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New Warm Ups/Activities for the week Looking at Henry VIII today Videos Religion Activity. Wednesday, November 28th. This is Justin Bieber . You have two minutes to jot down what you think of him and explain why. Warm Up.
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New Warm Ups/Activities for the week • Looking at Henry VIII today • Videos • Religion Activity Wednesday, November 28th
This is Justin Bieber. You have two minutes to jot down what you think of him and explain why. Warm Up
You have just come up with INTERPRETATIONS of Justin Bieber. An interpretation is somebody’s opinion, explanation or idea of an event, person or time. Interpretations may not always agree, for example: Some people feel that Justin Bieber is an good singer and musician. Other people think he is bad singer and a bad role model These different interpretations have been made by different people about Justin Bieber, but does that make one of them wrong?
Source A: “After dinner we were taken to see King Henry VIII. The king is very good looking. Tall and strong with auburn hair. He speaks many languages and plays sport as well as any man in England. He is a young man who will soon be 25 years old”. A description of Henry VIII written by a Ambassador to Henry’s court. Source B: “By the time he died in 1547 he was massively overweight, trusted no one, was easily annoyed and was a very dangerous man to fall out with”. Written by a modern historian. What do these sources tell us about interpretations?
Today we are going to look closer at Henry VIII ourselves, and try to form our own interpretations of him. Henry VIII – What type of King was he?
King of England • Henry needed a male heir, his father had become king after a civil war and he feared a similar war would happen if he didn’t have a son Henry VIII
He was married to Catherine of Aragon • She was previously married to his brother, Henry VII, but he died young • They also married young (15 and 16) and lived as brother and sister • They were both religious • Henry VIII even wrote a book called “The Defense of Seven Sacraments.”
The Defense of Seven Sacraments defended the many sacraments of the Catholic church that were being attacked by the reformers as needless and repetitive Defense of Seven Sacraments
This book earned Henry VIII the title of “Defender of the Faith”
bore Henry many children. They were either still born or lived a brief time.One daughter, Mary, survived. Catherine of Aragon
Henry’s convinced his wife, 42, is too old to have more children He wanted to divorce her and find a younger wife, but the church law did not allow divorce But, the pope could annul the marriage if there was proof the marriage wasn’t legal in the first place
The Pope should have granted Henry VIII the annulment because annulments for lesser reasons had occurred amongst EuropeanRoyalty Annulment
DENIED • The pope denied Henry’s annulment request because he didn’t want to offend Catherine’s powerful nephew- Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor
Henry decides to solve the problem himself • He called Parliament into session and asked it to pass a set of laws ending the pope’s power in England • This is known as Parliament Reformation Henry’s Solution
He appointed Cardinal Wolsey to help him He asked (or forced) his followers to take an oath of supremacy The Act of Supremacy made the English King head of the Church of England. It was signed in 1534. Henry took the bold move to separate from the Catholic Church
Sir Thomas More, a friend of Erasmus, was executed for refusing to sign the oath
Originally, he did not intend to change the doctrines at all. He just wanted to be the head of the church and not subject to the Pope’s authority. Once the separation began, many reformers in England saw this as a welcome move Henry’s attitude became more extreme over time
These reformers closely followed the development of Lutheranism on mainland Europe
Henry VIII was in love with Anne Boleyn—this gave him another excuse to pursue the separation from Rome
Anne would not become his mistress. She wanted to be Queen or nothing else Their courtship went on for almost seven years. Henry VIII risked all for his lust of Anne Boleyn
Henry VIII confiscated monastic lands and church wealth as the English Reformation ensued
The monasteries were dissolved.The land and wealth was passed out to Henry’s loyal followers
Their ruins inspired the Romantic poets of the early 19th century Many monasteries and abbeys fell into disrepair and ruin
Other church buildings were saved when they became Protestant Churches
Many churches suffer vandalism when their statues and windows are smashed in an anti-Catholic reaction
Henry moves quickly to eliminate Anne when she gives birth to a still born son a year and a half later They have a daughter, Elizabeth, in 1533
Anne was put on trial, and the accusations against her were solicited under torture.
Anne was executed by a French Swordsman at the Tower of London in 1536
She left the baby Elizabeth who will eventually become England’s greatest Queen
Henry goes on to have four more wives. More wives….
Within 24 hours of Anne Boleyn’s execution, Henry married Jane Seymour • In 1537, Jane gave Henry a son- prince Edward • Jane died 2 weeks after the birth due to complications during child birth • Henry was extremely upset and in love with her Jane Seymour
Henry was impressed with the portrait of Anne of Cleves by Hans Holbein • Henry had a contract drawn up, and married his 4th wife • He was disappointed with her appearance, and was now attracted to another young lady • She was lucky- Henry simply divorced her after 7 months Anne of Cleves
16 days later, he married Kathryn Howard, Anne Boleyn’s cousin • Henry was 49, and she was 19 • Henry had gained a lot of weight and was in a lot of pain, while she was a free spirit • Less than a year into the marriage, rumors of her infidelity began • She was beheaded and laid to rest near her cousin, Anne Boleyn Kathryn Howard
Wife number 6 (and the last one), Katherine Parr married Henry when she was 31 • Their marriage lasted for over 3 years and ended when Henry died in 1547 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fadCAHjN-s Katherine Parr
After Henry’s death, all 3 children eventually rule creating religious turmoil • Edward became king at age 9 and ruled just 6 years until he died at age 15 from tuberculosis • Edward’s oldest half-sister Mary ruled next • Elizabeth rules longest of all After Henry VIII
So, as we end this part of our story, we can recall the ditty:Henry VIII had six wives—One divorcedOne beheadedOne diedOne divorcedOne beheadedOne survived