16 February – Thetford Priory is closed down as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
23 March – Waltham Abbey is the last abbey to close as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries.[3] Composer Thomas Tallis, a musician here, moves to Canterbury Cathedral.
April – the cathedral priories of Canterbury and Rochester are transformed into secular cathedral chapters, concluding the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
June – Anne of Cleves is banished from court to Richmond Palace.
9 July – Henry's marriage to Anne of Cleves is annulled.[3] She is given a generous settlement with several residences in England, is referred to as "the King's Beloved Sister" and will outlive him and all his other wives.
Publication of The Byrth of Mankynde, the first printed book in English on obstetrics, and one of the first published in England to include engraved plates.[6]
John Brooke and Sons established at Armitage Bridge in West Yorkshire as textile manufacturers; the business will still exist in family hands into the 21st century.[11]
April – posthumous publication of Cardinal John Fisher's Psalmi seu precationes in the original and in an anonymous English translation by its sponsor, Queen Catherine Parr.[13]
29 May – publication of Catherine Parr's Prayers or Meditations, the first book published by an English queen under her own name, and the King's Primer, another devotional work overseen by her.[13]
18–19 July – Battle of the Solent between English and French fleets. On 19 July, Henry VIII's flagship, the Mary Rose, sinks[2] but the French are unable to land on the English mainland.
27 January – execution of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, father of Henry Howard, for treason is given royal approval but his life is spared by death of the king the following day.[15]
7 September – the funeral of dowager queen Catherine Parr, widow of Sir Thomas Seymour, in the chapel at Sudeley Castle (Gloucestershire) is the first in the British Isles to be held in the English language.[16]
Beverley Minster in Yorkshire is suppressed as a collegiate church on Easter Sunday.[17]
Howden Minster in Yorkshire is suppressed as a collegiate church.
Destruction of the religious colleges of Glasney and Crantock in Cornwall end the formal scholarship that has helped sustain the Cornish language and cultural identity.
5 December – Cardinal Reginald Pole receives 26 votes at the Papal conclave, only two short of the requisite two-thirds majority to be elected as Pope.
^Freeman, Thomas S. (2013). "One Survived: The Account of the Katherine Parr in Foxe's "Books of Martyrs"". In Betteridge, Thomas; Lipscomb, Suzannah (eds.). Henry VIII and the Court: Art, Politics and Performance. Farnham: Ashgate. pp. 241–242.
^Rosen, Adrienne (2010). "Tudor Rebellions". In Tiller, Kate; Darkes, Giles (eds.). An Historical Atlas of Oxfordshire. Chipping Norton: Oxfordshire Record Society. pp. 82–3. ISBN978-0-902509-68-9.
^"1549". Lincoln Cathedral. Archived from the original on 2011-07-13. Retrieved 2010-10-21.