The
Passing of Henry VIII
Today is the anniversary of the death, in
1547, of King Henry VIII. He was 56
years old and had reigned from the age of 18. By coincidence, today is as well
the anniversary of the birthday of his father, King Henry VII.
Although historians can and do dispute
the issue, in many respects he was a lousy king. On two occasions he sent England to war in France;
in both instances the gains were minimal while the costs were huge. He as well underwrote several campaigns,
including those of Maxmillian, the Holy Roman Emperor, further depleting the
quite healthy treasury left him by Henry VII (to suggest that Henry VII was in
the later part of his reign, especially after the death of his wife, only
miserly is to suggest to much frivolity).
Meanwhile, England’s greatest military victory during his reign, the
Battle of Flodden Field, was won by Thomas Howard, then the Earl of Surrey,
thereby earning him the return of Dukedom of Norfolk lost after his family
fought for the wrong side (i.e., that
of Richard III) at the Battle of Bosworth.
Henry VIII was not even in England when that victory was achieved.
Henry fancied that at least northern
Europe was a tri-part division of power between England, France and the Holy
Roman Emperor. While the Treaty of
London, structured by Cardinal Wolsey, would reflect this division, the reflection
was possible only because the Holy Roman Empire and France accommodated the
fiction. In fact there were two great powers in Europe, France
and the Holy Roman Empire, each tempered to a degree by the Papacy. England, while economically important, was
not a significant diplomatic power.
Henry condemned Luther as a heretic in
his Defense of the Seven Sacraments, earning him from the Papacy the title
Defender of the Faith. When, however, it
became convenient to do so in order to achieve the desired annulment of his
marriage to Catherine of Aragon, Henry separated the English Church from
communion with Rome. Unwilling to accept
even silent dissent from his policies, he would procure the executions of
numerous men of conscience including St. John Fisher and St. Thomas More. Hungry for assets, in concert with Thomas
Cromwell, he would destroy England’s monastic communities.
While the now iconic portrait of Henry
painted by Hans Holbein the Younger shows a man of dynamism and vigor (btw,
what we have are copies; the original was lost when the Whitehall Palace
burned), in many respects he was just not that great a king.
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