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Anne Hyde

Anne Hyde (12 March 1637 – 31 March 1671)[2][a] was Duchess of York and Albany as the first wife of James, Duke of York, who after her death became King James II and VII.

Anne Hyde
Duchess of York and Albany
c. 1665 portrait by Sir Peter Lely. "Anne's teasing playing of her hair is deliberately suggestive of a royal consort's prime role—breeding—but also a reminder of her great wit."[1]
Born12 March 1637
Windsor, Berkshire, England
Died31 March 1671(1671-03-31) (aged 34)
St James's Palace, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Burial5 April 1671
Spouse
(m. 1660)
Issue
more...
FatherEdward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon
MotherFrances Aylesbury
ReligionRoman Catholic
prev. Anglican

Anne was the daughter of a member of the English gentry—Edward Hyde (later created Earl of Clarendon)—and met her future husband when they were both living in exile in the Netherlands. She married James in 1660 and two months later gave birth to the couple's first child, who had been conceived out of wedlock. Some observers disapproved of the marriage, but James's brother, King Charles II of England, wanted the marriage to take place. Another cause of disapproval was the public affection James showed toward Anne. They had eight children, of whom six died in early childhood;[3] the two who reached adulthood were future monarchs, Mary II and Anne. James was a known philanderer who kept many mistresses, for which Anne often reproached him, and he fathered many illegitimate children.

Originally an Anglican, Anne converted to Catholicism soon after her marriage to James. She had been exposed to Catholicism during visits to the Netherlands and France and was strongly attracted thereto. Partly due to Anne's influence, James later also converted to Catholicism, which ultimately led to the Glorious Revolution. She suffered from advanced breast cancer and died shortly after giving birth to her last child.

Early years (1637–60)

In 1629, Edward Hyde married his first wife, Anne Ayliffe of Grittenham. Six months into the marriage, Anne caught smallpox, miscarried and died.[4] Three years later, Hyde married Frances Aylesbury. The couple's eldest daughter was born at Cranbourne Lodge in Windsor[5] in 1637. The parents named Anne after Edward Hyde's first wife. Almost nothing is known of her life before 1649, when her family fled to the Netherlands after the execution of the deposed King Charles I.[6]

During the First English Civil War, her father was a leading advisor to Charles I, then went into exile with his son Charles II in 1646. Like many refugees, they settled in Breda, where Mary of Orange offered shelter to many English fugitives.[7] Mary appointed Anne a maid of honour, apparently against the wishes of her mother Henrietta Maria, who loathed Hyde.[8]

Anne became a general favourite with the people she met either at The Hague or at the Princess of Orange's country house at Teylingen. She was attractive and stylish,[9] and she attracted many men. One of the first men to fall in love with Anne was Spencer Compton, a son of the Earl of Northampton.[10] However, Anne quickly fell in love with Henry Jermyn, who returned her feelings. Anne dismissed Jermyn just as quickly when she met James, Duke of York, the son of the deposed king.[11] On 24 November 1659, two[12] or three[13] years after she first met him, James promised he would marry Anne, despite the opposition of many, including her father, who confined her to a room and allegedly urged Charles to execute her.[8] Charles rejected this advice, suggesting Anne's strong character would be a positive influence on his weak-willed brother.[14]

Duchess of York (1660–71)

Marriage

 
A portrait of Anne, James and their two daughters, Lady Mary and Lady Anne (this portrait is based on an earlier portrait of Anne and James.)

