The story is that some of their families were very fearful of the king becoming interested in them. There is a movie explaining it. I think Anne Boylin
@@Missjulie1975 Catherine of Aragon and Ann of Cleves were both divorced. Catherine died after the divorce and Ann died after the divorce and Henry’s death. Only Catherine Parr survived her marriage to Henry.
Did Henry truly find Anne that unattractive or was it an excused because Anne didn’t recognize him on their first meeting where he was in disguise 🥸! A slight to Henry!
Henry's wives certainly are of great interest and importance but the paradigm shift Henry created when he broke from the Roman Catholic Church still resonates today. Without him there would be no Church of England. One of the few positive things he did.
Imagine taking the risk of becoming the wife of Henry after he just Executed his last wife. What nerves of Steel, they must’ve had
Wine, alot of wine… 😂
The story is that some of their families were very fearful of the king becoming interested in them. There is a movie explaining it. I think Anne Boylin
Only if you were English. He didn’t dare murder his foreign born wives!
I enjoyed it.
Me too
Divorced, beheaded, died,divorced, beheaded, survived.
Not quite accurate because he may have divorced Anne but she survived all of his wives!
@@Missjulie1975 Catherine of Aragon and Ann of Cleves were both divorced. Catherine died after the divorce and Ann died after the divorce and Henry’s death. Only Catherine Parr survived her marriage to Henry.
Beautiful story! What a bully, this 'king'.😮
Hideous man! I only wish he could know that all his efforts came to nought in the end. And Elizabeth handed the throne to a Scot in the end. 🤣😂😅🇬🇧
Why do all the queens look like Scarlett Johannson
The wives are all beautiful … and look alike. IRL, they didn’t.
All the same pictured woman?
Did Henry truly find Anne that unattractive or was it an excused because Anne didn’t recognize him on their first meeting where he was in disguise 🥸! A slight to Henry!
Henry's wives certainly are of great interest and importance but the paradigm shift Henry created when he broke from the Roman Catholic Church still resonates today. Without him there would be no Church of England. One of the few positive things he did.
mind your gammar, should it not read Henry VIII th ?! And I´m only German....
I’m confused if you dying that is should have the “th” it shouldn’t because it is reprinted in the Roman number “VII”
Don't you mean grammar? Obviously it's not VIIIth
No, not when using Roman numerals. Henry viii or alternatively Henry 8th. Does that explain it? (And it’s ‘grammar’)