There were several castles under King Henry VIII. These cluded Windsor Castle, Whitehall Palace, The Tower of London, Nonsuch Palace, Eltham Palace, Hampton Court Palace, St. James Palace. Hatfield House, Westminster Abbey, Newhall, Greenwich, Knole, Leeds, Woodstock, Ewelme, Ludlow, Oatlands, Ampthill, Woking, Halnaker, Petworth and Penshurst.
Henry VIII was one of the wealthiest kings in the history of England. He owned well over 60 castles, manors, and estates.
Using high school books & videos it has showed that Henry VIII build around 55 castles/palaces all over Britain.
time team says 55 castles
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Henry VIII was liked because he had 55 palaces and was athletic. He also did a load of betting.
Hampton Court and Greenwich
Henry owned many palaces and was also famous for building them as when he was older he could no longer hunt and joust so he took up a new hobby of building houses and palaces. Some of the palaces he owned were: Nonsuch, Richmond, Hampton Court, Greenwich, Whitehall, Windsor, Tower of London, Eltham, St James's, Beaulieu, Oatlands, Woking...
Born 28 June 1491 at the Palace of Placentia in Greenwich, London Henry VIII didnt actually leave home as there were royal palaces which he would have moved around with his father Henry VII
Henry the VIII had many banquets altogether. about 2 a day.
Henry built up the navy because he wanted to defeat the Spanish.
Henry VIII owned over 60 palaces, castles, and royal houses. It's hard to determine the exact number of palaces because that depends on your definition of 'palace' which can vary throughout history. A look through his properties show that he probably had 14 properties that were definitely considered palaces, as opposed to castles, manor houses, or hunting lodges.Only two palaces he owned still exist today: Hampton Court Palace and St. James's Palace. Some of the palaces that were most important to him include:Whitehall Palace, which was used as the main residence of the monarchs in London from the 1530s until it was destroyed by fire in 1698. Henry VIII married both Anne Boleyn and Jane Seymour here and died at Whitehall in 1547.Nonsuch Palace, which was built by Henry VIII in Surrey beginning in 1538. Construction had not been completed when he died in 1547. The palace was destroyed in 1682 and no trace of it remains today.Hampton Court Palace which was built for Cardinal Thomas Wolsey in 1514 and taken over by Henry VIII in 1529. It is one of the two palaces still standing today.Greenwich Palace (also known as Placentia), where Henry VIII was born in 1491. His daughters Mary I and Elizabeth I were both born at Greenwich and he married Anne of Cleves there in 1540.St. James's Palace was commissioned by Henry VIII in 1531. It is still the official residence of the Sovereign and the most senior palace in the United Kingdom. Two of Henry's children died there - the illegitimate Henry FitzRoy and Mary I.Eltham Palace in Eltham is where Henry VIII spent his childhood and is where he met (and really rather impressed) the famous scholar, Erasmus. This is where the Tudors often spent Christmas.Palace of Beaulieu (also known as New Hall) dates back, in various forms, to 1062. Henry VIII bought the palace from Thomas Boleyn, the father of his second wife Anne Boleyn, for £1000 in 1516; he rebuilt the house in brick and renamed it Beaulieu. It figures heavily into the politics of his divorce from Katherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn.Oatlands Palace in Surrey was acquired in 1538 and was rebuilt for Anne of Cleves. He then married Catherine Howard in 1540. His daughters Mary I and Elizabeth I both stayed there.Other palaces (again, those that are specifically named or referred to as palaces) that Henry VIII owned include Knole House, Otford, Woodstock, Woking, Esher, and Penshurst.
There are quite a lot of portraits of Henry VIII. Google or Wiki "Henry VIII portraits" and you'll find many sites with images.
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Henry VIII
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