Henry VII was the only child of Edmund Tudor ... After several years of exile in France Henry landed at Milford Haven in August 1485 to claim the English throne and defeated Richard III at the Battle ...
Henry V); a few could probably even get Bosworth Field (1485, Henry VII). But then the test, and the battles, get harder (Battle of the Boyne, anyone?). Other topics are even more of a struggle.
Henry VIII was a Tudor king who ruled England from ... won the throne from the Yorkist Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field. While some have seen this as the end of the conflict, other ...
The Tudors were a royal family reigning in Britain between 1485 and1603. Their names and the order in which they reigned: Henry VII – 1485-1509 Henry VIII – 1509-1547 Edward VI – 1547-1553 ...
Henry VIII is arguably the most famous King of England. However, in the final years of his life, he was largely unrecognisable from the strong and ruthless ruler of renown. During the last ...
Discover the historical and religious reasons why Henry VII spent a significant amount of money building the Lady Chapel at Westminster Abbey. This short clip, and accompanying discussion questions, ...
Beheading two wives and having numerous affairs and several (rumoured) children in and out of wedlock was always going to cement Henry VIII as one of history's bad boys. The King of England ...
Damian Lewis has revealed that taking on the role of Henry VIII in the BBC's adaptation of Wolf Hall wore him down. The actor, 53, candidly confessed that he usually finds acting very ...
On January 24, 1536, the 44-year-old Henry VIII was injured in a jousting accident ... famed for offering the picture of English kingship at the Field of the Cloth of Gold. Firebrand’s Henry ...
From tumultuous love affairs to violent betrayals, the six wives of Henry VIII all left marks on the Tudor dynasty – and shaped the course of history. READ MORE about these women here ...
Henry VIII demonstrated this in his treatment of St. Thomas More. More, a brilliant lawyer, experienced a meteoric rise in Henry VIII's England. "More formally entered royal service in 1518 when ...