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Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived. But who were these women and just what did it take to catch the eye of a king? Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived — this is the rhyme most commonly associated with the six wives of Henry VIII , chanted in classrooms around the world by children learning about the Tudor king and his family.
He had six wives in total between and These were, in order:. One could be forgiven for assuming Henry had notoriously bad luck when it came to marriage, but in truth it was his desire for a male son and heir to the Tudor dynasty that was the driving force behind most of his marital decisions.
Henry would divorce two wives, and behead two — Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard — for adultery and treason. He no doubt would have remained married to his third wife, Jane Seymour, who gave him his son and heir, but she died in childbirth.
In the end, only two wives — Anne of Cleves, who he divorced years prior, and his final wife, Katherine Parr — would outlive him. A devout Catholic, she was married to Henry for nearly 24 years and never acknowledged the annulment of their union. As the new heir to the throne, it was up to Henry to continue the fledgling Tudor dynasty.
Half of her promised dowry of , crowns was paid shortly after. It was the perfect royal match but, just six months later, Arthur was dead. So papal dispensation was sought, and granted, to permit the union — but only after Catherine had sworn that her short marriage had not been consummated. The union seems to have been, initially, one of mutual love as well as dynastic advancement.