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  1. Mary of Guise, also known as Mary of Lorraine, was a French noblewoman who became Queen of Scotland through her marriage to King James V and later served as queen regent during her daughter’s minority. Born into the powerful House of Guise, she was married first to Louis II d’Orléans, Duke of Longueville, before being persuaded to marry ...

  2. Her mother, Mary of Guise, as Regent (1554-1560) had paid for her clothes from her own French incomes. Mary had a wardrobe as a department of her household, with several officers and artisans including tailors and embroiderers, and the "tapissiers" who looked after tapestry, beds, and furniture with her menusier , Nicholas Guillebault, the household carpenter or upholsterer.

  3. 21 de may. de 2018 · Mary of Guise. Mary of Guise (1515–60), queen of James V of Scotland. The daughter of Claude, duke of Guise, and thus a member of one of France 's most militantly catholic families, Mary married James in June 1538. By him she bore two sons, who both died in infancy, and a daughter, Mary, who was barely a week old when her father died on 14 ...

  4. 22 de abr. de 2021 · Définition. Marie de Guise (alias Marie de Lorraine, 1515-1560) est une noble française qui devint la deuxième épouse de Jacques V d'Écosse (r. 1513-1542). Avec la mort prématurée de son mari, sa fille Marie devint reine d'Écosse (r. 1542-1567). Marie était encore mineure et Marie de Guise fut régente de 1554 à 1560.

  5. 7 de mar. de 2017 · Marie de Guise followed in the footsteps of other Stewart wives and mothers in the previous century, such as Joan Beaufort, mother of James II, and Mary of Gueldres, mother of James III. Between 1513 and 1514 Margaret Tudor, Henry VIII of England’s big sister and the widow of James IV, was regent for her son James V – she lost power when her remarriage meant she passed into the legal ...

  6. 28 de mar. de 2024 · In 1449 Mary of Guelders arrived in Scotland with a convoy of fourteen ships. She had travelled from Bruges, part of the territories of her great-uncle, the Duke of Burgundy. At around 16 years old, Mary was here to marry the 18-year-old James II, King of Scots. A prestigious international alliance had been arranged between Scotland, Burgundy ...

  7. When Mary of Guise arrived in Scotland, James Hamilton of Finnart was given 400 French gold crowns to repair the palace. In August 1539 he was paid for rebuilding the king's kitchen , at the north end of the great hall, with a fireplace, an oven, and a room for silver vessels, and another for keeping coal.