ANCESTORS of the KingThis is a featured page





King Henry VIII as portrayed by Jonathan Rhys Meyers
King Henry VIII's Ancestors

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Bayeux Tapestry showing William the Conqueror
William the Conqueror, King of England
AKA William I and William the Bastard
as he was the illegitimate son of Robert I, Duke of Normandy

c. 1027-1087

Henry I
Henry I ,
King of England
1068 - 1135
4th son of William the Conqueror

Father of
Matilda
Empress Matilda
Matilda of Normandy
1102-1167
Reigned as
Empress
April - Nov 1141 (although never crowned)
Mother of Henry II
Henry II
Henry II Plantagenet,
King of England

1133-1189

Father of
King John
ANCESTORS of the King - The Tudors Wiki
John

King of England
1199 - 1216


Father of
Edward II
Edward II Plantagenet
Edward II Plantagenet,
King of England
1284-1327

Father of
Edward III
Edward III of England
Edward III Plantagenet,
King of England

1312-1377

Father of
John of Gaunt


John of Gaunt
Royal, handsome, intelligent, athletic, powerful and wealthy, John of Gaunt (a Plantagenet) strode across the stage of 14th century England in a blaze of charisma. He was the 3rd son of an English King, Edward III, and the father of another, Henry IV. His legitimate daughters married into the royal families of Portugal and Spain, and were Queens and the mothers of Kings.

John of Gaunt's power and wealth were greatly enhanced by two very advantageous marriages, but he made the most of all the opportunities which came his way.

As a young man, he married the heiress Blanche of Lancaster. Through her, he became Duke of Lancaster and the wealthiest man in England.Together they had three children, including Henry Bollingbroke, the future Henry IV.

After Blanche's death from the Plague, John of Gaunt married Constance of Castile, the usurped and exiled heir to the throne of Castile. He claimed the Crown of Castile by right of his wife.In his old age, John of Gaunt married for a third time. No Duchess or Queen this time, rather he married his long-tStained glass window showing Tudor Roses & Portculliserm mistress.



Katherine Swynford
was the daughter of an obscure, lowly knight, and the widow of another. She was also the mother of John of Gaunt's four bastard children, the Beauforts. The children were declared legitimate in 1390 (and Gaunt married their mother in January 1396), this was on the condition that they be barred from ascending the throne. Undeterred by this, upon the failure of the primary Lancastrian line, the Tudors claimed precedence to the Yorks and eventually succeeded them.

John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford had four children during their affair:
  • John Beaufort, 1st Earl of Somerset, who married Margaret Holland;
  • Henry, Cardinal Beaufort;
  • Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter, who married Margaret Neville
  • Joan Beaufort, who married (1) Robert Ferrers, 3rd Baron Ferrers of Wemme and (2) Ralph Neville, 1st Earl of Westmoreland.
They were given the surname "Beaufort" after some of John of Gaunt's lost French lands (Beaufort in Champagne). As they were unlikely to be retrieved, this did not threaten the inheritance of John's legitimate children, particularly his heir, Henry of Bolingbroke (Henry IV).

From this unlikely couple came the House of Tudor - Henry VII's mother was Margaret Beaufort. King Henry VIII's emblem was the Tudor rose and the Beaufort portcullis [see picture above] signifying his tenuous link to royal blood through Margaret Beaufort.


King Henry VIII's great great grandparents

John Beaufort
1st Earl of Somerset

Father of John Beaufort
Margaret Holland



Mother of John Beaufort
Charles VI of
France



Father of Catherine of Valois
Isabeau
de
Bavière
(1401-37)


