You must mean Henry VIII.
No children, since the marriage was never consumated.
Answer Anne of Cleves, King Henry VIII's fourth wife, had no children.
None.
None. They never lived together, and their marriage was nevee consummated.
4 years running
Answer After her divorce from King Henry VIII Anne of Cleves remained in England for the rest of her life. As part of the divorce agreement, she was to be treated as "the king's sister" and essentially to remain under what would be called today house arrest. She never remarried (her interaction with others was severely limited) and she outlived Henry and all of his other wives.
Yes, to Catherine Parr.
None.
Anne of Cleves had two brothers. The eldest, William, later became Duke of Jülich-Cleves-Berg, while the younger, Adolph, was also a Duke.
She had 6-7.
He had 6 wives. They were, in chronological order: Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard (Anne Boleyn's cousin) and Catherine Parr.
She had six fingers.
One - though, legally speaking, that man was somebody she had been engaged to before, which was how the marriage to Henry could be annulled.