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  1. On 8 August 1503 Princess Margaret Tudor of England married King James IV of Scotland in Holyrood Abbey, becoming Queen of Scots and providing the Scottish throne with an heir, King James V. She would marry twice more before her death in 1541 and, like her ill-fated granddaughter Mary, Queen of Scots, Margaret’s choice of husband threatened ...

  2. 8 de jun. de 2018 · Margaret Tudor (1489–1541), queen of James IV of Scotland. Elder daughter of Henry VII of England , Margaret was married to James at Holyrood on 8 August 1503, and bore her husband six children—four sons and two daughters—of whom only one, Prince James ( James V), born in April 1512, survived.

  3. Margaret Tudor lived from 28 November 1489 to 18 October 1541. She was the daughter of Henry VII of England and the sister of Henry VIII; the wife of James IV of Scotland and the mother of James V. And, perhaps most crucially, it was her wedding that led to the unification of the Crowns of England and Scotland in 1603 by James VI/I, the son of ...

  4. Margaret Tudor was born in November 1489, the second child and eldest daughter of King Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York . She was the first princess in the new royal house of Tudor. Her father, the victor of Bosworth Field, had married Elizabeth, daughter of King Edward IV, in 1486, uniting the houses of Lancaster and York and putting ...

  5. Margaret Tudor. Margaret Tudor (28 November 1489 – 18 October 1541) was the wife of James IV of Scotland. She was Queen Consort of Scotland from 1503 until James IV died in 1513. After that, she was regent for their son James V. Margaret and James IV were grandparents of Mary, Queen of Scots . Margaret was born at Westminster Palace.

  6. Hace 2 días · Margaret Tudor died at Methven Castle on 18 October 1541, probably as a result of a stroke. She sent for her son James, but he did not arrive in time. Near the end, she expressed the hope that the King would give her possessions to her daughter, Lady Margaret Douglas.

  7. 14 de mar. de 2024 · Margaret then resumed the position of regent, alongside Albany, from 1517. The duke ultimately returned to France in 1524, leaving Margaret as regent for the remainder of James V’s minority. Visitors to Stirling today can stand in the same spot that, 500 years ago, Margaret Tudor refused entry to some of the most important nobles in Scotland.