After Anne became visibly pregnant in 1660, the couple were obliged to marry.[15] Following the Restoration of the monarchy in May 1660, they held an official but private marriage ceremony in London on 3 September 1660. The wedding took place between 11 at night and 2 in the morning at Worcester House—her father's house in the Strand—and was solemnised by Dr. Joseph Crowther, James's chaplain. The French Ambassador described Anne as having "courage, cleverness, and energy almost worthy of a King's blood".[16]

The couple's first child, Charles, was born in October of that year, but died seven months later. Seven children followed: Mary (1662–1694), James (1663–1667), Anne (1665–1714), Charles (1666–1667), Edgar (1667–1671), Henrietta (1669–1669) and Catherine (1671–1671). All of their sons and two of their daughters died in infancy.[3]

Even well after their marriage, some observers disapproved of the prince's decision, regardless of what he had promised beforehand.[17] Samuel Pepys said of the marriage: "... that the Duke of York's marriage with her hath undone the kingdom, by making the Chancellor so great above reach, who otherwise would have been but an ordinary man, to have been dealt with by other people ..."[18] After Anne's death, the royal court tried to find a new wife for James, but this new wife was not, under any circumstances, to be of humble birth.[19] As good a father as Pepys portrayed James to be, he strangely stated that Anne and James were unaffected by the death of their firstborn son.[20] Pepys also described Anne as "not only the proudest woman in the world, but the most expensefull."[18] Even in the minds of James's nephew (later to become Anne's son-in-law), William III of Orange, and that of her husband's cousin, Sophia of Hanover, the stigma of the Hydes' lowly birth remained.[21]

Domestic life

 
Anne, painted by Lely about 1670

Anne was not popular at court, although she was well liked by her brother-in-law.[22] Regarded as "the most unguarded ogler of his time", James had a succession of mistresses throughout their marriage.[23] These mistresses included Arabella Churchill, mother of his illegitimate son, the Duke of Berwick. Berwick had a highly successful career in the French army, while James secured a series of positions for Arabella's brother, John Churchill.[24]

Anne was not oblivious to her husband's infidelities, Pepys recording that she was jealous and chided James. Pepys also claimed, however, that the pair were notorious for showing their affections publicly, kissing and leaning on each other. In another entry, Pepys wrote that when James fell in love with Lady Chesterfield, Anne complained to Charles so insistently that Lady Chesterfield had to retreat to the countryside, where she remained until she died.[25] [26]

Historian John Callow claims Anne "made the greatest single impact" in the process that led to James becoming a Catholic.[27] Raised in the Anglican high church tradition which was closely linked to the forms and practices of Catholicism, Anne stopped attending Anglican service in 1669. James converted around the same time, but at Charles' request delayed the announcement of his conversion until 1673.[28] Although he later converted to Catholicism on his deathbed, Charles insisted for political reasons that his brother's children must be raised as Protestants, so both Mary and Anne were members of the Church of England.[29]

Death and legacy

 
Anne Hyde's coat of arms[30]

Anne was ill for 15 months after the birth of her youngest son, Edgar.[31] She bore Henrietta in 1669 and Catherine in 1671,[32] never recovering from Catherine's birth.[33] Ill with breast cancer,[34] she died on 31 March 1671.[5][b] On her deathbed, her brothers Henry and Laurence tried to bring an Anglican priest to give her communion, but Anne refused[33] and she received viaticum of the Catholic Church.[34] Two days after her death, her embalmed body was interred in the vault of Mary, Queen of Scots, at Westminster Abbey's Henry VII Chapel.[35] In June 1671, Anne's only surviving son Edgar died of natural causes, followed by Catherine in December, leaving Mary and Anne as the Duke of York's heirs.[36]

After Anne Hyde's death, a portrait of her painted by Willem Wissing was commissioned by the future Mary II; this used to hang above the door of the Queen's Drawing Room of the Garden House at Windsor Castle.[37] Two years after the death of his first wife, James married a Catholic princess, Mary of Modena. Mary bore James Francis Edward, James's only son to survive to adulthood. James became king of England, Ireland and Scotland in 1685, but was deposed during the Glorious Revolution of 1688. The throne was then offered by the Parliament of England to Anne's eldest daughter Mary and her husband William III of Orange.[38] After Mary died in 1694 and William in 1702, Anne Hyde's only surviving child Anne became queen of the three kingdoms and, in 1707, the first sovereign of the united Kingdom of Great Britain.[39]