Mother of Catherine of Valois
Joan Beaufort
Only daughter of John of Gaunt

Mother of Cecily Neville
Ralph Neville
1st Earl of Westermorland


Father of Cecily Neville
Richard
of Conisburgh
3rd Earl of Cambridge

Father of Richard Plantagenet
Anne
de Mortimer



Mother of Richard Plantagenet

King Henry VIII's great grandparents

John Beaufort
John Beaufort

1st Duke of Somerset

Father of
Margaret Beaufort





Margaret Beauchamp
of Bletsoe


Mother of Margaret Beaufort

Catherine of Valois
Catherine of Valois


Mother of
Edmund Tudor






Owen Tudor



Father of Edmund Tudor
Richard Plantagenant
Richard Plantagenet
3rd Duke of York

Father of Edward IV
Cecily Neville
Cecily
Neville



Mother of Edward IV




Richard Woodville
1st Earl Rivers



Father of Elizabeth Woodville



Jacquetta
of
Luxembourg




Mother of Elizabeth Woodville

Catherine of Valois' first husband, Henry V died suddenly in 1422 and she was effectively exiled from court, suspicion falling on her nationality, and passed over as regent for her son Henry VI by her brothers-in-law and kept away from her son. She entered a relationship and later married Henry VOwen Tudor, a Welsh courtier, who would become the founding father of the Tudor dynasty. In 1436, Owen Tudor was imprisoned, and Catherine retired to Bermondsey Abbey, where she died on the 3rd of January 1437. Owen was allowed to go back to Wales but he was arrested and taken to Newgate. He escaped and went back to Wales. When Henry VI was of age he made provisions for Owen, who took the red rose and fought bravely and strongly for it. His last battle came at Mortimer's Cross on Febuary 4, 1460. He was captured by the Yorkists who beheaded him in Hereford market place and set up his head on the market cross.


Henry V

Henry IV
Of their five children, two sons, Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond
and Jasper Tudor, 1st
Duke of Bedford, were to play an important role
in the future of the English monarchy.


Richard Plantagenet 3rd Duke of York was Lord Protector during Henry VI's madness and father of Edward IV and Richard III
Henry VI


King Henry VIII's grandparents

Margaret Beaufort
Lady Margaret Beaufort
born - 1433 - died 1509

Mother of Henry VII

Edmund Tudor
Edmund Tudor
Earl of Richmond,
born c. 1430 - died 1456

Half-brother of Henry VI, Father of Henry VII

Edward IV of York
Edward IV of York
born 1442 – died 1483
Brother of Richard III

Father of Elizabeth of York
Elizabeth Woodville
Elizabeth Woodville
born 1437 – died1492


Mother of Elizabeth of York

When Henry VI's queen, Margaret of Anjou, had produced no offspring and concerned to secure the line of accession, the king married his half-brother Edmund Tudor, to Margaret Beaufort. Edmund Tudor showed little grace or concern for his young wife and in 1455 they moved to Lamphey, Pembrokeshire, South Wales. At the tender age of twelve, Margaret became pregnant, Edmund’s concerns about succession being more important than Margaret’s safety.

Shortly thereafter in August 1456, Edmund was captured and imprisoned in Carmarthen Castle by Richard Duke of York’s retainers. Shortly following his release from prison Edmund succumbed to the plague and died on 1 November 1456 leaving the very young Margaret alone and 6 months pregnant. She took refuge with her brother-in-law, Jasper Tudor, at Pembroke castle, where she gave birth to Henry on 28 January 1457. Her only child.


Elizabeth Woodville was a maid of honour to Margaret of Anjou. Stories have her giving Edward, a known womanizer, an ultimatum that they had to be married or she would not submit to his advances. On May 1, 1464, Elizabeth and Edward married secretly.

Edward's mother, Cecily Neville, Duchess of York, and Cecily's brother, the Earl of Warwick who had been an ally of Edward IV in winning the crown, were arranging a marriage for Edward with the French king. When Warwick found out about Edward's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville, Warwick turned against Edward and helped restore Henry IV briefly to power. Warwick was killed in battle, Henry and his son killed, and Edward returned to power.

Elizabeth Woodville was crowned Queen in Westminster Abbey on May 26, 1465. Elizabeth and Edward's marriage was to produce 10 children.

