![Mary I of England](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9mL2ZlL0FudGhvbmlzX01vcl8wMDEuanBnLzE2MDBweC1BbnRob25pc19Nb3JfMDAxLmpwZw==.jpg )
Mary I (18 February 1516 – 17 November 1558), also known as Mary Tudor, and as "Bloody Mary" by her Protestant opponents, was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 and Queen of Spain as the wife of King Philip II from January 1556 until her death in 1558. She made vigorous attempts to reverse the English Reformation, which had begun during the reign of her father, King Henry VIII. Her attempt to restore to the Church the property confiscated in the previous two reigns was largely thwarted by Parliament, but during her five-year reign, Mary had over 280 religious dissenters burned at the stake in the Marian persecutions.
Mary I | |
---|---|
![]() Portrait by Antonis Mor, 1554 | |
Queen of England and Ireland | |
Reign | July 1553 – 17 November 1558 |
Coronation | 1 October 1553 |
Predecessor | Jane (disputed) or Edward VI |
Successor | Elizabeth I |
Co-monarch | Philip (1554–1558) |
Queen consort of Spain | |
Tenure | 16 January 1556 – 17 November 1558 |
Born | 18 February 1516 Palace of Placentia, Greenwich, England |
Died | 17 November 1558 (aged 42) St James's Palace, Westminster, England |
Burial | 14 December 1558 Westminster Abbey, London |
Spouse | Philip II of Spain (m. 1554) |
House | Tudor |
Father | Henry VIII of England |
Mother | Catherine of Aragon |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Signature | ![]() |
Mary was the only surviving child of Henry VIII by his first wife, Catherine of Aragon. She was declared illegitimate and barred from the line of succession following the annulment of her parents' marriage in 1533, though she would later be restored via the Third Succession Act 1543. Her younger half-brother, Edward VI, succeeded their father in 1547 at the age of nine. When Edward became terminally ill in 1553, he attempted to remove Mary from the line of succession because he supposed, correctly, that she would reverse the Protestant reforms that had taken place during his reign. Upon his death, leading politicians proclaimed Mary's and Edward's Protestant cousin, Lady Jane Grey, as queen instead. Mary speedily assembled a force in East Anglia and deposed Jane, who was eventually beheaded. Mary was—excluding the disputed reigns of Jane and the Empress Matilda—the first queen regnant of England. In July 1554, she married Prince Philip of Spain, becoming queen consort of Habsburg Spain on his accession in 1556.
After Mary's death in 1558, her re-establishment of Roman Catholicism in England was reversed by her younger half-sister and successor, Elizabeth I.
Birth and family
Mary was born on 18 February 1516 at the Palace of Placentia in Greenwich, England. She was the only child of King Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, to survive infancy. Before Mary, her mother had three miscarriages and stillbirths and one short-lived son, Henry, Duke of Cornwall.
Mary was baptised into the Catholic faith at the Church of the Observant Friars in Greenwich three days after her birth. Her godparents included Lord Chancellor Thomas Wolsey; her great-aunt Catherine, Countess of Devon; and Agnes Howard, Duchess of Norfolk. Henry VIII's first cousin once removed, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, stood sponsor for Mary's confirmation, which was conducted immediately after the baptism. The following year, Mary became a godmother herself when she was named as one of the sponsors of her cousin Frances Brandon. In 1520, the Countess of Salisbury was appointed Mary's governess. Sir John Hussey (later Lord Hussey) was her chamberlain from 1530, and his wife Lady Anne, daughter of George Grey, 2nd Earl of Kent, was one of Mary's attendants.
Childhood
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Mary was a precocious child. In July 1520, when scarcely four and a half years old, she entertained a visiting French delegation with a performance on the virginals (a type of harpsichord). A great part of her early education came from her mother, who consulted the Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives for advice and commissioned him to write De Institutione Feminae Christianae, a treatise on the education of girls. By the age of nine, Mary could read and write Latin. She studied French, Spanish, music, dance, and perhaps Greek. Henry VIII doted on his daughter and boasted to the Venetian ambassador Sebastian Giustinian that Mary never cried. Mary had a fair complexion with pale blue eyes and red or reddish-golden hair, traits very similar to those of her parents. She was ruddy-cheeked, a trait she inherited from her father.
Despite his affection for Mary, Henry was deeply disappointed that his marriage had produced no sons. By the time Mary was nine years old, it was apparent that Henry and Catherine would have no more children, leaving Henry without a legitimate male heir. In 1525, Henry sent Mary to the border of Wales to preside, presumably in name only, over the Council of Wales and the Marches. She was given her own court based at Ludlow Castle and many of the royal prerogatives normally reserved for a Prince of Wales. Vives and others called her the Princess of Wales, although she was never technically invested with the title. She appears to have spent three years in the Welsh Marches, making regular visits to her father's court, before returning permanently to the home counties around London in mid-1528.
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Throughout Mary's childhood, Henry negotiated potential future marriages for her. When she was only two years old, Mary was promised to Francis, Dauphin of France, the infant son of King Francis I, but the contract was repudiated after three years. In 1522, at the age of six, she was instead contracted to marry her 22-year-old cousin Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. However, Charles broke off the engagement within a few years with Henry's agreement.Cardinal Wolsey, Henry's chief adviser, then resumed marriage negotiations with the French, and Henry suggested that Mary marry the French king Francis I, who was eager for an alliance with England. A marriage treaty was signed which provided that Mary marry either Francis I or his second son Henry, Duke of Orléans, but Wolsey secured an alliance with France without the marriage.
In 1528, Wolsey's agent Thomas Magnus discussed the idea of Mary marrying her cousin James V of Scotland with the Scottish diplomat Adam Otterburn. According to the Venetian Mario Savorgnano, by this time she was developing into a pretty, well-proportioned young lady with a fine complexion.
Adolescence
Although various possibilities for Mary's marriage had been considered, the marriage of Mary's parents was itself in jeopardy, which threatened her status. Disappointed at the lack of a male heir, and eager to remarry, Henry attempted to have his marriage to Catherine annulled, but Pope Clement VII refused his request. Henry claimed, citing biblical passages (Leviticus 20:21), that the marriage was unclean because Catherine was the widow of his brother Arthur, Prince of Wales (Mary's uncle). Catherine claimed that her marriage to Arthur was never consummated and so was not a valid marriage. Pope Julius II had issued a dispensation on that basis. Clement VII may have been reluctant to act because he was influenced by Charles V, Catherine's nephew and Mary's former betrothed, whose troops had sacked Rome in the War of the League of Cognac.
From 1531, Mary was often sick with irregular menstruation and depression, although it is not clear whether this was caused by stress, puberty or a more deep-seated disease. She was not permitted to see her mother, whom Henry had sent to live away from court. In early 1533, Henry married Anne Boleyn, and in May Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury, formally declared the marriage with Catherine void and the marriage to Anne valid. Henry repudiated the Pope's authority, declaring himself Supreme Head of the Church of England. Catherine was demoted to Dowager Princess of Wales (a title she would have held as Arthur's widow), and Mary was deemed illegitimate. She was styled "The Lady Mary" rather than Princess, and her place in the line of succession was transferred to Henry and Anne's newborn daughter, Elizabeth. Mary's household was dissolved; her servants (including the Countess of Salisbury) were dismissed and, in December 1533, she was sent to join her infant half-sister's household at Hatfield Palace, Hertfordshire.
Mary determinedly refused to acknowledge that Anne was the queen or that Elizabeth was a princess, enraging King Henry. Under strain and with her movements restricted, Mary was frequently ill, which the royal physician attributed to her "ill treatment". The Imperial ambassador Eustace Chapuys became her close adviser, and interceded, unsuccessfully, on her behalf at court. The relationship between Mary and her father worsened; they did not speak to each other for three years. Although both she and her mother were ill, Mary was refused permission to visit Catherine. When Catherine died in 1536, Mary was "inconsolable". Catherine was interred in Peterborough Cathedral, while Mary grieved in semi-seclusion at Hunsdon in Hertfordshire.
Adulthood
In 1536, Queen Anne fell from the King's favour and was beheaded. Elizabeth, like Mary, was declared illegitimate and stripped of her succession rights. Within two weeks of Anne's execution, Henry married Jane Seymour, who urged her husband to make peace with Mary. Henry insisted that Mary recognise him as head of the Church of England, repudiate papal authority, acknowledge that the marriage between her parents was unlawful, and accept her own illegitimacy. She attempted to reconcile with Henry by submitting to his authority as far as "God and my conscience" permitted, but was eventually bullied into signing a document agreeing to all of Henry's demands.
Reconciled with her father, Mary resumed her place at court. Henry granted her a household, which included the reinstatement of Mary's favourite, Susan Clarencieux. Mary's Privy Purse accounts for this period, kept by Mary Finch, show that Hatfield House, the Palace of Beaulieu (also called Newhall), Richmond and Hunsdon were among her principal places of residence, as well as Henry's palaces at Greenwich, Westminster and Hampton Court. Her expenses included fine clothes and gambling at cards, one of her favourite pastimes.
Rebels in the North of England, including Lord Hussey, Mary's former chamberlain, campaigned against Henry's religious reforms, and one of their demands was that Mary be made legitimate. The rebellion, known as the Pilgrimage of Grace, was ruthlessly suppressed. Along with other rebels, Hussey was executed, but there is no suggestion that Mary was directly involved. In 1537, Queen Jane died after giving birth to a son, Edward. Mary was made godmother to her half-brother and acted as chief mourner at the Queen's funeral.
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Mary was courted by Philip, Duke of Bavaria, from late 1539, but he was Lutheran and his suit for her hand was unsuccessful. Over 1539, the King's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, negotiated a potential alliance with the Duchy of Cleves. Suggestions that Mary marry William I, Duke of Cleves, who was the same age, came to nothing, but a match between Henry and the Duke's sister Anne was agreed. When the King saw Anne for the first time in late December 1539, a week before the scheduled wedding, he found her unattractive but was unable, for diplomatic reasons and without a suitable pretext, to cancel the marriage. Cromwell fell from favour and was arrested for treason in June 1540; one of the unlikely charges against him was that he had plotted to marry Mary himself. Anne consented to the annulment of the marriage, which had not been consummated, and Cromwell was beheaded.
In 1541, Henry had the Countess of Salisbury, Mary's old governess and godmother, executed on the pretext of a Catholic plot in which her son Reginald Pole was implicated. Her executioner was "a wretched and blundering youth" who "literally hacked her head and shoulders to pieces". In 1542, following the execution of Henry's fifth wife, Catherine Howard, the unmarried Henry invited Mary to attend the royal Christmas festivities. At court, while her father was between marriages and thus without a consort, Mary acted as hostess. In 1543, Henry married his sixth and last wife, Catherine Parr, who was able to bring the family closer together. Henry returned Mary and Elizabeth to the line of succession through the Act of Succession 1544 (also known as the Third Succession Act), placing them after Edward – though both remained legally illegitimate.
Henry VIII died in 1547, and Edward succeeded him. Mary inherited estates in Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex, and was granted Hunsdon and Beaulieu as her own. Since Edward was still a child, rule passed to a regency council dominated by Protestants, who attempted to establish their faith throughout the country. For example, the Act of Uniformity 1549 prescribed Protestant rites for church services, such as the use of Thomas Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer. Mary remained faithful to Roman Catholicism and defiantly celebrated traditional Mass in her own chapel. She appealed to her cousin Emperor Charles V to apply diplomatic pressure demanding that she be allowed to practise her religion.
For most of Edward's reign, Mary remained on her own estates and rarely attended court. A plan between May and July 1550 to smuggle her out of England to the safety of the European mainland came to nothing. Religious differences between Mary and Edward continued. Mary attended a reunion with Edward and Elizabeth for Christmas 1550, where the 13-year-old Edward embarrassed Mary, then 34, and reduced both her and himself to tears in front of the court, by publicly reproving her for ignoring his laws regarding worship. Mary repeatedly refused Edward's demands that she abandon Catholicism, and Edward persistently refused to drop his demands.
