Queen Mary I is best known for her vigorous attempt to reverse the English Reformation, which had begun during the reign of her father, Henry VIII.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,833 |
Queen Mary I is best known for her vigorous attempt to reverse the English Reformation, which had begun during the reign of her father, Henry VIII.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,833 |
Queen Mary I speedily assembled a force in East Anglia and deposed Jane, who was ultimately beheaded.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,834 |
Queen Mary I was the only child of King Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, to survive infancy.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,835 |
Queen Mary I's mother had suffered many miscarriages and stillbirths.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,836 |
Queen Mary I's godparents included Lord Chancellor Thomas Wolsey; her great-aunt Catherine, Countess of Devon; and Agnes Howard, Duchess of Norfolk.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,838 |
The following year, Queen Mary I became a godmother herself when she was named as one of the sponsors of her cousin Frances Brandon.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,839 |
Queen Mary I studied French, Spanish, music, dance, and perhaps Greek.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,840 |
Queen Mary I had a fair complexion with pale blue eyes and red or reddish-golden hair.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,841 |
Queen Mary I was ruddy-cheeked, a trait she inherited from her father.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,842 |
Queen Mary I was given her own court based at Ludlow Castle and many of the royal prerogatives normally reserved for a Prince of Wales.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,843 |
When she was only two years old, Queen Mary I was promised to Francis, Dauphin of France, the infant son of King Francis I, but the contract was repudiated after three years.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,844 |
Cardinal Wolsey, Henry's chief adviser, then resumed marriage negotiations with the French, and Henry suggested that Queen Mary I marry the French king Francis I, who was eager for an alliance with England.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,845 |
From 1531, Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,846 |
Queen Mary I was not permitted to see her mother, whom Henry had sent to live away from court.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,847 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,848 |
Under strain and with her movements restricted, Queen Mary I was frequently ill, which the royal physician attributed to her "ill treatment".
FactSnippet No. 1,853,849 |
Catherine was interred in Peterborough Cathedral, while Queen Mary I grieved in semi-seclusion at Hunsdon in Hertfordshire.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,850 |
Elizabeth, like Queen Mary I, was declared illegitimate and stripped of her succession rights.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,851 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,852 |
Queen Mary I's expenses included fine clothes and gambling at cards, one of her favourite pastimes.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,853 |
Suggestions that Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,855 |
Queen Mary I's executioner was "a wretched and blundering youth" who "literally hacked her head and shoulders to pieces".
FactSnippet No. 1,853,856 |
Queen Mary I remained faithful to Roman Catholicism and defiantly celebrated traditional Mass in her own chapel.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,857 |
Queen Mary I appealed to her cousin Emperor Charles V to apply diplomatic pressure demanding that she be allowed to practise her religion.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,858 |
Queen Mary I attended a reunion with Edward and Elizabeth for Christmas 1550, where the 13-year-old Edward embarrassed Queen Mary I, 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,859 |
Queen Mary I repeatedly refused Edward's demands that she abandon Catholicism, and Edward persistently refused to drop his demands.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,860 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,861 |
Queen Mary I's 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,862 |
Just before Edward's death, Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,863 |
Therefore, instead of heading to London from her residence at Hunsdon, Queen Mary I fled to East Anglia, where she owned extensive estates and Northumberland had ruthlessly put down Kett's Rebellion.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,864 |
Queen Mary I was accompanied by her half-sister Elizabeth and a procession of over 800 nobles and gentlemen.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,865 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,866 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,867 |
Now aged 37, Queen Mary I turned her attention to finding a husband and producing an heir, which would prevent the Protestant Elizabeth from succeeding to the throne.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,868 |
Lord Chancellor Gardiner and the English House of Commons unsuccessfully petitioned Queen Mary I to consider marrying an Englishman, fearing that England would be relegated to a dependency of the Habsburgs.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,869 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,870 |
Queen Mary I rejected the break with Rome her father instituted and the establishment of Protestantism by her brother's regents.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,871 |
Queen Mary I recanted, repudiated Protestant theology, and rejoined the Catholic faith.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,872 |
Queen Mary I persevered with the policy, which continued until her death and exacerbated anti-Catholic and anti-Spanish feeling among the English people.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,873 |
Queen Mary I 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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,874 |
Queen Mary I granted a royal charter to the Muscovy Company under governor Sebastian Cabot, and commissioned a world atlas from Diogo Homem.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,875 |
Financially, Queen Mary I's regime tried to reconcile a modern form of government—with correspondingly higher spending—with a medieval system of collecting taxation and dues.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,876 |
Queen Mary I retained the Edwardian appointee William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester, as Lord High Treasurer and assigned him to oversee the revenue collection system.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,877 |
Queen Mary I drafted plans for currency reform but they were not implemented until after her death.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,878 |
Queen Mary I decreed in her will that her husband would be the regent during the minority of their child.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,879 |
Queen Mary I was a queen, and by the same title a king.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,880 |
Prescott attempted to redress the tradition that Queen Mary I was intolerant and authoritarian, and scholarship since then has tended to view the older, simpler assessments of Queen Mary I with increasing reservations.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,881 |
Catholic historians, such as John Lingard, thought Queen Mary I'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.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,882 |
Queen Mary I adopted "Truth, the Daughter of Time" as her personal motto.
FactSnippet No. 1,853,883 |