9 March 2022
Dear King Henry VII,
In my last letter we talked about your son King Henry VIII’s wives all six of them. In this letter I going to ask you some questions. You were the last warrior king of the war of the roses, how did it feel to defeat King Richard III on the battle ground of Bosworth field? I bet it felt good to defeat that York king. Did you love Elizabeth of York or was it just another arrangement to end the war of the roses? To combine the red rose of the house of Lancaster and the white rose of York was a big accomplishment. Poor prince Arthur dying before he could be king. I bet that broke your heart to lose your son. Did you and Elizabeth grieve over the lose of your son, because honestly, I don’t know anything about Arthur’s death all that I know is that he died in Ludlow from the sweating sickness, six months after he married Catherine of Aragon.
Did you tell Henry to marry Catherine, just before you died or was that he own choice? Because I believe that Henry married his brothers widow because he had fallen in love with Catherine even while she was married to Arthur, Henry loved her. But we may never know what Henry was thinking when he became king of England.
Your son Henry VIII may have been a tyrant king, but I believe that he was a good man at heart. He just didn’t how to find the right kind of love he needed in his life. He kept getting married to different women just so he could try for a son, when he had the perfect monarch in a daughter he didn’t even want in Elizabeth; named after your wife she became the good queen Bess or Gloriana. Not even his own son did what his daughter did for England. She defeated the Spanish Armada with a small navy at the helm. She brought England into the golden era. Defeating enemies after enemies again and again. Your own great-great granddaughter Mary Queen of Scots tried to have Elizabeth killed so she could take the throne. Which is something that you didn’t want to happen with any of your grand-kids or great-great grand-kids. But since Elizabeth refused to marry and have an heir the Tudor linage ended with her.
Queen Anne Boleyn’s greatest supporter