Who was William Warham and what was his family background?
William Warham was the son of Robert Warham, a tenant farmer from Malshanger in Hampshire. He studied at Winchester College before moving to New College, Oxford.
Short answers, pulled from the story.
William Warham was the son of Robert Warham, a tenant farmer from Malshanger in Hampshire. He studied at Winchester College before moving to New College, Oxford.
William Warham assumed the dual roles of Lord Chancellor and Archbishop of Canterbury two years after being consecrated Bishop of London in 1502. This occurred in 1504 when he took office following his service as Keeper of the Great Seal.
Henry VII relied on William Warham to negotiate treaties with European powers during the late fifteenth century. He traveled to Scotland alongside Richard Foxe bishop of Durham in 1497 and helped draft commercial agreements with Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor.
Thomas Wolsey succeeded William Warham as Lord Chancellor in 1515 after the latter resigned from office. His resignation possibly stemmed from disliking Henry VIII foreign policy decisions.
William Warham assisted Thomas Wolsey as assessor during a secret inquiry into Henry marriage validity in 1527. He signed a letter to Pope Clement VII urging acceptance of Henry wishes regarding annulment despite using the phrase ira principis mors est meaning the king anger is death when explaining his reluctance to help Queen Catherine.
In February 1532 William Warham protested against parliamentary acts concerning church matters passed since 1529. The Convocation of 1531 saw clergy vote £100,000 to avoid praemunire penalties while accepting Henry as supreme head so far as Law Christ allows.