Henry VIII lived in Hampton Court Palace in London, England.
Camelot
Henry IV 1367-1413 was the 10th King of England. He was a politique; he regarded religion as part of royal authority.
Confinscated all their books, and feligous relics. Some were burned to the ground and their property was added to the king of england and supreme head of the churchs royal library. Their priests were allowed to live but had to take an oath stating that king henry the 8th was supreme head of the church. As did all citizens of england did during this transition of religous power from church to the king.
Great Britain was not one unified country until 1707, when England and Scotland merged. In 1500, the King of England was Henry VII, who was the first Tudor King. In 1500, the King of Scotland was James IV, a Stuart/Stewart. In 1500, the Kingdom of Wales was already conquered by England (Since the 13th century). Although Ireland is not a part of Britain (Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom), in 1500, part of Ireland (the Pale) was under English rule. There has been no undisputed, recognized Irish King since 1198.
In 1431, King Henry sixth of England, was crowned Henry second of France and ruled both countries until 1453 when the end of the Hundred Years War saw England expelled from all of France with the exception of Calais.
He was part of the Tudor dynasty
part of france
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.
Henry VII was part of the Tudor dynasty or House of Tudor which was a European royal house of Welsh origin that ruled the Kingdom of England and its realms, including the Lordship of Ireland, later the Kingdom of Ireland, from 1485 until 1603. There is no direct link between Henry and the current British Royal Family who are descended from the House of Hanover.
When William invaded England and became its king he was also the Duke of Normandy. Normandy is, and was, part of France and as duke he was, in theory, a servant of the King of France. Integrating England and Normandy would either mean England was part of Normandy and therefore part of France, or Normandy was part of England, which would not have gone down well with the King of France who, in theory, own it.
The ten plays usually called history plays are King John, Richard II, Henry IV Part 1, Henry IV Part 2, Henry V, Henry VI Part 1, Henry VI Part 2, Henry VI Part 3, Richard III and Henry VIII. Kings of England portrayed at one point or another in these plays are John, Henry III, Richard II, Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward IV, Edward V, Henry VII and Henry VIII. The following Kings and Queens of England appear in Shakespeare's history plays: John, Henry III, Richard II, Henry IV, Henry V, Henry VI, Edward IV, Edward V, Richard III, Henry VII, Henry VIII, and Elizabeth. Whether they were made immortal by these characterizations is another story. Henry III and Henry VII only appear at the end of plays to take over from the previous and recently deceased monarch. And Edward V is just a teenager and Elizabeth a baby when they appear.
England was mainly catholic with the Pope in Rome head of the church. When Henry III fell out with the Pope over divorces, Henry broke off from Rome, and Protestantism became the official religion in England, with Henry III as head of the new church. This led to the Dissolution of the Monasteries and other catholic religious buildings. Many can still be seen as ruins in Britain today.