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Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester

Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester (8 July 1640 – 13 September 1660)[a] was the youngest son of Charles I, King of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and his wife, Henrietta Maria of France. He is also known as Henry of Oatlands.[2][3][4]

Henry Stuart
Duke of Gloucester
Portrait by Jan Boeckhorst, c. 1659[1]
Born8 July 1640
Oatlands Palace, Surrey, England
Died13 September 1660(1660-09-13) (aged 20)
Palace of Whitehall, London, England
Burial21 September 1660
HouseStuart
FatherCharles I of England
MotherHenrietta Maria of France

From the age of two, Henry and his sister Elizabeth were separated from their family during the English Civil War and became prisoners of Parliament. For several years, the children were constantly transported from one residence to another due to the plague raging in London. They also periodically changed their governesses and guardians to those more loyal to the government. In 1645, Henry and Elizabeth were joined by their elder brother James, Duke of York, who found himself in a difficult financial situation. In 1647, Charles I was arrested, and during the years 1647–1648 he was allowed to see his children several times. In April 1648 James fled the country; it was probably planned that he would take Henry with him, but Elizabeth was afraid to let her younger brother go. When in 1649 Charles I was sentenced to death, he, fearing that Henry would be proclaimed king and made a puppet of the government, took an oath from his eight-year-old son not to take the crown for anything while both of his older brothers were alive.

After the execution of Charles I, Scotland proclaimed his eldest son Charles II as their sovereign. In the summer of 1650, he landed in Scotland, which prompted Parliament to send the children of the late monarch to Carisbrooke Castle on the Isle of Wight, where their father had previously been imprisoned. Before leaving for Carisbrooke, Henry and Elizabeth were stripped of all titles and privileges. Shortly after arriving on the Isle of Wight in September 1650, Henry's sister fell ill and died. Henry remained at Carisbrooke until the following year, when, with the permission of Oliver Cromwell, he returned to the continent, where he eventually joined his mother in Paris. With Henrietta Maria, whom the prince had not seen for eleven years, Henry did not have a good understanding: the prince was an ardent Protestant, and his mother was an implacable Catholic. The Queen, against the wishes of her late husband and eldest son, tried to convert Henry to Catholicism, but this only deteriorated their relationship. Henry went to his brother Charles in Cologne. In 1657, the prince fought on the side of the Spanish against France with his brother James. In May 1659, Charles restored to his brother the title of Duke of Gloucester, which Henry had been deprived of by Parliament in 1650, and bestowed the title of Earl of Cambridge.

After the restoration of the monarchy in England in 1660, Henry accompanied his brother during his return to Britain. There Henry received a number of appointments, but before the coronation of Charles II, he contracted smallpox and died. He was buried in the vault of Mary, Queen of Scots in Westminster Abbey, where his elder sister Mary, who also died of smallpox, was buried a few weeks later.

Birth and early years edit

Henry was born on 8 July 1640 at Oatlands Palace[2] near Weybridge in Surrey[5] as the youngest son[3] and penultimate child of King Charles I of England, Scotland, and Ireland and his wife, Henrietta Maria of France.[6] In total, the royal couple had nine children—four sons and five daughters;[7] the eldest son of the royal couple, Charles James, was either stillborn or died immediately after birth,[8] the fourth daughter, Catherine, died less than half an hour after baptism,[9] and the third daughter, Anne, died at the age of three.[10] Since Henry was born after the death of Charles James, throughout his life he was the third son of the King.[2][4] With the deaths of Catherine and Anne, the boy also became the fifth child of the royal couple to survive infancy.[7]

His paternal grandparents were King James VI of Scotland and I of England (the first one of the House of Stuart in England) and his wife Anne of Denmark, and his maternal grandparents were King Henry IV of France and his wife Marie de' Medici;[6] of all his grandparents at the time of Henry's birth, only Marie de Medici[b] was alive. The prince was baptized on 22 July 1640, and his only godmother was his elder sister Mary, for whom this ceremony was her first public appearance.[11] From birth, Henry received the title of Duke of Gloucester.[8][c]

In the spring of 1641, Henry's elder sister and godmother, nine-year-old Mary, was betrothed to William, the eldest son and heir of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange. It was planned that until reaching the age of twelve (the minimum age of marriage consent) the princess would remain in England,[12] but by the beginning of 1642 the situation in the country was tense, and in February Mary and her mother left for The Hague.[13] Henrietta Maria hurriedly said goodbye to Henry and Elizabeth at Hampton Court Palace[14] and did not see her son again until 1653: in August 1642, the English Civil War broke out, and two-year-old Henry and his sister were held as hostages in the hands of the English Parliament.[3]

English Civil War edit

 
A 7-year-old Henry at left, alongside his siblings James, Duke of York, the future James II, and Princess Elizabeth, portrait by Sir Peter Lely, 1647.

