William crucially switched sides or left the battlefield Richard III s death at Bosworth Field effectively ended the Wars of the Roses citation needed ReignTo secure his hold on the throne Henry declared himself king by right of conquest retroactively from 21 August 1485 the day before Bosworth Field 22 Thus anyone who had fought for Richard against him would be guilty of treason and Henry could legally confiscate the lands and property of Richard III while restoring his own Henry spared Richard s nephew and designated heir John de la Pole Earl of Lincoln and made the Yorkist heiress Margaret Plantagenet Countess of Salisbury suo jure He took care not to address the baronage or summon Parliament until after his coronation which took place in Westminster Abbey on 30 October 1485 23 After his coronation Henry issued an edict that any gentleman who swore fealty to him would notwithstanding any previous attainder be secure in his property and person citation needed nbsp Queen Elizabeth Henry s wife nbsp King Henry VII s Coat of ArmsHenry honoured his pledge of December 1483 to marry Elizabeth of York and the wedding took place in 1486 at Westminster Abbey 24 17 25 He was 29 years old she was 20 They were third cousins as both were great great grandchildren of John of Gaunt 26 Henry married Elizabeth of York with the hope of uniting the Yorkist and Lancastrian sides of the Plantagenet dynastic disputes and he was largely successful However such a level of paranoia persisted that anyone John de la Pole Earl of Lincoln for example 27 with blood ties to the Plantagenets was suspected of coveting the throne 28 Henry had Parliament repeal Titulus Regius the statute that declared Edward IV s marriage invalid and his children illegitimate thus legitimising his wife Amateur historians Bertram Fields and Sir Clements Markham have claimed that he may have been involved in the murder of the Princes in the Tower as the repeal of Titulus Regius gave the Princes a stronger claim to the throne than his own Alison Weir points out that the Rennes ceremony two years earlier was plausible only if Henry and his supporters were certain that the Princes were already dead 29 Henry secured his crown principally by dividing and undermining the power of the nobility especially through the aggressive use of bonds and recognisances to secure loyalty He also enacted laws against livery and maintenance the great lords practice of having large numbers of retainers who wore their lord s badge or uniform and formed a potential private army citation needed Henry began taking precautions against rebellion while still in Leicester after Bosworth Field Edward Earl of Warwick the ten year old son of Edward IV s brother George Duke of Clarence was the senior surviving male of the House of York 30 Before departing for London Henry sent Robert Willoughby to Sheriff Hutton in Yorkshire to arrest Warwick and take him to the Tower of London 31 Despite such precautions Henry faced several rebellions over the next twelve years citation needed The first was the 1486 rebellion of the Stafford brothers abetted by Viscount Lovell which collapsed without fighting 32 Next in 1487 Yorkists led by Lincoln rebelled in support of Lambert Simnel a boy they claimed to be Edward of Warwick who was actually a prisoner in the Tower The rebellion began in Ireland where the historically Yorkist nobility headed by the powerful Gerald FitzGerald 8th Earl of Kildare proclaimed Simnel king and provided troops for his invasion of England The rebellion was defeated and Lincoln killed at the Battle of Stoke Henry showed remarkable clemency to the surviving rebels he pardoned Kildare and the other Irish nobles and he made the boy Simnel a servant in the royal kitchen where he was in charge of roasting meats on a spit 33 In 1490 a young Fleming Perkin Warbeck appeared and claimed to be Richard of Shrewsbury the younger of the Princes in the Tower Warbeck won the support of Edward IV s sister Margaret Duchess of Burgundy He led attempted invasions of Ireland in 1491 and England in 1495 and persuaded James IV of Scotland to invade England in 1496 In 1497 Warbeck landed in Cornwall with a few thousand troops but was soon captured and executed 34 When the King s agents searched the property of William Stanley Chamberlain of the Household with direct access to Henry VII they found a bag of coins amounting to around 10 000 and a collar of livery with Yorkist garnishings Stanley was accused of supporting Warbeck s cause arrested and later executed In response to this threat within his own household the King instituted more rigid security for access to his person 35 In 1499 Henry had the Earl of Warwick executed 36 However he spared Warwick s elder sister