Henry VIII Crowned King Of England


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Henry was a king who hadn’t been expected to rule ~ he only took the throne because his older brother Arthur, had died.
Henry had originally been predicted to enter the Church.
In fact, his grandmother Margaret Beaufort, harboured hopes that Henry would become the archbishop.

He lived to play, and work came in~between.
Most mornings Henry woke up around eight o’clock.
Once he was out of bed, he preferred hunting or hawking over the business of governing.
When his outdoor activities ended, Henry could find time to meet some of his obligations, but work had to be completed quickly ~ his nights were usually filled with dancing, gambling or playing cards.

But while ruling the land, he also made sure he found time to enjoy himself.

He was an accomplished musician, who sang and played instruments such as the recorder and the lute.
He composed and arranged music himself ~ his work includes "Pastimes with Good Company," but, contrary to popular belief, he wasn’t the man behind "Greensleeves"

There were plenty of illnesses around, for him to worry about, but two particular concerns were the sweating sickness, and the plague.
When a severe wave of the sweating sickness hit in 1517-18, Henry left London for nearly a year.

As he grew older, particularly once he entered middle age, Henry put on a massive amount of weight.
Henry weighed nearly 400 pounds when he died in 1547.
The king also suffered from painful ulcers on his legs and in his later years, had trouble standing and walking.

In 2011, bioarchaeologist Catrina Banks Whitley and anthropologist Kyra Kramer, shared their theory that Henry was a member of the rare blood group, that is positive for the Kell antigen.
This means that if the king impregnated a woman, and the baby inherited Kell-positive status, the mother would build up Kell antibodies.
Though that first pregnancy would likely not be affected, future Kell-positive fetuses, would be attacked by those antibodies.
The fact that Henry’s first wife, Katharine of Aragon, experienced many miscarriages and the loss of children soon after birth, fits this theory.
Their one surviving daughter, Mary, although not the result of a first pregnancy, could have been Kell negative, then her mother’s antibodies wouldn’t have affected her.

Henry’s other known children Edward VI and the illegitimate Henry FitzRoy, were also first pregnancies for their respective mothers.
Obviously the science to prove or disprove this hypothesis, didn’t exist in the Tudor era, but it wouldn’t have mattered if it had ~ anyone who tried to tell Henry that he was the real problem would’ve been risking their head......

Lets try and de~bunk some of the myths ~
* Henry had syphilis.......
This is highly unlikely, and has been credibly debunked.
If Henry had been given mercury ~ the go-to treatment for syphilis at the time ~ it would’ve been almost impossible to hide the side effects, and would have been mentioned on the Kings medical records.
There has been no record found of the King having been administered Mercury - the King's medical records were meticulously written down, in case of mis-managed medication, overdoses, adverse reactions etc...
* A jousting accident left Henry with brain damage......
The king did have a serious jousting accident in 1536… but he didn’t display a sudden personality change overnight.
This theory is also questionable, but Henry may well have suffered from some frontal lobe injury, which got progressively worse over time.
This, and the constant pain he was in from his legs, would most likely be the reason he ended up so cranky.
* Henry had McLeod syndrome......
This syndrome could account for Henry’s later mobility issues.
Symptoms for McLeod usually start in the 30s and are slowly progressive.
Common symptoms include neuropathy, cardiomyopathy, seizures, late on~set dementia and behavioural changes.
McLeod syndrome is also tied to the Kell blood group, so the pregnancy problems experienced by Henry’s partners are another indication in its favour.

Professor Diarmaid MacCulloch of Oxford University told The Telegraph in 2015,
"His sexual shenanigans were not all that great, by the standards of most monarchs of the time"
Contrary to popular belief, Henry wasn't in and out of women's beds, getting his hands on every floozy he could.....
He was actually quite devout, and although he had mistresses, he didn't have many, unlike most monarch's of the era.
The Tudor Intruders (and more)
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