Dissolution has a great deal to do with Henry VIII. Have you ever heard of the English Reformation? Henry VIII started that period. The English Reformation was a period when England broke all ties with the Roman Catholic Church and became a Protestant nation because Henry VIII wanted a divorce from his wife, Catherine of Aragon. The pope refused and Henry broke all ties with Rome, creating his own English Church, and having himself proclaimed the Supreme Head of the Church of England. He then divorced Catherine and married Anne Boleyn. During this prosses Henry began the dissolution, or tearing down, of the Catholic monastaries. The first English Monarch to take such a drastic step in the religion of England.
anne of cleves
when was Henry VIII funeral he was to fat to fit in his coffin so it burst, his stomach exploded and his jewels got robbed
VIII mean the eighth in Roman numerals. Henry the Eighth
Sire Thomas More was an intellectual and humanist during Henry VIII's reign. Thomas More was a member of the King's Council as well as Speaker of the House in Parliament. Thomas More acted as Henry VIII's close adviser and confident. After the dismissal of Cardinal Wolsey, Thomas More was also appointed as the Chancellor to King Henry VIII.
Henry VIII?
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The dissolution of the monasteries was nothing to do with supressing Protestants (Monasteries were Catholic) and it was Henry VIII not Henry VII.
The Dissolution of the Monasteries, and in favour of Protestantism as the state religion.
he got it from the monasteries
Hinchingbooke House was a nunnery up until the dissolution of monasteries under Henry VIII.
it was June 24, 1509. when Catherine of Aragon got married to Henry VIII
Henry VIII first got married to Catherine of Aragon in 1509.
he got it from jousting
anne of cleves
when was Henry VIII funeral he was to fat to fit in his coffin so it burst, his stomach exploded and his jewels got robbed
No, Henry VIII did not order the closure of Fountains Abbey in 1529. He ordered the closure in 1539 (not 1529) as part of the historic "Dissolution of the Monasteries".
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