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
Charles, Duke of Cambridge 22 October 1660 5 May 1661 Born two months after his parents' legal marriage, died aged seven months of smallpox[40]
Mary II 30 April 1662 28 December 1694 Married her cousin William III, Prince of Orange, in 1677. She and her husband ascended the throne in 1689 after the deposition of her father. No surviving issue[41]
James, Duke of Cambridge 12 July 1663 20 June 1667 Died of the bubonic plague[42]
Anne, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland 6 February 1665 1 August 1714 Married Prince George of Denmark in 1683. Successor of her brother-in-law and cousin in 1702. First monarch of Great Britain under the Act of Union of 1707. No surviving issue[43]
Charles, Duke of Kendal 4 July 1666 22 May 1667 Died of convulsions[44]
Edgar, Duke of Cambridge 14 September 1667 8 June 1671 Died in childhood[32]
Henrietta 13 January 1669 15 November 1669 Died in infancy[32]
Catherine 9 February 1671 5 December 1671 Died in infancy[32]

Media portrayals

Notes

  1. ^ All the dates in this article are Old Style.
  2. ^ England used the Julian calendar (OS) during Anne's lifetime.

References

  1. ^ Portrait of the Duchess of York 5 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine. historicalportraits.com. Philip Mould Ltd.
  2. ^ Ward, Adolphus William (1891). "Hyde, Anne" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 28. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  3. ^ a b Weir 2008, pp. 259–60.
  4. ^ Lister 1838, p. 9.
  5. ^ a b Weir 2008, p. 259.
  6. ^ Henslowe 1915, p. 18.
  7. ^ Henslowe 1915, p. 19.
  8. ^ a b Miller 2000, p. 44.
  9. ^ Melville 2005, p. 3.
  10. ^ Henslowe 1915, p. 34.
  11. ^ Melville 2005, pp. 3–4.
  12. ^ Melville 2005, p. 4.
  13. ^ Gregg 1984, p. 2.
  14. ^ Softly 1979, p. 91.
  15. ^ Henslowe 1915, pp. 130–1.
  16. ^ Fraser 2002, p. 202.
  17. ^ Miller 2000, pp. 44–45.
  18. ^ a b The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 24 June 1667.
  19. ^ Strickland 1882, pp. 242–3.
  20. ^ The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 6 May 1661.
  21. ^ Gregg 1984, pp. 3–4.
  22. ^ Melville 2005, p. 17,19.
  23. ^ Miller 2000, p. 46.
  24. ^ Holmes 2008, pp. 56–57.
  25. ^ Melville 2005, pp. 21–22.
  26. ^ Melville 2005, pp. 25–27.
  27. ^ Callow 2000, p. 144.
  28. ^ Miller 2000, pp. 58–59.
  29. ^ Van der Kiste 2003, p. 32.
  30. ^ Maclagan & Louda 1999, p. 27.
  31. ^ Henslowe 1915, p. 289.
  32. ^ a b c d Weir 2008, p. 260.
  33. ^ a b Gregg 1984, p. 10.
  34. ^ a b Melville 2005, p. 32.
  35. ^ Henslowe 1915, p. 300.
  36. ^ Waller 2002, pp. 49–50.
  37. ^ Willem Wissing. "James, Duke of Cambridge (1663–7)". Royal Collection Trust. Inventory no. 401234.
  38. ^ Devine 2006, p. 3.
  39. ^ Gregg 1984, p. 240.
  40. ^ Panton 2011, p. 455.
  41. ^ Weir 2008, p. 266.
  42. ^ The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 30 April 1667.
  43. ^ Weir 2008, pp. 267–8.
  44. ^ The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 14 May 1667.
  45. ^ The Last King: full cast and crew. IMDb.

