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When The Mary Rose Sank – Historic Tudor. Original title: England's forces near Portsmouth, along with a view of the English and French fleets at the start of the action between them on the XIX July MDXLV (July 19, 1545) OTHER NAMES: The Cowdry Picture Cowdry Print Mary Rose last minute This historic picture was originally painted in 1545 or shortly after eyewitness accounts - and destroyed by fire in 1793. It shows the last man standing on the crow's nest of the great Tudor warship Mary Rose - the rest of the ship has disappeared as she drops below the Solent's waves . This article describes the significance of the image and the story of its preservation and republication with modern art printing technology. In one way, the story of the picture bravely reflects the story of the modern technology that helped find, recapture and extremely reserve the Mary Rose warship itself. The image measures almost two meters above and a reproduction in almost full size hangs prominently Mary Rose Museum at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard to illustrate the context of the Sun's battle, the forgotten act that Mary Rose went down. The sale of the same reproductive print helps to raise money for a new Mary Rose Museum building to reunite the inspirational remnants of the resurrected warship with thousands of her crew's Tudor items recovered from the wreckage, from coins and cannons to English longbows. The warship's English flag is still shown flying as it slides to its death, surrounded by bodies in the center of the image, just above Southsea Castle. The naval naval and English army naval arrangements are preparing to defend Southsea and Portsmouth's approaches. The boats are displayed correctly in the Solent's deep water channels. Historians say that all important people who participated in the event are in the picture, and it has proved to be geographically correct. No wonder you ask a question about the picture is all you need to get senior museum staff to talk long about the humble events of that day. On the morning of July 19, 1545, simply the largest invasion ever reached British shores sailed around the eastern side of the Isle of Wight, troops and burnt villages landed near Bembridge and massaged in Solent with the intention of capturing the town and sea base in Portsmouth. It is believed that up to 40,000 French invasion troops were on board. The mighty French fleet, fortified by store galleries borrowed from the Vatican, had been sent to teach King Henry VIII's Protestant England a lesson and cast Henry's claim to France's throne once and for all. Henry had previously been protected from the French by his alliance with Spain, friends he lost when he divorced his first wife, the Spanish Catherine in Aragon. A year earlier, in 1544, Henry had invaded France and laid siege to Boulogne - another battle that was recorded in a matching large panorama picture (now another artistic original) now also available as a modern reproduction that helps Mary Rose to new…