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Henry VIII's fifth wife Catherine Howard was imprisoned at Hampton Court in 1541 before she was beheaded at the age of 21 and her ghost has been said to still haunt the palace.
Known throughout history as the third wife of Henry VIII and the only one to give birth to his son, Edward, Jane Seymour begins as a servant to Queen Catherine, and later serves Queen Anne Boleyn.
DIVORCED, beheaded, died. Divorced, beheaded, survived. The children’s rhyme sums up the generally unfortunate fates of the six wives of King Henry VIII – one of the most famous kings in Brit… ...
Katherine Parr is remembered as Henry VIII’s lucky queen, the one who got away, or, as the old rhyme says, the one who “survived.” ...
Novelist Elizabeth Fremantle, author of "Queen's Gambit," offers a snapshot of Katherine Parr, the sixth wife of Henry VIII, and her life at Hampton Court Palace.
JANE SEYMOUR Jane Seymour was Henry VIII's third wife and she DID manage to give Henry VIII a son! Prince Edward was born to them both in 1537.
What did the Tudor king Henry VIII want from his six wives? And why would he execute them, like Anne Boleyn, or divorce them, like Catherine of Aragon?
In 'Six' the musical, the wives of King Henry VII draw inspiration from 21st-century pop divas. Here how each wife compares to a moden day singer.
After “Too many years lost in history,” as they memorably sing in Six: The Musical,” the wives of Henry VIII continue to receive their belated due, with the latest example being “Firebrand ...
Catherine Parr did more than simply outlive her notorious husband. She played a role in shaping the future of the kingdom—and the reigns of its future queens.
It is now thought that Henry VIII’s third wife, Jane Seymour, and his fifth and youngest wife, Catherine Howard, both of which lived in the palace for a time, have never left.
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