Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard were executed for committing crimes agains the king. Anne was beheaded for High treason (betraying the trust of the king), Adultery and Incest - none of which were infact true. Katherine was executed for High treason and Adultery - no one is completley sure about the validity of the accusation of treason but the adultery was certainly true. It is famously known that whilst married to the king, Katherine became the mistress of Thomas Culpepper. She had also been betrothed to Francis Dereham and had not admitted this to the king, therefore their marriage had been null and void in the eyes of God from the start. This actually means that King Henry had no right to execute her on the grounds of adultery as they were never formally married and it was not a religiously bound marriage contract.
hope this helps :)
Henry V11 was arguably the best Tudor king and didn't execute his wife. The much married Henry V111 only executed two of his six wives, both for infidelity. In order: Divorced, executed, died, divorced, executed, survived
Henry VIII, who's wives were; Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves, Katherine Seymour and Katherine Parr.
The Protestant Church of England. He created it so that he could divorce his wives
He didn't. His son, King Henry VIII famously married six times - see the related question links below.
Answer King Henry VII of England had one wife. His son, King Henry VIII famously had six wives.
The Capricious King Was King Henry VIII who tied of five of his six wives.
King Henry the 8 had 6 wives.
King Henry the Eighth of England was noted for having six wives.
King Henry VIII. He did it, basically, so that he could get more money and divorce his many wives.
Answer King Henry VIII of England had SIX wives, and at least two mistresses.
There was no King who "had five of his six wives killed." Assumimg this refers to King Henry VIII of England, who married six times and two of whose wives were tried and executed for treason, full details on the links below.
No, divorced only two..Catherine of Aragon his fist wife and Anne of Cleves his fourth wife. Here is an easy way to remember what happened to Henry the VIII's wives: Divoced, beheaded and died; divorced, beheaded, survived.