Margaret who survived until 1541 when she was executed by Henry VIII 37 Economics nbsp Groat of Henry VIIFor most of Henry VII s reign Edward Story was Bishop of Chichester Story s register still exists and according to the 19th century historian W R W Stephens affords some illustrations of the avaricious and parsimonious character of the king It seems that Henry was skilful at extracting money from his subjects on many pretexts including that of war with France or war with Scotland The money so extracted added to the King s personal fortune rather than being used for the stated purpose 38 Unlike his predecessors Henry VII came to the throne without personal experience in estate management or financial administration 39 Despite this during his reign he became a fiscally prudent monarch who restored the fortunes of an effectively bankrupt exchequer Henry VII introduced stability to the financial administration of England by keeping the same financial advisors throughout his reign For instance except for the first few months of the reign the Baron Dynham and the Earl of Surrey were the only Lord High Treasurers throughout his reign 40 Henry VII improved tax collection in the realm by introducing ruthlessly efficient mechanisms of taxation He was supported in this effort by his chancellor Archbishop John Morton whose Morton s Fork was a catch 22 method of ensuring that nobles paid increased taxes those nobles who spent little must have saved much and thus could afford the increased taxes in contrast those nobles who spent much obviously had the means to pay the increased taxes 41 Henry also increased wealth by acquiring land through the act of resumption of 1486 which had been delayed as he focused on defence of the Church his person and his realm 42 nbsp Henry VII centre with his advisors Sir Richard Empson and Edmund DudleyThe capriciousness and lack of due process that indebted many would tarnish his legacy and were soon ended upon Henry VII s death after a commission revealed widespread abuses 43 According to the contemporary historian Polydore Vergil simple greed underscored the means by which royal control was over asserted in Henry s final years 44 Following Henry VII s death Henry VIII executed Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley his two most hated tax collectors on trumped up charges of treason 45 Henry VII established the pound avoirdupois as a standard of weight it later became part of the Imperial 46 and customary systems of units 46 In 1506 he resumed the construction of King s College Chapel Cambridge started under Henry VI guaranteeing finances which would continue even after his death 47 Foreign policy Further information Mad War Henry VII s policy was to maintain peace and to create economic prosperity Up to a point he succeeded The Treaty of Redon was signed in February 1489 between Henry and representatives of Brittany Based on the terms of the accord Henry sent 6 000 troops to fight at the expense of Brittany under the command of Lord Daubeney The purpose of the agreement was to prevent France from annexing Brittany According to John M Currin the treaty redefined Anglo Breton relations Henry started a new policy to recover Guyenne and other lost Plantagenet claims in France The treaty marks a shift from neutrality over the French invasion of Brittany to active intervention against it 48 Henry later concluded a treaty with France at Etaples that brought money into the coffers of England and ensured the French would not support pretenders to the English throne such as Perkin Warbeck However this treaty came at a price as Henry mounted a minor invasion of Brittany in November 1492 Henry decided to keep Brittany out of French hands signed an alliance with Spain to that end and sent 6 000 troops to France 49 The confused fractious nature of Breton politics undermined his efforts which finally failed after three sizeable expeditions at a cost of 24 000 However as France was becoming more concerned with the Italian Wars the French were happy to agree to the Peace of Etaples 50 Henry had pressured the French by laying siege to Boulogne in October 1492 Henry had been under the financial and physical protection of the French throne or its vassals for most of his life before becoming king To strengthen his position however he subsidised shipbuilding so strengthening the navy he commissioned Europe s first ever and the world s oldest surviving dry dock at Portsmouth in 1495 and improving trading opportunities John Cabot originally from Genoa and Venice had heard that ships from Bristol had discovered uncharted newfound territory far west of Ireland Having secured financial backing from Florentine bankers in London Cabot was granted carefully phrased