Bibliography

  • Callow, John (2000). The Making of King James II: The Formative Years of a King. Gloucestershire: Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-2398-9.
  • Curtis, Gila (1972). The Life and Times of Queen Anne. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-99571-5.
  • Devine, Tom (2006). The Scottish Nation 1700–2007. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-102769-X.
  • Everett Green, Mary (1857). Lives of the Princesses of England, from the Norman Conquest. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longman, & Roberts. OCLC 15617187.
  • Fraser, Antonia (2002). King Charles II. Phoenix. ISBN 0-7538-1403-X.
  • Green, David (1970). Queen Anne. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-211693-6.
  • Gregg, Edward (1984). Queen Anne. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-7448-0018-8.
  • Henslowe, J. R. (1915). Anne Hyde, Duchess of York. London: T. W. Laurie.
  • Holmes, Richard (2008). Marlborough; England's Fragile Genius. Harper Press. ISBN 978-0007225712.
  • Hutton, Ronald (1989). Charles II: King of England, Scotland and Ireland. Oxford: Clarendon. ISBN 0-19-822911-9.
  • Lister, Thomas Henry (1838). Life and Administration of Edward, First Earl of Clarendon. London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longmans. OCLC 899249.
  • Maclagan, Michael; Louda, Jiří (1999). Line of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. London: Little, Brown & Co. ISBN 1-85605-469-1.
  • Melville, Lewis (2005). The Windsor Beauties: Ladies of the Court of Charles II. Michigan: Loving Healing Press. ISBN 1-932690-13-1.
  • Miller, John (2000). James II. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08728-4.
  • Panton, Kenneth John (2011). Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5779-7.
  • Softly, Barbara (1979). The Queens of England. Michigan: Bell Pub Co. ISBN 0-517-30200-4.
  • Strickland, Agnes (1882). The Queens of England. Boston: Easton and Lauriat. OCLC 950726.
  • Van der Kiste, John (2003). William and Mary. Gloucestershire: Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-3048-9.
  • Waller, Maureen (2002). Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses who Stole Their Father's Crown. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-312-30711-X.
  • Weir, Alison (2008). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy. London: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-09-953973-5.

