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DECEMBER, 2008 |
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Travel is people. You may
go abroad to see the famous sites, but what you remember best are the
people you meet. Among them, like
unex-pected treasure, are a few
memorable contacts that will make your travels unique, special, and
delightful. "People" is devoted to some of those you may come in contact
with during your Home At First
travels.
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Inventors
of the Modern World
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— SECOND OF A SERIES —
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Portrait by an unknown
artist of
Henry VIII at about the age of 29 in
1520 when in June he met with King
Francis I of France on the Field of Cloth
of Gold, a great medieval tournament
that served as backdrop for one of the
first modern power summits of national leaders. Concurrently, Magellan
was
circumnavigating the globe, Cortez was
conquering Mexico, and Martin Luther
was inventing Protestantism in Germany. |
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orn just 13 months before
Columbus
set off from Spain on his first voyage of discovery, Henry was the
second son and third child of
King Henry VII
(formerly Henry Tudor) and his wife
Elizabeth of York.
His older brother,
Arthur,
was Prince of Wales and heir to the throne. Young Henry, second in line
to the throne, prepared for a future as a kind of vice president: a
heartbeat away from the throne. His education was lavish, and
generalized, but with a concentration in religion. The Renaissance was
underway, and, like a young de' Medici, Prince Henry received
instruction in art, languages, science, religion, music, mathematics,
the classics, and geography. Henry was an athlete, a sportsman, and a
knight of the realm who participated in and won jousting tournaments.
Prince Henry was set for life: handsome, strong, tall, rich, powerful,
educated, and, at leisure. Then the fates intervened. |
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enry Tudor, aka
King Henry VII
of England, was dead at the age of 52. Founder of the Tudor Dynasty,
Henry VII took the throne of the United Kingdom on the battlefield,
beating the royal army and killing
King Richard III
at Bosworth
Field, the famous battle where
Shakespeare imagined Richard would gladly trade his crown and empire
for a horse and escape. After Bosworth, Henry Tudor shrewdly had
himself declared king retroactive to the day before the battle,
thereby making anyone who opposed him on the battlefield a traitor
against the crown.
Portrait by an unknown
artist of
King Henry VII at about
1505. |
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The new King Henry VII was only 28 years old but already
acutely aware of the greatest issue perennially challenging the English
monarchy: royal succession. His designer marriage to
Elizabeth of York
was calculated to put off any challenges to his right to reign by
claimants of either of the two Plantagenet lines – York and Lancaster –
who had been fighting the fratricidal civil war of attrition called the
Wars of the Roses
for at least thirty years.
Henry VII was obsessed with solidifying the monarchy
and shoring up the nation.
The Plantagenet dynasty
had lasted over 330 years—the bulk of the Middle Ages—producing several
great kings who strengthened and expanded the English Empire, but also
witnessing several very unstable periods where disputes over the rights
to the crown nearly crippled the nation. Henry Tudor stopped the chaos
and ended the troubled Plantagenet dynasty by recombining the contested
bloodlines and by eliminating challengers: first in the battle to
capture the monarchy and afterwards by consigning rivals to prison or
worse in the Tower
of London. Most importantly, Henry VII
ensured national security by producing two indisputably legitimate and
healthy male heirs, Arthur and Henry. Henry VII’s 23-year reign ended
the troubled Plantagenet dynasty by joining competing royal bloodlines
into the amalgamation called
the Tudors. |
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All the paranoiac stress of Henry VII’s quest for a stable
monarchy was not lost on his two sons and two daughters. When
Crown
Prince Arthur
died of illness in 1502 at the age of 15, he had already been married
for five months to the Spanish princess
Catherine of Aragon,
herself not quite 16. Although only middle teenagers, the young royal
couple were expected to begin a family immediately, to ensure future
national stability by producing a crown prince of their own. When Arthur
died childless, his brother, Henry, replaced him as crown prince, and,
seven years later with the special dispensation of the Pope in Rome,
replaced Arthur as husband to Catherine of Aragon.
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The
widowed princess Catherine of Aragon in 1503 or
1504 by the
Estonian artist Michel Sittow. In four years
she would marry Henry VIII. |
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The marriage of Henry and Catherine of Aragon occurred only
after the death of King Henry VII, who died in April 1509 doubting he
wished the heir to the English throne to be tied to the Spanish throne
by marriage. But young
King Henry VIII—only 18
years old but already concerned with the critical issue of royal
succession—married Catherine with whom he had had an off-and-on
engagement of almost seven years within a month and a half of his
father’s death. Thirteen days later, June 24, 1509, King Henry VIII and
his royal consort Queen Catherine of Aragon were crowned in a lavish
coronation at London’s
Westminster Abbey. |
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The newlyweds got right to work. In 1510, in the first year of
marriage with Henry, the new queen gave birth to a girl, but the baby
was premature and stillborn. Soon afterwards Catherine again became
pregnant and bore this child to term, giving birth to a live son on New
Years Day 1511. The excitement of the court of the arrival of an heir to
the throne was ebullient but short-lived, as the child, who would have
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become King Henry
IX, died within two months of his
birth. A second son arrived during 1513, but prema-turely, and he did not
live. In December of 1514 Catherine bore a
fourth child—and a third son—but he, too,
was either stillborn or died shortly after birth. This boy was named for
his father, Henry.
