On 5 May 1527, the great and the good of England and France descended on Greenwich for 24 hours of jousting, feasting and dancing – all to mark the signing of a diplomatic treaty that would signal a new chapter in the two nations’ long and turbulent relationship.

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This wasn’t the first treaty signed during Henry VIII’s reign. Nor was it the last – but it was certainly one of the most momentous. For the Treaty of Westminster, as it would be known, saw the English king ditching his relationship with one European superpower – the Habsburgs, led by Emperor Charles V – and throwing his lot in with the French.

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