(Brother A prop, not every painting of the emperor can be hung...for example, this Richard III who belongs to the "enemy" of the Tudor family...)
I didn't expect Margaret to die in the end, but it was never said that she and Brandon had children! So how can the story go on without Jane Grey (granddaughter of historically Charles Brandon and Henry VIII's sister Mary) or Mary Queen of Scots (granddaughter of Margaret and James IV)?
Henry Fitzroy seems to have died too soon, and it is said that he should live into his teens.
Queen Catherine was always tough and never bowed her head for any reason; it was just that she was too pitiful, obviously it was not her fault for not having a son--the paragraph before leaving the court was appreciated.
Anne Boleyn lived out her initial refusal and welcomed her future invincibility. Alas, I think everyone will say that she is a disaster, but without Henry VIII's son complex and passionate seeds, how could she have achieved her?
Henry VIII, although he was still young at the time, was not so good-looking! Even though he is the son of the beautiful Elizabeth of York, his father does not seem to be a handsome man! The year he met Anne Boleyn was 1526, when he should have been thirty-five years old, and it was not a big problem to find thirty-year-old Jonathan Rhys Meyers to play, but why set the age in his twenties? However, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn procrastinated until 1533 to successfully marry, and it is difficult to imagine that the emperor who changed his mistresses like clothes would be so determined (of course, for the sake of trying every means to get a legitimate son)
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