Henry VIII of England (1491–1547)
Author of Love Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn
About the Author
Image credit: Portrait by Hans Holbein, circa 1536-1537,
Sammlung Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
(Yorck Project)
Sammlung Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
(Yorck Project)
Works by Henry VIII of England
Unleash Your Inner Tudor: Henry VIII's Inspirational Guide to a Completely Sizzling, Sparkly, Tyrannical, Much Wider, Demanding, and Sexier You (2017) 5 copies
The Love Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn by King of England Henry VIII With Notes (Illustrator) (2015) 3 copies, 1 review
Love Letters of Henry VIII 2 copies
Trios 2 copies
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Henry VIII of England
- Legal name
- Tudor, Henry
- Birthdate
- 1491-06-28
- Date of death
- 1547-01-28
- Gender
- male
- Education
- private tutors
- Occupations
- prince
king - Organizations
- House of Tudor
- Awards and honors
- Order of the Bath
Defender of the Faith - Relationships
- Henry VII (father)
Mary I (daughter)
Elizabeth I (daughter)
Edward VI (son)
Elizabeth of York (mother)
Catherine of Aragon (wife) (show all 20)
Anne Boleyn (wife)
Jane Seymour (wife)
Anne of Cleves (wife)
Catherine Howard (wife)
Catherine Parr (wife)
Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland (sister)
Mary Tudor, Queen of France and Duchess of Suffolk (sister)
James V, King of Scotland (nephew)
Mary Queen of Scots (great-niece)
Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk (boon companion & brother-in-law)
Lady Jane Grey (great-great niece)
Edward V, King of England (posthumous brother-in-law)
Margaret Beaufort (grandmother)
Lady Margaret Douglas (niece) - Nationality
- England
- Birthplace
- Greenwich Palace, London, England, UK
- Places of residence
- London, England, UK
- Place of death
- Whitehall Palace, London, England, UK
- Burial location
- St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, London, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Discussions
Henry VIII in Legacy Libraries (February 2015)
Reviews
These letters show a different side to Henry VIII. This isn’t the famous tyrant, but a man in love. Shame he turned out to be fickle, but the eloquence and devotion shown in his letters to Anne Boleyn make an interesting read.
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1581556.html
This is a neat and slim little volume, containing the seventeen letters written by Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn in the 1520s which somehow mysteriously found their way to the Vatican archives, where they still remain. None of Anne's letters to Henry during their courtship survive; but the collection includes a letter she wrote to her father as a child, two letters from her to Cardinal Wolsey, and finally a letter of disputed authenticity from Anne to show more Henry a few days before her execution, pleading for mercy and a fair trial (she got neither). Finally, we get a surviving love letter from Henry to Jane Seymour, commiserating with her about "a ballad made lately of great derision against us" so presumably written after their relationship had become public but before Anne's execution.
There is an illuminating introduction by Jasper Ridley, including also the introduction to the 1745 edition of the letters, by William Oldys, and plenty of illustrations. The letters themselves are not immensely interesting, but do convey Henry's passion and general intense activity - two of them apparently came with a dead deer attached, personally hinted by the king and sent to Hever for the Boleyns' dinner table. I was pleased to recognise several authentic phrases from the letters in the episode of The Tudors we watched last night (episode 7, the one with the outbreak of sweating sickness and the Pope), so the writers clearly did their research.
A nice little presentation of some primary source material. show less
This is a neat and slim little volume, containing the seventeen letters written by Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn in the 1520s which somehow mysteriously found their way to the Vatican archives, where they still remain. None of Anne's letters to Henry during their courtship survive; but the collection includes a letter she wrote to her father as a child, two letters from her to Cardinal Wolsey, and finally a letter of disputed authenticity from Anne to show more Henry a few days before her execution, pleading for mercy and a fair trial (she got neither). Finally, we get a surviving love letter from Henry to Jane Seymour, commiserating with her about "a ballad made lately of great derision against us" so presumably written after their relationship had become public but before Anne's execution.
There is an illuminating introduction by Jasper Ridley, including also the introduction to the 1745 edition of the letters, by William Oldys, and plenty of illustrations. The letters themselves are not immensely interesting, but do convey Henry's passion and general intense activity - two of them apparently came with a dead deer attached, personally hinted by the king and sent to Hever for the Boleyns' dinner table. I was pleased to recognise several authentic phrases from the letters in the episode of The Tudors we watched last night (episode 7, the one with the outbreak of sweating sickness and the Pope), so the writers clearly did their research.
A nice little presentation of some primary source material. show less
Three parts in score, from Margriet Tindemans
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Statistics
- Works
- 19
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 181
- Popularity
- #119,335
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 24














