The primary counselors whom Henry VIII had…
1515 CE
The primary counselors whom Henry VIII had inherited from his father—Richard Foxe, Bishop of Winchester, and William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury—are cautious and conservative, advising the King to be a careful administrator like his father.
Henry had soon appointed to his Privy Council individuals more sympathetic to his own views and inclinations.
Wolsey had been adamantly antiwar; however, when the King in 1511 expressed his enthusiasm for an invasion of France, Wolsey had been able to adapt to the King's mindset and gave persuasive speeches to the Privy Council in favor of war.
Warham and Foxe, who failed to share the King’s enthusiasm for the French war, fall from power and Wolsey takes over as the King's most trusted advisor and administrator.
Warham in 1515 resigns as Lord Chancellor, probably under pressure from the King and Wolsey, and Henry appoints Wolsey in his place.
Wolsey's rise to a position of great secular power parallels his increased responsibilities in the Church.
He had become a Canon of Windsor in 1511, the same year that he became a member of the Privy Council.
He had been made Bishop of Lincoln in 1514, then in the same year Archbishop of York.
Pope Leo X makes him a cardinal in 1515, with the titular church S. Cæciliæ trans Tiberim.
Wolsey establishes the palace known as Hampton Court, on the left bank of the River Thames, fourteen miles (twenty-three kilometers) upstream from the center of London.