letters patent from Henry in March 1496 permitting him to embark on an exploratory voyage westerly It is not known precisely where Cabot landed but he was eventually rewarded with a pension from the king it is presumed that Cabot perished at sea after a later unsuccessful expedition 51 Henry VII was one of the first European monarchs to recognise the importance of the newly united Spanish kingdom he concluded the Treaty of Medina del Campo by which his son Arthur Prince of Wales was married to Catherine of Aragon 52 He also concluded the Treaty of Perpetual Peace with Scotland the first treaty between England and Scotland for almost two centuries which betrothed his daughter Margaret Tudor to King James IV of Scotland By this marriage Henry VII hoped to break the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France Though this was not achieved during his reign the marriage eventually led to the union of the English and Scottish crowns under Margaret s great grandson James VI and I following the death of Henry s granddaughter Elizabeth I Henry also formed an alliance with Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I 1493 1519 and persuaded Pope Innocent VIII to issue a papal bull of excommunication against all pretenders to Henry s throne In 1506 Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller Emery d Amboise asked Henry VII to become the protector and patron of the Order as he had an interest in the crusade 53 Later on Henry had exchanged letters with Pope Julius II in 1507 in which he encouraged him to establish peace among Christian realms and to organise an expedition against the Turks of the Ottoman Empire 54 Trade agreements Henry VII was much enriched by trading alum which was used in the wool and cloth trades as a chemical fixative for dyeing fabrics 55 Since alum was mined in only one area in Europe Tolfa Italy it was a scarce commodity and therefore especially valuable to its landholder the Pope With the English economy heavily invested in wool production Henry VII became involved in the alum trade in 1486 With the assistance of the Italian merchant banker Lodovico della Fava and the Italian banker Girolamo Frescobaldi Henry VII became deeply involved in the trade by licensing ships obtaining alum from the Ottoman Empire and selling it to the Low Countries and in England 56 This trade made an expensive commodity cheaper which raised opposition from Pope Julius II since the Tolfa mine was a part of papal territory and had given the Pope monopoly control over alum citation needed Henry s most successful diplomatic achievement as regards the economy was the Magnus Intercursus great agreement of 1496 In 1494 Henry embargoed trade mainly in wool with the Burgundian Netherlands in retaliation for Margaret of Burgundy s support for Perkin Warbeck The Merchant Adventurers the company which enjoyed the monopoly of the Flemish wool trade relocated from Antwerp to Calais At the same time Flemish merchants were ejected from England The dispute eventually paid off for Henry Both parties realised they were mutually disadvantaged by the reduction in commerce Its restoration by the Magnus Intercursus was very much to England s benefit in removing taxation for English merchants and significantly increasing England s wealth In turn Antwerp became an extremely important trade entrepot transhipment port through which for example goods from the Baltic spices from the east and Italian silks were exchanged for English cloth 57 In 1506 Henry extorted the Treaty of Windsor from Philip the Handsome Duke of Burgundy Philip had been shipwrecked on the English coast and while Henry s guest was bullied into an agreement so favourable to England at the expense of the Netherlands that it was dubbed the Malus Intercursus evil agreement France Burgundy the Holy Roman Empire Spain and the Hanseatic League all rejected the treaty which was never in force Philip died shortly after the negotiations 58 Law enforcement and justices of the peace Henry s principal problem was to restore royal authority in a realm recovering from the Wars of the Roses There were too many powerful noblemen and as a consequence of the system of so called bastard feudalism each had what amounted to private armies of indentured retainers mercenaries masquerading as servants citation needed Following the example of Edward IV Henry VII created a Council of Wales and the Marches for his son Arthur which was intended to govern Wales and the Marches Cheshire and Cornwall 59 60 61 nbsp Late 16th century copy of a portrait of Henry VIIHe was content to allow the nobles their regional influence if they were loyal to him For instance the Stanley family had control of Lancashire and Cheshire upholding the peace