Henrietta Maria of France

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Henrietta Maria of France
Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland; later queen mother (more...)
Painting by Anthony Van Dyck, c. 1633
Painting by Anthony Van Dyck, c. 1633
Consort 13 June 162530 January 1649
Consort to Charles I
Issue
Charles II
Mary, Princess Royal
James II and VII
Elizabeth of England
Anne of England
Henry, Duke of Gloucester
Henrietta Anne of England
Royal house House of Stuart
House of Bourbon
Father Henry IV of France
Mother Marie de' Medici
Born 25 November 1609
Flag of France Louvre, Paris
Died 10 September 1669 (aged 59)
Flag of France Château de Colombes, France
Burial Saint Denis Basilica, Paris

Henrietta Maria (25 November 160910 September 1669), was Princess of France and Queen Consort of England, Scotland and Ireland (13 June 162530 January 1649) through her marriage to Charles I. She was the mother of two kings, Charles II and James II, and was grandmother to both William and Mary and Queen Anne.

Contents

Born as Henriette-Marie de France, Princess of France, she was the youngest daughter of Henry IV of France and Marie de Medici and the sister of the future Louis XIII of France. Her father was killed before she was a year old; her mother was banished from the royal court in 1617.

She was born at the Louvre Palace and brought up as a Roman Catholic. This made her an unpopular choice of wife for the English King, whom she married by proxy on 11 May 1625, shortly after his accession to the throne.

They were married in person at St. Augustine's Church, Canterbury, Kent, on 13 June 1625. However, her religion made it impossible for her to be crowned with her husband in an Anglican service. Initially their relationship was cold. Henrietta Maria had brought many servants with her from France, all of them Roman Catholic, and all costing the King a lot of money to maintain. It is said that eventually Charles sent this retinue home, only allowing his teenage bride to retain her chaplain and two ladies in waiting. Finding her sadly watching the retinue depart for France at the window of a palace, Charles angrily and forcibly dragged his wayward queen away. Charles had intended to marry Maria Anna, a daughter of Philip III of Spain, but a mission to Spain in 1623 had failed. Perhaps this earlier disappointment explains why relations with his French bride were strained; every time the couple met, they started arguing and would separate, not seeing each other for weeks. When next they met, again they had to separate, because they could not stop arguing.

Henrietta Maria took an immediate dislike to George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, the King's favourite. However, after Buckingham's death in August 1628, her relationship with her husband, Charles I, improved and they finally forged deep bonds of love and affection. Her refusal to give up her Catholic faith alienated her from many of the people and certain powerful courtiers such as William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury and Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford. Charles, on the other hand, had definite leanings towards Catholicism, and, once he had reached maturity, did not share his father's sexual ambivalence.

Henrietta Maria's ancestors in three generations

 
 
 
 
Charles de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme
 
 
Antoine de Bourbon
 
 
 
 
 
 
Françoise d'Alençon
 
 
Henry IV of France
 
 
 
 
 
 
Henry II of Navarre
 
 
Jeanne III of Navarre
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marguerite de Navarre
 
Henrietta Maria of France
 
 
 
 
 
Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
 
 
Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
 
 
 
 
 
 
Eleonora di Toledo
 
 
Marie de' Medici
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor
 
 
Johanna of Austria
 
 
 
 
 
 
Anna of Bohemia and Hungary
 

Name Birth Death Notes
Charles James, Duke of Cornwall 13 March 1629 13 March 1629 Died as an infant.
Charles II 29 May 1630 6 February 1685 Married Catherine of Braganza (1638 - 1705) in 1663. No legitimate issue.
Mary, Princess Royal 4 November 1631 24 December 1660 Married William II, Prince of Orange (1626 - 1650) in 1648. Had issue.
James II, King of England 14 October 1633 16 September 1701 Married (1) Anne Hyde (1637 - 1671) in 1659; had issue
(2) Mary of Modena (1658 - 1718) in 1673; had issue
Elizabeth, Princess of England 29 December 1635 8 September 1650 Died young; no issue. Buried Newport, Isle of Wight
Anne, Princess of England 17 March 1637 8 December 1640 Died young; no issue. Buried Westminster Abbey
Catherine, Princess of England 29 January 1639 29 January 1639 Died as an infant; buried Westminster Abbey.
Henry, Duke of Gloucester 8 July 1640 18 September 1660 Died unmarried; no issue. Buried Westminster Abbey
Henrietta Anne, Princess of England 16 June 1644 30 June 1670 Married Philip I, Duke of Orléans (1640 - 1701) in 1661; had issue

See also descendants of Henrietta Maria de Bourbon, which maps how the Medici became part of the European Royal families, eventually leading to Prince William of Wales, future King of the United Kingdom.

Henrietta Maria in the 1630s
Henrietta Maria in the 1630s

Henrietta Maria increasingly took part in national affairs as the country moved towards open conflict through the 1630s. She despised Puritan courtiers to deflect a diplomatic approach to Spain and sought a coup to pre-empt the Parliamentarians. As war approached she was active in seeking funds and support for her husband, but her concentration on Catholic sources like Pope Urban VIII and the French angered many in England and hindered Charles' efforts. She was also sympathetic to her fellow Catholics and even gave a requiem in her private chapel at Somerset House for Father Richard Blount, S.J. upon his death in 1638.

In August 1642, when the conflict began, she was in Europe. She continued to raise money for the Royalist cause, and did not return to England until early 1643. She landed at Bridlington in Yorkshire with troops and arms, and joined the Royalist forces in northern England, making her headquarters at York. She remained with the army in the north for some months before rejoining the King at Oxford. The collapse of the king's position following Scottish intervention on the side of Parliament, and his refusal to accept stringent terms for a settlement led her to flee to France with her sons in July 1644. Charles was executed in 1649, leaving her almost destitute.

She settled in Paris, appointing as her chancellor the eccentric Sir Kenelm Digby. She angered both Royalists in exile and her eldest son by attempting to convert her youngest son, Henry, to Catholicism. She returned to England following the Restoration in October 1660 and lived as 'Dowager Queen' and 'Queen Mother' at Somerset House in London until 1665 when she returned permanently to France. Her financial problems were resolved by a generous pension. She founded a convent at Chaillot, where she settled.

Henrietta Maria died at Château de Colombes, and was buried in the royal tombs at Saint Denis Basilica near Paris.

The U.S. state of Maryland was named in her honour by her husband, Charles I. George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore submitted a draft charter for the colony with the name left blank, suggesting that Charles bestow a name in his own honor. Charles, hadving already honored himself and several family members in other colonial names, decided to honor his wife. The specific name given in the charter was "Terra Mariae, anglice, Maryland". The English name was preferred over the Latin due in part to the undesired association of "Mariae" with the Spanish Jesuit Juan de Mariana.[1] Cape Henrietta Maria, at the western meeting of James Bay and Hudson Bay in Northern Ontario, is also named for her.

A less pleasant commemoration of her was the naming of the slave ship "Henrietta Marie", one of the many that carried slaves to what is now the United States. In 1701 she sank 35 miles off the coast of Key West after selling 190 slaves to Jamaica.

  1. ^ Stewart, George R. [1945] (1967). Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States, Sentry edition (3rd), Houghton Mifflin, 42-43. 

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Henrietta Maria of France
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 25 November 1609 Died: 10 September 1669
British royalty
Preceded by
Anne of Denmark
Queen consort of England and Ireland, Queen consort of Scotland
16251649
Succeeded by
Catherine of Braganza
Preceded by
Elizabeth Woodville
Queen mother
1649 - 1669
Succeeded by
Alexandra of Denmark
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