As a result of the civil war that began in August, Charles I and Henrietta Maria were forced to leave their two youngest children at that time, Henry and Elizabeth, in the care of Parliament.[5] In October 1642, the plague reached the outskirts of Hampton Court Palace, where the siblings lived together. Elizabeth, who had not been in good health since childhood, fell ill again and was so weak that she could not leave the capital. On the recommendation of the governess, the Countess of Roxburghe, and with the permission of the House of Lords, the children were transferred to St. James's Palace for lack of a more suitable residence.[15] Although Parliament did not intend to punish the children for the actions of their father,[5] at the same time, the amount of expenses for the court of the prince and princess was considered, and in the process of discussion it was decided to dismiss without payment of salary almost all the servants who, in the opinion of Parliament, were papists, sympathizers or simply opponents of Parliament.[5] However, Elizabeth achieved some mitigation for the court, although the children were replaced by a chaplain and cut costs for the wardrobe, which became truly puritanical.[16]

In December 1642 and January 1643, Henry and Elizabeth were visited by two of the King's squires, with the permission of Parliament, to make sure that the children were healthy and did not need anything.[15] Later, the prince and his sister were completely deprived of wardrobe payments: this was the result of the confrontation between Charles I and the Parliament; as the representative of the House of Commons wrote: "...if the King wants to fight with us, they [children] must pay for clothes at their own expense!".[17] This action angered not only the King, but also the children's governess, the Countess of Roxburghe, who wrote a letter to the Parliament. After an investigation by the House of Commons[5] and a second discussion, it was decided to return the payments; however, all expenses of Henry and Elizabeth had to be announced publicly.[17] In addition, an investigation and discussion were held by the House of Lords, which confirmed the decision of the House of Commons.[5] The royal children were allotted an amount of £800 a month each, the expenditure of which was overseen by an officer, Sir Ralph Freeman. The Parliament also conducted an investigation into the activities of the clerics of the chapel of the royal palace to make sure that children were brought up in the "correct" religion.[17] On 20 July 1643, the staff of the servants of the royal children were again revised: the Countess of Roxburghe was replaced by the Countess of Dorset, who was loyal to the government.[2][18][19]

In the summer of 1643, Parliament decided to transfer Henry and his sister to Oxford under the protection of the local garrison, but in the fall during a game, Elizabeth fell and broke her leg,[16] and Parliament decided to postpone the move. By the summer of 1644, the princess had fully recovered from her injury, but soon fell ill. In July, doctors recommended that Elizabeth change the climate,[16][20] so the children were moved to Chelsea, to the residence of Sir John Danvers,[16][18][20] who would later become one of the signatories of the death warrant of Charles I. During the move, Henry and Elizabeth were denied the honorary escort that was due to members of the royal family.[20] At the same time, the plague epidemic did not weaken the position, so the prince and princess were moved from time to time from one residence to another: St. James, Whitehall and Chelsea.[18] By winter, the royal children were again transported, but not as planned to St. James's Palace, next to which the plague was raging, but to Whitehall, which seemed more reliable.[20]

At the beginning of 1645, the governess of the children, the Countess of Dorset, fell seriously ill and died. Shortly before her death, Henry and Elizabeth were placed under the care of the Earl and Countess of Northumberland,[2][16][18] which was reported in the newspapers on 13 March 1645.[21] The Earl was a close friend of the King and therefore treated his children with all respect and care.[22] Under the care of the Northumberlands, the royal children spent a happy summer at one of the Earl 's residences, probably Syon House. Elizabeth wrote about this to her older sister, Mary, on 11 September 1645. On the day on which the letter to Mary is dated, hearings were held in Parliament on the maintenance of the royal children; the composition of the servants, the amount required for the maintenance of the children and their court, as well as the place of their permanent residence were agreed. The Earl of Northumberland was asked to choose one of the royal residences, and he chose St. James's Palace, where Henry and Elizabeth were soon transferred. Also, the Earl managed to achieve a reduction in the number of protection of children for their comfort.[22]

In September, the prince's brother, the Duke of York, found himself in a difficult position: he was in Oxford, where the plague was creeping up, accumulated debts and lost all provisions. In a letter to his father, he asked permission to join his brother and sister in London. The prince did not wait for an answer from his father, but Parliament approved the move[23] and the placement of the prince under the guardianship of the Earl of Northumberland[18] and with a magnificent escort delivered the boy to St. James Palace.[23] The Duke of York remained with his brother and sister until April 1648.

Father's arrest and execution edit

 
King Charles I of England, portrait by Anthony van Dyck, c. 1638.