Accession
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On 6 July 1553, at the age of 15, Edward VI died of a lung infection, possibly tuberculosis. He did not want the crown to go to Mary because he feared she would restore Catholicism and undo his and their father's reforms, and so he planned to exclude her from the line of succession. His advisers told him that he could not disinherit only one of his half-sisters: he would have to disinherit Elizabeth as well, even though she was a Protestant. Guided by John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, and perhaps others, Edward excluded both from the line of succession in his will.
Contradicting the Act of Succession 1544, which restored Mary and Elizabeth to the line of succession, Edward named Northumberland's daughter-in-law Lady Jane Grey, the granddaughter of Henry VIII's younger sister Mary, as his successor. Lady Jane's mother was Frances Brandon, Mary's cousin and goddaughter. Just before Edward's death, Mary was summoned to London to visit her dying brother, but was warned that the summons was a pretext on which to capture her and thereby facilitate Jane's accession to the throne. Therefore, instead of heading to London from her residence at Hunsdon, Mary fled to East Anglia, where she owned extensive estates and Northumberland had ruthlessly put down Kett's Rebellion. Many adherents to the Catholic faith, opponents of Northumberland, lived there. On 9 July, from Kenninghall, Norfolk, she wrote to the privy council with orders for her proclamation as Edward's successor.
On 10 July 1553, Lady Jane was proclaimed queen by Northumberland and his supporters, and on the same day Mary's servant, Thomas Hungate, arrived in London with her letter to the council. By 12 July, Mary and her supporters had assembled a military force at Framlingham Castle, Suffolk. Northumberland's support collapsed, and Jane was deposed on 19 July. She and Northumberland were imprisoned in the Tower of London. Mary rode triumphantly into London on 3 August 1553, on a wave of popular support. She was accompanied by her half-sister Elizabeth and a procession of over 800 nobles and gentlemen.
Reign
One of Mary's first actions as queen was to order the release of the Roman Catholic Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, and Stephen Gardiner from imprisonment in the Tower of London, as well as her kinsman Edward Courtenay. Mary understood that the young Lady Jane was essentially a pawn in Northumberland's scheme, and Northumberland was the only conspirator of rank executed for high treason in the immediate aftermath of the attempted coup. Lady Jane and her husband, Lord Guildford Dudley, though found guilty, were kept under guard in the Tower rather than immediately executed, while Lady Jane's father, Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, was released. Mary was left in a difficult position, as almost all the Privy Counsellors had been implicated in the plot to put Lady Jane on the throne. She appointed Gardiner to the council and made him both Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor, offices he held until his death in November 1555. Susan Clarencieux became Mistress of the Robes. On 1 October 1553, Gardiner crowned Mary at Westminster Abbey.
Spanish marriage
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Now aged 37, Mary turned her attention to finding a husband and producing an heir, which would prevent the Protestant Elizabeth (still next in line under the terms of Henry VIII's will and the Act of Succession of 1544) from succeeding to the throne. While the English expected her to marry, there was a general consensus that the Queen should not marry a foreigner, since that could lead to the interference of a foreign power in English affairs. On 16 November 1553, a parliamentary delegation went to her and formally requested that she choose an English husband, with its obvious although tacit candidates being her kinsmen Edward Courtenay, recently created Earl of Devon, and the Catholic Cardinal Reginald Pole. But Mary's first cousin, Charles V, also king of Spain, saw that an alliance with England would give him supremacy in Europe; he sent his minister to England to propose his only legitimate son, Philip, as a person whom the religious and political interests of the world recommended for Mary. The Spanish prince had been widowed a few years before by the death of his first wife, Maria Manuela of Portugal, mother of his son Carlos and was the heir apparent to vast territories in Continental Europe and the New World. Both Philip and Mary were descendants of John of Gaunt. As part of the marriage negotiations, a portrait of Philip by Titian was sent to Mary in the latter half of 1553.
Mary was convinced that the safety of England required her to form a closer relationship with Charles's family, the Habsburgs, and she decided to marry Philip. A marriage treaty was presented to the Privy Council on 7 December 1553, and even though the terms clearly favoured England and included several safeguards, many still thought that England would be drawn into Philip's wars and become a mere province of the Habsburg Empire. This was of particular concern to the landed gentry and parliamentary classes, who foresaw having to pay greater taxes to cover the cost of England's participation in foreign wars.
Lord Chancellor Gardiner and the English House of Commons unsuccessfully petitioned Mary to consider marrying an Englishman, fearing that England would be relegated to a dependency of the Habsburgs. The marriage was unpopular with the English; Gardiner and his allies opposed it on the basis of patriotism, while Protestants were motivated by a fear that with the restoration of Catholicism and the arrival of the Spanish King, the Inquisition would come to judge Protestant heretics. Many English people knew the stories of the torments and cruelties suffered by the prisoners of the Inquisition, and there were even those "who had suffered from the rack of the inquisitors" themselves.
It was not just the English who were alarmed by the pending marriage of Mary and Philip. France feared an alliance between England and Spain. Antoine de Noailles, the French ambassador to England, "threatened war and began immediate intrigues with any malcontents he could find". Before Christmas in 1553, anti-Spanish ballads and broadsheets were circulating in the streets of London.
When Mary insisted on marrying Philip, insurrections broke out. Thomas Wyatt the Younger led a force from Kent to depose Mary in favour of Elizabeth, as part of a wider conspiracy now known as Wyatt's rebellion, which also involved the Duke of Suffolk, Lady Jane's father. Mary declared publicly that she would summon Parliament to discuss the marriage and if Parliament decided that the marriage was not to the kingdom's advantage, she would refrain from pursuing it. On reaching London, Wyatt was defeated and captured. Wyatt, the Duke of Suffolk, Lady Jane, and her husband Guildford Dudley were executed. Courtenay, who was implicated in the plot, was imprisoned and then exiled. Elizabeth, though protesting her innocence in the Wyatt affair, was imprisoned in the Tower of London for two months, then put under house arrest at Woodstock Palace.
Mary was—excluding the brief, disputed reigns of the Empress Matilda and Lady Jane Grey—England's first queen regnant. Further, under the English common law doctrine of jure uxoris, the property and titles belonging to a woman became her husband's upon marriage, and it was feared that any man she married would thereby become king of England in fact and name. While Mary's grandparents Ferdinand and Isabella had retained sovereignty of their respective realms during their marriage, there was no precedent to follow in England. Under the terms of Queen Mary's Marriage Act, Philip was to be styled "King of England", all official documents (including Acts of Parliament) were to be dated with both their names, and Parliament was to be called under the joint authority of the couple, for Mary's lifetime only. England would not be obliged to provide military support to Philip's father in any war, and Philip could not act without his wife's consent or appoint foreigners to office in England. Philip was unhappy with these conditions but ready to agree for the sake of securing the marriage. He had no amorous feelings for Mary and sought the marriage for its political and strategic gains; his aide Ruy Gómez de Silva wrote to a correspondent in Brussels, "the marriage was concluded for no fleshly consideration, but in order to remedy the disorders of this kingdom and to preserve the Low Countries." A future child of Mary and Philip would be not only heir to the throne of England but also heir to the Spanish Empire in the event that Philip's eldest son, Don Carlos, died without issue.
To elevate his son to Mary's rank, Emperor Charles V ceded to Philip the crown of Naples as well as his claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Mary thus became queen of Naples and titular queen of Jerusalem upon marriage. Their wedding at Winchester Cathedral on 25 July 1554 took place just two days after their first meeting. Philip could not speak English, and so they spoke a mixture of Spanish, French, and Latin.
False pregnancy
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In September 1554, Mary stopped menstruating. She gained weight, and felt nauseated in the mornings. For these reasons, almost the entirety of her court, including her physicians, believed she was pregnant. Parliament passed the Treason Act of 1554 making Philip regent in the event of Mary's death in childbirth. In the last week of April 1555, Elizabeth was released from house arrest, and called to court as a witness to the birth, which was expected imminently. According to Giovanni Michieli, the Venetian ambassador, Philip may have planned to marry Elizabeth if Mary died, but in a letter to his brother-in-law Maximilian of Austria, Philip expressed uncertainty as to whether Mary was pregnant. Mary's pregnancy had its pros and cons for Elizabeth: if Mary died during childbirth, Elizabeth would become the new queen; however, if her sister gave birth to a healthy baby, Elizabeth's chances of becoming queen would recede sharply.
Thanksgiving services in the diocese of London were held at the end of April after false rumours that Mary had given birth to a son spread across Europe. Through May and June, the apparent delay in delivery fed gossip that Mary was not pregnant. Susan Clarencieux revealed her doubts to the French ambassador, Antoine de Noailles. Mary continued to exhibit signs of pregnancy until July 1555, when her abdomen receded. Michieli dismissively ridiculed the pregnancy as more likely to "end in wind rather than anything else". It was most likely a false pregnancy, perhaps induced by Mary's overwhelming desire to have a child. In August, soon after the disgrace of the false pregnancy, which Mary considered "God's punishment" for her having "tolerated heretics" in her realm,[full citation needed] Philip left England to command his armies against France in Flanders. Mary was heartbroken and fell into a deep depression. Michieli was touched by the Queen's grief; he wrote she was "extraordinarily in love" with her husband and disconsolate at his departure.
Elizabeth remained at court until October, apparently restored to favour. In the absence of any children, Philip was concerned that one of the next claimants to the English throne after his sister-in-law was Mary, Queen of Scots, who was betrothed to Francis, Dauphin of France. Philip persuaded his wife that Elizabeth should marry his cousin Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy, to secure the Catholic succession and preserve the Habsburg interest in England, but Elizabeth refused to agree and parliamentary consent was unlikely.
Religious policy
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In the month following her accession, Mary issued a proclamation that she would not compel any of her subjects to follow her religion, but by the end of September 1553, leading Protestant churchmen—including Thomas Cranmer, John Bradford, John Rogers, John Hooper, and Hugh Latimer—were imprisoned. Mary's first Parliament, which assembled in early October, declared her parents' marriage valid and abolished Edward's religious laws. Church doctrine was restored to the form it had taken in the 1539 Six Articles of Henry VIII, which (among other things) reaffirmed clerical celibacy. Married priests were deprived of their benefices.
Mary rejected the break with Rome instituted by her father and the establishment of Protestantism by her brother's regents. Philip persuaded Parliament to repeal Henry's religious laws, returning the English church to Roman jurisdiction. Reaching an agreement took many months and Mary and Pope Julius III had to make a major concession: the confiscated monastery lands were not returned to the church but remained in the hands of their influential new owners. By the end of 1554, the Pope had approved the deal, and the Heresy Acts were revived.
Around 800 rich Protestants, including John Foxe, fled into exile. Those who stayed and persisted in publicly proclaiming their beliefs became targets of heresy laws. The first executions occurred over five days in February 1555: John Rogers on 4 February, Laurence Saunders on 8 February, and Rowland Taylor and John Hooper on 9 February. Thomas Cranmer, the imprisoned archbishop of Canterbury, was forced to watch Bishops Ridley and Latimer being burned at the stake. He recanted, repudiated Protestant theology, and rejoined the Catholic faith. Under the normal process of the law, he should have been absolved as a repentant, but Mary refused to reprieve him. On the day of his burning, he dramatically withdrew his recantation. In total, 283 were executed, most by burning. The burnings proved so unpopular that even Alfonso de Castro, one of Philip's own ecclesiastical staff, condemned them and another adviser, Simon Renard, warned him that such "cruel enforcement" could "cause a revolt". Mary persevered with the policy, which continued for the rest of her reign and exacerbated anti-Catholic and anti-Spanish feeling among the English people. The victims became lauded as martyrs.
Reginald Pole, the son of Mary's executed governess, arrived as papal legate in November 1554. He was ordained a priest and appointed Archbishop of Canterbury immediately after Cranmer's execution in March 1556.
As long as the Queen remained childless, her half-sister Elizabeth was her successor. Mary, concerned about her sister's religious convictions (Elizabeth only attended mass under obligation and had only superficially converted to Catholicism to save her life after being imprisoned following Wyatt's rebellion, although she remained a staunch Protestant), seriously considering the possibility of removing her from the succession and naming as her successor her Scottish first cousin and devout Catholic, Margaret Douglas.