External links

anne, hyde, american, historian, historian, march, 1637, march, 1671, duchess, york, albany, first, wife, james, duke, york, after, death, became, king, james, duchess, york, albanyc, 1665, portrait, peter, lely, anne, teasing, playing, hair, deliberately, sug. For the American historian see Anne Hyde historian Anne Hyde 12 March 1637 31 March 1671 2 a was Duchess of York and Albany as the first wife of James Duke of York who after her death became King James II and VII Anne HydeDuchess of York and Albanyc 1665 portrait by Sir Peter Lely Anne s teasing playing of her hair is deliberately suggestive of a royal consort s prime role breeding but also a reminder of her great wit 1 Born12 March 1637Windsor Berkshire EnglandDied31 March 1671 1671 03 31 aged 34 St James s Palace Westminster Middlesex EnglandBurial5 April 1671Westminster AbbeySpouseJames Duke of York and Albany m 1660 wbr Issuemore Charles Duke of Cambridge Mary II Queen of England James Duke of Cambridge Anne Queen of Great Britain Charles Duke of Kendal Edgar Duke of CambridgeFatherEdward Hyde 1st Earl of ClarendonMotherFrances AylesburyReligionRoman Catholicprev AnglicanAnne was the daughter of a member of the English gentry Edward Hyde later created Earl of Clarendon and met her future husband when they were both living in exile in the Netherlands She married James in 1660 and two months later gave birth to the couple s first child who had been conceived out of wedlock Some observers disapproved of the marriage but James s brother King Charles II of England wanted the marriage to take place Another cause of disapproval was the public affection James showed toward Anne They had eight children of whom six died in early childhood 3 the two who reached adulthood were future monarchs Mary II and Anne James was a known philanderer who kept many mistresses for which Anne often reproached him and he fathered many illegitimate children Originally an Anglican Anne converted to Catholicism soon after her marriage to James She had been exposed to Catholicism during visits to the Netherlands and France and was strongly attracted thereto Partly due to Anne s influence James later also converted to Catholicism which ultimately led to the Glorious Revolution She suffered from advanced breast cancer and died shortly after giving birth to her last child Contents 1 Early years 1637 60 2 Duchess of York 1660 71 2 1 Marriage 2 2 Domestic life 3 Death and legacy 4 Issue 5 Media portrayals 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly years 1637 60 EditIn 1629 Edward Hyde married his first wife Anne Ayliffe of Grittenham Six months into the marriage Anne caught smallpox miscarried and died 4 Three years later Hyde married Frances Aylesbury The couple s eldest daughter was born at Cranbourne Lodge in Windsor 5 in 1637 The parents named Anne after Edward Hyde s first wife Almost nothing is known of her life before 1649 when her family fled to the Netherlands after the execution of the deposed King Charles I 6 During the First English Civil War her father was a leading advisor to Charles I then went into exile with his son Charles II in 1646 Like many refugees they settled in Breda where Mary of Orange offered shelter to many English fugitives 7 Mary appointed Anne a maid of honour apparently against the wishes of her mother Henrietta Maria who loathed Hyde 8 Anne became a general favourite with the people she met either at The Hague or at the Princess of Orange s country house at Teylingen She was attractive and stylish 9 and she attracted many men One of the first men to fall in love with Anne was Spencer Compton a son of the Earl of Northampton 10 However Anne quickly fell in love with Henry Jermyn who returned her feelings Anne dismissed Jermyn just as quickly when she met James Duke of York the son of the deposed king 11 On 24 November 1659 two 12 or three 13 years after she first met him James promised he would marry Anne despite the opposition of many including her father who confined her to a room and allegedly urged Charles to execute her 8 Charles rejected this advice suggesting Anne s strong character would be a positive influence on his weak willed brother 14 Duchess of York 1660 71 EditMarriage Edit A portrait of Anne James and their two daughters Lady Mary and Lady Anne this portrait is based on an earlier portrait of Anne and James After Anne became visibly pregnant in 1660 the couple were obliged to marry 15 Following the Restoration of the monarchy in May 1660 they held an official but private marriage ceremony in London on 3 September 1660 The wedding took place between 11 at night and 2 in the morning at Worcester House her father s house in the Strand and was solemnised by Dr Joseph Crowther James s chaplain The French Ambassador described Anne as having courage cleverness and