on the condition that they stayed within the law In other cases he brought his over powerful subjects to heel by decree He passed laws against livery the upper classes flaunting of their adherents by giving them badges and emblems and maintenance the keeping of too many male servants These laws were used shrewdly in levying fines upon those that he perceived as threats citation needed However his principal weapon was the Court of Star Chamber This revived an earlier practice of using a small and trusted group of the Privy Council as a personal or Prerogative Court able to cut through the cumbersome legal system and act swiftly Serious disputes involving the use of personal power or threats to royal authority were thus dealt with 62 Henry VII used justices of the peace on a large nationwide scale They were appointed for every shire and served for a year at a time Their chief task was to see that the laws of the country were obeyed in their area Their powers and numbers steadily increased during the time of the Tudors never more so than under Henry s reign 63 Despite this Henry was keen to constrain their power and influence applying the same principles to the justices of the peace as he did to the nobility a similar system of bonds and recognisances to that which applied to both the gentry and the nobles who tried to exert their elevated influence over these local officials citation needed All Acts of Parliament were overseen by the justices of the peace For example they could replace suspect jurors in accordance with the 1495 act preventing the corruption of juries They were also in charge of various administrative duties such as the checking of weights and measures citation needed By 1509 justices of the peace were key enforcers of law and order for Henry VII They were unpaid which in comparison with modern standards meant a smaller tax bill for law enforcement Local gentry saw the office as one of local influence and prestige and were therefore willing to serve Overall this was a successful area of policy for Henry both in terms of efficiency and as a method of reducing the corruption endemic within the nobility of the Middle Ages citation needed Later years and death nbsp Scene at the deathbed of Henry VII at Richmond Palace 1509 drawn contemporaneously from witness accounts by the courtier Sir Thomas Wriothesley d 1534 who wrote an account of the proceedings British Library Add MS 45131 f 54 nbsp Tomb effigies of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York by Pietro Torrigiano Westminster Abbey nbsp Posthumous portrait bust by Pietro Torrigiano made using Henry s death maskIn 1502 Henry VII s life took a difficult and personal turn in which many people he was close to died in quick succession His first son and heir apparent Arthur Prince of Wales died suddenly at Ludlow Castle very likely from a viral respiratory illness known at the time as the English sweating sickness 64 This made Henry VII s second son Henry Duke of York heir apparent to the throne The King normally a reserved man who rarely showed much emotion in public unless angry surprised his courtiers by his intense grief and sobbing at his son s death while his concern for the Queen is evidence that the marriage was a happy one as is his reaction to Queen Elizabeth s death the following year when he shut himself away for several days refusing to speak to anyone 65 Henry VII was shattered by the loss of Elizabeth and her death impacted him severely 66 Henry wanted to maintain the Spanish alliance Accordingly he arranged a papal dispensation from Pope Julius II for Prince Henry to marry his brother s widow Catherine a relationship that would have otherwise precluded marriage in the Church Elizabeth had died in childbirth so Henry had the dispensation also permit him to marry Catherine himself After obtaining the dispensation Henry had second thoughts about the marriage of his son and Catherine Catherine s mother Isabella I of Castile had died and Catherine s sister Joanna had succeeded her Catherine was therefore daughter of only one reigning monarch and so less desirable as a spouse for Henry VII s heir apparent The marriage did not take place during his lifetime Otherwise at the time of his father s arranging of the marriage to Catherine of Aragon the future Henry VIII was too young to contract the marriage according to Canon Law and would be ineligible until age fourteen 67 Henry made half hearted plans to remarry and beget more heirs but these never came to anything He entertained thoughts of remarriage to renew the alliance with Spain Joanna Dowager Queen of Naples a niece of Queen Isabella of Castile Queen Joanna of Castile and Margaret Dowager Duchess of Savoy sister in law of Joanna of Castile