The royal couple did not let their disappoint-ments keep them
from their primary duty, and early in 1516 a healthy baby was born who
would one day sit on the English throne as
Queen Mary I,
the first uncontested ruling woman monarch of England since the
rebellious 1st century Briton
Boudica took on the
Romans.
Because proper royal English heirs were to be males, Henry and
Catherine did not look to baby Mary as the solution to their quest. In
November 1518 Queen Catherine—now almost 33 years old—ended her last
pregnancy much as she had ended her first, bearing a stillborn baby
girl. There was no male heir to the throne of England. |

Queen
Mary I, daughter of King Henry
VIII and Queen Catherine of Aragon.
Portrait by court painter Hans Eworth
(Flemish) from 1554 during her reign
as England's first ruling queen (1553-8). |
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Young King Henry VIII had not been neglecting his other royal
duties. The
Renaissance—born more than 100 years
earlier in Tuscany, Italy—bloomed throughout |
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Charles V Holy Roman
Emperor,
nephew of Queen Catherine of
Aragon and, during his reign from
1519-56, one of the two most power-
ful men in Europe. Portrait from
1548 attributed to Lambert Sustris
Dutch painter of the Titian school. |
western Europe, introducing
revolutionary ideas of literature, music, poetry, science, art,
architecture, and religion as it spread along trade routes west and
north. Powerful and wealthy city-states emerged from regional trading
centers and became vibrant centers of the arts, education, technology,
humanistic ideas, and, importantly, politics.
European nation states grew out of the strategic alliances of
the trading partners. On the Continent, two principal national powers
were coalescing: the
Kingdom of France, and
the Holy Roman
Empire, comprised of much of Italy,
Spain, greater Austria, and the Netherlands. Two powerful secular
rulers, King
Francis I of France and
Emperor Charles V of the
Holy Roman Empire, jockeyed to dominate
Europe. England’s King Henry VIII was non-aligned and openly being
courted by his Continental peers. England, once an empire with control
over large sections of France and Spain, had lost most of its
Continental territory during the civil Wars of the Roses and was reduced
to a secondary power sequestered from the wealth and power of the
Continent. |
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Henry had been schooled as a Renaissance man, mastering
languages (Latin, French, and Spanish), composing poetry and music,
studying religion, and pursuing several sports and games. He was a fine
horseman and successful jousting knight*—a risky sport that helped Henry
VIII build a reputation as an athlete, adventurer, and warrior—a leader
not to be trifled with.
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Henry VIII
jousting at a tournament
at Westminster
with
Queen Catherine of Aragon attending c.1511. Artist unknown.
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Henry VIII wanted England to be, in today’s vernacular, a
“player” in the turbulent international politics of 16th century Europe.
He sided with his Spanish in-laws and the Pope in a war against France
from 1511-16. While Henry invaded France leading the English army, the
French arranged for their ally,
King James IV of Scotland,
to invade England. Queen Catherine of Aragon, acting as temporary head
of state with her husband in England, directed English troops to meet
the Scots in battle. At
Flodden Field in
northern England the Scots suffered a calamitous defeat that ended their
aggression and cost them their king’s life. James IV left a widow,
Queen Margaret,
elder sister of Henry VIII, whose great-grandson established the
Stewart dynasty
as King James I of
England and replaced the Tudors at the
start of the 17th century.
*Several suits of
Henry’s armor—showing the
king’s progression from his athletic 20s to his
immense late-40s—may be
seen at the Tower of London
from April 1 to October 31, 2009,
and in
Windsor Castle, where a special exhibition of Henry VIII
related artifacts will be presented
from April 8, 2009 until March 31,
2010. These special exhibitions mark the
500th anniversary
of the beginning of the reign of King Henry
VIII. For more information, see:
THE ROYAL COLLECTION AT WINDSOR CASTLE
and
DRESSED TO KILL AT THE TOWER OF LONDON. |
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Following an at-best inconclusive (and at-worst lost) war
against France, Henry VIII gained a grudging respect for England’s
traditional enemy and its leader King Francis I. Like Henry, Francis I
was a Renaissance man and an athlete, and the English king felt some
competitive kinship with his French rival. Together they arranged to
meet at a lavish 17-day summit in June 1520 called the
Field of Cloth of Gold
near Calais just across the English Channel in northeastern France. The
gathering was to mark the post-war treaty of 1518 that officially ended
hostilities between the neighbors.
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Henry VIII
(left foreground) arrives on a
white charger with his army at the
Field of the Cloth of Gold in June
1520. By
English court painter Hans Holbein.
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But the summit was an opportunity for
both kings to demonstrate the impressive wealth and enlightened power of
their kingdoms at the height of the Renaissance. Both kings made a great
show, but the alliance between France and England remained a tenuous
one, and King Henry hedged England’s bets by maintaining ties with his
Spanish relative and France’s enemy, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. By
maintaining relations with both principal European powers, Henry bought
the time to build a powerful navy and lay the foundations for what would
soon become a growing, modern British Empire. |
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Despite Henry’s successes centralizing a powerful
government in Britain and preparing the nation to become an
international power, the nagging question of succession remained
unanswered. In 1525, Queen Catherine of Aragon was 40 years old and
would not again conceive a child. Henry, age 33, needed to solve this
vexing problem or risk all that he and his father had accomplished.
In Part III we examine Henry's revolutionary and scandalous solution to
the question of succession.
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— END OF PART II —
Next Time:
PART III
A Scandalous Solution Starts a
Revolution
SEE ALSO: PART I
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