What did Henry VII look like? The First Tudor King's Face Reconstructed from his Death Mask

Royalty Now is a human-crafted channel, backed by research and vigilance. While we use generative AI for small bits of our images, they are primarily crafted in Photoshop and NEVER pulled directly from any generative AI engine. Real research, real artistry. Five hundred years ago, a Welsh exile with almost no legitimate claim to the English throne won a battle he probably should have lost — and founded the most famous royal dynasty in English history. This is the reconstructed face of King Henry VII, built from a portrait painted from life, an eyewitness description, and his actual death mask. In our last video, we went searching for the true face of Elizabeth of York.    • The REAL White Princess: What did Elizabet...   This time we turn to the man lying beside her: her husband, the king who ended the Wars of the Roses and stitched together a country torn apart by more than thirty years of civil war. Henry Tudor's rise is one of the unlikeliest in English history. Born at Pembroke Castle in January 1457 to a father who had already died and a mother who was just thirteen years old, Henry spent fourteen years in exile before landing in Wales and defeating Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485 — the last time an English king would win his crown on the battlefield. Unlike his wife, Henry left behind an unusually rich trail of evidence for reconstructing his real face: A portrait painted from life in 1505, by an unknown Netherlandish artist — commissioned as part of marriage negotiations and sent abroad so a prospective bride could see her suitor. It's now the oldest painting in London's National Portrait Gallery. -A written description from Polydore Vergil, the Italian scholar Henry himself commissioned to write a history of England — describing a cheerful, sharp-minded king with reddish-brown hair and dark blue eyes. His funeral effigy — the life-sized figure that lay atop his coffin during the funeral procession. Only its head survives today, and it preserves small, human details the sculptures missed, like a dimple in his chin. If you enjoyed this look at the real face of Henry VII, hit like and subscribe, and let me know in the comments if you'd like to see a more extensive Tudor family tree next. 0:00 Intro 1:00 History 6:10 Henry's Appearance 12:00 Re-creations revealed Find us here: Instagram: @Royalty_Now_ X: @Royalty_Now Tik Tok: @RoyaltyNow RoyaltyNowStudios.com This video creation and final image are ©Royalty Now.