Will of Henry VIII of England


The will of Henry VIII of England was a significant constitutional document, or set of contested documents created in the 1530s and 1540s, affecting English and Scottish politics for the rest of the 16th century. In conjunction with legislation passed by the English Parliament, it was supposed to have a regulative effect in deciding the succession to the three following monarchs of the House of Tudor, the three legitimate and illegitimate children of King Henry VIII of England. Its actual legal and constitutional status was much debated; and arguably the succession to Elizabeth I of England did not respect Henry's wishes.

Last testament

Henry VIII made a final revision to his last will and testament on 30 December 1546. It was signed using the "dry stamp", a device in use since 1545 and under the control of Anthony Denny and John Gates. It confirmed the line of succession as Edward, Mary and Elizabeth; following them, the Grey and Suffolk families. The will was read, stamped and sealed on 27 January 1547, when the dying king was past speech. He died within hours, the next day.
The document still exists, but this fact was not generally known or accepted by the 1560s, when some believed it was lost, or had been destroyed.

The 16 executors

The will appointed 16 executors. This body had little impact in the short term, because its powers were given to a smaller group. It was officially the council of Edward VI of England until 12 March 1547, after which Protector Somerset nominated the council. The effective end of the Somerset Protectorate came in early 1550. Those executors who were still alive had a leading constitutional role, in theory from 13 October 1549.
The executors comprised:
NamePosition/professionReligious orientationDate of death
Thomas BromleyChief Justice of the King's Bench1555
Sir Anthony BrowneCourtierCatholic1548
Thomas CranmerArchbishop of CanterburyReformer1556
Sir Anthony DennyCourtierReformer1549
John Dudley, Viscount LisleMilitary leaderReformer1553
Sir William HerbertCourtierReformer1570
Sir Edward MontagueChief Justice of the Common Pleas1557
Sir Edward NorthLawyerNeutral1564
Sir William PagetPoliticianNeutral1563
William Paulet, Baron St John of BasingPoliticianNeutral1572
John RussellAdmiralReformer1555
Edward Seymour, Earl of HertfordMilitary leaderReformer1552
Cuthbert TunstallBishop of DurhamCatholic1559
Sir Edward WottonAdministrator? Catholic1551
Nicholas WottonCleric and diplomat? Catholic1567
Thomas WriothesleyAdministratorCatholic1550

Pollard wrote that the traditional view, that the balance of the group of executors on the religious question was deliberately poised to create an equilibrium, is mistaken: the exclusion of Stephen Gardiner tipped the balance to the evangelical reformers. MacCulloch considers that in 1550, after the fall of Somerset, there was a balance, but that the evangelicals manoeuvred to a position of superiority.

Third Succession Act

The constitutional standing of Henry VIII's last will depended on the Third Succession Act that received the royal assent in 1544. Section VI of the act provides that the line of succession, if not continued by the king's children by his marriages, should be regulated by the contents of the king's last will. The wording is conditional on the will being signed by the king's hand. The issue of the "dry stamp" signature was brought up in the context of Anglo-Scottish diplomacy, carried out by Robert Melville on behalf of Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1567. Since the provisions of the will disadvantaged all the claimants of the House of Stuart, the point remained important.