Foreign policy
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Furthering the Tudor conquest of Ireland, English colonists were settled in the Irish Midlands under Mary and Philip's reign. Queen's and King's Counties (later called Counties Laois and Offaly) were founded, and their plantation began. Their principal towns were named, respectively, Maryborough (later called Portlaoise) and Philipstown (later Daingean).
In January 1556, Mary's father-in-law the Emperor abdicated. Mary and Philip were still apart; he was declared king of Spain in Brussels, but she stayed in England. Philip negotiated an unsteady truce with the French in February 1556. The next month, the French ambassador in England, Antoine de Noailles, was implicated in a plot against Mary when Henry Dudley, a second cousin of the executed Duke of Northumberland, attempted to assemble an invasion force in France. The plot, known as the Dudley conspiracy, was betrayed, and the conspirators in England were rounded up. Dudley remained in exile in France, and Noailles prudently left Britain.
Philip returned to England from March to July 1557 to persuade Mary to support Spain in a renewed war against France. Mary was in favour of declaring war, but her councillors opposed it because French trade would be jeopardised, it contravened the foreign war provisions of the marriage treaty, and a bad economic legacy from Edward VI's reign and a series of poor harvests meant England lacked supplies and finances. War was only declared in June 1557 after Reginald Pole's nephew Thomas Stafford invaded England and seized Scarborough Castle with French help, in a failed attempt to depose Mary. As a result of the war, relations between England and the Papacy became strained, since Pope Paul IV was allied with Henry II of France. In August, English forces were victorious in the aftermath of the Battle of Saint Quentin, with one eyewitness reporting, "Both sides fought most choicely, and the English best of all." Celebrations were brief, as in January 1558 French forces took Calais, England's sole remaining possession on the European mainland. Although the territory was financially burdensome, its loss was a mortifying blow to the Queen's prestige. According to Holinshed's Chronicles, Mary later lamented (although this may be apocryphal), "When I am dead and opened, you shall find 'Calais' lying in my heart".
Commerce and revenue
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The weather during the years of Mary's reign was consistently wet. The persistent rain and flooding led to famine. Another problem was the decline of the Antwerp cloth trade. Despite Mary's marriage to Philip, England did not benefit from Spain's enormously lucrative trade with the New World. The Spanish guarded their trade routes jealously, and Mary could not condone English smuggling or piracy against her husband's subjects. In an attempt to increase trade and rescue the English economy, Mary's counsellors continued Northumberland's policy of seeking out new commercial opportunities. She granted a royal charter to the Muscovy Company under governor Sebastian Cabot, and commissioned a world atlas from Diogo Homem. Adventurers such as John Lok and William Towerson sailed south in an attempt to develop links with the coast of Africa.
Financially, Mary's regime tried to reconcile a modern form of government—with correspondingly higher spending—with a medieval system of collecting taxation and dues. Mary retained the Edwardian appointee William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester, as Lord High Treasurer and assigned him to oversee the revenue collection system. A failure to apply new tariffs to new forms of imports meant that a key source of revenue was neglected. To solve this, Mary's government published a revised "Book of Rates" (1558), which listed the tariffs and duties for every import. This publication was not extensively reviewed until 1604.
English coinage was debased under both Henry VIII and Edward VI. Mary drafted plans for currency reform but they were not implemented until after her death.
Death
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After Philip's visit in 1557, Mary again thought she was pregnant, with a baby due in March 1558. She decreed in her will that her husband would be the regent during the minority of their child. But no child was born, and Mary was forced to accept that her half-sister Elizabeth would be her lawful successor.
Mary was weak and ill from May 1558. In pain, possibly from ovarian cysts or uterine cancer, she died on 17 November 1558, aged 42, at St James's Palace, during an influenza epidemic that also claimed Archbishop Pole's life later that day. She was succeeded by Elizabeth. Philip, who was in Brussels, wrote to his sister Joanna: "I felt a reasonable regret for her death."
Although Mary's will stated that she wished to be buried next to her mother, she was interred in Westminster Abbey on 14 December, in a tomb she eventually shared with Elizabeth. The inscription on their tomb, affixed there by James I when he succeeded Elizabeth, is Regno consortes et urna, hic obdormimus Elizabetha et Maria sorores, in spe resurrectionis ("Consorts in realm and tomb, we sisters Elizabeth and Mary here lie down to sleep in hope of the resurrection").
Legacy
John White, Bishop of Winchester, praised Mary at her funeral service: "She was a king's daughter; she was a king's sister; she was a king's wife. She was a queen, and by the same title a king also." She was the first woman to successfully claim the throne of England, despite competing claims and determined opposition, and enjoyed popular support and sympathy during the earliest parts of her reign, especially from the Roman Catholics of England.
Protestant writers at the time, and since, have often condemned Mary's reign. By the 17th century, the memory of her religious persecutions had led to the adoption of her sobriquet "Bloody Mary".John Knox attacked Mary in his First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women (1558), and John Foxe vilified her prominently in Actes and Monuments (1563). Foxe's book remained popular throughout the following centuries and helped shape enduring perceptions of Mary as a bloodthirsty tyrant. Historian Lucy Wooding notes misogynistic undertones in descriptions of Mary. "She's simultaneously being lambasted for being 'vindictive and fierce' and 'spineless and weak', criticized for such actions as showing clemency to political prisoners and yielding authority to her husband."
Mary is remembered in the 21st century for her vigorous efforts to restore the primacy of Roman Catholicism in England after the rise of Protestant influence during the previous reigns. Protestant historians have long deplored her reign, emphasizing that in just five years she burned several hundred Protestants at the stake. In the mid-20th century, H. F. M. Prescott attempted to redress the tradition that Mary was intolerant and authoritarian, and scholarship since then has tended to view the older, simpler assessments of Mary with increasing reservations. A historiographical revisionism since the 1980s has improved her reputation among scholars to some degree.Christopher Haigh argued that her revival of religious festivities and Catholic practices was generally welcomed. Haigh concluded that the "last years of Mary's reign were not a gruesome preparation for Protestant victory, but a continuing consolidation of Catholic strength." English Catholics often remembered Mary favourably; decades after her death, the epitaph for John Throckmorton refers to "Queene Marie [Mary I] of happie memorie".
Catholic historians, such as John Lingard, thought Mary's policies failed not because they were wrong but because she had too short a reign to establish them and because of natural disasters beyond her control. In other countries, the Catholic Counter-Reformation was spearheaded by Jesuit missionaries, but Mary's chief religious advisor, Cardinal Reginald Pole, refused to allow the Jesuits into England. Her marriage to Philip was unpopular among her subjects and her religious policies resulted in deep-seated resentment. The military loss of Calais to France was a bitter humiliation to English pride. Failed harvests increased public discontent. Philip spent most of his time abroad, while his wife remained in England, leaving her depressed at his absence and undermined by their inability to have children. After Mary's death, Philip sought to marry Elizabeth but she refused him. Although Mary's rule was ultimately ineffectual and unpopular, the policies of fiscal reform, naval expansion, and colonial exploration that were later lauded as Elizabethan accomplishments were started in Mary's reign.
Titles, style, and arms
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When Mary ascended the throne, she was proclaimed under the same official style as Henry VIII and Edward VI: "Mary, by the Grace of God, Queen of England, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, and of the Church of England and of Ireland on Earth Supreme Head". The title Supreme Head of the Church was repugnant to Mary's Catholicism, and she omitted it after Christmas 1553.
Under Mary's marriage treaty with Philip, the official joint style reflected not only Mary's but also Philip's dominions and claims: "Philip and Mary, by the grace of God, King and Queen of England, France, Naples, Jerusalem, and Ireland, Defenders of the Faith, Princes of Spain and Sicily, Archdukes of Austria, Dukes of Milan, Burgundy and Brabant, Counts of Habsburg, Flanders and Tyrol". This style, which had been in use since 1554, was replaced when Philip inherited the Spanish Crown in 1556 with "Philip and Mary, by the Grace of God King and Queen of England, Spain, France, both the Sicilies, Jerusalem and Ireland, Defenders of the Faith, Archdukes of Austria, Dukes of Burgundy, Milan and Brabant, Counts of Habsburg, Flanders and Tyrol".
Mary I's coat of arms was the same as those used by all her predecessors since Henry IV: Quarterly, Azure three fleurs-de-lys Or [for France] and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England). Sometimes, her arms were impaled (depicted side-by-side) with those of her husband. She adopted "Truth, the Daughter of Time" (Latin: Veritas Temporis Filia) as her personal motto.
Family tree
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Both Mary and Philip were descended from John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster, a relationship that was used to portray Philip as an English king.
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See also
- Jewels of Mary I of England
- Tudor period
Notes
- Edward VI died on 6 July. Mary was proclaimed his successor in London on 19 July; sources differ on whether her regnal years were dated from 24 July or 6 July.
- Although he was in deacon's orders and prominent in the church, Pole was not ordained until the day before his consecration as archbishop.
References
- Weir (p. 160)
- Sweet and Maxwell's (p. 28)
- Loades, pp. 12–13; Weir, pp. 152–153.
- Porter, p. 13; Waller, p. 16; Whitelock, p. 7.
- Porter, pp. 13, 37; Waller, p. 17.
- Porter, p. 13; Waller, p. 17; Whitelock, p. 7.
- Loades, p. 28; Porter, p. 15.
- Loades, p. 29; Porter, p. 16; Waller, p. 20; Whitelock, p. 21.
- Hoyle, p. 407.
- Whitelock, p. 23.
- Whitelock, p. 27.
- Loades, pp. 19–20; Porter, p. 21.
- Loades, p. 31; Porter, p. 30.
- Porter, p. 28; Whitelock, p. 27.
- Loades, pp. 32, 43.
- Domine Orator, per Deum immortalem, ista puella nunquam plorat, quoted in Whitelock, p. 17.
- Tremlett, Giles. Catherine of Aragon, Henry's Spanish Queen. p. 244.
- Tittler, p. 1.
- Loades, p. 37; Porter, pp. 38–39; Whitelock, pp. 32–33.
- Porter, pp. 38–39; Whitelock, pp. 32–33.
- Waller, p. 23.
- Loades, pp. 41–42, 45.
- Porter, pp. 20–21; Waller, pp. 20–21; Whitelock, pp. 18–23.
- Loades, pp. 22–23; Porter, pp. 21–24; Waller, p. 21; Whitelock, p. 23.
- Whitelock, pp. 30–31.
- Whitelock, pp. 36–37.
- Whitelock, pp. 37–38.
- State Papers Henry VIII. Vol. 4, part IV. London. 1836. p. 545.
- Mario Savorgnano, 25 August 1531, in Calendar of State Papers, Venetian, vol. IV, p. 682, quoted in Loades, p. 63.
- Porter, pp. 56, 78; Whitelock, p. 40.
- Waller, p. 27.
- Porter, p. 76; Whitelock, p. 48.
- Porter, p. 92; Whitelock, pp. 55–56.
- Loades, p. 77; Porter, p. 92; Whitelock, p. 57.
- Loades, p. 78; Whitelock, p. 57.
- Porter, pp. 97–101; Whitelock, pp. 55–69.
- Dr William Butts, quoted in Waller, p. 31.
- Loades, pp. 84–85.
- Porter, p. 100.
- Porter, pp. 103–104; Whitelock, pp. 67–69, 72.
- Letter from Emperor Charles V to Empress Isabella, quoted in Whitelock, p. 75.
- Porter, p. 107; Whitelock, pp. 76–77.
- Whitelock, p. 91.
- Porter, p. 121; Waller, p. 33; Whitelock, p. 81.
- Porter, pp. 119–123; Waller, pp. 34–36; Whitelock, pp. 83–89.
- Porter, pp. 119–123; Waller, pp. 34–36; Whitelock, pp. 90–91.
- Loades, p. 105.
- Madden, F. (ed.) (1831) The Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary, quoted in Loades, p. 111.
- Porter, pp. 129–132; Whitelock, p. 28.
- Porter, pp. 124–125.
