Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Professor Ives has demonstrated the weakness of some of the grounds for thinking that Henry VIII's will was tampered with after 30 December 1546. But he has not mentioned Paget's later testimony suggesting that the ‘unfulfilled gifts clause’ was inserted in the will after 12 January 1547. Even if it was part of the will by 30 December, the gifts implemented by its authority resulted from later skilful and ruthless manipulation of the king. Henry's ‘unwritten will’ greatly strengthened Edward Seymour and his allies and gave William Paget, who was largely responsible for its final shape, the means of buying off potential objectors to Seymour's elevation to the protectorship.
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17 APC, 1547–50, p. 19.
18 Ibid. pp. 16–19.
19 Miller, , ‘Henry VIII's unwritten will’, p. 91Google Scholar, discussing draft list of grants in Public Record Office, SP 10/1/11.
20 Ives, , ‘Henry VIII's will’, p. 802Google Scholar, perhaps makes these promotions seem more deliberate and carefully planned than they really were.
21 British Library, Add. MS 48126, fos. 6–7. Compare the account in Add. MS 48023, fo. 350 (Dr G. Bernard kindly gave me a copy of his transcript of this latter document).
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