Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Henry VII's Foreign Policies - Coggle Diagram
Henry VII's Foreign Policies
Brittany and France
1066: Beginning of English-French rivalry
1337–1453: Hundred Years' War
1485: Henry VII signs a one-year truce with France
1489: Treaty of Redon (Henry sends 6,000 volunteers)
December 1491: Brittany loses independence, Anne marries Charles VIII
October 1492: Henry’s army of 26,000 men besieges Boulogne
November 3, 1492: Treaty of Étaples (745,000 crowns paid to Henry)
Scotland
July 1486: Henry signs three-year truce with Scotland
1488: Assassination of James III, James IV becomes king
1490s: Scotland supports Perkin Warbeck
1497: Truce of Ayton signed
1497–1503: Perpetual Peace of 1503 (Margaret marries James IV)
Burgundy
1468: Charles the Bold marries Margaret of Burgundy
1486: Maximilian becomes Holy Roman Emperor
1493: Magnus Intercursus treaty restores trade relations with England
1495: Alliance against France, England joins in 1496
1503: Margaret of Burgundy dies
1505: Henry supports Philip’s claim to Castile
1506: Philip shipwrecks, signs Malus Intercursus
September 1506: Death of Philip, weakening the treaty
Spain
1479: Union of Aragon and Castile
1489: Treaty of Medina del Campo (Marriage of Prince Arthur and Catherine of Aragon)
Dowry: 100,000 crowns
1501: Catherine arrives in England
April 1502: Death of Prince Arthur
June 1502: Ferdinand and Isabella approve marriage of Catherine to Prince Henry
1503: Queen Elizabeth dies, Henry faces succession issues
1504: Death of Isabella weakens Spain
1506: Philip of Burgundy shipwrecked in England, signs Malus Intercursus
1 more item...