- Loades, p. 108.
- Loades, p. 114; Porter, pp. 126–127; Whitelock, pp. 95–96.
- Loades, pp. 127–129; Porter, pp. 135–136; Waller, p. 39; Whitelock, p. 101.
- Loades, pp. 126–127; Whitelock, p. 101.
- Whitelock, pp. 103–104.
- Whitelock, p. 105.
- Whitelock, pp. 105–106.
- Loades, p. 122; Porter, p. 137.
- Contemporary Spanish and English reports, quoted in Whitelock, p. 108.
- Porter, p. 143.
- Waller, p. 37.
- Porter, pp. 143–144; Whitelock, p. 110.
- Loades, p. 120; Waller, p. 39; Whitelock, p. 112.
- Loades, pp. 137–138; Whitelock, p. 130.
- Loades, pp. 143–147; Porter, pp. 160–162; Whitelock, pp. 133–134.
- Porter, p. 154; Waller, p. 40.
- Loades, pp. 153–157; Porter, pp. 169–176; Waller, pp. 41–42; Whitelock, pp. 144–147.
- Porter, p. 178; Whitelock, p. 149.
- Porter, pp. 179–182; Whitelock, pp. 148–160.
- Porter, p. 187.
- Porter, pp. 188–189.
- Waller, pp. 48–49; Whitelock, p. 165.
- Waller, pp. 51–53; Whitelock, pp. 165, 138.
- Loades, p. 176; Porter, p. 195; Tittler, pp. 8, 81–82; Whitelock, p. 168.
- Whitelock, p. 168.
- Porter, p. 203; Waller, p. 52.
- Loades, pp. 176–181; Porter, pp. 213–214; Waller, p. 54; Whitelock, pp. 170–174.
- Porter, p. 210; Weir, pp. 159–160.
- Waller, pp. 57–59.
- Waller, p. 59; Whitelock, p. 181.
- Waller, pp. 59–60; Whitelock, pp. 185–186.
- Whitelock, p. 182.
- Whitelock, p. 183.
- Porter, pp. 257–261; Whitelock, pp. 195–197.
- Froude (1910, p. 23)
- Weikel (1980, p. 53)
- Froude (1910, p. 55); Loades, pp. 199–201; Porter, pp. 265–267.
- Porter, p. 310.
- Heard (2000, pp. 46, 48)
- Heard (2000, pp. 48, 49)
- Fletcher (1970, p. 86)
- Porter, pp. 279–284; Waller, p. 72; Whitelock, pp. 202–209.
- Waller, p. 73.
- Alexander Samson, Mary and Philip: The marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain (Manchester, 2020), p. 70.
- Loades (1999, pp. 190–191)
- Porter, pp. 288–299; Whitelock, pp. 212–213.
- Porter, p. 300; Waller, pp. 74–75; Whitelock, p. 216.
- Porter, pp. 311–313; Whitelock, pp. 217–225.
- Waller, pp. 84–85; Whitelock, pp. 202, 227.
- Porter, p. 269; Waller, p. 85.
- Porter, pp. 291–292; Waller, p. 85; Whitelock, pp. 226–227.
- Porter, pp. 308–309; Whitelock, p. 229.
- Letter of 29 July 1554 in the Calendar of State Papers, Spanish, volume XIII, quoted in Porter, p. 320 and Whitelock, p. 244.
- Alexander Samson, Mary and Philip: The marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain (Manchester, 2020), pp. 71–73.
- Porter, pp. 321, 324; Waller, p. 90; Whitelock, p. 238.
- Loades, pp. 224–225; Porter, pp. 318, 321; Waller, pp. 86–87; Whitelock, p. 237.
- Porter, p. 319; Waller, pp. 87, 91.
- Porter, p. 333; Waller, pp. 92–93.
- Loades, pp. 234–235.
- Porter, p. 338; Waller, p. 95; Whitelock, p. 255.
- Waller, p. 96.
- "The queen's pregnancy turns out not to have been as certain as we thought": Letter of 25 April 1554, quoted in Porter, p. 337 and Whitelock, p. 257.
- Loades, p. 32.
- Waller, p. 95; Whitelock, p. 256.
- Whitelock, pp. 257–259.
- Whitelock, p. 258.
- Waller, p. 97; Whitelock, p. 259.
- Porter, pp. 337–338; Waller, pp. 97–98.
- PBS Video.
- Porter, p. 342.
- Waller, pp. 98–99; Whitelock, p. 268.
- Antoine de Noailles quoted in Whitelock, p. 269.
- Whitelock, p. 284.
- Tittler, pp. 23–24; Whitelock, p. 187.
- Loades, pp. 207–208; Waller, p. 65; Whitelock, p. 198.
- Porter, p. 241; Whitelock, pp. 200–201.
- Porter, p. 331.
- Loades, pp. 235–242.
- Waller, p. 113.
- Solly, Meilan. "The Myth of 'Bloody Mary'". Smithsonian Magazine. 12 March 2020.
- Whitelock, p. 262.
- Loades, p. 325; Porter, pp. 355–356; Waller, pp. 104–105.
- Loades, p. 326; Waller, pp. 104–105; Whitelock, p. 274.
- Duffy, p. 79; Waller, p. 104.
- Porter, pp. 358–359; Waller, p. 103; Whitelock, p. 266.
- Waller, p. 102.
- Waller, pp. 101, 103, 105; Whitelock, p. 266.
- See for example, the Oxford Martyrs.
- Loades, p. 238; Waller, p. 94.
- Porter, p. 357.
- Loades, p. 319.
- Morgan Ring, So High A Blood: The Life of Margaret Countess of Lennox (Bloomsbury, 2017), p. 110.
- Porter 2007, pp. 251–252
- Tittler, p. 66.
- Porter, pp. 381–387.
- Whitelock, p. 288.
- Porter, p. 389; Waller, p. 111; Whitelock, p. 289.
- Whitelock, pp. 293–295.
- Tyler, Royall, ed. (1954). "Spain: August 1557". Calendar of State Papers, Spain. London. pp. 308–318. Retrieved 1 December 2021 – via British History Online.
- Loades, pp. 295–297; Porter, pp. 392–395; Whitelock, pp. 291–292.
- Porter, p. 393.
- Porter, pp. 229, 375; Whitelock, p. 277.
- Tittler, p. 48.
- Tittler, p. 49.
- Tittler, pp. 49–50.
- Porter, p. 371.
- Porter, p. 373.
- Porter, p. 372.
- Porter, p. 375; Tittler, p. 51.
- Porter, p. 376.
- Porter, p. 376; Tittler, p. 53.
- Porter, p. 398; Waller, pp. 106, 112; Whitelock, p. 299.
- Whitelock, pp. 299–300.
- Whitelock, p. 301.
- Loades, p. 305; Whitelock, p. 300.
- Waller, p. 108.
- Letter from the King of Spain to the Princess of Portugal, 4 December 1558, in Calendar of State Papers, Spanish, volume XIII, quoted in Loades, p. 311; Waller, p. 109 and Whitelock, p. 303.
- Porter, p. 410; Whitelock, p. 1.
- Loades, p. 313; Whitelock, p. 305.
- Waller, p. 116.
- Waller, p. 115.
- Porter, pp. 361–362, 418; Waller, pp. 113–115.
- Weikel.
- Loades, David (1989). "The Reign of Mary Tudor: Historiography and Research." Albion 21 (4) : 547–558. online.
- Haigh, pp. 203–234, quoted in Freeman, Thomas S. (2017). "Restoration and Reaction: Reinterpreting the Marian Church." Journal of Ecclesiastical History In press. online.
- Haigh, p. 234.
- Epitaph plaque, tomb of Sir John Throckmorton, Coughton Church, Warwickshire.
- Loades, pp. 340–341.
- Mayer, Thomas F. (1996). "A Test of Wills: Cardinal Pole, Ignatius Loyola, and the Jesuits in England". In McCoog, Thomas M. (ed.). The Reckoned Expense: Edmund Campion and the Early English Jesuits. pp. 21–38.
- Loades, pp. 342–343; Waller, p. 116.
- Loades, pp. 340–343.
- Porter, p. 400.
- Tittler, p. 80; Weikel.
- Loades, pp. 217, 323.
- e.g. Waller, p. 106.
- Waller, p. 60; Whitelock, p. 310.
- Crofton, p. 128.
- Davies, C. S. L.; Edwards, John (23 September 2004). "Katherine [Catalina, Catherine, Katherine of Aragon] (1485–1536), queen of England, first consort of Henry VIII". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4891. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Weir, "The Tudors".
- Licence, p. 38.
- Edwards, p. xiii.
- Previte-Orton, p. 902.
- Whitelock, p. 242.
Sources
- Crofton, Ian (2006). The Kings and Queens of England. Quercus Books. ISBN 978-1-8472-4141-2.
- "Calendar of State Papers, Spain".
- Duffy, Eamon (2009). Fires of Faith: Catholic England Under Mary Tudor. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-15216-6. OCLC 276274639. OL 22685559M.
- Edwards, John (2000). The Spain of the Catholic Monarchs 1474–1520. Blackwell Publishers Inc. ISBN 978-0-6311-6165-3.
- Fletcher, Anthony (1970). Tudor Rebellions (Second ed.). Longman Group Limited. ISBN 9780582313897. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
- Froude, James Anthony (1910). The Reign of Mary Tudor. London: J. M. Dent & Sons, New York: P. Dutton & Co. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- Haigh, Christopher (1992). English Reformations: religion, politics and society under the Tudors. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-198-22163-0. OCLC 26720329. OL 1718720M.
- Heard, Nigel (2000). Edward VI and Mary: A Mid-Tudor Crisis? (Second ed.). Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 9780340743171. Retrieved 9 November 2021.
- Hoyle, R. W. (2001). The Pilgrimage of Grace and the Politics of the 1530s. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-925906-2. OL 22264908M.
- Loades, David M. (1989). Mary Tudor: A Life. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-15453-1. LCCN 89007163. OL 2188907M.
- Loades, David M. (1999). Politics and Nation, England 1450-1660 (Fifth ed.). David Loades. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
- Paget, Gerald (1977). The Lineage & Ancestry of HRH Prince Charles, Prince of Wales. Edinburgh & London: Charles Skilton. ISBN 0-284-98590-2. OCLC 79311835. OL 17872227M.
- Porter, Linda (2007). Mary Tudor: The First Queen. London: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-7499-0982-6. OCLC 230990057. OL 26863607M.
- Previte-Orton, C.W. (1912). "The States of Western Europe". The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 2. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 872–910.
- "Chapter Five: Table of regnal year of English Sovereigns". Sweet & Maxwell's Guide to Law Reports and Statutes (4th ed.). London: Sweet & Maxwell's Guide. 1962.
- Tittler, Robert (1991). The Reign of Mary I (2nd ed.). London & New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-06107-5. LCCN 90043171. OL 1882426M.
- Waller, Maureen (2006). Sovereign Ladies: The Six Reigning Queens of England. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-33801-5. OL 9516816M.
- Weikel, Ann (1980). Tittler, Robert; Loach, Jennifer (eds.). The Mid-Tudor Polity c.1540-1560. The Marian Council Revisited: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 9780333245286. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
- Weikel, Ann (2004; online edition 2008). "Mary I (1516–1558)" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (subscription or UK public library membership required). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18245.
- Weir, Alison (1996). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. London: Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9. OL 7794712M.
- Whitelock, Anna (2009). Mary Tudor: England's First Queen. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-9018-7. LCCN 2009437824. OL 23681864M.
Further reading
- Doran, Susan and Thomas Freeman, eds. (2011). Mary Tudor: Old and New Perspectives. Palgrave MacMillan.
- Edwards, John. (2011). Mary I: England's Catholic Queen. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-11810-4.
- Erickson, Carolly (1978). Bloody Mary: The Life of Mary Tudor. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-11663-2.
- Loades, David M. (1979, 2d ed. 1991). The Reign of Mary Tudor: Politics, Government and Religion in England, 1553–58. London and New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-05759-0.
