Two of Henry VIII's queens were beheaded - but not by him personally. His second queen, Anne Boleyn (mother of Queen Elizabeth I) was beheaded, and his fifth queen, Katherine Howard was beheaded.
King Henry 8th had 6 wives. A good way on remembering how many wives and how they died is... Divorced, Beheaded, died, Divorced, Beheaded, survived.
At his instructions two of his wives were beheaded.
2 Another answer Since King Offa in 774 and King William III in 1702 there have been about 53 Kings of England. After 1707 and the Union with Scotland, Kings and Queens ruled Great Britain. The link below had more information about the list of English Monarchs
Two - his second (Anne Boleyn) and his fifth (Kathryn Howard). Anne Boleyn was accused of witchcraft and Kathryn Howard was found guilty of adultery. Interestingly, the news that Kathryn Howard had another husband was brought by Henry VII's jester, as he was the only person who could get away with it.
Two. Anne Boleyn was tried, convicted and executed for treason, witchcraft and incest. She was probably innocent. Catherine Howard was tried, convicted and executed for treason-- her treason was committing adultery with at least two men.
King Henry 8th had 6 wives. A good way on remembering how many wives and how they died is... Divorced, Beheaded, died, Divorced, Beheaded, survived.
At his instructions two of his wives were beheaded.
two of them were beheaded. the saying goes divorced, beheaded, divorced, survived, divorced beheaded, died
2 Another answer Since King Offa in 774 and King William III in 1702 there have been about 53 Kings of England. After 1707 and the Union with Scotland, Kings and Queens ruled Great Britain. The link below had more information about the list of English Monarchs
Anne Boleyn
Two. The old "rhyme" goes "divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived". Two of Henry's wives ... the second and fifth ... were executed, the first and third were divorced (and therefore no longer his wives at the time of their death), the third died (of natural causes), and the sixth was still married to Henry at the time of HIS death.
in the old days, as long as he was faithful to all his wives, i am not sure how many, but more than one
The mountains are for religous use only! Also, kings have sex with their wives on mountains! Hope this helps!
Henry VIII (1491 - 1547), the second Tudor monarch, had six wives. Details as follows: 1) Catherine of Aragon (1485 - 1536) - divorced (mother of Mary I) 2) Anne Boleyn (c1501-07 - 1536) - beheaded (mother of Elizabeth I) 3) Jane Seymour (c1504-09 - 1537) - died after childbirth (mother of Edward VI) 4) Anne of Cleves (1515 - 1557) - divorced 5) Catherine Howard (c1520 - 1542) - beheaded 6) Katherine Parr (c1512 - 1548) - outlived Henry, as he died in January 1547.
Two - his second (Anne Boleyn) and his fifth (Kathryn Howard). Anne Boleyn was accused of witchcraft and Kathryn Howard was found guilty of adultery. Interestingly, the news that Kathryn Howard had another husband was brought by Henry VII's jester, as he was the only person who could get away with it.
There are many places on the internet where one could view videos of English kings. The best places to view videos of English kings would be video sharing sites like Youtube.
It is difficult to know for certain how the wives in the harem felt as historical records are limited. Some may have been content with their roles, while others may have experienced unhappiness or dissatisfaction due to the dynamics of a polygamous relationship.