were all considered 68 In 1505 he was sufficiently interested in a potential marriage to Joanna of Naples that he sent ambassadors to Naples to report on the 27 year old Joanna s physical suitability 69 The wedding never took place and the physical description Henry sent with his ambassadors of what he desired in a new wife matched the description of his wife Elizabeth After 1503 records show the Tower of London was never again used as a royal residence by Henry VII and all royal births under Henry VIII took place in palaces 70 Henry VII falls among the minority of British monarchs that never had any known mistresses and for the times it is very unusual that he did not remarry his son Henry was the only male heir left after the death of his wife thus the death of Arthur created a precarious political position for the House of Tudor During his lifetime the nobility often criticised Henry VII for re centralizing power in London and later the 16th century historian Francis Bacon was ruthlessly critical of the methods by which he enforced tax law but it is equally true that Henry VII was diligent about keeping detailed records of his personal finances down to the last halfpenny 71 these and one account book detailing the expenses of his queen survive in the British National Archives as do accounts of courtiers and many of the king s own letters Until the death of his wife the evidence is clear from these accounting books that Henry was a more doting father and husband than was widely known and there is evidence that his outwardly austere personality belied a devotion to his family Letters to relatives have an affectionate tone not captured by official state business as evidenced by many written to his mother Margaret Many of the entries show a man who loosened his purse strings generously for his wife and children and not just on necessities in spring 1491 he spent a great amount of gold on a lute for his daughter Mary the following year he spent money on a lion for Elizabeth s menagerie With Elizabeth s death the possibilities for such family indulgences greatly diminished 72 Immediately afterwards Henry became very sick and nearly died himself allowing only his mother Margaret Beaufort near him privily departed to a solitary place and would that no man should resort unto him 73 Further compounding Henry s distress his older daughter Margaret had previously been betrothed to King James IV of Scotland and within months of her mother s death she had to be escorted to the border by her father he would never see her again 74 Margaret Tudor wrote letters to her father declaring her homesickness but Henry could do nothing but mourn the loss of his family and honour the terms of the peace treaty he had agreed to with the King of Scotland 75 Henry VII died of tuberculosis at Richmond Palace on 21 April 1509 and was buried in the chapel he commissioned in Westminster Abbey next to his wife Elizabeth 76 He was succeeded by his second son Henry VIII reigned 1509 47 who would initiate the Protestant Reformation in England 77 78 His mother died two months later on 29 June 1509 79 Appearance and characterAmiable and high spirited Henry was friendly if dignified in manner and it was clear that he was extremely intelligent His biographer Professor Stanley Chrimes credits him even before he had become king with a high degree of personal magnetism ability to inspire confidence and a growing reputation for shrewd decisiveness On the debit side he may have looked a little delicate as he suffered from poor health 25 80 Legacy and memoryHistorians have always compared Henry VII with his continental contemporaries especially Louis XI of France and Ferdinand II of Aragon By 1600 historians emphasised Henry s wisdom in drawing lessons in statecraft from other monarchs In 1622 Francis Bacon published his History of the Reign of King Henry VII By 1900 the New Monarchy interpretation stressed the common factors that in each country led to the revival of monarchical power This approach raised puzzling questions about similarities and differences in the development of national states In the late 20th century a model of European state formation was prominent in which Henry less resembles Louis and Ferdinand 81 FamilyThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Henry VII of England news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Henry VII centre left with his family as depicted at Hampton Court PalaceHenry VII and Elizabeth had seven children b Arthur 19 September 1486 2 April 1502 Prince of Wales heir apparent from birth to death named after the legendary King Arthur 83 Margaret 28 November 1489 18 October 1541 Queen of Scotland as the wife of James IV and regent for their son James V