www.verdultart.com
Home
Help
View Cart
My Account
Help
Search:
Products
Recession Buster Sale*
Originals
Lithographs
Giclée
China Black Pottery
Appraisals & Services
Books and Publications
Tax Write-offs
Memberships
Member Market Watch
Art Selling Program
Art Financing
Auction: Best Buy
Auction: Private Only
Our Links
Williamverdult.com
Products and Services
Verdult Index-Blog
Insider-Blog
Verdult Forum
The Gallery
Contact Support
Specials
Get Yazzy's Best Buy Painting!
Join our mailing list!
Home
>
Giclée
>
King - Henry IV- Kings and Queens of Europe - Gicleé Collection
Our Price:
$25,500.00
Sale Price: $1,499.00
You Save $24,001.00!
Product Code:
YPC-98GICLEE10
Qty:
Description
King - Henry IV - Kings and Queens of Europe - Gicleé Collection
Features
Artist: William Verdult
Title: King IV - Henry
Original apparaised for $80,000 by the National Institute of Appraisers.
Frame: unframed
Type: Oil on Canvas (Gicleé)
Original Year Created 2009
Registration Number #Assigned - Assigned/100 (Limited Edition of 100).
Size 21 X 31 inches
Part of Kings and Queens of Europe Gicleé Collection
William Verdult Fine Art Canvas Giclee with corporation approved facsimile signature printed below the image.
Background
Henry IV (1399-1413 AD)
................................................................
Henry IV was born at Bolingbroke in 1367 to John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster. He married Mary Bohun in 1380, who bore him seven children before her death in 1394. In 1402, Henry remarried, taking as his bride Joan of Navarre.
Henry had an on-again, off-again relationship with his cousin, Richard II . He was one of the Lords Appellant who, in 1388, persecuted many of Richard's advisor-favorites, but his excellence as a soldier gained the king's favor - Henry was created Duke of Hereford in 1397. In 1398, however, the increasingly suspicious Richard banished him fov ten years. John of Gaunt's death in 1399 prompted Richard to confiscate the vast Lancastrian estates; Henry invaded England while Richard was on campaign in Ireland, usurping the throne from the king.
The very nature of Henry's usurpation dictated the circumstances of his reign - incessant rebellion became the order of the day. Richard's supporters immediately revolted upon his deposition in 1400. In Wales , Owen Glendower led a national uprising that lasted until 1408; the Scots waged continual warfare throughout the reign; the powerful families of Percy and Mortimer (the latter possessing a stronger claim to the throne than Henry) revolted from 1403 to 1408; and Richard Scrope, Archbishop of York, proclaimed his opposition to the Lancastrian claim in 1405.
Two political blunders in the latter years of his reign diminished Henry's support. His marriage to Joan of Navarre (of whom it was rumored practiced necromancy) was highly unpopular - she was, in fact, convicted of witchcraft in 1419. Scrope and Thomas Mawbray were executed in 1405 after conspiring against Henry; the Archbishop's execution alarmed the English people, adding to his unpopularity. He developed a nasty skin disorder and epilepsy, persuading many that God was punishing the king for executing an archbishop.
Crushing the myriad of rebellions was costly, which involved calling Parliament to fund such activities. The House of Commons used the opportunity to expand its powers in 1401, securing recognition of freedom of debate and freedom from arrest for dissenting opinions. Lollardy, the Protestant movement founded by John Wycliffe during the reign of Edward III , gained momentum and frightened both secular and clerical landowners, inspiring the first anti-heresy statute, De Heritico Comburendo, to become law in 1401.
Henry, ailing from leprosy and epilepsy, watched as Prince Henry controlled the government for the last two years of his reign. In 1413, Henry died in the Jerusalem Chamber of Westminster Abbey. Rafael Holinshed explained his unpopularity in Chronicles of England : "... by punishing such as moved with disdain to see him usurp the crown, did at sundry times rebel against him, he won(himself more hatred, than in all his life time ... had been possible for him to have weeded out and removed." Unlikely as it may seem (due to the amount of rebellion in his reign), Henry left his eldest son an undisputed succession.
Related Products...
King Tutt - Wory Ceereate by William Verdult
Sale Price: $999.00
Add
Ramses III by William Verdult
Sale Price: $999.00
Add
Birch Tree by William Verdult
Sale Price: $18,000.00
Add
Queen of Scots by William Verdult
Sale Price: $1,499.00
Add
The Egyptian by William Verdult
Sale Price: $999.00
Add
Share your knowledge of this product with other customers...
Be the first to write a review.
Browse for more products in the same category as this item:
Giclée
The Tut Collection - by William Verdult
$25.99
Romance
$63,000.00
Without
$3,700.00
Appraisal by the National Institute of Certified Appraisers (NIA).
$375.00
Nina
$45,000.00
Tranquil Floral
$3,000.00