- —— (2006). Mary Tudor: The Tragical History of the First Queen of England. Kew, Richmond, UK: National Archives.
- —— (2011). Mary Tudor. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: Amberley Publishing.
- Madden, Frederick, Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary, 1536–1544 (London, 1831).
- Prescott, H. F. M. (1952). Mary Tudor: The Spanish Tudor. Second edition. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode.
- Ridley, Jasper (2001). Bloody Mary's Martyrs: The Story of England's Terror. New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0-7867-0854-9.
- Samson, Alexander (2020). Mary and Philip: The Marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain. Manchester UK: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-4223-8.
- Waldman, Milton (1972). The Lady Mary: A Biography of Mary Tudor, 1516–1558. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-211486-0.
- Wernham, R. B. (1966). Before the Armada: The Growth of English Foreign Policy, 1485–1588. London: Jonathan Cape.
External links
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![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlpoTDFkcGEybHhkVzkwWlMxc2IyZHZMbk4yWnk4ek5IQjRMVmRwYTJseGRXOTBaUzFzYjJkdkxuTjJaeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Mary I at the official website of the British monarchy
- . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. .
- "Mary I (1516–1558)". BBC.
- Portraits of Queen Mary I at the National Portrait Gallery, London
Mary I 18 February 1516 17 November 1558 also known as Mary Tudor and as Bloody Mary by her Protestant opponents was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 and Queen of Spain as the wife of King Philip II from January 1556 until her death in 1558 She made vigorous attempts to reverse the English Reformation which had begun during the reign of her father King Henry VIII Her attempt to restore to the Church the property confiscated in the previous two reigns was largely thwarted by Parliament but during her five year reign Mary had over 280 religious dissenters burned at the stake in the Marian persecutions Mary IPortrait by Antonis Mor 1554Queen of England and Ireland more ReignJuly 1553 17 November 1558Coronation1 October 1553PredecessorJane disputed or Edward VISuccessorElizabeth ICo monarchPhilip 1554 1558 Queen consort of SpainTenure16 January 1556 17 November 1558Born18 February 1516 Palace of Placentia Greenwich EnglandDied17 November 1558 aged 42 St James s Palace Westminster EnglandBurial14 December 1558 Westminster Abbey LondonSpousePhilip II of Spain m 1554 wbr HouseTudorFatherHenry VIII of EnglandMotherCatherine of AragonReligionRoman CatholicismSignature Mary was the only surviving child of Henry VIII by his first wife Catherine of Aragon She was declared illegitimate and barred from the line of succession following the annulment of her parents marriage in 1533 though she would later be restored via the Third Succession Act 1543 Her younger half brother Edward VI succeeded their father in 1547 at the age of nine When Edward became terminally ill in 1553 he attempted to remove Mary from the line of succession because he supposed correctly that she would reverse the Protestant reforms that had taken place during his reign Upon his death leading politicians proclaimed Mary s and Edward s Protestant cousin Lady Jane Grey as queen instead Mary speedily assembled a force in East Anglia and deposed Jane who was eventually beheaded Mary was excluding the disputed reigns of Jane and the Empress Matilda the first queen regnant of England In July 1554 she married Prince Philip of Spain becoming queen consort of Habsburg Spain on his accession in 1556 After Mary s death in 1558 her re establishment of Roman Catholicism in England was reversed by her younger half sister and successor Elizabeth I Birth and familyMary was born on 18 February 1516 at the Palace of Placentia in Greenwich England She was the only child of King Henry VIII and his first wife Catherine of Aragon to survive infancy Before Mary her mother had three miscarriages and stillbirths and one short lived son Henry Duke of Cornwall Mary was baptised into the Catholic faith at the Church of the Observant Friars in Greenwich three days after her birth Her godparents included Lord Chancellor Thomas Wolsey her great aunt Catherine Countess of Devon and Agnes Howard Duchess of Norfolk Henry VIII s first cousin once removed Margaret Pole Countess of Salisbury stood sponsor for Mary s confirmation which was conducted immediately after the baptism The following year Mary became a godmother herself when she was named as one of the sponsors of her cousin Frances Brandon In 1520 the Countess of Salisbury was appointed Mary s governess Sir John Hussey later Lord Hussey was her chamberlain from 1530 and his wife Lady Anne daughter of George Grey 2nd Earl of Kent was one of Mary s attendants ChildhoodCatherine of Aragon 1520 Mary s motherMary in 1522 at the time of her engagement to Emperor Charles V She is aged 6 and wears a rectangular brooch inscribed The Emperour Mary was a precocious child In July 1520 when scarcely four and a half years old she entertained a visiting French delegation with a performance on the virginals a type of harpsichord A great part of her early education came from her mother who consulted the Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives for advice and commissioned him to write De Institutione Feminae Christianae a treatise on the education of girls By the age of nine Mary could read and write Latin She studied French Spanish music dance and perhaps Greek Henry VIII doted on his daughter and boasted to the Venetian ambassador Sebastian Giustinian that Mary never cried Mary had a fair complexion with pale blue eyes and red or reddish golden hair traits very similar to those of her parents She was ruddy cheeked a trait she inherited from her father Despite his affection for Mary Henry was deeply disappointed that his marriage had produced no sons By the time Mary was nine years old it was apparent that Henry and Catherine would have no more children leaving Henry without a legitimate male heir In 1525 Henry sent Mary to the border of Wales to preside presumably in name only over the Council of Wales and the Marches She was given her own court based at Ludlow Castle and many of the royal prerogatives normally reserved for a Prince of Wales Vives and others called her the Princess of Wales although she was never technically invested with the title She appears to have spent three years in the Welsh Marches making regular visits to her father s court before returning permanently to the home counties around London in mid 1528 Emperor Charles V Mary s cousin and later father in law Throughout Mary s childhood Henry negotiated potential future marriages for her When she was only two years old Mary was promised to Francis Dauphin of France the infant son of King Francis I but the contract was repudiated after three years In 1522 at the age of six she was instead contracted to marry her 22 year old cousin Charles V Holy Roman Emperor However Charles broke off the engagement within a few years with Henry s agreement Cardinal Wolsey Henry s chief adviser then resumed marriage negotiations with the French and Henry suggested that Mary marry the French king Francis I who was eager for an alliance with England A marriage treaty was signed which provided that Mary marry either Francis I or his second son Henry Duke of Orleans but Wolsey secured an alliance with France without the marriage In 1528 Wolsey s agent Thomas Magnus discussed the idea of Mary marrying her cousin James V of Scotland with the Scottish diplomat Adam Otterburn According to the Venetian Mario Savorgnano by this time she was developing into a pretty well proportioned young lady with a fine complexion AdolescenceAlthough various possibilities for Mary s marriage had been considered the marriage of Mary s parents was itself in jeopardy which threatened her status Disappointed at the lack of a male heir and eager to remarry Henry attempted to have his marriage to Catherine annulled but Pope Clement VII refused his request Henry claimed citing biblical passages Leviticus 20 21 that the marriage was unclean because Catherine was the widow of his brother Arthur Prince of Wales Mary s uncle Catherine claimed that her marriage to Arthur was never consummated and so was not a valid marriage Pope Julius II had issued a dispensation on that basis Clement VII may have been reluctant to act because he was influenced by Charles V Catherine s nephew and Mary s former betrothed whose troops had sacked Rome in the War of the League of Cognac From 1531 Mary was often sick with irregular menstruation and depression although it is not clear whether this was caused by stress puberty or a more deep seated disease She was not permitted to see her mother whom Henry had sent to live away from court In early 1533 Henry married Anne Boleyn and in May Thomas Cranmer the Archbishop of Canterbury formally declared the marriage with Catherine void and the marriage to Anne valid Henry repudiated the Pope s authority declaring himself Supreme Head of the Church of England Catherine was demoted to Dowager Princess of Wales a title she would have held as Arthur s widow and Mary was deemed illegitimate She was styled The Lady Mary rather than Princess and her place in the line of succession was transferred to Henry and Anne s newborn daughter Elizabeth Mary s household was dissolved her servants including the Countess of Salisbury were dismissed and in December 1533 she was sent to join her infant half sister s household at Hatfield Palace Hertfordshire Mary determinedly refused to acknowledge that Anne was the queen or that Elizabeth was a princess enraging King Henry Under strain and with her movements restricted Mary was frequently ill which the royal physician attributed to her ill treatment The Imperial ambassador Eustace Chapuys became her close adviser and interceded unsuccessfully on her behalf at court The relationship between Mary and her father worsened they did not speak to each other for three years Although both she and her mother were ill Mary was refused permission to visit Catherine When Catherine died in 1536 Mary was inconsolable Catherine was interred in Peterborough Cathedral while Mary grieved in semi seclusion at Hunsdon in Hertfordshire AdulthoodIn 1536 Queen Anne fell from the King s favour and was beheaded Elizabeth like Mary was declared illegitimate and stripped of her succession rights Within two weeks of Anne s execution Henry married Jane Seymour who urged her husband to make peace with Mary Henry insisted that Mary recognise him as head of the Church of England repudiate papal authority acknowledge that the marriage between her parents was unlawful and accept her own illegitimacy She attempted to reconcile with Henry by submitting to his authority as far as God and my conscience permitted but was eventually bullied into signing a document agreeing to all of Henry s demands Reconciled with her father Mary resumed her place at court Henry granted her a household which included the reinstatement of Mary s favourite Susan Clarencieux Mary s Privy Purse accounts for this period kept by Mary Finch show that Hatfield House the Palace of Beaulieu also called Newhall Richmond and Hunsdon were among her principal places of residence as well as Henry s palaces at Greenwich Westminster and Hampton Court Her expenses included fine clothes and gambling at cards one of her favourite pastimes Rebels in the North of England including Lord Hussey Mary s former chamberlain campaigned against Henry s religious reforms and one of their demands was that Mary be made legitimate The rebellion known as the Pilgrimage of Grace was ruthlessly suppressed Along with other rebels Hussey was executed but there is no suggestion that Mary was directly involved In 1537 Queen Jane died after giving birth to a son Edward Mary was made godmother to her half brother and acted as chief mourner at the Queen s funeral Mary in 15441545 painting showing left to right Mother Jak Mary Edward Henry VIII Jane Seymour posthumous Elizabeth Will Somers court fool Mary was courted by Philip Duke of Bavaria from late 1539 but he was Lutheran and his suit for her hand was unsuccessful Over 1539 the King s chief minister Thomas Cromwell negotiated a potential alliance with the Duchy of Cleves Suggestions that Mary marry William I Duke of Cleves who was the same age came to nothing but a match between Henry and the Duke s sister Anne was agreed When the King saw Anne for the first time in late December 1539 a week before the scheduled wedding he found her unattractive but was unable for diplomatic reasons and without a suitable pretext to cancel the marriage Cromwell fell from favour and was arrested for treason in June 1540 one of the unlikely charges against him was that he had plotted to marry Mary himself Anne consented to the annulment of the marriage which had not been consummated and Cromwell was beheaded In 1541 Henry had the Countess of Salisbury Mary s old governess and godmother executed on the pretext of a Catholic plot in which her son Reginald Pole was implicated Her executioner was a wretched and blundering youth who literally hacked her head and shoulders to pieces In 1542 following the execution of Henry s fifth wife Catherine Howard the unmarried Henry invited Mary to attend the