Henry VIII 28 June 1491 28 January 1547 Henry VII s successor Elizabeth 2 July 1492 14 September 1495 Mary 18 March 1496 25 June 1533 briefly Queen of France as the wife of Louis XII then wife of Charles Brandon 1st Duke of Suffolk Edmund 21 February 1499 19 June 1500 styled Duke of Somerset but never formally created a peer 84 Katherine 2 February 1503 18 February 1503 Henry VII s position in relation to the houses of York and Lancaster selective chart 85 Blanche of LancasterJohn of GauntDuke of LancasterKatherine SwynfordHenry IVJohn BeaufortEarl of SomersetJoan BeaufortHenry VCatherine of ValoisOwen TudorJohn BeaufortDuke of SomersetCecily NevilleRichardDuke of YorkHenry VIEdmund TudorEarl of RichmondMargaret BeaufortEdward IVRichard IIIHenry VIIElizabeth of YorkEdward VFamily tree of the principal members of the house of TudorRed text indicates Monarch of England Blue text indicates Monarch of Scotland nbsp vteEnglish royal families in the Wars of the RosesDukes except Aquitaine and Princes of Wales are noted as are the monarchs reigns Individuals with red dashed borders are Lancastrians and blue dotted borders are Yorkists Some changed sides and are represented with a solid thin purple border Monarchs have a rounded corner border See also Family tree of English monarchs Henry of GrosmontDuke of LancasterEdward IIIKing of Englandr 1327 1377Edward of Woodstock The Black Prince Prince of WalesLionel of AntwerpDuke of ClarenceBlanche of LancasterJohn of GauntDuke of LancasterKatherine SwynfordEdmund of LangleyDuke of YorkThomas of WoodstockDuke of GloucesterRichard IIPrince of Wales King of Englandr 1377 1399Philippa of ClarenceHenry IVDuke of Lancaster King of Englandr 1399 1413John BeaufortThomas BeaufortDuke of ExeterJoan BeaufortRalph NevilleHenry Percy Hotspur Elizabeth MortimerRoger MortimerOwen TudorCatherine of ValoisHenry VDuke of Lancaster Prince of Wales King of Englandr 1413 1422HumphreyDuke of GloucesterEdward of NorwichDuke of YorkRichard of ConisburghAnne de MortimerJohn Beaufort1st Duke of SomersetMargaret of AnjouHenry VIKing of Englandr 1422 1461 r 1470 1471Edmund Beaufort2nd Duke of Somerset 1st St AlbansWilliam NevilleEleanor NevilleHenry Percy 1st St AlbansAnne NevilleDuchess of BuckinghamRichard Neville nbsp WakefieldCecily NevilleRichard of YorkDuke of York Prince of Wales WakefieldHenry Beaufort3rd Duke of Somerset nbsp HexhamRichard Woodville nbsp EdgecoteMargaret BeaufortEdmund Beaufort4th Duke of Somerset nbsp TewkesburyHenry Percy TowtonHumphrey StaffordJohn Neville BarnetRichard Neville Kingmaker BarnetMargaret BeaufortEdmund TudorJasper TudorDuke of BedfordCatherine WoodvilleHenry StaffordDuke of Buckingham nbsp Elizabeth WoodvilleEdward IVDuke of York King of Englandr 1461 1470 r 1471 1483George PlantagenetDuke of Clarence nbsp TowerEdward of WestminsterPrince of Wales TewkesburyAnne NevilleRichard IIIDuke of Gloucester King of Englandr 1483 1485 Bosworth FieldHenry VIIKing of Englandr 1485 1509Elizabeth of YorkEdward VPrince of Wales King of Englandr 1483 nbsp TowerRichard of ShrewsburyDuke of York nbsp TowerSee alsoCestui que Cultural depictions of Henry VII of EnglandNotes a Royal house of Welsh French origin Roland de Velville or Veleville who was knighted in 1497 and was Constable of Beaumaris Castle is sometimes presented as the clear illegitimate issue of Henry VII of England by a Breton lady whose name is not known The possibility this was Henry s illegitimate son is baseless 82 ReferencesCitations Tudor Pembroke Ymddiriedolaeth Harri Tudur Henry Tudor Trust www henrytudortrust org uk Breverton Terry 2016 Henry VII The Maligned Tudor King Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1445646060 via Google Books BBC Wales History Themes Pembroke The Main Street British Broadcasting Corporation Rogers amp Turvey 2000 Kendall 1973 p 13 Williams 1973 p 17 Kendall 1973 p 156 Chrimes 1999 p 3 Davies Norman The Isles A History pp 337 379 a b Mackie 1952 p 47 Chrimes 1999 p 3 Mackie 1952 p 54 Starkey 2006 p 4 Marilee Mongello Tudor Monarchs Henry VII one Englishhistory net Retrieved 7 February 2013 a b Williams 1973 p 19 Soden Iain 2013 Rooms with no view Royal Exiles From Richard the Lionheart to Charles II Amberley Publishing ISBN 978 1445612034 Breverton Terry 2016 Henry VII The Maligned Tudor King Amberley Publishing ISBN 978 1445646060 Chrimes 1977 p 65 a b Williams 1973 p 25 Kendall 1973 p 297 Henry Tudor s landing site History Points Retrieved 14 January 2019 Rees David 1985 The Son of Prophecy Henry Tudor s Road to Bosworth Black Raven Press ISBN 978 0 85159 005 9 Kendall 1973 p 361 Williams 1973 p 31 Chrimes 1999 p 50 Westminster Abbey website Coronations Henry VII and Elizabeth of York Retrieved 4 March 2013 Weir 2007 p 7 a b