Mary Tudor, Queen of France

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This article is about Mary, queen consort of France. For her niece and namesake, Mary Tudor, queen regnant of England, see Mary I of England.
Mary Tudor
Queen consort of France (more...)
Consort 9 October 1514 - 1 January 1515
Coronation 5 November 1514
Spouse Louis XII
Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk
Issue
Henry Brandon, 1st Earl of Lincoln
Frances, Duchess of Suffolk
Eleanor, Countess of Cumberland
Titles and styles
The Duchess of Suffolk
The Dowager Queen of France
The Queen of France
Princess Mary of England
Royal house House of Tudor
Father Henry VII of England
Mother Elizabeth of York
Born March 18, 1496(1496-03-18)
Richmond Palace
Died June 25, 1533 (aged 37)
Westhorpe Hall, Suffolk, England

Mary Tudor (March 18, 1496June 25, 1533) was the younger sister of Henry VIII of England and queen consort of France due to her marriage to Louis XII. After his death, she married Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk.

Contents

[edit] First marriage: Queen of France

A sketch of Mary during her brief period as Queen of France
A sketch of Mary during her brief period as Queen of France

Mary was the fifth child of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York, and the youngest to survive infancy. She was born at Richmond Palace. She and her brother Henry VIII were close when they were children – he named his daughter, the future Queen Mary, after her and the warship Mary Rose was also named in her honour.

Known in her youth as one of the most beautiful princesses in Europe,[1] Mary was betrothed in December 1507 to Charles of Castile, later Holy Roman Emperor. However, changes in the political alliances of the European powers meant this wedding did not take place.[2] Instead, Cardinal Wolsey negotiated a peace treaty with France, and on October 9, 1514, at the age of 18, Mary married its 52-year-old King Louis XII at Abbeville. One of her Maids of Honour who attended her in France was Anne Boleyn. Mary was described by the Venetian Ambassador as " a Paradise- tall, slender, grey-eyed, possessing an extreme pallor". She wore her glorious silken red-gold hair flowing loose to her waist.[3] Despite two previous marriages, the king had no living sons and sought to produce an heir; but Louis died on January 1, 1515, less than three months after he married Mary, reputedly worn out by his exertions in the bedchamber. Their union produced no children.

Following Louis's death, the new King Francis I made attempts to arrange a second marriage for the beautiful widow.[4]

[edit] Second marriage: Duchess of Suffolk

English Royalty
House of Tudor

Royal Coat of Arms
Henry VII
   Arthur, Prince of Wales
   Margaret, Queen of Scots
   Henry VIII
   Mary, Queen of France

Mary had been unhappy with her marriage to Louis, as at this time she was almost certainly already in love with Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk.[5] Henry knew of his sister's feelings[6] but wanted any future marriage to be to his advantage. When he sent Brandon to bring Mary back to England in late January 1515, he made the Duke promise that he would not propose to her.[7] However, the couple married in secret in France on March 3, 1515. Technically this was treason, as Brandon had married a Royal Princess without Henry's consent. The King was outraged, and the Privy Council urged that Brandon should be imprisoned or executed. Due to the intervention of Wolsey, and Henry's affection for both his sister and Brandon, the couple were let off with a heavy fine.[8] They were officially married on May 13, 1515 at Greenwich Palace.

Mary Tudor and Charles Brandon
Mary Tudor and Charles Brandon

Even after her second marriage, Mary was normally referred to at the English court as "the French Queen", and was not known as the "Duchess of Suffolk" in her lifetime.[9]

After the marriage, Mary spent most of her time at the Duke's country seat of Westhorpe Hall in Suffolk.[10] She and Brandon had three children:

Relations between Henry VIII and Mary were strained in the late 1520s when she opposed the King's attempt to obtain an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, whom Mary had known for many years. She had developed a strong dislike for the future Queen Anne Boleyn,[11] whom she had first encountered in France.[12]

Mary died at Westhorpe Hall, Westhorpe, Suffolk on June 25, 1533, and was initially buried at the abbey at Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. Her body was moved to nearby St. Mary's Church, also in Bury St Edmunds, when the abbey was destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Her husband soon married their son's fiancée, who was also their ward, fourteen year-old Catherine Willoughby, by whom he had two sons.

[edit] In popular culture

Mary was portrayed by silent screen star Marion Davies in the 1922 film When Knighthood Was in Flower, reputed to have been, at the time of its release, the most expensive film ever made. It was one of Davies' biggest hits. Another fictionalized version of Mary's marital adventures is portrayed in the 1953 Walt Disney film The Sword and the Rose starring Richard Todd and Glynis Johns.

She is also the subject of the novels Mary, Queen of France by Jean Plaidy, The Reluctant Queen by Molly Costain Haycraft, and Princess of Desire by Maureen Peters. The novel of When Knighthood Was in Flower, by Edwin Caskoden (the pen name of Charles Major) was published in 1898, and was the source material for both the Davies and the Disney films. She was also fictionalized in the historical fiction novel The Last Boleyn by Karen Harper.

The drama series The Tudors portrays Mary and Charles's relationship, though the character is named Princess Margaret, and is a composite of Mary and her sister Margaret Tudor, portrayed by Gabrielle Anwar. Charles Brandon is portrayed by Henry Cavill. Many liberties have been taken with the story. For example, in the television series, Henry arranges his sister's marriage with the aged King of Portugal, not of France, in the late 1520s. Margaret/Mary then kills her husband. Another fictitious sub-plot has Henry making Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk so the latter would be of appropriate rank to give away Henry's sister at her supposed wedding to the King of Portugal. In the story, the Tudor/Brandon marriage soon cools and no mention is made of their three children. Yet another discontinuity relates to Henry's sister dying before Wolsey (who died in 1530).

[edit] Ancestry

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 169. Erasmus said of her that "Nature never formed anything more beautiful."
  2. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 169.
  3. ^ Hester W. Chapman"The Thistle and The Rose"pgs172-173
  4. ^ Antonia Fraser, The Wives of Henry VIII, pp. 68-69.
  5. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 173.
  6. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 173. Letters from 1515 indicate that Mary agreed to wed Louis only on condition that "if she survived him, she should marry whom she liked."
  7. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 178.
  8. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 178, 184. The fine of £24,000 – approximately equivalent to £7,200,000 today – was later reduced by Henry.
  9. ^ Fraser
  10. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 185.
  11. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 310.
  12. ^ Weir, Henry VIII, p. 175. Anne and her sister Mary Boleyn were maids of honour in the entourage that accompanied Mary to France for her wedding.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Mary Tudor, Queen of France
Born: 18 March 1496 Died: 25 June 1533
French royalty
Preceded by
Anne of Brittany
Queen consort of France
October 9, 1514January 1, 1515
Succeeded by
Claude of France
Peerage of England
Preceded by
Elizabeth Bruyn
Duchess of Suffolk
13 May 151525 June 1533
Succeeded by
Catherine Willoughby
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