royal Christmas festivities At court while her father was between marriages and thus without a consort Mary acted as hostess In 1543 Henry married his sixth and last wife Catherine Parr who was able to bring the family closer together Henry returned Mary and Elizabeth to the line of succession through the Act of Succession 1544 also known as the Third Succession Act placing them after Edward though both remained legally illegitimate Henry VIII died in 1547 and Edward succeeded him Mary inherited estates in Norfolk Suffolk and Essex and was granted Hunsdon and Beaulieu as her own Since Edward was still a child rule passed to a regency council dominated by Protestants who attempted to establish their faith throughout the country For example the Act of Uniformity 1549 prescribed Protestant rites for church services such as the use of Thomas Cranmer s Book of Common Prayer Mary remained faithful to Roman Catholicism and defiantly celebrated traditional Mass in her own chapel She appealed to her cousin Emperor Charles V to apply diplomatic pressure demanding that she be allowed to practise her religion For most of Edward s reign Mary remained on her own estates and rarely attended court A plan between May and July 1550 to smuggle her out of England to the safety of the European mainland came to nothing Religious differences between Mary and Edward continued Mary attended a reunion with Edward and Elizabeth for Christmas 1550 where the 13 year old Edward embarrassed Mary then 34 and reduced both her and himself to tears in front of the court by publicly reproving her for ignoring his laws regarding worship Mary repeatedly refused Edward s demands that she abandon Catholicism and Edward persistently refused to drop his demands AccessionEdward VI declared his first cousin once removed Lady Jane Grey his heir Lady Jane was married to Lord Guildford Dudley a son of the English politician John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland On 6 July 1553 at the age of 15 Edward VI died of a lung infection possibly tuberculosis He did not want the crown to go to Mary because he feared she would restore Catholicism and undo his and their father s reforms and so he planned to exclude her from the line of succession His advisers told him that he could not disinherit only one of his half sisters he would have to disinherit Elizabeth as well even though she was a Protestant Guided by John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland and perhaps others Edward excluded both from the line of succession in his will Contradicting the Act of Succession 1544 which restored Mary and Elizabeth to the line of succession Edward named Northumberland s daughter in law Lady Jane Grey the granddaughter of Henry VIII s younger sister Mary as his successor Lady Jane s mother was Frances Brandon Mary s cousin and goddaughter Just before Edward s death Mary was summoned to London to visit her dying brother but was warned that the summons was a pretext on which to capture her and thereby facilitate Jane s accession to the throne Therefore instead of heading to London from her residence at Hunsdon Mary fled to East Anglia where she owned extensive estates and Northumberland had ruthlessly put down Kett s Rebellion Many adherents to the Catholic faith opponents of Northumberland lived there On 9 July from Kenninghall Norfolk she wrote to the privy council with orders for her proclamation as Edward s successor On 10 July 1553 Lady Jane was proclaimed queen by Northumberland and his supporters and on the same day Mary s servant Thomas Hungate arrived in London with her letter to the council By 12 July Mary and her supporters had assembled a military force at Framlingham Castle Suffolk Northumberland s support collapsed and Jane was deposed on 19 July She and Northumberland were imprisoned in the Tower of London Mary rode triumphantly into London on 3 August 1553 on a wave of popular support She was accompanied by her half sister Elizabeth and a procession of over 800 nobles and gentlemen ReignOne of Mary s first actions as queen was to order the release of the Roman Catholic Thomas Howard 3rd Duke of Norfolk and Stephen Gardiner from imprisonment in the Tower of London as well as her kinsman Edward Courtenay Mary understood that the young Lady Jane was essentially a pawn in Northumberland s scheme and Northumberland was the only conspirator of rank executed for high treason in the immediate aftermath of the attempted coup Lady Jane and her husband Lord Guildford Dudley though found guilty were kept under guard in the Tower rather than immediately executed while Lady Jane s father Henry Grey 1st Duke of Suffolk was released Mary was left in a difficult position as almost all the Privy Counsellors had been implicated in the plot to put Lady Jane on the throne She appointed Gardiner to the council and made him both Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor offices he held until his death in November 1555 Susan Clarencieux became Mistress of the Robes On 1 October 1553 Gardiner crowned Mary at Westminster Abbey Spanish marriage Edward Courtenay 1st Earl of Devon and Cardinal Reginald Pole both were potential candidates for marriage Philip of Spain by Titian Now aged 37 Mary turned her attention to finding a husband and producing an heir which would prevent the Protestant Elizabeth still next in line under the terms of Henry VIII s will and the Act of Succession of 1544 from succeeding to the throne While the English expected her to marry there was a general consensus that the Queen should not marry a foreigner since that could lead to the interference of a foreign power in English affairs On 16 November 1553 a parliamentary delegation went to her and formally requested that she choose an English husband with its obvious although tacit candidates being her kinsmen Edward Courtenay recently created Earl of Devon and the Catholic Cardinal Reginald Pole But Mary s first cousin Charles V also king of Spain saw that an alliance with England would give him supremacy in Europe he sent his minister to England to propose his only legitimate son Philip as a person whom the religious and political interests of the world recommended for Mary The Spanish prince had been widowed a few years before by the death of his first wife Maria Manuela of Portugal mother of his son Carlos and was the heir apparent to vast territories in Continental Europe and the New World Both Philip and Mary were descendants of John of Gaunt As part of the marriage negotiations a portrait of Philip by Titian was sent to Mary in the latter half of 1553 Mary was convinced that the safety of England required her to form a closer relationship with Charles s family the Habsburgs and she decided to marry Philip A marriage treaty was presented to the Privy Council on 7 December 1553 and even though the terms clearly favoured England and included several safeguards many still thought that England would be drawn into Philip s wars and become a mere province of the Habsburg Empire This was of particular concern to the landed gentry and parliamentary classes who foresaw having to pay greater taxes to cover the cost of England s participation in foreign wars Lord Chancellor Gardiner and the English House of Commons unsuccessfully petitioned Mary to consider marrying an Englishman fearing that England would be relegated to a dependency of the Habsburgs The marriage was unpopular with the English Gardiner and his allies opposed it on the basis of patriotism while Protestants were motivated by a fear that with the restoration of Catholicism and the arrival of the Spanish King the Inquisition would come to judge Protestant heretics Many English people knew the stories of the torments and cruelties suffered by the prisoners of the Inquisition and there were even those who had suffered from the rack of the inquisitors themselves It was not just the English who were alarmed by the pending marriage of Mary and Philip France feared an alliance between England and Spain Antoine de Noailles the French ambassador to England threatened war and began immediate intrigues with any malcontents he could find Before Christmas in 1553 anti Spanish ballads and broadsheets were circulating in the streets of London When Mary insisted on marrying Philip insurrections broke out Thomas Wyatt the Younger led a force from Kent to depose Mary in favour of Elizabeth as part of a wider conspiracy now known as Wyatt s rebellion which also involved the Duke of Suffolk Lady Jane s father Mary declared publicly that she would summon Parliament to discuss the marriage and if Parliament decided that the marriage was not to the kingdom s advantage she would refrain from pursuing it On reaching London Wyatt was defeated and captured Wyatt the Duke of Suffolk Lady Jane and her husband Guildford Dudley were executed Courtenay who was implicated in the plot was imprisoned and then exiled Elizabeth though protesting her innocence in the Wyatt affair was imprisoned in the Tower of London for two months then put under house arrest at Woodstock Palace Mary was excluding the brief disputed reigns of the Empress Matilda and Lady Jane Grey England s first queen regnant Further under the English common law doctrine of jure uxoris the property and titles belonging to a woman became her husband s upon marriage and it was feared that any man she married would thereby become king of England in fact and name While Mary s grandparents Ferdinand and Isabella had retained sovereignty of their respective realms during their marriage there was no precedent to follow in England Under the terms of Queen Mary s Marriage Act Philip was to be styled King of England all official documents including Acts of Parliament were to be dated with both their names and Parliament was to be called under the joint authority of the couple for Mary s lifetime only England would not be obliged to provide military support to Philip s father in any war and Philip could not act without his wife s consent or appoint foreigners to office in England Philip was unhappy with these conditions but ready to agree for the sake of securing the marriage He had no amorous feelings for Mary and sought the marriage for its political and strategic gains his aide Ruy Gomez de Silva wrote to a correspondent in Brussels the marriage was concluded for no fleshly consideration but in order to remedy the disorders of this kingdom and to preserve the Low Countries A future child of Mary and Philip would be not only heir to the throne of England but also heir to the Spanish Empire in the event that Philip s eldest son Don Carlos died without issue To elevate his son to Mary s rank Emperor Charles V ceded to Philip the crown of Naples as well as his claim to the Kingdom of Jerusalem Mary thus became queen of Naples and titular queen of Jerusalem upon marriage Their wedding at Winchester Cathedral on 25 July 1554 took place just two days after their first meeting Philip could not speak English and so they spoke a mixture of Spanish French and Latin False pregnancy Mary and Philip Hans Eworth In September 1554 Mary stopped menstruating She gained weight and felt nauseated in the mornings For these reasons almost the entirety of her court including her physicians believed she was pregnant Parliament passed the Treason Act of 1554 making Philip regent in the event of Mary s death in childbirth In the last week of April 1555 Elizabeth was released from house arrest and called to court as a witness to the birth which was expected imminently According to Giovanni Michieli the Venetian ambassador Philip may have planned to marry Elizabeth if Mary died but in a letter to his brother in law Maximilian of Austria Philip expressed uncertainty as to whether Mary was pregnant Mary s pregnancy had its pros and cons for Elizabeth if Mary died during childbirth Elizabeth would become the new queen however if her sister gave birth to a healthy baby Elizabeth s chances of becoming queen would recede sharply Thanksgiving services in the diocese of London were held at the end of April after false rumours that Mary had given birth to a son spread across Europe Through May and June the apparent delay in delivery fed gossip that Mary was not pregnant Susan Clarencieux revealed her doubts to the French ambassador Antoine de Noailles Mary continued to exhibit signs of pregnancy until July 1555 when her abdomen receded Michieli dismissively ridiculed the pregnancy as more likely to end in wind rather than anything else It was most likely a false pregnancy perhaps induced by Mary s overwhelming desire to have a child In August soon after the disgrace of the false pregnancy which Mary considered God s punishment for her having tolerated heretics in her realm full citation needed Philip left England to command his armies against France in Flanders Mary was heartbroken and fell into a deep depression Michieli was touched by the Queen s grief he wrote she was extraordinarily in love with her husband and disconsolate at his departure Elizabeth remained at court until October apparently restored to favour In the absence of any children Philip was concerned that one of the next claimants to the English throne after his sister in law was Mary Queen of Scots who was betrothed to Francis Dauphin of France Philip persuaded his wife that Elizabeth should marry his cousin Emmanuel Philibert Duke of Savoy to secure the Catholic succession and preserve the Habsburg interest in England