Chrimes 1999 p 53 Morgan 1988 p 709 Chrimes 1999 p 72 Penn 2011 pp 22 23 Weir 1995 p 190 Chrimes 1999 p 72 Chrimes 1999 p 51 Chrimes 1999 p 69 Williams 1973 p 62 Chrimes 1999 pp 69 70 Arthurson Ian 2009 The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy History Press Limited ISBN 978 0750939898 page needed Arthurson Ian 1997 The Perkin Warbeck Conspiracy 1491 1499 Sutton p 215 ISBN 978 0750916103 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Blessed Margaret Pole Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Stephens 1876 pp 176 177 Chrimes 1977 p 119 Chrimes 1999 p 121 Chrimes 1999 p 203 Chrimes 1999 p 123 Penn 2011 pp 371 Guy 1988 pp 272 273 Elgin 2013 p 55 a b pound avoirdupois Sizes Inc 17 April 2012 Retrieved 13 September 2016 1497 1558 Henry VII authorizes standard amp A unit of mass 453 592 37 grams now technically the international pound now used chiefly in the United States but since the 16th century the most commonly encountered unit of mass throughout the English speaking world The magnitude of the pound avoirdupois has varied less than 1 since the middle of the 14th century Hunt amp Towle 1998 p 88 Currin John M 1996 Henry VII and the Treaty of Redon 1489 Plantagenet Ambitions and Early Tudor Foreign Policy History Curry 81 263 343 358 doi 10 1111 1468 229X 00015 JSTOR 24423267 Mackie 1952 p 97 Currin 2000 pp 379 412 Chrimes 1999 pp 228 230 Warnicke 2000 p 103 Setton 1976 p 47 Setton 1976 p 50 Penn 2011 pp 201 Penn 2011 pp 203 204 Williams 1973 pp 167 168 Williams 1973 p 198 201 Horrox Rosemary 2004 Arthur prince of Wales 1486 1502 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 705 Retrieved 7 October 2013 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription required Griffiths Ralph 1972 Wales and the Marches in the Fifteenth Century In Chrimes Stanley Ross Charles Griffiths Ralph eds Fifteenth Century England 1399 1509 Studies in Politics and Society Bristol Sutton Publishing pp 145 172 ISBN 978 0064911269 Chrimes 1999 pp 249 256 Williams 1973 p 178 MacCulloch 1996 pp 39 42 Penn 2011 p 70 Chrimes 1999 pp 302 304 Weir 2013 p 404 Penn 2013 p 204 Bergenroth G A Calendar of State Papers Spain Supplement To Volumes 1 and 2 Queen Katherine Intended Marriage of King Henry VII To Queen Juana British History Online Retrieved 7 August 2020 Schwarz Arthur L 2009 Henry s Father Searches for a New Wife VIVAT REX An Exhibition Commemorating the 500th Anniversary of the Accession of Henry VIII The Grolier Club p 58 ISBN 978 1605830179 Herman Peter C 2011 A Short History of Early Modern England John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1444394993 page needed Domestic and foreign policy of Henry VII Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 16 November 2015 Henry VII Winter King Queen to History Chrimes 1999 p 304 Penn 2013 pp 110 113 Queen Margaret s Arch York Civic Trust Retrieved 9 March 2020 Tudor Times Tudor Times Retrieved 9 March 2020 Chrimes 1999 pp 313 314 n5 Hunt amp Towle 1998 p 69 Lockyer 2014 p 88 Margaret Beaufort Countess of Richmond Westminster Abbey Retrieved 10 January 2021 Seward Desmond 2010 The Wars of the Roses Nature 467 7316 318 Bibcode 2010Natur 467 744B doi 10 1038 467744a S2CID 4350364 Gunn 2009 pp 380 392 Chrimes 1999 p 67 n3 Wagner amp Schmid 2011 p 1104 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Somerset Earls and Dukes of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 385 Chrimes 1972 Select Pedigrees I amp II Sources Chrimes Stanley B 1972 Henry VII 1st ed Methuen Publishing ISBN 978 0 413 28590 4 1977 Henry VII 2nd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 413 38400 3 1999 Henry VII 3rd ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 520 02266 9 OL 21264946M Currin John M November 2000 The King s Army into the Partes of Bretaigne Henry VII and the Breton Wars 1489 1491 War in History 7 4 doi 10 1177 096834450000700401 S2CID 154603131 Elgin Kathy 2013 Henry VIII The Charismatic King who Reforged a Nation Arcturus Publishing p 55 ISBN 978 1 782 12859 5 Gunn Steven August 2009 Politic history New Monarchy and state formation Henry VII in European perspective Historical Research 82 217 380 392 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2281 2009 00492 x Guy John 1988 The Tudor Age 1485 1603 In Morgan Kenneth O ed The Oxford History of Britain Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 192 85202 1 Hunt Jocelyn Towle Carolyn 1998 Henry VII Longman History in Depth New York Longman p 88 ISBN 978 0 582 29691 6 Kendall Paul Murray 1973 Richard the Third Sphere Books ISBN 978 0 351 17095 9 Lockyer Roger 2014 Henry VII Taylor amp Francis p 88 ISBN 978 1 317 89432 2 MacCulloch Diarmaid 1996 The Consolidation of England 1485 1603 In Morrill John