In March 1647, the Earl of Northumberland moved the royal children to Hampton Court Palace,[24] but almost immediately they were recalled back to St. James Palace.[18] At the same time, the Scots handed over Charles I to the English Parliament. According to the decision of Parliament, the King was to be placed under arrest in Caversham, and before leaving, Charles I,[24] having learned how close his children were to him,[18] asked to see them.[24] In the summer of 1647, due to a new epidemic, the Earl of Northumberland was forced to transport the royal children from one residence to another and ended up staying at Syon House.[2][25] In August, the arrested King was again transported to Hampton Court Palace, from where on the 23rd he was allowed to leave for Syon House and see his children there.[25] On 31 August, the visit was repeated, and on 7 September, Henry, with his brother and sister, arrived at Hampton Court Palace to see their father.[26] On one of these visits, the King insisted that his youngest son should not be subjected to religious pressure; it is not clear whether he feared the influence of Catholics or Protestants. At the same time, Charles I gave all three children a conflicting instruction "to be faithful to the Anglican Church, but more than that, to their Catholic mother".[18]

In October, Parliament planned to move the children to St. James's Palace for the winter; learning of this, the King asked the government to allow the Earl of Northumberland to transmit letters between Charles I and his children and to allow them to visit their father from time to time. Charles I' request was granted,[27] but in November 1647 the King managed to escape. Upon learning of her father's escape, Elizabeth took every opportunity to persuade her older brother, the Duke of York, to flee the country; this was done, probably, according to the instructions given by Charles I earlier and in correspondence with Elizabeth.[28] Thanks to the ingenuity of the princess,[16] James managed to deceive the personal guard and, disguised as a woman[18] in Elizabeth's chambers, escaped to the continent to The Hague at the side of his sister Mary on 21 April 1648.[29] Probably, the King planned that Henry would also escape with the Duke of York, but Elizabeth was afraid to let Henry go because he was too small. After James's escape, Parliament investigated and ordered the Earl of Northumberland to transport Henry and Elizabeth without delay to one of the residences –Syon House or Hampton Court– and the Earl chose Syon House.[30]

In August 1648, Charles I was again captured, but in October he sent an encouraging letter from Newport to his daughter Elizabeth with his trusted servant Sir Thomas Herbert, with whom the princess had a long conversation about her father.[31] The fateful autumn and winter of 1648 remained vague for Henry and Elizabeth: they did not receive any more news from their father, in addition, the Earl of Northumberland took them out of town for the whole winter and did not devote all the details of the trial of the King—a process that horrified him.[16] However, the royal children knew that on 26 January 1649, Charles I was convicted and sentenced to death.[18] The day before the sentencing, he asked to see the children; a similar request was submitted to the government on 27 January. On 29 January, the day before the execution, the King was allowed to see Henry and Elizabeth,[2][18][32] after which the royal children were returned to Syon House.[33]

At their last meeting, Charles I gave instructions to his children. He feared that after his death, Henry might be proclaimed King and made a puppet in the hands of Parliament. The King knelt down in front of his son and said: "Now they will deprive your father of his head. Listen, my child, what I say: they will decapitate me and, perhaps, make you King. But remember what I say. You must not become King while your brothers Charles and James are both alive...I oblige you not to become King before them".[34] Eight-year-old Henry replied that he would rather be torn apart first.[35]

Change of guardians and death of sister edit

 
The Children of Charles I, by Margaret Isabel Dicksee, 1895.

There are no records of how the royal children spent the fateful hours of 30 January 1649.[33] By this time, their guardian the Earl of Northumberland had become very attached to the children of Charles I.[33] He became one of five English peers who opposed the execution of the King.[36] As a result, the royal children were transferred to the care of the Earl and Countess of Leicester[18] at Penshurst Place.[33] Elizabeth, who did not want to move to new, and in her opinion, less benevolent guardians,[37] again sent a request to Parliament to let her and Henry go to live with their sister Mary in Holland, and again to no avail.[33] The royal children, accompanied by the Countess of Leicester and ten or eleven servants, arrived at Penshurst on 14 June 1649.[38]

In Penshurst Place, the Countess of Leicester was mainly involved in the upbringing of the royal children, since the Earl was almost constantly in London. The numerous children of the Earl and Countess became companions of Henry and Elizabeth;[39] with them, they sat at the table without royal honors, but as members of the family.[40] This was done on the basis of instructions given by Parliament.[2] Here the royal children were lucky to have a mentor, Robert Lovel,[18] who was a maternal relative of the Earl of Leicester[33] and a supporter of the royalists.[2] Shortly after being sent to the Leicester household, rumors spread that royal children might be poisoned or sent to an insane asylum or charity school under the names of Harry and Bessie Stewart; there were also fears that the children would become victims of the matrimonial plans of their guardians. However, most likely, these rumors were spread by order of their mother Henrietta Maria, who was in exile in France, and had no basis.[41]