but Elizabeth refused to agree and parliamentary consent was unlikely Religious policy Gold medal by Jacopo da Trezzo of Mary I Queen of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith 1555Mary by Hans Eworth 1554 She wears a jewelled pendant bearing the Tudor pearl set beneath two diamonds In the month following her accession Mary issued a proclamation that she would not compel any of her subjects to follow her religion but by the end of September 1553 leading Protestant churchmen including Thomas Cranmer John Bradford John Rogers John Hooper and Hugh Latimer were imprisoned Mary s first Parliament which assembled in early October declared her parents marriage valid and abolished Edward s religious laws Church doctrine was restored to the form it had taken in the 1539 Six Articles of Henry VIII which among other things reaffirmed clerical celibacy Married priests were deprived of their benefices Mary rejected the break with Rome instituted by her father and the establishment of Protestantism by her brother s regents Philip persuaded Parliament to repeal Henry s religious laws returning the English church to Roman jurisdiction Reaching an agreement took many months and Mary and Pope Julius III had to make a major concession the confiscated monastery lands were not returned to the church but remained in the hands of their influential new owners By the end of 1554 the Pope had approved the deal and the Heresy Acts were revived Around 800 rich Protestants including John Foxe fled into exile Those who stayed and persisted in publicly proclaiming their beliefs became targets of heresy laws The first executions occurred over five days in February 1555 John Rogers on 4 February Laurence Saunders on 8 February and Rowland Taylor and John Hooper on 9 February Thomas Cranmer the imprisoned archbishop of Canterbury was forced to watch Bishops Ridley and Latimer being burned at the stake He recanted repudiated Protestant theology and rejoined the Catholic faith Under the normal process of the law he should have been absolved as a repentant but Mary refused to reprieve him On the day of his burning he dramatically withdrew his recantation In total 283 were executed most by burning The burnings proved so unpopular that even Alfonso de Castro one of Philip s own ecclesiastical staff condemned them and another adviser Simon Renard warned him that such cruel enforcement could cause a revolt Mary persevered with the policy which continued for the rest of her reign and exacerbated anti Catholic and anti Spanish feeling among the English people The victims became lauded as martyrs Reginald Pole the son of Mary s executed governess arrived as papal legate in November 1554 He was ordained a priest and appointed Archbishop of Canterbury immediately after Cranmer s execution in March 1556 As long as the Queen remained childless her half sister Elizabeth was her successor Mary concerned about her sister s religious convictions Elizabeth only attended mass under obligation and had only superficially converted to Catholicism to save her life after being imprisoned following Wyatt s rebellion although she remained a staunch Protestant seriously considering the possibility of removing her from the succession and naming as her successor her Scottish first cousin and devout Catholic Margaret Douglas Foreign policy Portrait by Hans Eworth c 1555 1558 Furthering the Tudor conquest of Ireland English colonists were settled in the Irish Midlands under Mary and Philip s reign Queen s and King s Counties later called Counties Laois and Offaly were founded and their plantation began Their principal towns were named respectively Maryborough later called Portlaoise and Philipstown later Daingean In January 1556 Mary s father in law the Emperor abdicated Mary and Philip were still apart he was declared king of Spain in Brussels but she stayed in England Philip negotiated an unsteady truce with the French in February 1556 The next month the French ambassador in England Antoine de Noailles was implicated in a plot against Mary when Henry Dudley a second cousin of the executed Duke of Northumberland attempted to assemble an invasion force in France The plot known as the Dudley conspiracy was betrayed and the conspirators in England were rounded up Dudley remained in exile in France and Noailles prudently left Britain Philip returned to England from March to July 1557 to persuade Mary to support Spain in a renewed war against France Mary was in favour of declaring war but her councillors opposed it because French trade would be jeopardised it contravened the foreign war provisions of the marriage treaty and a bad economic legacy from Edward VI s reign and a series of poor harvests meant England lacked supplies and finances War was only declared in June 1557 after Reginald Pole s nephew Thomas Stafford invaded England and seized Scarborough Castle with French help in a failed attempt to depose Mary As a result of the war relations between England and the Papacy became strained since Pope Paul IV was allied with Henry II of France In August English forces were victorious in the aftermath of the Battle of Saint Quentin with one eyewitness reporting Both sides fought most choicely and the English best of all Celebrations were brief as in January 1558 French forces took Calais England s sole remaining possession on the European mainland Although the territory was financially burdensome its loss was a mortifying blow to the Queen s prestige According to Holinshed s Chronicles Mary later lamented although this may be apocryphal When I am dead and opened you shall find Calais lying in my heart Commerce and revenue Philip and Mary sixpence 1554Mary shilling The weather during the years of Mary s reign was consistently wet The persistent rain and flooding led to famine Another problem was the decline of the Antwerp cloth trade Despite Mary s marriage to Philip England did not benefit from Spain s enormously lucrative trade with the New World The Spanish guarded their trade routes jealously and Mary could not condone English smuggling or piracy against her husband s subjects In an attempt to increase trade and rescue the English economy Mary s counsellors continued Northumberland s policy of seeking out new commercial opportunities She granted a royal charter to the Muscovy Company under governor Sebastian Cabot and commissioned a world atlas from Diogo Homem Adventurers such as John Lok and William Towerson sailed south in an attempt to develop links with the coast of Africa Financially Mary s regime tried to reconcile a modern form of government with correspondingly higher spending with a medieval system of collecting taxation and dues Mary retained the Edwardian appointee William Paulet 1st Marquess of Winchester as Lord High Treasurer and assigned him to oversee the revenue collection system A failure to apply new tariffs to new forms of imports meant that a key source of revenue was neglected To solve this Mary s government published a revised Book of Rates 1558 which listed the tariffs and duties for every import This publication was not extensively reviewed until 1604 English coinage was debased under both Henry VIII and Edward VI Mary drafted plans for currency reform but they were not implemented until after her death DeathTomb of Elizabeth I and Mary I in Westminster Abbey After Philip s visit in 1557 Mary again thought she was pregnant with a baby due in March 1558 She decreed in her will that her husband would be the regent during the minority of their child But no child was born and Mary was forced to accept that her half sister Elizabeth would be her lawful successor Mary was weak and ill from May 1558 In pain possibly from ovarian cysts or uterine cancer she died on 17 November 1558 aged 42 at St James s Palace during an influenza epidemic that also claimed Archbishop Pole s life later that day She was succeeded by Elizabeth Philip who was in Brussels wrote to his sister Joanna I felt a reasonable regret for her death Although Mary s will stated that she wished to be buried next to her mother she was interred in Westminster Abbey on 14 December in a tomb she eventually shared with Elizabeth The inscription on their tomb affixed there by James I when he succeeded Elizabeth is Regno consortes et urna hic obdormimus Elizabetha et Maria sorores in spe resurrectionis Consorts in realm and tomb we sisters Elizabeth and Mary here lie down to sleep in hope of the resurrection LegacyJohn White Bishop of Winchester praised Mary at her funeral service She was a king s daughter she was a king s sister she was a king s wife She was a queen and by the same title a king also She was the first woman to successfully claim the throne of England despite competing claims and determined opposition and enjoyed popular support and sympathy during the earliest parts of her reign especially from the Roman Catholics of England Protestant writers at the time and since have often condemned Mary s reign By the 17th century the memory of her religious persecutions had led to the adoption of her sobriquet Bloody Mary John Knox attacked Mary in his First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women 1558 and John Foxe vilified her prominently in Actes and Monuments 1563 Foxe s book remained popular throughout the following centuries and helped shape enduring perceptions of Mary as a bloodthirsty tyrant Historian Lucy Wooding notes misogynistic undertones in descriptions of Mary She s simultaneously being lambasted for being vindictive and fierce and spineless and weak criticized for such actions as showing clemency to political prisoners and yielding authority to her husband Mary is remembered in the 21st century for her vigorous efforts to restore the primacy of Roman Catholicism in England after the rise of Protestant influence during the previous reigns Protestant historians have long deplored her reign emphasizing that in just five years she burned several hundred Protestants at the stake In the mid 20th century H F M Prescott attempted to redress the tradition that Mary was intolerant and authoritarian and scholarship since then has tended to view the older simpler assessments of Mary with increasing reservations A historiographical revisionism since the 1980s has improved her reputation among scholars to some degree Christopher Haigh argued that her revival of religious festivities and Catholic practices was generally welcomed Haigh concluded that the last years of Mary s reign were not a gruesome preparation for Protestant victory but a continuing consolidation of Catholic strength English Catholics often remembered Mary favourably decades after her death the epitaph for John Throckmorton refers to Queene Marie Mary I of happie memorie Catholic historians such as John Lingard thought Mary s policies failed not because they were wrong but because she had too short a reign to establish them and because of natural disasters beyond her control In other countries the Catholic Counter Reformation was spearheaded by Jesuit missionaries but Mary s chief religious advisor Cardinal Reginald Pole refused to allow the Jesuits into England Her marriage to Philip was unpopular among her subjects and her religious policies resulted in deep seated resentment The military loss of Calais to France was a bitter humiliation to English pride Failed harvests increased public discontent Philip spent most of his time abroad while his wife remained in England leaving her depressed at his absence and undermined by their inability to have children After Mary s death Philip sought to marry Elizabeth but she refused him Although Mary s rule was ultimately ineffectual and unpopular the policies of fiscal reform naval expansion and colonial exploration that were later lauded as Elizabethan accomplishments were started in Mary s reign Titles style and armsArms of Mary I impaled with those of her husband Philip II of Spain When Mary ascended the throne she was proclaimed under the same official style as Henry VIII and Edward VI Mary by the Grace of God Queen of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith and of the Church of England and of Ireland on Earth Supreme Head The title Supreme Head of the Church was repugnant to Mary s Catholicism and she omitted it after Christmas 1553 Under Mary s marriage treaty with Philip the official joint style reflected not only Mary s but also Philip s dominions and claims Philip and Mary by the grace of God King and Queen of England France Naples Jerusalem and Ireland Defenders of the Faith Princes of Spain and Sicily Archdukes of Austria Dukes of Milan Burgundy and Brabant Counts of Habsburg Flanders and Tyrol This style which had been in use since 1554 was replaced when Philip inherited the Spanish Crown in 1556 with Philip and Mary by the Grace of God King and Queen of England Spain France both the Sicilies Jerusalem and Ireland Defenders of the Faith Archdukes of Austria Dukes of Burgundy Milan and Brabant Counts of Habsburg Flanders and Tyrol Mary I s coat of arms was the same as those used by all her predecessors since Henry IV Quarterly Azure three fleurs de lys Or for France and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or for England Sometimes her arms were impaled depicted side by side with those of her husband She adopted Truth the Daughter of Time Latin Veritas Temporis Filia as her personal motto Family treeAncestors of Mary I of England8 Edmund Tudor 1st Earl of Richmond4 Henry VII of