ed The Oxford Illustrated History of Tudor and Stuart Britain Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 192 89327 7 Mackie John Duncan 1952 The Earlier Tudors 1485 1558 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 198 21706 0 Morgan Kenneth O 1988 The Oxford History of Britain Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285202 1 Penn Thomas 2011 Winter King Henry VII and The Dawn of Tudor England 1st ed London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 439 19156 9 2013 Winter King Henry VII and the Dawn of Tudor England Reprint ed Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 439 19157 6 Rogers Caroline Turvey Roger 2000 Henry VII London Hodder amp Stoughton Educational ISBN 978 0 340 75381 1 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1976 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 American Philosophical Society ISBN 978 0 871 69161 3 Starkey David 2006 Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 007 24766 0 Stephens W R W 1876 Memorials of the South Saxon See and Cathedral Church of Chichester London Bentley Wagner John Schmid Susan Walters 2011 Encyclopedia of Tudor England Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 598 84298 2 Warnicke Retha M 2000 The Marrying of Anne of Cleves Royal Protocol in Early Modern England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 17969 0 Weir Alison 1995 The Princes in the Tower New York Ballantine ISBN 978 0 345 39178 0 2007 The Six Wives of Henry VIII New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 802 19875 4 2013 Elizabeth of York The First Tudor Queen Random House ISBN 978 1 448 19138 3 Williams Neville 1973 The Life and Times of Henry VII London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 76517 2 Further readingAnglo Sydney 1987 Ill of the dead The posthumous reputation of Henry VII Renaissance Studies 1 1 27 47 doi 10 1111 j 1477 4658 1987 tb00121 x JSTOR 24410008 Ashley Mike 2002 British Kings amp Queens Carroll amp Graf pp 280 286 ISBN 978 0 7867 1104 8 OL 8141172M Cooper J P 1959 Henry VII s Last Years Reconsidered Historical Journal 2 2 103 129 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00022056 JSTOR 3020534 S2CID 162609810 Cunningham Sean 2007 Henry VII New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 26620 8 Elton G R 1961 Henry VII A Restatement Historical Journal 4 1 1 29 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00022184 JSTOR 3020379 S2CID 159982738 Fritze Ronald H 1991 Historical Dictionary of Tudor England 1485 1603 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0313265983 Gunn Steven 2007 Henry VII in Context Problems and Possibilities History 92 307 301 17 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 2007 00397 x Morrill John 1996 The Oxford Illustrated History of Tudor and Stuart Britain Oxford Oxford University Press Stubbs William 1886 The Reign of Henry VII 1 April 24 1883 Seventeen lectures on the study of medieval and modern history and kindred subjects 334 352 Wikidata Q107248208 1886 The Reign of Henry VII April 25 1883 Seventeen lectures on the study of medieval and modern history and kindred subjects 353 371 Wikidata Q107248250 Towle Carolyn Hunt Jocelyn 1998 Henry VII New York Longman ISBN 978 0 582 29691 6 Ward Kevin 2006 A History of Global Anglicanism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 00866 2 Weir Alison 2011 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy London Vintage ISBN 978 1 446 44911 0 2002 Henry VIII King and Court London Pimlico ISBN 978 0 7126 6451 6 1966 Before the Armada the growth of English foreign policy 1485 1588 OCLC 530462 External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Henry VII of England nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Henry VII of England nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Henry VII of England Henry VII at the official website of the British monarchy Henry VII at the official website of the Royal Collection Trust Gairdner James 1891 Henry VIII In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 26 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 67 94 Tudor Place page on Henry VII Discussion of marital bed by Janina Ramirez and Jonathan Foyle Art Detective Podcast 15 Feb 2017 Portraits of King Henry VII at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Henry VII of EnglandHouse of TudorBorn 28 January 1457 Died 21 April 1509Regnal titlesPreceded byRichard III King of EnglandLord of Ireland1485 1509 Succeeded byHenry VIIIPeerage of EnglandPreceded byEdmund Tudor Earl of Richmond1457 1461 Forfeit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry VII of England amp oldid 1194919126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.