The Parliament had a real plan, according to which the royal children were to be deprived of all their privileges, transferred to the custody of a trusted family and raised in obscurity but this plan was not destined to come true: immediately after the execution of Charles I, Scotland proclaimed Henry's elder brother, Charles II, as its new king.[35] In the summer of 1650, when it became known that Charles II had landed in Scotland, it was decided to transfer Henry and Elizabeth to Carisbrook Castle on the Isle of Wight,[42] where their father had previously been imprisoned, under the care of Anthony Mildmay and his wife.[35] Elizabeth was horrified at the prospect of being imprisoned in her father's former prison and petitioned for her and her brother to be left in Penshurst Place on the pretext of the princess's ill health, but was unsuccessful. Before leaving for Carisbrook Castle, the number of the royal children's servants was reduced to four people (including Lovel[2]); they were deprived of their status of prince and princess, and Henry of his the ducal title: Elizabeth was now called Lady Elizabeth Stewart, and Henry was named Harry Stewart or Mr. Harry.[43]

On 23 August, about a week after arriving at Carisbrook Castle,[33] Elizabeth fell ill after playing outdoors. On 8 September 1650[7] at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, she died,[33] and ten-year-old Henry was left alone.[35]

Life abroad edit

 
Prince Henry, portrait by Adriaen Hanneman, c. 1653. This portrait was made during the prince's early exile in Paris.

Henry remained at Carisbrooke Castle until 1652, when Oliver Cromwell allowed the prince to leave the country[35] and provided him with funds to cover his travel expenses.[2] Henry went to Holland to his sister Mary, where he was warmly received by her and other relatives. Here, on Easter Sunday 1653, the prince was knighted in the Order of the Garter.[35] Then, at the special invitation of his mother, the prince joined her in Paris.[44] In 1653, his elder brother Charles II went to Germany,[45] where he moved his court a year later;[46] he offered to take Henry with him, but their mother insisted that the prince stay in Paris:[35] Henrietta Maria believed that after a long stay in England, Henry should improve his education in the capital of France. Charles II yielded to his mother on the condition that she would not force Henry to change his faith.[45]

With his mother, the prince, who had not seen her since the age of two, could not establish a good understanding, because during the separation he became a zealous Protestant, and Henrietta Maria was a staunch Catholic.[3] The widow of Charles I went against the will of her eldest son and late husband, to whom she also promised not to persuade her youngest sons to change their faith,[35] and tried to convert not only Henry, but also her other son, James, Duke of York, to Catholicism.[47] The more mature James became fascinated with his mother's religion[48][49] but did not convert to Catholicism until many years after her death.[50][51] Henrietta Maria could not give up trying to make her youngest son a Catholic, because she believed that only the true church could save his soul. At first, she acted cautiously and did not even send away his teacher Robert Lovel, who professed Anglicanism, from his son. Henry visited his brother James, and on his return to Paris found that his teacher had been sent back to England.[35] The prince was transferred to the care of the Aumônier[d] of Henrietta Maria, Walter Montagu, abbot of a monastery near Pontoise,[45] who was supposed to take care of the religious education of fourteen-year-old Henry.[35] In the absence of Lovel, the prince succumbed to the abbot's persuasion and agreed to get acquainted with Catholicism, but was deeply indignant at the actions of his mother. Not getting a quick result, Henrietta Maria joined Montague and began to persuade her son to change religion but Henry was adamant, and it was decided to send him to a Jesuit College.[45]

When news of his mother's actions reached Charles II, he became furious[52] and immediately sent the Marquess of Ormonde to Paris to bring Henry to him in Cologne. Initially, Henry refused to leave Paris, and Ormond agreed with his decision.[45] At the same time, the prince assured his mother that he intended to adhere to the Protestant religion in all dangers, to which she stated that she did not want to see him anymore. When Henry returned from another Anglican service, he found that, on the orders of Henrietta Maria, his horses had been taken out of the stables, bedding removed from his bed, and orders had been given to the kitchen not to cook food for the prince; this meant that the prince was effectively kicked out of the palace.[45][52] Henry moved into the house of Lord Hutton, where he spent two months, while the Marquess of Ormond collected funds to send the prince to his brother in Cologne.[45] Thus, Henrietta Maria's attempts to convert Henry to Catholicism not only failed and angered the royalists and Charles II,[53] but also completely ruined her relationship with her younger son.[45]

