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Anne Boleyn

Anne Boleyn. How far did she Influence Henry VIII’s Religious Policies from 1527 to her death in 1536?. The Divorce. Henry had been married to Catherine of Aragon since 1509… …but she had not given him the son he so wanted.

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Anne Boleyn

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  1. Anne Boleyn How far did she Influence Henry VIII’s Religious Policies from 1527 to her death in 1536? HRSFC Student Presentation 2003

  2. The Divorce • Henry had been married to Catherine of Aragon since 1509… • …but she had not given him the son he so wanted. • Henry decided to divorce Catherine in favour of a new wife claiming that the marriage had been illegitimate. • It was forbidden in the Bible to marry your brother’s widow. • But where did Anne Boleyn fit into this?

  3. Anne’s Role • Some historians (such as Eric Ives) suggest that the relationship between Anne and Henry only became serious after the decision to divorce Catherine. • However others (eg. J.J. Scarisbrick and David Starkey) believe that it was passion for Anne that triggered Henry’s desire for divorce. • It was “cause and effect.” • Anne is compared by Starkey to Lady Macbeth.

  4. Anne and Religious Writings • Anne had a strong religious background and regularly read the works of those critical of the Church. • Sometimes she showed these to Henry… • Simon Fish – “A Supplication for Beggars” • William Tyndale – “Obedience” • Anne even marked the passages that she thought Henry ought to read in particular. • He later declared: “This book is for me and all Kings to read”

  5. Anne and Wolsey • Wolsey was the power behind Henry’s religious policy on the divorce • Was she responsible for his downfall? • Retha Warnicke: “unreasonable” • “Ascribes too much political power to Anne” • Maria Dowling: “Anne was determined to remove Wolsey from his position of supreme power under the King.”

  6. Anne and Cromwell • Thomas Cromwell replaced Wolsey as Henry’s chief ministers and so was the power behind many religious policies. • Eric Ives describes how Anne was an “an effective influence on Cromwell” and that she viewed him as “her man.” • However Warnicke claims that the two “did not form a political faction” and that they functioned independently of each other.

  7. Anne and Patronage • Anne gained a reputation for patronising reformist members of the clergy. • A list exists of bishops that Anne “appointed” which includes Thomas Cranmer who became Archbishop. • It was Cranmer who kick-started the Reformation. • Ives: “the most striking evidence of Anne Boleyn’s influence within the Church.” • “Appointments” are disputed by other historians. • “Exaggerates greatly her influence in religious matters.”

  8. Conclusion… • “Anne Boleyn was not a catalyst in the English Reformation; she was an element in the equation.” • “Brief though Anne’s influence was, it was a thousand days of support for reform from the throne itself.”

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