conciselistings.com conciselistings.com
Search:    Main :> About Us :> Privacy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article   
Free links exchange
 

Travel & Accommodation

Medicine & Treatment

Shopping & Auction

Health & Therapy

Internet & Computers

Culture & Art

Realty & Property

Careers & Employment

Science & Space

Entertainment

Issues & News

Home Family & Garden

Politics & Government

Outdoor & Sports

Drink & Food

Online & Board Games

Lifestyle & Fashion

Automotive

Society & Issues

Education & Reference

Self Healing

Business & Companies

Teens & Kids

Finance & Banking


 

Main –› Issues & News –› Humanities & Arts
 

A Short Biography on Some of Europe's Most Loved and Hated Monarchs - Pt 4 Queen Mary I

 

Queen Mary I of England was born in 1516 to Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon and was the first British monarch to rule in her own right. Mary was pronounced queen in 1553 and ruled for five years after the death of Edward VI. Mary was well educated and learned to speak Latin, Spanish, French and Italian. She was also taught Greek, science and music.

1547 saw the death of her father and her half brother Edward VI crowned king. Edward was England's first Protestant monarch; his Parliament's Act of Uniformity prescribed Protestant rites for church services. Mary, wanting to keep her Roman Catholic faith, asked to be allowed to worship in private in her own chapel. Upon being ordered to discontinue this practice, Mary appealed to her cousin, the Emperor Charles V. Charles subsequently threatened to declare war against England if Mary's religious rights were infringed. Mary was never bothered again and was left to worship in private.

Edward died in 1553 whilst Mary was staying at Framlingham Castle in Suffolk. He had no wish for the Crown to go to either Mary or her half sister Elizabeth, so had them both excluded from the line of succession in his will.

One of Marys first acts after came to power, was to bring the Catholic faith back to England by initially scrapping the religious proclamations of her half brother, Edward VI. Mary replaced the proclamations with the old English laws. Heresy against the church was now punishable by death. The reintroduction of this act earned Mary the nickname, Bloody Mary. During her short, five-year reign, Queen Mary I had more than 300 subjects burnt at the stake for the act of heresy. The most notable of these was the Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer.

In 1555, in an effort to produce a male heir, Mary married prince Philip II of Spain. This did not go down well with the people, as many viewed Spain as an enemy of England. Twice during her rule, Mary thought she was pregnant with child, displaying all the symptoms. Alas, this was not so as her symptoms were a sign of a false pregnancy. Mary had convinced herself that she was pregnant and the body reacted accordingly.

Following the advice of her husband, Mary allied herself with Spain during the war against France. The subsequent consequences of her actions were that England lost her only and last remaining foothold in the country Calais. Sadly, in 1558, Philip II left her and went back to Spain to claim the Spanish throne.

Queen Mary I, childless and without a husband was forced to recognize her sister, Elizabeth, an Anglican Protestant, as the next ruler of England. Although Mary tried to persuade her sister to convert and accept the Roman Catholic faith, Elizabeth refused and went on to become Queen Elizabeth I.

England suffered under the leadership of Mary: the economy was in ruin, religious dissent reached its pinnacle and England lost her last foothold in Europe. Jane Austen wrote about Mary: "This woman had the good luck of being advanced to the throne of England, in spite of the superior pretensions, Merit and Beauty of her Cousins Mary Queen of Scotland and Jane Grey. Nor can I pity the Kingdom for the misfortunes they experienced during her reign, since they fully deserved them..."

Mary died at the age of forty-two of influenza, uterine cancer or ovarian cancer at St. James's Palace on 17 November 1558 and is buried in Westminster Abbey beside Elizabeth. The Latin inscription on their tomb translates to "Partners both in Throne and grave, here rest we two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary, in the hope of one resurrection".

I hope you have enjoyed reading about Queen Mary I.

In my next article will learn about the life of Charles II of England.

Until then,

Best wishes and have a great day

Stuart Bazga

www.guide-to-castles-of-europe.com

Author: Stuart Bazga
 
Author Bio:

Stuart Bazga

Hi! I am an Aussie living in the UK, here in sunny Stafford.

I moved to England in 1990 and joined the RAF in 1992.

I have had tours to Cyprus (3 years), Gibraltar (2 years) as well as serving in Croatia for 6 months (1997) as part of NATO keeping the peace as well as Bahrain (2000) helping in keeping Saddam at bay.

I am married to Maria and have two boys, Roberto is 8 ( might make 9 if he behaves himself) and Ricardo nearly 5 ( not 4 you ask him. He will tell you he is nearly 5).

My wife is Portuguese and we were married on the Island of Madeira were she is from.

I run a small import/export business selling Australian Opals and jewellery for use throughout Europe and the UK.

Have a browse at Kulpunya Opals I would love to hear what you think of the site!

Hobbies:

Photograph, Antique collecting and making jewellery with gold filled wire

This article can be searched using: art & humanities news, arts & humanities, humanities social sciences, society news, art news
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Message from Jesus: Please No More Christian Soldiers - You're Killin Me
 
The Advantages of Canvas Tarps
 
Power Intelligence: Quality & Quantity
 
How To Display An XML Feed On Your Website
 
The "Booming" US Economy; For Whom Doth It Boom?
 
Debate on Torturing International Terrorists
 
History of the Green Berets
 
Holding Government and Politicians Accountable
 
From Toledo To Jerusalem
 
Understanding RSS - Part Twelve - A Full RSS Feed Template For Podcasting & VideoCasting
 
 
 
Main :> Privacy :> ToS
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.conciselistings.com - All Rights Reserved.