Henry remained with Charles in Cologne until 1656. In July 1655, their sister Mary visited them, then together they made a trip to Frankfurt, where they visited the fair incognito,[54] although they did not manage to remain unrecognised.[52] Prior to this, Henry had also visited Mary in the Netherlands a couple of times with his brother and alone. In 1656 the brothers left for Bruges, where Henry became a member of the Archers of Saint George.[45] In December 1656, Henry became colonel of the "old" English regiment of the Spanish army and volunteered with his brother James to enter the service of the Spanish in 1657 in the Low Countries.[45][52] The mother of the princes opposed: she believed that Henry was too young to become a soldier.[3] The prince did not listen to her and fought side by side with his brother in the defence of Dunkirk on 17 June 1658,[55] where both showed great courage. When the city fell, Henry managed to escape capture by gathering some of the scattered troops and making a desperate breakthrough through the enemy battle formations. In the battle, the prince lost his sword, and while Villeneuve, the groom of the Prince de Ligne, was looking for the lost weapon, Henry covered him with a pistol.[45]

On 26 February 1657 or 1658, Charles II knighted his brother, on 27 October 1658 he introduced him to his Privy Council,[45] and on 13 May 1659 he restored to him the title of Duke of Gloucester and additionally bestowed him the title of Earl of Cambridge.[3][8][45][52]

Stuart Restoration and death edit

 
18th-century posthumous print of Henry, Duke of Gloucester, by George Vertue

Following the restoration of the monarchy in England in 1660, Henry accompanied his brother Charles II to his homeland;[3][52] the costs of their trip were again paid by Parliament.[45] Henry settled in the Palace of Whitehall[3] and on 31 June 1660 he was already sitting in the House of Lords.[52] On 13 June he was appointed Chief Steward of Gloucester, and on 3 July he became Ranger of Hyde Park.[45][52]

Early in September 1660, Henry contracted smallpox, an epidemic that raged in London.[52] The prince died on 13 September 1660[3] before his brother Charles II's coronation.[52] On 21 September, his remains were moved to Somerset House, from where they were taken by river to Westminster. He was buried in Westminster Abbey in the vault of Mary, Queen of Scots.[45][52][56] Henry's death overshadowed the joy of a family reunion.[52] A few weeks later Henry's elder sister Mary, Dowager Princess of Orange, also died of smallpox; on her deathbed, she wished to be buried next to her brother.[57]

The Earl of Clarendon, an English historian, statesman and father of the Duke of York's first wife, wrote enthusiastically of Henry as one of the finest youth, "the most manly...that I ever knew" and "a prince of extraordinary hopes, who had a personality of comely and graceful with liveliness and the power of reason and understanding." Gilbert Burnet believed that the prince "had a different character than any of his brothers. He was active and liked to do things, had a penchant for special friendships, and a quirky personality that tended to be very pleasant." As Burnet wrote, "his death was mourned by many, especially the King, who had never been so upset".[45]

Charles II planned to betroth Henry to Princess Wilhelmine Ernestine of Denmark to reinforce the English-Danish maritime alliance, and King Frederick III of Denmark also agreed to the marriage, but the prince's early death prevented this union. Henry's death led to the fact that the throne eventually passed to William III and Mary II—the children of Henry's older sister and older brother, respectively,[3] and later to the House of Hanover.

Titles, styles, honours and arms edit

Titles edit

Though it is said that he was created Duke of Gloucester and Earl of Cambridge on 13 May 1659, he was probably styled as such from birth.[8]

Honours edit

Arms edit

 
Coat of arms of Henry as a son of the Sovereign
 
Arms of Henry according to Elias Ashmole's "Institutions, Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter"[58]

Henry's own coat of arms is based on the royal coat of arms of the Stuarts. The shield holders are burdened with a title (tournament collar) as in a shield: on a green lawn, a golden leopard armed with scarlet and crowned with a golden crown [rising lion alert] and a silver unicorn armed with gold, topped like a collar with a golden crown with a chain attached to it.[59]

A four-part shield with a silver tournament collar [title], the teeth of which are burdened with a Tudor rose (a scarlet rose with a silver core and green leaves[60]): in the 1st and 4th parts—the English royal coat of arms (four times: in the 1st and 4th parts in the azure field three golden lilies [France]; in the 2nd and 3rd parts in the scarlet field three golden leopards [walking on the alert of a lion], armed with azure, one above the other); in the 2nd part—the coat of arms of Scotland (in a golden field, scarlet, armed with azure, a rising lion, surrounded by a double flourishing and counter-blooming inner border); in the 3rd part—the coat of arms of Ireland (a gold harp with silver strings in an azure field).[61]

The shield is surmounted by a crown corresponding to the dignity of the children of the monarch with the owner's cap. Above the crown is a crest: a golden leopard crowned with a golden crown of the monarch's children with a silver title (as in a shield) around its neck, also standing on a golden crown. The shield is girded with the ribbon of the Order of the Garter[62] of dark blue velvet with a gold border woven with a gold inscription: "Honi soit qui mal y pense" ("Shame on him who thinks ill of it").