energy almost worthy of a King s blood 16 The couple s first child Charles was born in October of that year but died seven months later Seven children followed Mary 1662 1694 James 1663 1667 Anne 1665 1714 Charles 1666 1667 Edgar 1667 1671 Henrietta 1669 1669 and Catherine 1671 1671 All of their sons and two of their daughters died in infancy 3 Even well after their marriage some observers disapproved of the prince s decision regardless of what he had promised beforehand 17 Samuel Pepys said of the marriage that the Duke of York s marriage with her hath undone the kingdom by making the Chancellor so great above reach who otherwise would have been but an ordinary man to have been dealt with by other people 18 After Anne s death the royal court tried to find a new wife for James but this new wife was not under any circumstances to be of humble birth 19 As good a father as Pepys portrayed James to be he strangely stated that Anne and James were unaffected by the death of their firstborn son 20 Pepys also described Anne as not only the proudest woman in the world but the most expensefull 18 Even in the minds of James s nephew later to become Anne s son in law William III of Orange and that of her husband s cousin Sophia of Hanover the stigma of the Hydes lowly birth remained 21 Domestic life Edit Anne painted by Lely about 1670 Anne was not popular at court although she was well liked by her brother in law 22 Regarded as the most unguarded ogler of his time James had a succession of mistresses throughout their marriage 23 These mistresses included Arabella Churchill mother of his illegitimate son the Duke of Berwick Berwick had a highly successful career in the French army while James secured a series of positions for Arabella s brother John Churchill 24 Anne was not oblivious to her husband s infidelities Pepys recording that she was jealous and chided James Pepys also claimed however that the pair were notorious for showing their affections publicly kissing and leaning on each other In another entry Pepys wrote that when James fell in love with Lady Chesterfield Anne complained to Charles so insistently that Lady Chesterfield had to retreat to the countryside where she remained until she died 25 26 Historian John Callow claims Anne made the greatest single impact in the process that led to James becoming a Catholic 27 Raised in the Anglican high church tradition which was closely linked to the forms and practices of Catholicism Anne stopped attending Anglican service in 1669 James converted around the same time but at Charles request delayed the announcement of his conversion until 1673 28 Although he later converted to Catholicism on his deathbed Charles insisted for political reasons that his brother s children must be raised as Protestants so both Mary and Anne were members of the Church of England 29 Death and legacy Edit Anne Hyde s coat of arms 30 Anne was ill for 15 months after the birth of her youngest son Edgar 31 She bore Henrietta in 1669 and Catherine in 1671 32 never recovering from Catherine s birth 33 Ill with breast cancer 34 she died on 31 March 1671 5 b On her deathbed her brothers Henry and Laurence tried to bring an Anglican priest to give her communion but Anne refused 33 and she received viaticum of the Catholic Church 34 Two days after her death her embalmed body was interred in the vault of Mary Queen of Scots at Westminster Abbey s Henry VII Chapel 35 In June 1671 Anne s only surviving son Edgar died of natural causes followed by Catherine in December leaving Mary and Anne as the Duke of York s heirs 36 After Anne Hyde s death a portrait of her painted by Willem Wissing was commissioned by the future Mary II this used to hang above the door of the Queen s Drawing Room of the Garden House at Windsor Castle 37 Two years after the death of his first wife James married a Catholic princess Mary of Modena Mary bore James Francis Edward James s only son to survive to adulthood James became king of England Ireland and Scotland in 1685 but was deposed during the Glorious Revolution of 1688 The throne was then offered by the Parliament of England to Anne s eldest daughter Mary and her husband William III of Orange 38 After Mary died in 1694 and William in 1702 Anne Hyde s only surviving child Anne became queen of the three kingdoms and in 1707 the first sovereign of the united Kingdom of Great Britain 39 Issue EditName Birth Death NotesCharles Duke of Cambridge 22 October 1660 5 May 1661 Born two months after his parents legal marriage died aged seven months of smallpox 40 Mary II 30 April 1662 28 December 1694 Married her cousin William III Prince of Orange in 1677 She and her husband ascended the throne in 1689 after the deposition of her father No surviving issue 41 James Duke of Cambridge 12 July 1663 20 June 1667 Died of the bubonic plague 42 