Online Encyclopedia

HENRY VI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

HENRY VI  . (1421-1471), king of England, son of Henry V. and Catherine of Valois, was born at Windsor on the 6th of December 1421 . He became king of England on the 1st of September 1422, and a few weeks later, on the
See also:
death of his grandfather Charles VI., was proclaimed king of France also . Henry V. had directed that Richard Beauchamp,
See also:
earl of Warwick (q.v.), should be his son's
See also:
preceptor; Warwick took up his charge in 1428; he trained his pupil to be a good man and refined gentleman, but he could not teach him kingship . As early as 1423 the baby king was made to appear at public functions and take his place in parliament . He was knighted by his
See also:
uncle
See also:
Bedford at Leicester in May 1426, and on the 6th of November 1429 was crowned at Westminster . Early in the next
See also:
year he was taken over to France, and after long delay crowned in Paris on the 16th of December 1431 . His return to
See also:
London on the 14th of
See also:
February 1432 was celebrated with a
See also:
great
See also:
pageant devised by Lydgate . During these early years Bedford ruled France wisely and at first with success, but he could not prevent the
See also:
mischief which Humphrey of Gloucester (q.v.) caused both at home and abroad . Even in France the
See also:
English lost ground steadily after the victory of
See also:
Joan of Arc before Orleans in 1429 . The climax came with the death of Bedford, and defection of Philip of
See also:
Burgundy in 1435 . This closed the first phase of Henry's reign .

There followed fifteen years of vain struggle in France, and growing disorder at home . The determining

factor in politics was the conduct of the war . Cardinal Beaufort, and after him Suffolk, sought by working for peace to secure at least
See also:
Guienne and
See also:
Normandy . Gloucester courted popularity by opposing them throughout; with him was Richard of York, who stood next in succession to the
See also:
crown . Beaufort controlled the council, and it was under his guidance that the king began to take
See also:
part in the government . Thus it was natural that as Henry grew to manhood he seconded heartily the peace policy . That policy was wise, but
See also:
national pride made it unpopular and difficult . Henry himself had not the strength or knowledge to
See also:
direct it, and was unfortunate in his advisers . The cardinal was old, his nephews John and Edmund Beaufort were incompetent, Suffolk, though a man of noble character, was tactless . Suffolk, however, achieved a great success by negotiating the
See also:
marriage of Henry to Margaret of
See also:
Anjou (q.v.) in 1445 . Humphrey of Gloucester and Cardinal Beaufort both died early in 1447 . Suffolk was now all-powerful in the favour of the king and queen .

But his home

administration was unpopular, whilst the incapacity of Edmund Beaufort ended in the loss of all Normandy and Guienne . Suffolk's fall in 1450
See also:
left Richard of York the foremost man in England . Henry's reign then entered on its last phase of dynastic struggle . Cade'srebellion suggested first that popular discontent might result in a change of rulers . But York, as heir to the
See also:
throne, could abide his time . The situation was altered by the
See also:
mental derangement of the king, and the birth of his son in 1453 . York after a struggle secured the protectorship, and for the next year ruled England . Then Henry was restored to sanity, and the queen and Edmund Beaufort, now Duke of Somerset, to power . Open war followed, with the defeat and death of Somerset at St Albans on the 22nd of May 1455 . Nevertheless a hollow peace was patched up, which continued during four years with lack of all governance . In 1459 war broke out again . On the loth of
See also:
July 146o Henry was taken prisoner at Northampton, and forced to acknowledge York as heir, to the exclusion of his own son .

Richard of York's death at

Wakefield (Dec . 29, 1460), and the queen's victory at St Albans (Feb . 17, 1461), brought Henry his freedom and no more .
See also:
Edward of York had himself proclaimed king, and by his decisive victory at
See also:
Towton on the 29th of March, put an end to Henry's reign . For over three years Henry was a fugitive in Scotland . He returned to take part in an abortive rising in 1464 . A year later he was captured in the north, and brought a prisoner to the Tower . For six months in 1470-1471 he emerged to hold a shadowy kingship as Warwick's puppet . Edward's final victory at
See also:
Tewkesbury was followed by Henry's death on the 21st of May 1471, certainly by violence, perhaps at the hands of Richard of Gloucester . Henry was the most hapless of monarchs . He was so honest and well-meaning that he might have made a good ruler in quiet times . But he was crushed by the burden of his
See also:
inheritance .

He had not the

genius to find a way out of the French entanglement or the skill to steer a constitutional monarchy between
See also:
rival factions . So the
See also:
system and policy which were the creations of Henry IV. and Henry V. led under Henry VI. to the ruin of their dynasty . Henry's very virtues added to his difficulties . He was so trusting that any one could influence him, so faithful that he would not give up a minister who had become impossible . Thus even in the
See also:
middle period' he had no real control of the government . In his latter years he was mentally too weak for
See also:
independent
See also:
action . At his best he was a " good and gentlecreature," but too kindly and generous to
See also:
rule others . Religious observances and study were his chief occupations . His piety was genuine;
See also:
simple and pure, he was shocked at any
See also:
suggestion of impropriety, but his rebuke was only " Fie, for shame! forsooth ye are to blame." For
See also:
education he was really zealous . Even as a boy he was concerned for the upbringing of his
See also:
half-brothers, his
See also:
mother's children by Owen Tudor . Later, the planning of his great
See also:
foundations at
See also:
Eton and King's College, Cambridge, was the one thing which absorbed his
See also:
interest . To both he was more than a royal founder, and the credit of the whole scheme belongs to him .

The

charter for Eton was granted on the 11th of
See also:
October 1440, and that for King's College in the following February . Henry himself laid the foundation-stones of both buildings . He frequently visited Cambridge to superintend the progress of the
See also:
work . When at Windsor he loved to send for the boys from his school and give them good advice . Henry's only son was Edward, prince of Wales (1453-1471), who, having shared the many journeys and varying fortunes of his mother, Margaret, was killed after the
See also:
battle of Tewkesbury (May 4, 1471) by some noblemen in attendance on Edward IV . There is a
See also:
life of Henry by his
See also:
chaplain John Waltman (printed at the end of Hearne's edition of Ottcrbourne) ; but it is concerned only with his piety and
See also:
patience in adversity . English chronicles for the reign are scanty; the best are the Chronicles of London (ed . C . L . Kingsford), with the analogous Gregory's Chronicle (ed . J . Gairdner for Camden
See also:
Soc.) and Chronicle of London (ed .

See also:
Sir H . N . Nicolas) . The Poston Letters, with James Gairdner's valuable Introductions, are indispensable . Other useful authorities are Joseph Stevenson's Letters and Papers illustrative of the
See also:
Wars of the English in France during the Reign of Henry VI.; and Correspondence of T . Bekyr{ton (both in " Rolls " series) . For the French war the chief
See also:
sources are the Chronicles of Monstrelet, D'Escouchy and T . Basin . For other documents and
See also:
modern authorities see under HENRY IV . For Henry's foundations see Sir H . C . Maxwell-Lyte,
See also:
History of Eton College (London, 1899), and J .

B . Mullinger, History of the University of Cambridge (London, 1888), (C . L .

End of Article: HENRY VI
[back]
HENRY V
[next]
HENRY VII

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.