Elias Ashmole's Institutions, Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter lists a coat of arms with three roses (one above the other) on each prong of the title.[63]

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ All dates in this article are in the Old Style Julian calendar, in use in England throughout Henry's lifetime.
  2. ^ Henry IV was assassinated in 1610, James VI and I died in 1625, Anne of Denmark died in 1619.
  3. ^ The duchy was assigned to the crown, although the Earldom of Gloucester did not belong to the royal family.[5]
  4. ^ Chaplain or church officer who originally was in charge of distributing money to the deserving poor.

References edit

  1. ^ "Henry, Duke of Gloucester – National Portrait Gallery". www.npg.org.uk.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Henderson 1891, p. 108.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Panton 2011, p. 459.
  4. ^ a b "Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Beatty 2003, p. 43.
  6. ^ a b Weir 2011, p. 254.
  7. ^ a b c Weir 2011, pp. 253–254.
  8. ^ a b c d e Weir 2011, p. 253.
  9. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 396.
  10. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 394.
  11. ^ Beatty 2003, p. 35.
  12. ^ Beatty 2003, p. 36.
  13. ^ Purkiss 2012, p. 248.
  14. ^ Purkiss 2012, p. 126.
  15. ^ a b Everett Green 1855, p. 339.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Goodwin 1889, p. 232.
  17. ^ a b c Everett Green 1855, pp. 340–341.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Beatty 2003, p. 44.
  19. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 342.
  20. ^ a b c d Everett Green 1855, p. 345.
  21. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 348.
  22. ^ a b Everett Green 1855, p. 349.
  23. ^ a b Everett Green 1855, pp. 350–351.
  24. ^ a b c Everett Green 1855, pp. 352–353.
  25. ^ a b Everett Green 1855, p. 357.
  26. ^ Everett Green 1855, pp. 358–359.
  27. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 361.
  28. ^ Everett Green 1855, pp. 364–365.
  29. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 364.
  30. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 365.
  31. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 367.
  32. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 368.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h Goodwin 1889, p. 233.
  34. ^ Beatty 2003, pp. 44–45.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Beatty 2003, p. 45.
  36. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 372.
  37. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 373.
  38. ^ Everett Green 1855, pp. 375–376.
  39. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 374.
  40. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 375.
  41. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 377.
  42. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 381.
  43. ^ Everett Green 1855, p. 383.
  44. ^ Henderson 1891, pp. 108–109.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Henderson 1891, p. 109.
  46. ^ Kitson 1999, p. 117.
  47. ^ White 2006, p. 192.
  48. ^ Miller 2008, pp. 58–59.
  49. ^ Callow 2000, pp. 144–145.
  50. ^ Callow 2000, pp. 143–144.
  51. ^ Waller 2007, p. 135.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Beatty 2003, p. 46.
  53. ^ Cartwright 1900, pp. 25–28.
  54. ^ Goodwin 1893, p. 401.
  55. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Gloucester, Earls and Dukes of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 128.
  56. ^ Chester 1876, p. 152.
  57. ^ Goodwin 1893, p. 403.
  58. ^ Ashmole 1672, pp. 716–717 (N° 452).
  59. ^ Boutell 2010, pp. 245–246.
  60. ^ "Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family". heraldica.org. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  61. ^ Vilinbakhov, Georgy; Medvedev, Mikhail (1 April 1990). "Heraldic album. Sheet 2". Vokrug sveta (in Russian).
  62. ^ Ashmole 1672, p. 717.
  63. ^ Ashmole 1672, p. 716.
  64. ^ a b Louda & Maclagan 1999, p. 27.
  65. ^ a b Louda & Maclagan 1999, p. 50.
  66. ^ a b c d Louda & Maclagan 1999, p. 140.

