The Beatles were one of the most successful and influential rock bands of the 20th century. The group was formed by the "Fab Four": John Lennon (rhythm guitar, vocals), Paul McCartney (bass guitar, vocals), George Harrison (lead guitar, vocals), and Ringo Starr (drums, vocals). From Liverpool to Global Domination Formed in Liverpool in 1960, they dominated the British and international charts from 1962 to 1970. In the early 1960s, their enormous popularity sparked a global phenomenon known as "Beatlemania." As their music grew in sophistication—led by primary songwriters Lennon and McCartney—the band evolved from pop idols into the embodiment of the 1960s counterculture. They experimented with psychedelia, Indian classical music, and studio techniques that changed the face of the recording industry forever. A Prolific Legacy The Beatles wrote over 200 songs (including 186 original compositions released during their active years). Their catalog includes timeless mast...

Henry VII

In 1485 the Wars of the Roses came to an end with the victory of Henry Tudor, who was crowned king Henry VII of England.
Under his rule England enjoyed a long peaceful and rich period: the army, the navy and the whole machine of the State administration were reorganized and put under the direct control of the king.
He also laid the foundation of English Humanism.
In his search for powerful political alliances, Henry VII gave his eldest son Arthur in marriage to Catherine of Aragon, the aunt of the future Emperor Charles V of Spain.
Next, Henry VII's son, king Henry VIII, continued what his father had begun.
His accession was welcomed by humanist scholars; in fact, he had all the gifts of body and mind that had a prince: he was poet, soldier and musician.
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| Henry VIII |
Henry VIII 's allegiance to the Catholic cause against Martin Luther was so strong that he was proclaimed defensor fidei by the Pope.
However, King Henry VIII broke with Catholic Church when pope Clement VII refused to grant him a divorce from his first wife Catherine of Aragon, in order to marry Anne Boleyn.
King VIII established the Act of Supremacy: the Church of England was declared independent and its bishops became subject to the authority of the king, who was proclaimed Head of the Church.
The old powerful aristocracy of feudal origin and Catholic sympathies was replaced by a new Protestant aristocracy linked to the Tudors by the purchase of the lands confiscated from the monasteries.
However, Henry VII's policy met with several opponents.
The most famous was the Bishop of Canterbury sir Thomas More, who refused to recognize the supremacy of the king in ecclesiastical matters and remained faithful to the Church of Rome.
For this reason, More was beheaded.
When king Henry VIII died, his son king of England and Ireland Edward VI accessed to the throne.
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| Edward VI |
Under his rule, radical Protestantism was strong and in 1549 Edward VI promulgated the Book of Common Prayer, which became the basis of the Anglican communion.
During this period Catholics were persecuted.
In 1553 king Edward VI died because of tuberculosis and his sister Mary I, daughter of Catherine of Aragon, became queen of England and Ireland.
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| Mary I |
Her first goal was the restoration of the Catholic religion and the restoration of papal supremacy in England.
According this goal, Mary I beheaded all Protestant opponents and, for this reason, she was so-called Bloody Mary.



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