Edward VI (1537-53), king of England, the son of Henry VIII by Jane Seymour, was born at Hampton Court. Being only nine years old at his accession, a council of regency was formed under his uncle, the Earl of Hertford, later duke of Somerset. Edward was much interested in religious and educational matters. He sympathized with the principles of the Reformation, and during his reign Protestantism in England made rapid strides. The Bloody Statute of Henry VIII was repealed; and a new prayer book, known as the First Prayer Book of Edward VI, was issued in 1549. In 1552 the Second Prayer Book, of a more reformed type than the First, was issued, as well as the forty-two articles embodying the doctrines of the Church of England. Edward died of consumption in his sixteenth year. [World Wide Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1935]


Edward VI (1537-53), king of England and Ireland (1547-53), the last in the male line of the house of Tudor.

Edward was born at Hampton Court on October 12, 1537, the only son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour, his third wife. He succeeded to the throne on the death of his father early in 1547. On his accession, his maternal uncle, Edward Seymour, 1st earl of Hertford, was named Lord Protector and duke of Somerset. In 1547 the Protector, in Edward's name, invaded Scotland, using as a pretext an alleged violation by the Scots of an agreement to give Mary, queen of Scots, in marriage to Edward. The English forces defeated the Scots at Pinkie in September of that year.

Both Edward and the Protector strongly favored the principle of the Reformation and did much to establish Protestantism in England. The body of edicts known as the Six Articles, enacted in the reign of Henry VIII, was repealed, and a new service book, the first Book of Common Prayer, was imposed in 1549. Although it was moderate in its approach, it was strongly opposed by Roman Catholics and stirred some uprisings. It subsequently, however, came into general use in the Anglican church.

In 1549 Somerset's attempt to help poor peasants by forbidding enclosure was thwarted by rich landowners, with the result that the peasants revolted. The opportunity was used by John Dudley, later duke of Northumberland, to remove Somerset from power. Edward was thereafter virtually controlled by Dudley, who in 1552 persuaded him to have Somerset executed for treason. The king became seriously ill of tuberculosis the year after. Shortly before Edward's death at Greenwich on July 6, 1553, Dudley induced him to sign a will depriving his half sisters, who later ruled as Mary I and Elizabeth I, of their claim to the royal succession. The right of succession then fell to Lady Jane Grey, who had married Dudley's son, but she was deposed by Mary a few days later. [Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopedia]

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