Anne Queen of Great Britain and Ireland 6 February 1665 1 August 1714 Married Prince George of Denmark in 1683 Successor of her brother in law and cousin in 1702 First monarch of Great Britain under the Act of Union of 1707 No surviving issue 43 Charles Duke of Kendal 4 July 1666 22 May 1667 Died of convulsions 44 Edgar Duke of Cambridge 14 September 1667 8 June 1671 Died in childhood 32 Henrietta 13 January 1669 15 November 1669 Died in infancy 32 Catherine 9 February 1671 5 December 1671 Died in infancy 32 Media portrayals EditIn the 2003 mini series Charles II The Power and the Passion or The Last King Anne Hyde is portrayed by Tabitha Wady 45 Notes Edit All the dates in this article are Old Style England used the Julian calendar OS during Anne s lifetime References Edit Portrait of the Duchess of York Archived 5 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine historicalportraits com Philip Mould Ltd Ward Adolphus William 1891 Hyde Anne In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 28 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Weir 2008 pp 259 60 Lister 1838 p 9 a b Weir 2008 p 259 Henslowe 1915 p 18 Henslowe 1915 p 19 a b Miller 2000 p 44 Melville 2005 p 3 Henslowe 1915 p 34 Melville 2005 pp 3 4 Melville 2005 p 4 Gregg 1984 p 2 Softly 1979 p 91 Henslowe 1915 pp 130 1 Fraser 2002 p 202 Miller 2000 pp 44 45 a b The Diary of Samuel Pepys Monday 24 June 1667 Strickland 1882 pp 242 3 The Diary of Samuel Pepys Monday 6 May 1661 Gregg 1984 pp 3 4 Melville 2005 p 17 19 Miller 2000 p 46 Holmes 2008 pp 56 57 Melville 2005 pp 21 22 Melville 2005 pp 25 27 Callow 2000 p 144 Miller 2000 pp 58 59 Van der Kiste 2003 p 32 Maclagan amp Louda 1999 p 27 Henslowe 1915 p 289 a b c d Weir 2008 p 260 a b Gregg 1984 p 10 a b Melville 2005 p 32 Henslowe 1915 p 300 Waller 2002 pp 49 50 Willem Wissing James Duke of Cambridge 1663 7 Royal Collection Trust Inventory no 401234 Devine 2006 p 3 Gregg 1984 p 240 Panton 2011 p 455 Weir 2008 p 266 The Diary of Samuel Pepys Tuesday 30 April 1667 Weir 2008 pp 267 8 The Diary of Samuel Pepys Tuesday 14 May 1667 The Last King full cast and crew IMDb Bibliography EditCallow John 2000 The Making of King James II The Formative Years of a King Gloucestershire Sutton ISBN 0 7509 2398 9 Curtis Gila 1972 The Life and Times of Queen Anne London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 99571 5 Devine Tom 2006 The Scottish Nation 1700 2007 London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 102769 X Everett Green Mary 1857 Lives of the Princesses of England from the Norman Conquest London Longman Brown Green Longman amp Roberts OCLC 15617187 Fraser Antonia 2002 King Charles II Phoenix ISBN 0 7538 1403 X Green David 1970 Queen Anne London Collins ISBN 0 00 211693 6 Gregg Edward 1984 Queen Anne New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 7448 0018 8 Henslowe J R 1915 Anne Hyde Duchess of York London T W Laurie Holmes Richard 2008 Marlborough England s Fragile Genius Harper Press ISBN 978 0007225712 Hutton Ronald 1989 Charles II King of England Scotland and Ireland Oxford Clarendon ISBN 0 19 822911 9 Lister Thomas Henry 1838 Life and Administration of Edward First Earl of Clarendon London Longman Orme Brown Green and Longmans OCLC 899249 Maclagan Michael Louda Jiri 1999 Line of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe London Little Brown amp Co ISBN 1 85605 469 1 Melville Lewis 2005 The Windsor Beauties Ladies of the Court of Charles II Michigan Loving Healing Press ISBN 1 932690 13 1 Miller John 2000 James II New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08728 4 Panton Kenneth John 2011 Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy Lanham Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5779 7 Softly Barbara 1979 The Queens of England Michigan Bell Pub Co ISBN 0 517 30200 4 Strickland Agnes 1882 The Queens of England Boston Easton and Lauriat OCLC 950726 Van der Kiste John 2003 William and Mary Gloucestershire Sutton ISBN 0 7509 3048 9 Waller Maureen 2002 Ungrateful Daughters The Stuart Princesses who Stole Their Father s Crown London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 312 30711 X Weir Alison 2008 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy London Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 09 953973 5 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Hyde Anne DNB00 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lady Anne Hyde Anne Hyde Duchess of York at the National Portrait Gallery London Miller John January 2008 Anne Hyde Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14325 Subscription or UK public library membership required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Hyde amp oldid 1147451543, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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