Bibliography edit

  • Ashmole, Elias (1672). The Institution, Laws & Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. J. Macock.
  • Beatty, Michael A. (2003). The English Royal Family of America, from Jamestown to the American Revolution. McFarland. pp. 43–47. ISBN 978-0-7864-1558-8.
  • Boutell, Charles (2010). A Manual of Heraldry: Historical and Popular (1863). Kessinger Publishing. pp. 245–246. ISBN 978-1-1652-9931-7.
  • Callow, John (2000). The Making of King James II: The Formative Years of a Fallen King. Gloucestershire: Sutton. pp. 143–149. ISBN 978-0-7509-2398-9.
  • Cartwright, Julia (1900). Madame: a life of Henrietta, daughter of Charles I and Duchess of Orleans. London: Seeley and Co.Ltd.
  • Chester, Joseph Lemuel, ed. (1876), The Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, London: Harleian Society
  • Everett Green, Mary Anne (1855). Lives of the Princesses of England. Vol. VI. Henry Colburn. pp. 335–396.
  • Goodwin, Gordon (1889). Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Elizabeth (1635-1650). Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900. Vol. XVII. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 232–233.
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  • Henderson, Thomas Finlayson (1891). Leslie Stephen (ed.). Henry (1639-1660). Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900. Vol. CCLXVII. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 108–109.
  • Kitson, Frank (1999). Prince Rupert: Admiral and General-at-Sea. London: Constable. ISBN 978-0-0947-9850-2.
  • Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1999) [1981], Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (2nd ed.), London: Little, Brown, ISBN 978-0-3168-4820-6
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  • Purkiss, Diane (2012). The English Civil War: A People's History. London: Harper-Collins, UK. ISBN 978-0-0073-6911-9.
  • Waller, Maureen (2007). Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father's Crown. Macmillan. pp. 49–135. ISBN 978-1-4299-8209-2.
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  • White, Michelle A. (2006). Henrietta Maria and the English Civil Wars. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7546-3942-8.

