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=== Protestant alliance === Henry married again, for a third time, to [[Jane Seymour]], the daughter of a Wiltshire knight, and with whom he had become enamoured while she was still a lady-in-waiting to Queen Anne. Jane became pregnant, and in 1537 produced a son, who became [[King Edward VI]] following Henry's death in 1547. Jane died of [[puerperal fever]] only a few days after the birth, leaving Henry devastated. Cromwell continued to gain the king's favour when he designed and pushed through the [[Laws in Wales Acts]], uniting England and Wales. In 1540, Henry married for the fourth time to the daughter of a Protestant German duke, [[Anne of Cleves]], thus forming an alliance with the Protestant German states. Henry was reluctant to marry again, especially to a Protestant, but he was persuaded when the court painter [[Hans Holbein the Younger]] showed him a flattering portrait of her. She arrived in England in December 1539, and Henry rode to [[Rochester, Kent|Rochester]] to meet her on 1 January 1540. Although the historian [[Gilbert Burnet]] claimed that Henry called her a ''Flanders Mare'', there is no evidence that he said this; in truth, court ambassadors negotiating the marriage praised her beauty. Whatever the circumstances were, the marriage failed, and Anne agreed to a peaceful annulment, assumed the title ''My Lady, the King's Sister'', and received a large settlement, which included [[Richmond Palace]], [[Hever Castle]], and numerous other estates across the country. Although the marriage made sense in terms of foreign policy, Henry was still enraged and offended by the match. Henry chose to blame Cromwell for the failed marriage, and ordered him beheaded on 28 July 1540.{{Sfn|Loades|1991|p=4}} Henry kept his word and took care of Anne in his last years alive; however, after his death Anne suffered from extreme financial hardship because Edward VI's councillors refused to give her any funds and confiscated the homes she had been given. She pleaded to her brother to let her return home, but he only sent a few agents who tried to assist in helping her situation and refused to let her return home. Anne died on 16 July 1557 in [[Chelsea Manor]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Warnicke |first=Retha |date=2005 |title=Anne of Cleves, Queen of England |journal=History Review |issue=51 |pages=39β40}}</ref> [[File:Thomas Cranmer by Gerlach Flicke.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Thomas Cranmer]], Henry's first Protestant [[Archbishop of Canterbury]], responsible for the [[Book of Common Prayer]] during Edward VI's reign]] The fifth marriage was to the young [[Catherine Howard]], niece of the Catholic [[Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk]]. Catherine was promoted by Norfolk in the hope that she would persuade Henry to restore the Catholic religion in England. Henry called her his "rose without a thorn", but the marriage ended in failure. Henry's infatuation with Catherine started before the end of his marriage with Anne when she was still a member of Anne's court. Catherine was young and vivacious, but Henry's age made him less inclined to use Catherine in the bedroom; rather, he preferred to admire her, which Catherine soon grew tired of. Catherine, forced into a marriage to an unattractive, obese man over 30 years her senior, had never wanted to marry Henry, and allegedly conducted an affair with the King's favourite, [[Thomas Culpeper]], while Henry and she were married. During her questioning, Catherine first denied everything but eventually she was broken down and told of her infidelity and her pre-nuptial relations with other men. Henry, first enraged, threatened to torture her to death but later became overcome with grief and self-pity. She was accused of treason and was [[executed]] on 13 February 1542, destroying the English Catholic holdouts' hopes of a national reconciliation with the Catholic Church. Her execution also marked the end of the Howard family's power and influence within the English court.{{Sfn|Loades|1991|pp=4β8}} By the time Henry conducted another marriage with his final wife [[Catherine Parr]] in July 1543, the old Roman Catholic advisers, including the Duke of Norfolk, had lost all their power and influence. Norfolk himself was still a committed Catholic, and he was nearly persuaded to arrest Catherine for preaching Lutheran doctrines to Henry while she attended his ill health. However, she managed to reconcile with the King after vowing that she had only argued about religion with him to take his mind off the suffering caused by his ulcerous leg. Her peacemaking also helped reconcile Henry with his daughters Mary and Elizabeth and fostered a good relationship between her and Edward.
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