Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn, Jasper Ridley. A fascinating moment from history, these love letters reveal a more tender side to the famously uxoricidal Henry VIII. This book is the very definition of short and sweet and demonstrates that Henry certainly had more to attract his many wives and several mistresses than his position as king. This should ...

  2. 29 de ene. de 2007 · Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn : the love letters ... Anne Boleyn, Queen, consort of Henry VIII, King of England, 1507-1536 Call number srlf ...

  3. 1 de ago. de 2009 · The Love Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn: With Notes by Henry, King of England Henry, Queen consort of Henry VIII King of England Anne Boleyn, Anne Boleyn , Daniel Berkeley Updike, Merrymount Press

  4. 13 de ene. de 2023 · Henry’s wish to be soon in the arms of his “sweet-heart” Anne, “whose pretty duckys I trust shortly to kiss”, has proved irresistible. But it has always been a mystery how the letters ended up in, of all places, the Vatican Library. From the seventeenth century to this day people have speculated about how they got there.

  5. This volume contains an engrossing selection of correspondence, reports and other documents concerning Henry and his wives. The central part of the book is a famous collection of love letters sent by the king to his second wife Anne Boleyn, one of his spouses who lost her head to be superceded by another beauty of the court Jane Seymour, one of Anne's ladies in waiting.

    • Henry VIII King of England, Henry Ellis, Henry VIII
  6. Henry VIII. The Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn is perhaps the most remarkable document of the kind known to exist. The letters appear to have been written after Anne Boleyn had been sent away from court, in consequence of reports injurious to her reputation, which had begun to be publicly circulated. Her removal indeed was so abrupt that ...

  7. In the Vatican Library, there survive 17 highly personal love letters, written in King Henry VIII's own hand to Anne Boleyn between 1527 and 1528. How the letters got there no one exactly knows - they were probably stolen from Anne to be used as evidence in Henry's divorce trial with Catherine of Aragon. In the second of her Explainer podcasts ...