My favourite would be Anne Boleyn. Anne is often called the most influential Queen Consort in British History, and not without reasons.
I see her as strong-willed, smart woman. Elizabeth was a good mixture of her father, and mother.
I don't have anything against Catherine of Aragon, and I quite like her. If she were the heir to Isabella I, not Joana, I think we would have another great Queen.
Jane Seymour is probably my least-favourite. She just doesn't have a 'face' for me - pale, uninteresting, always doing what others told her.
Of other wives, I like Anne of Cleves, she'd probably be an excellent wife for some Duke or Prince, but definitely not Henry. There is no straight opinion for Katherine Howard - I pity but don't like her. Catherine Parr is probably my second favourite after Anne Boleyn, even ahead of Catherine of Aragon.
Catherine of Aragon. First, only and real wife of King Henry VIII.
Well, all of Henry's wives ater Anne Boleyn were 'legal' and 'real' wives, even if we don't acknowledge his divorce with Catherine of Aragon. He was a widower by the time he married Jane, so she was quite a 'real' wife.
I voted for Anne of Cleves because she was a foreigner without an influential family who had the misfortune not to be liked or ven be tolerated by her husband but made her way in her new country to a personal success. Anne cared and protected princesses Mary and Elizabeth from their father. Mary and Elizabeth rarely showed the warm side of their characters but sometimes they did - I put it back to the fact that Anne had taught them that not all people were to be distrusted per se. For Mary Tudor Anne was her father's real widow and she appointed her second lady in the realm after herself on her coronation. When Anne of Cleves died she was really mourned by queen Mary and princess Elizabeth.
Actually the more that I think of it the more Katharine Howard reminds me of Princess Diana. Very young, very foolish, could be used by others, hung around with really disreputable company, could be nasty, and ended dying way too young because of her foolishness.
The main leading cause of death for women during that era was child birth.
That is disgusting, a person wearing actual silk worms.
I have much admiration (and I suppose pity) for Catherine of Aragon - I think she is my favourite. She was a good mother, and dignified!
You know, I thought her Holbein pictures were quite nice. Flemmish cow indeed!It seems it always comes down to Catherine of Anne. Although Anne of Cleaves was smart enough not to try to stop Henry from getting a divorce and testified that the marriage had never been consumated. In the end, she was given a title and a castle. Unlike his other wives, Anne didn't make out to badly.