Elizabeth Woodville was the mother in law to Henry VII. Dont know what type of relationship they had though
He would have been brother in law - married Elizabeth of York sister of the Princes
A weak governing document is detrimental because it will entail flaws in the providing of the law. It will entail the abuse of law and law of governanace, leading to social unrest, chaos and conflict for everybody.
He was English. He was a descendant of Edward III through his son John Duke of Lancaster.. John had children with Katherine Swynford (whose brother in law was Geoffrey Chaucer) and Henry's mother was a great granddaughter of theirs. His father also had Royal blood in him. His grandmother was Catherine of Valois (the daughter of a King of France) who had been the wife of Henry V. After Henry V died she secretly married Owen Tudor and had five children with him. Catherine's son Henry IV ennobled his half brother who was the father of Henry VII.
Henryâ??s life was full of controversy beginning with his claim to the throne of England. The War of Roses has raged for years and it was probably only due to the weakness of Richard III and the lack of Lancaster descendants remaining that Henry even had a claim to be king. He was only related to the Lancaster's was through one of John of Gauntâ??s bastards. However, Henry successfully became Henry VII on that link. In an effort to keep the dowry of Catherine of Aragon when his eldest son, Arthur died, Henry married her off to her young brother-in-law who would become Henry VIII. This proved that Henry's real Achilles Heel was greed. At the end of his life, widespread greed and corruption deep within the roots of his reign were discovered.
John Vans Agnew has written: 'Some important questions in Scots entail law briefly considered' -- subject(s): Entail
Katherine of Aragon - daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain - married Arthur, son of King Henry VII in 1501. Arthur died in Wales in 1502 at the age of sixteen and just over a year later Katherine was betrothed to Arthur's brother, later King Henry VIII, in 1509, allegedly to avoid King Henry VII's obligation to return her dowry to her father. The future King Henry VIII was too young to marry and so the wedding was delayed until 1509. In the intervening years, Katherine was kept more or less a prisoner at London's Durham House until after Henry VII died and Henry VIII took the throne, whereupon a double coronation was held.
yes it is a federal law
henry vii had 5 problems: The house of york : so he married elizabeth of york to settle the war overmighty subjects: his nobles were more powerful than him so he banned provate armies and made them give him loans which they never got back no money: so henry taxed wealthy people law and order problems abroad: he got his son arthur to marry catherine from spain and he got a pension from the french king. i dont know anything about henry viii though exept he had SIX WIVES :)
Henry VII executed 2 of his wives for commiting treason (Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard). My theory is that they didn't want any people that were breaking the law to live any longer.
An absolute ruler. He was law and expected to be obeyed. Henry had an encyclopedia memory and could name the owner of purchased land and the price. He was aware of the intrigues dealing with Francis and Charles. He played factions against factions, conversant in principles of economics. Henry ruled with the love of his people. Elizabeth I inherited that trait, unlike Henry she had no interest in making a Henry V agincourt. Henry vii tried to recapture that military glory.
Henry C. Wolf Law Library was created in 1779.