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  1. «María Tudor» redirige aquí. Para la hermana de Enrique VIII, véase María Tudor, duquesa de Suffolk . María I b ( Palacio de Greenwich, 18 de febrero de 1516- Palacio de St James, 17 de noviembre de 1558) fue reina de Inglaterra e Irlanda desde el 6 o el 19 de julio a de 1553 hasta su muerte.

    • 1 de octubre de 1553
  2. Mary I (18 February 1516 – 17 November 1558), also known as Mary Tudor, and as " Bloody Mary " by her Protestant opponents, was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 and Queen of Spain and the Habsburg dominions as the wife of King Philip II from January 1556 until her death in 1558.

  3. 27 de sept. de 2023 · María Tudor, la reina sangrienta. Tras vivir marginada durante su juventud, con 37 años subió al trono de Inglaterra y se casó con Felipe II de España. Pero su breve reinado dejaría un amargo recuerdo por el que sería recordada en la historia. Especialista en historia contemporánea y editora digital. Actualizado a 27 de septiembre de ...

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    • Early Life
    • First Marriage: Queen of France
    • Second Marriage: Duchess of Suffolk
    • Death
    • Appearance and Personality
    • Issue
    • In Literature
    • In Other Media
    • Portraiture and Other Depictions
    • References

    Mary was the fifth child of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York, and the youngest to survive infancy. She was born at Sheen Palace, on 18 March 1496. A privy seal bill dated from midsummer 1496 authorises a payment of 50 shillings to her nurse, Anne Skeron. Also, Erasmus stated that she was four years old when he visited the royal nursery in...

    Cardinal Wolsey negotiated a peace treaty with France, and on 9 October 1514, at the age of 18, Mary married the 52-year-old King Louis XII of France at Abbeville. She was accompanied to France by several English maids of honour (one of whom was Anne Boleyn) under the supervision of her old governess Lady or "Mother" Guildford, who acted as her pri...

    Mary had been unhappy in her marriage of state to King Louis XII, as she was almost certainly already in love with Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk. King Henry VIII was aware of Mary's feelings; letters from her in 1515 indicated that she had agreed to wed Louis only on condition that "if she survived him, she should marry whom she liked." But ...

    Mary had multiple bouts of illness, requiring treatments over her lifetime. She died, age 37, at Westhorpe Hall, Suffolk, on 25 June 1533, having never fully recovered from the sweating sickness she caught in 1528. The cause of death has been speculated to have been angina, tuberculosis, appendicitis, or cancer. As an English princess, daughter of ...

    Upon her arrival in France, Mary was described as being "handsome and well favoured, were not her eyes and eyebrows too light; she is slight, rather than defective from corpulence, and conducts herself with so much grace, and has such good manners, that for her age of 18 years—and she does not look more—she is a paradise." Contemporaries lauded her...

    Mary and Charles had four children, two daughters and two sons: 1. Henry Brandon (11 March 1516– 1522) 2. Lady Frances Brandon (16 July 1517 – 20 November 1559), who married Henry Grey, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, and was the mother of Lady Jane Grey. 3. Lady Eleanor Brandon (1519 – 27 September 1547), who married Henry Clifford, 2nd Earl of Cumberland...

    She is the main character in several historical fiction novels: 1. When Knighthood Was in Flower, by Edwin Caskoden (the pen name of Charles Major) (1898), the novel was the source material for both the Davies film directed by Robert Vignola and the Disney film, The Sword and the Rose. 2. The Reluctant Queen by Molly Costain Haycraft(1962) 3. Mary,...

    In The Tudors (television series, 2007), Mary Tudor is called by her sister's name, Margaret (to avoid confusion with Henry VIII's daughter Mary I of England), and played by Gabrielle Anwar. She is...
    In The Spanish Princess (television mini series, 2019–2020), Mary Tudor is a main character. Isla Merrick-Lawless portrays a younger version in Season 1 and Sai Bennettportrays an older version in...
    In The Sword and the Rose (Walt Disney and Perce Pearce film, 1953), Mary Tudor (played by Glynis Johns) falls for the non-noble Brandon (played by Richard Todd) and attempts to run away from Engla...

    Mary's portraits and other depictions are mostly subject of heated debate as to if it is really her or somebody else, who draw or painted her or whether the painting is misdated.Confirmed depictions of her include: 1. Illumination called Henry VII in mourning, c.1503-1504 which also depicts the three surviving children of Elizabeth of York on left ...

    Brown, Mary Croom (1911). Mary Tudor: Queen of France. London: Methuen Publishing.
    Chapman, Hester W. (1969). The Thistle and the Rose: The Sisters of Henry VIII. New York: Coward, McGann & Geoghegan.LCC 79-159754.
    Green, Mary Anne Everett (1854). Lives of the Princesses of England Vol. V. London: Henry Colburn. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
    Perry, Maria (2000). The Sisters of Henry VIII: The Tumultuous Lives of Margaret of Scotland and Mary of France. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80989-3.
  4. María Tudor (Greenwich, Inglaterra, 1516 - Londres, 1558) Reina de Inglaterra e Irlanda. Hija de Enrique VIII y Catalina de Aragón, la historiografía tradicional anglosajona la ha presentado como un ser cruel y despiadado.

  5. 29 de mar. de 2024 · Mary Tudor. Byname: Bloody Mary. Born: February 18, 1516, Greenwich, near London, England. Died: November 17, 1558, London (aged 42) House / Dynasty: House of Tudor. Notable Family Members: spouse Philip II. father Henry VIII. mother Catherine of Aragon. On the Web: History Today - ‘Bloody Mary’ born at Greenwich Palace (Mar. 29, 2024)

  6. 26 de mar. de 2024 · Mary Tudor (born March 1495/96—died June 24, 1533, Westhorpe, Suffolk, Eng.) was an English princess, the third wife of King Louis XII of France; she was the sister of England’s King Henry VIII (ruled 1509–47) and the grandmother of Lady Jane Grey, who was titular queen of England for nine days in 1553.