England9 Margaret Beaufort2 Henry VIII of England10 Edward IV of England5 Elizabeth of York11 Elizabeth Woodville1 Mary I of England12 John II of Aragon6 Ferdinand II of Aragon13 Juana Enriquez3 Catherine of Aragon14 John II of Castile7 Isabella I of Castile15 Isabella of Portugal Both Mary and Philip were descended from John of Gaunt the Duke of Lancaster a relationship that was used to portray Philip as an English king Family of Mary I of EnglandJohn of Gaunt Duke of LancasterHenry IV of EnglandJohn Beaufort Earl of SomersetJoan BeaufortHenry III of CastileCatherine of LancasterHenry V of EnglandJohn Beaufort Duke of SomersetCecily NevilleJohn II of CastileHenry VI of EnglandLady Margaret BeaufortEdward IV of EnglandIsabella I of CastileFerdinand II of AragonHenry VII of EnglandElizabeth of YorkJoanna of CastileMaria of AragonCatherine of AragonHenry VIII of EnglandMargaret TudorMary TudorCharles V Holy Roman EmperorIsabella of PortugalJames V of ScotlandLady Frances BrandonPhilip II of SpainMary I of EnglandElizabeth I of EnglandEdward VI of EnglandMary Queen of ScotsLady Jane GreySee alsoJewels of Mary I of England Tudor periodNotesEdward VI died on 6 July Mary was proclaimed his successor in London on 19 July sources differ on whether her regnal years were dated from 24 July or 6 July Although he was in deacon s orders and prominent in the church Pole was not ordained until the day before his consecration as archbishop ReferencesWeir p 160 Sweet and Maxwell s p 28 Loades pp 12 13 Weir pp 152 153 Porter p 13 Waller p 16 Whitelock p 7 Porter pp 13 37 Waller p 17 Porter p 13 Waller p 17 Whitelock p 7 Loades p 28 Porter p 15 Loades p 29 Porter p 16 Waller p 20 Whitelock p 21 Hoyle p 407 Whitelock p 23 Whitelock p 27 Loades pp 19 20 Porter p 21 Loades p 31 Porter p 30 Porter p 28 Whitelock p 27 Loades pp 32 43 Domine Orator per Deum immortalem ista puella nunquam plorat quoted in Whitelock p 17 Tremlett Giles Catherine of Aragon Henry s Spanish Queen p 244 Tittler p 1 Loades p 37 Porter pp 38 39 Whitelock pp 32 33 Porter pp 38 39 Whitelock pp 32 33 Waller p 23 Loades pp 41 42 45 Porter pp 20 21 Waller pp 20 21 Whitelock pp 18 23 Loades pp 22 23 Porter pp 21 24 Waller p 21 Whitelock p 23 Whitelock pp 30 31 Whitelock pp 36 37 Whitelock pp 37 38 State Papers Henry VIII Vol 4 part IV London 1836 p 545 Mario Savorgnano 25 August 1531 in Calendar of State Papers Venetian vol IV p 682 quoted in Loades p 63 Porter pp 56 78 Whitelock p 40 Waller p 27 Porter p 76 Whitelock p 48 Porter p 92 Whitelock pp 55 56 Loades p 77 Porter p 92 Whitelock p 57 Loades p 78 Whitelock p 57 Porter pp 97 101 Whitelock pp 55 69 Dr William Butts quoted in Waller p 31 Loades pp 84 85 Porter p 100 Porter pp 103 104 Whitelock pp 67 69 72 Letter from Emperor Charles V to Empress Isabella quoted in Whitelock p 75 Porter p 107 Whitelock pp 76 77 Whitelock p 91 Porter p 121 Waller p 33 Whitelock p 81 Porter pp 119 123 Waller pp 34 36 Whitelock pp 83 89 Porter pp 119 123 Waller pp 34 36 Whitelock pp 90 91 Loades p 105 Madden F ed 1831 The Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary quoted in Loades p 111 Porter pp 129 132 Whitelock p 28 Porter pp 124 125 Loades p 108 Loades p 114 Porter pp 126 127 Whitelock pp 95 96 Loades pp 127 129 Porter pp 135 136 Waller p 39 Whitelock p 101 Loades pp 126 127 Whitelock p 101 Whitelock pp 103 104 Whitelock p 105 Whitelock pp 105 106 Loades p 122 Porter p 137 Contemporary Spanish and English reports quoted in Whitelock p 108 Porter p 143 Waller p 37 Porter pp 143 144 Whitelock p 110 Loades p 120 Waller p 39 Whitelock p 112 Loades pp 137 138 Whitelock p 130 Loades pp 143 147 Porter pp 160 162 Whitelock pp 133 134 Porter p 154 Waller p 40 Loades pp 153 157 Porter pp 169 176 Waller pp 41 42 Whitelock pp 144 147 Porter p 178 Whitelock p 149 Porter pp 179 182 Whitelock pp 148 160 Porter p 187 Porter pp 188 189 Waller pp 48 49 Whitelock p 165 Waller pp 51 53 Whitelock pp 165 138 Loades p 176 Porter p 195 Tittler pp 8 81 82 Whitelock p 168 Whitelock p 168 Porter p 203 Waller p 52 Loades pp 176 181 Porter pp 213 214 Waller p 54 Whitelock pp 170 174 Porter p 210 Weir pp 159 160 Waller pp 57 59 Waller p 59 Whitelock p 181 Waller pp 59 60 Whitelock pp 185 186 Whitelock p 182 Whitelock p 183 Porter pp 257 261 Whitelock pp 195 197 Froude 1910 p 23 Weikel 1980 p 53 Froude 1910 p 55 Loades pp 199 201 Porter pp 265 267 Porter p 310 Heard 2000 pp 46 48 Heard 2000 pp 48 49 Fletcher 1970 p 86 Porter pp 279 284 Waller p 72 Whitelock pp 202 209 Waller p 73 Alexander Samson Mary and Philip The marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain Manchester 2020 p 70 Loades 1999 pp 190 191 Porter pp 288 299 Whitelock pp 212 213 Porter p 300 Waller pp 74 75 Whitelock p 216 Porter pp 311 313 Whitelock pp 217 225 Waller pp 84 85 Whitelock pp 202 227 Porter p 269 Waller p 85 Porter pp 291 292 Waller p 85 Whitelock pp 226 227 Porter pp 308 309 Whitelock p 229 Letter of 29 July 1554 in the Calendar of State Papers Spanish volume XIII quoted in Porter p 320 and Whitelock p 244 Alexander Samson Mary and Philip The marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain Manchester 2020 pp 71 73 Porter pp 321 324 Waller p 90 Whitelock p 238 Loades pp 224 225 Porter pp 318 321 Waller pp 86 87 Whitelock p 237 Porter p 319 Waller pp 87 91 Porter p 333 Waller pp 92 93 Loades pp 234 235 Porter p 338 Waller p 95 Whitelock p 255 Waller p 96 The queen s pregnancy turns out not to have been as certain as we thought Letter of 25 April 1554 quoted in Porter p 337 and Whitelock p 257 Loades p 32 Waller p 95 Whitelock p 256 Whitelock pp 257 259 Whitelock p 258 Waller p 97 Whitelock p 259 Porter pp 337 338 Waller pp 97 98 PBS Video Porter p 342 Waller pp 98 99 Whitelock p 268 Antoine de Noailles quoted in Whitelock p 269 Whitelock p 284 Tittler pp 23 24 Whitelock p 187 Loades pp 207 208 Waller p 65 Whitelock p 198 Porter p 241 Whitelock pp 200 201 Porter p 331 Loades pp 235 242 Waller p 113 Solly Meilan The Myth of Bloody Mary Smithsonian Magazine 12 March 2020 Whitelock p 262 Loades p 325 Porter pp 355 356 Waller pp 104 105 Loades p 326 Waller pp 104 105 Whitelock p 274 Duffy p 79 Waller p 104 Porter pp 358 359 Waller p 103 Whitelock p 266 Waller p 102 Waller pp 101 103 105 Whitelock p 266 See for example the Oxford Martyrs Loades p 238 Waller p 94 Porter p 357 Loades p 319 Morgan Ring So High A Blood The Life of Margaret Countess of Lennox Bloomsbury 2017 p 110 Porter 2007 pp 251 252 Tittler p 66 Porter pp 381 387 Whitelock p 288 Porter p 389 Waller p 111 Whitelock p 289 Whitelock pp 293 295 Tyler Royall ed 1954 Spain August 1557 Calendar of State Papers Spain London pp 308 318 Retrieved 1 December 2021 via British History Online Loades pp 295 297 Porter pp 392 395 Whitelock pp 291 292 Porter p 393 Porter pp 229 375 Whitelock p 277 Tittler p 48 Tittler p 49 Tittler pp 49 50 Porter p 371 Porter p 373 Porter p 372 Porter p 375 Tittler p 51 Porter p 376 Porter p 376 Tittler p 53 Porter p 398 Waller pp 106 112 Whitelock p 299 Whitelock pp 299 300 Whitelock p 301 Loades p 305 Whitelock p 300 Waller p 108 Letter from the King of Spain to the Princess of Portugal 4 December 1558 in Calendar of State Papers Spanish volume XIII quoted in Loades p 311 Waller p 109 and Whitelock p 303 Porter p 410 Whitelock p 1 Loades p 313 Whitelock p 305 Waller p 116 Waller p 115 Porter pp 361 362 418 Waller pp 113 115 Weikel Loades David 1989 The Reign of Mary Tudor Historiography and Research Albion 21 4 547 558 online Haigh pp 203 234 quoted in Freeman Thomas S 2017 Restoration and Reaction Reinterpreting the Marian Church Journal of Ecclesiastical History In press online Haigh p 234 Epitaph plaque tomb of Sir John Throckmorton Coughton Church Warwickshire Loades pp 340 341 Mayer Thomas F 1996 A Test of Wills Cardinal Pole Ignatius Loyola and the Jesuits in England In McCoog Thomas M ed The Reckoned Expense Edmund Campion and the Early English Jesuits pp 21 38 Loades pp 342 343 Waller p 116 Loades pp 340 343 Porter p 400 Tittler p 80 Weikel Loades pp 217 323 e g Waller p 106 Waller p 60 Whitelock p 310 Crofton p 128 Davies C S L Edwards John 23 September 2004 Katherine Catalina Catherine Katherine of Aragon 1485 1536 queen of England first consort of Henry VIII Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4891 Subscription or UK public library membership required Weir The Tudors Licence p 38 Edwards p xiii Previte Orton p 902 Whitelock p 242 Sources Crofton Ian 2006 The Kings and Queens of England Quercus Books ISBN 978 1 8472 4141 2 Calendar of State Papers Spain Duffy Eamon 2009 Fires of Faith Catholic England Under Mary Tudor New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 15216 6 OCLC 276274639 OL 22685559M Edwards John 2000 The Spain of the Catholic Monarchs 1474 1520 Blackwell Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 6311 6165 3 Fletcher Anthony 1970 Tudor Rebellions Second ed Longman Group Limited ISBN 9780582313897 Retrieved 18 November 2021 Froude James Anthony 1910 The Reign of Mary Tudor London J M Dent amp Sons New York P Dutton amp Co Retrieved 8 December 2021 Haigh Christopher 1992 English Reformations religion politics and society under the Tudors Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 198 22163 0 OCLC 26720329 OL 1718720M Heard Nigel 2000 Edward VI and Mary A Mid Tudor Crisis Second ed Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 9780340743171 Retrieved 9 November 2021 Hoyle R W 2001 The Pilgrimage of Grace and the Politics of the 1530s Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 925906 2 OL 22264908M Loades David M 1989 Mary Tudor A Life Oxford Basil Blackwell ISBN 0 631 15453 1 LCCN 89007163 OL 2188907M Loades David M 1999 Politics and Nation England 1450 1660 Fifth ed David Loades Retrieved 3 December 2021 Paget Gerald 1977 The Lineage amp Ancestry of HRH Prince Charles Prince of Wales Edinburgh amp London Charles Skilton ISBN 0 284 98590 2 OCLC 79311835 OL 17872227M Porter Linda 2007 Mary Tudor The First Queen London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 7499 0982 6 OCLC 230990057 OL 26863607M Previte Orton C W 1912 The States of Western Europe The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 872 910 Chapter Five Table of regnal year of English Sovereigns Sweet amp Maxwell s Guide to Law Reports and Statutes 4th ed London Sweet amp Maxwell s Guide 1962 Tittler Robert 1991 The Reign of Mary I 2nd ed London amp New York Longman ISBN 0 582 06107 5 LCCN 90043171 OL 1882426M Waller Maureen 2006 Sovereign Ladies The Six Reigning Queens of England New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 33801 5 OL 9516816M Weikel Ann 1980 Tittler Robert Loach Jennifer eds The Mid Tudor Polity c 1540 1560 The Marian Council Revisited Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 9780333245286 Retrieved 2 October 2021 Weikel Ann 2004 online edition 2008 Mary I 1516 1558 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography subscription or UK public library membership required Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18245 Weir Alison 1996 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy London Pimlico ISBN 0 7126 7448 9 OL 7794712M Whitelock Anna 2009 Mary Tudor England s First Queen London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 9018 7 LCCN 2009437824 OL 23681864M Further readingDoran Susan and Thomas Freeman eds 2011 Mary Tudor Old and New Perspectives Palgrave MacMillan Edwards John 2011 Mary I England s Catholic Queen New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 11810 4 Erickson Carolly 1978 Bloody Mary The Life of Mary Tudor Garden City NY Doubleday ISBN 0 385 11663 2 Loades David M 1979 2d ed 1991 The Reign of Mary Tudor Politics Government and Religion in England 1553 58 London and New York Longman ISBN 0 582 05759 0 2006 Mary Tudor The Tragical History of the First Queen of England Kew Richmond UK National Archives 2011 Mary Tudor Stroud Gloucestershire UK Amberley Publishing Madden Frederick Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary 1536 1544 London 1831 Prescott H F M 1952 Mary Tudor The Spanish Tudor Second edition London Eyre amp Spottiswoode Ridley Jasper 2001 Bloody Mary s Martyrs The Story of England s Terror New York Carroll amp Graf ISBN 0 7867 0854 9 Samson Alexander 2020 Mary and Philip The Marriage of Tudor England and Habsburg Spain Manchester UK Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 5261 4223 8 Waldman Milton 1972 The Lady Mary A Biography of Mary Tudor 1516 1558 London Collins ISBN 0 00 211486 0 Wernham R B 1966 Before the Armada The Growth of English Foreign Policy 1485 1588 London Jonathan Cape External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Mary I of England Wikiquote has quotations related to Mary I of England Mary I at the official website of the British monarchy Mary I 1516 1558 Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Mary I Queen Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Mary I 1516 1558 BBC Portraits of Queen Mary I at the National Portrait Gallery LondonMary I of EnglandTudor dynastyBorn 18 February 1516 Died 17 November 1558Regnal titlesPreceded byEdward VI or Jane Queen of England and Ireland 1553 1558 with Philip 1554 1558 Succeeded byElizabeth IRoyal titlesVacantTitle last held byIsabella of Portugal Queen consort of Naples Duchess consort of Milan 1554 1558 VacantTitle next held byElisabeth of FranceQueen consort of Spain Sardinia and Sicily Duchess consort of Burgundy 1556 1558