Edward IV was the ancestor that Henry V111 most resembled. Very tall (at 6' 4", the tallest ever king of England), well-built and handsome, Edward was a clever and effective king. Like Henry, he was fond of food and drink, and became very overweight towards the end of his life. His death at the early age of forty sparked a political crisis.

King Richard IIIAfter the death of King Edward IV, his brother Richard briefly took responsibility for the safety of Edward's son King Edward V as Lord Protector. Later, he is alleged to have placed Edward (aged 12) and his brother Richard (aged 9) in the Tower of London. They became known as the Princes in the Tower who mysteriously disappeared. Richard then seized the throne for himself.
Richard III was the last king from the House of York, and his defeat by King Henry VIII's father, Henry Tudor at the Battle of Bosworth marked the culmination of the War of the Roses and the end of the Plantagenet dynasty. His reign was from 22nd June 1483 to 22nd August 1485.



King Henry VIII's parents

who married in 1486

The houses of York and Lancaster were finally united with this union
and the Wars of the Roses which were a series of bloody dynastic civil wars
between supporters of the rival houses of Lancaster and York, for the throne of England.
They are generally accepted to have been fought in several spasmodic episodes
between 1455 and 1487 (although there was related fighting both before and after this period.)
The war ended with the victory of the Lancastrian Henry Tudor (Henry VII),
who founded the House of Tudor which subsequently ruled England and Wales
for the next 116 years.

Henry VII by Sittow c. 1500

Henry VII
Father

born - 1457 crowned - 1485 died - 1509

This portrait by Michael Sittow is circa 1500 and shows Henry holding the red rose of the house of Lancaster.

The union of Henry and Elizabeth was both symbolic and necessary. Despite his victory at Bosworth, the exiled nobleman who took the name Henry VII needed the support of those sympathetic to the defeated Yorkist cause. He also needed the legitimacy of his wife's claim to the throne. He had spent years in exile and campaigned tirelessly to win support for his claim to the English throne. It had not been an easy task. In fact, it was only when Richard duke of York usurped the throne from his young nephew Edward (son and heir of Edward IV) that Henry Tudor became a viable candidate for king.

Henry Tudor's claim to the throne was never based on ancestry alone. He knew, none better, that such a claim would be flimsy at best. His royal blood came from women - his mother, Margaret Beaufort, was the granddaughter of John Beaufort (died 1410), the eldest of the bastard sons of John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster. Gaunt's eldest legitimate son was the first Lancastrian
king of England.
Elizabeth of York
Elizabeth of York

Mother
born - 1466 died - 1503

This only known contemporary portrait is circa 1500 and shows Elizabeth holding the white rose of York as the sole surviving heir of the
house of York
(after her two brothers, the princes disappeared from the Tower of London).

She married Henry VII a few months after his victory at Bosworth Field, where he defeated her uncle, King Richard III. Elizabeth was a
popular queen and seemingly content with her sheltered domestic role. She had little choice in the matter; her mother-in-law, Margaret Beaufort was always the dominant female at court.


Elizabeth died on her 38th birthday, 9 days after her 8th pregnancy ended in stillbirth, , when her young son Henry Tudor ( the future
King Henry VIII) was at the
impressionable age of just 12 years old
Lancaster Rose York Rose


King Henry VIII
born 1491



Henry VIII by Joos Van Cleve c.1535

Tudor Rose

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MsSquirrly
MsSquirrly
Latest page update: made by MsSquirrly , Sep 6 2009, 12:39 PM EDT (about this update About This Update MsSquirrly added John - MsSquirrly

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Keyword tags: ancestors
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Anne'sCurls Henry VII 8 Nov 10 2009, 1:05 PM EST by lettice
Thread started: Nov 5 2009, 3:12 PM EST  Watch
This is going to come off as crazy, but for the longest time I have found Henry VII to be quite good looking? Much better looking that his son. Does anyone else find him a handsome dead guy?
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