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Henry VII foreign policy - Coggle Diagram
Henry VII foreign policy
England aims
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pretenders (simple,warbeck,suffolk), foreign support
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economy; maintain cloth trade, develop closer trading ties to other countries and have security
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foreign aims
Brittany and France aims - French threat, Henrys relationship to both
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Spanish aims - powerful, preoccupied with Moors and Naples
Burgundy aims - cloth trade, Margaret of burgundy supporting pretenders
treaties
Treaty of Medina Del Campo 1489- agreement that neither Spain or England would support each others enemies = mutual protection
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Treaty of Redon 1489- H7's promise to aid Brittany with an English army to defend against French, cheap and wouldn't cause war but Anne married Charles without H7 approval. so Brittany was taken by France.
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events
Poynings Law 1495 - Irish parliament couldn't make decisions without consulting English parliament first to get approval
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Navigation Acts
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outcome : was a failure as a lot of foreign ships still continued to transport English exports. In 1509, half of trade was carried out by foreign ships. In 1485, H7 started with 7 ships and it fell in 5 in 1488 which it remained through the rest of the reign.