henry, stuart, duke, gloucester, july, 1640, september, 1660, youngest, charles, king, england, scotland, ireland, wife, henrietta, maria, france, also, known, henry, oatlands, henry, stuartduke, gloucesterportrait, boeckhorst, 1659, born8, july, 1640oatlands,. Henry Stuart Duke of Gloucester 8 July 1640 13 September 1660 a was the youngest son of Charles I King of England Scotland and Ireland and his wife Henrietta Maria of France He is also known as Henry of Oatlands 2 3 4 Henry StuartDuke of GloucesterPortrait by Jan Boeckhorst c 1659 1 Born8 July 1640Oatlands Palace Surrey EnglandDied13 September 1660 1660 09 13 aged 20 Palace of Whitehall London EnglandBurial21 September 1660Westminster Abbey LondonHouseStuartFatherCharles I of EnglandMotherHenrietta Maria of France From the age of two Henry and his sister Elizabeth were separated from their family during the English Civil War and became prisoners of Parliament For several years the children were constantly transported from one residence to another due to the plague raging in London They also periodically changed their governesses and guardians to those more loyal to the government In 1645 Henry and Elizabeth were joined by their elder brother James Duke of York who found himself in a difficult financial situation In 1647 Charles I was arrested and during the years 1647 1648 he was allowed to see his children several times In April 1648 James fled the country it was probably planned that he would take Henry with him but Elizabeth was afraid to let her younger brother go When in 1649 Charles I was sentenced to death he fearing that Henry would be proclaimed king and made a puppet of the government took an oath from his eight year old son not to take the crown for anything while both of his older brothers were alive After the execution of Charles I Scotland proclaimed his eldest son Charles II as their sovereign In the summer of 1650 he landed in Scotland which prompted Parliament to send the children of the late monarch to Carisbrooke Castle on the Isle of Wight where their father had previously been imprisoned Before leaving for Carisbrooke Henry and Elizabeth were stripped of all titles and privileges Shortly after arriving on the Isle of Wight in September 1650 Henry s sister fell ill and died Henry remained at Carisbrooke until the following year when with the permission of Oliver Cromwell he returned to the continent where he eventually joined his mother in Paris With Henrietta Maria whom the prince had not seen for eleven years Henry did not have a good understanding the prince was an ardent Protestant and his mother was an implacable Catholic The Queen against the wishes of her late husband and eldest son tried to convert Henry to Catholicism but this only deteriorated their relationship Henry went to his brother Charles in Cologne In 1657 the prince fought on the side of the Spanish against France with his brother James In May 1659 Charles restored to his brother the title of Duke of Gloucester which Henry had been deprived of by Parliament in 1650 and bestowed the title of Earl of Cambridge After the restoration of the monarchy in England in 1660 Henry accompanied his brother during his return to Britain There Henry received a number of appointments but before the coronation of Charles II he contracted smallpox and died He was buried in the vault of Mary Queen of Scots in Westminster Abbey where his elder sister Mary who also died of smallpox was buried a few weeks later Contents 1 Birth and early years 2 English Civil War 2 1 Father s arrest and execution 2 2 Change of guardians and death of sister 3 Life abroad 4 Stuart Restoration and death 5 Titles styles honours and arms 5 1 Titles 5 2 Honours 5 3 Arms 6 Ancestry 7 Notes 8 References 9 BibliographyBirth and early years editHenry was born on 8 July 1640 at Oatlands Palace 2 near Weybridge in Surrey 5 as the youngest son 3 and penultimate child of King Charles I of England Scotland and Ireland and his wife Henrietta Maria of France 6 In total the royal couple had nine children four sons and five daughters 7 the eldest son of the royal couple Charles James was either stillborn or died immediately after birth 8 the fourth daughter Catherine died less than half an hour after baptism 9 and the third daughter Anne died at the age of three 10 Since Henry was born after the death of Charles James throughout his life he was the third son of the King 2 4 With the deaths of Catherine and Anne the boy also became the fifth child of the royal couple to survive infancy 7 His paternal grandparents were King James VI of Scotland and I of England the first one of the House of Stuart in England and his wife Anne of Denmark and his maternal grandparents were King Henry IV of France and his wife Marie de Medici 6 of all his grandparents at the time of Henry s birth only Marie de Medici b was alive The prince was baptized on 22 July 1640 and his only godmother was his elder sister Mary for whom this ceremony was her first public appearance 11 From birth Henry received the title of Duke of Gloucester 8 c In the spring of 1641 Henry s elder sister and godmother nine year old Mary was betrothed to William the eldest son and heir of Frederick Henry Prince of Orange It was planned that until reaching the age of twelve the minimum age of marriage consent the princess would remain in England 12 but by the beginning of 1642 the situation in the country was tense and in February Mary and her mother left for The Hague 13 Henrietta Maria hurriedly said goodbye to Henry and Elizabeth at Hampton Court Palace 14 and did not see her son again until 1653 in August 1642 the English Civil War broke out and two year old Henry and his sister were held as hostages in the hands of the English Parliament 3 English Civil War edit nbsp A 7 year old Henry at left alongside his siblings James Duke of York the future James II and Princess Elizabeth portrait by Sir Peter Lely 1647 As a result of the civil war that began in August Charles I and Henrietta Maria were forced to leave their two youngest children at that time Henry and Elizabeth in the care of Parliament 5 In October 1642 the plague reached the outskirts of Hampton Court Palace where the siblings lived together Elizabeth who had not been in good health since childhood fell ill again and was so weak that she could not leave the capital On the recommendation of the governess the Countess of Roxburghe and with the permission of the House of Lords the children were transferred to St James s Palace for lack of a more suitable residence 15 Although Parliament did not intend to punish the children for the actions of their father 5 at the same time the amount of expenses for the court of the prince and princess was considered and in the process of discussion it was decided to dismiss without payment of salary almost all the servants who in the opinion of Parliament were papists sympathizers or simply opponents of Parliament 5 However Elizabeth achieved some mitigation for the court although the children were replaced by a chaplain and cut costs for the wardrobe which became truly puritanical 16 In December 1642 and January 1643 Henry and Elizabeth were visited by two of the King s squires with the permission of Parliament to make sure that the children were healthy and did not need anything 15 Later the prince and his sister were completely deprived of wardrobe payments this was the result of the confrontation between Charles I and the Parliament as the representative of the House of Commons wrote if the King wants to fight with us they children must pay for clothes at their own expense 17 This action angered not only the King but also the children s governess the Countess of Roxburghe who wrote a letter to the Parliament After an investigation by the House of Commons 5 and a second discussion it was decided to return the payments however all expenses of Henry and Elizabeth had to be announced publicly 17 In addition an investigation and discussion were held by the House of Lords which confirmed the decision of the House of Commons 5 The royal children were allotted an amount of 800 a month each the expenditure of which was overseen by an officer Sir Ralph Freeman The Parliament also conducted an investigation into the activities of the clerics of the chapel of the royal palace to make sure that children were brought up in the correct religion 17 On 20 July 1643 the staff of the servants of the royal children were again revised the Countess of Roxburghe was replaced by the Countess of Dorset who was loyal to the government 2 18 19 In the summer of 1643 Parliament decided to transfer Henry and his sister to Oxford under the protection of the local garrison but in the fall during a game Elizabeth fell and broke her leg 16 and Parliament decided to postpone the move By the summer of 1644 the princess had fully recovered from her injury but soon fell ill In July doctors recommended that Elizabeth change the climate 16 20 so the children were moved to Chelsea to the residence of Sir John Danvers 16 18 20 who would later become one of the signatories of the death warrant of Charles I During the move Henry and Elizabeth were denied the honorary escort that was due to members of the royal family 20 At the same time the plague epidemic did not weaken the position so the prince and princess were moved from time to time from one residence to another St James Whitehall and Chelsea 18 By winter the royal children were again transported but not as planned to St James s Palace next to which the plague was raging but to Whitehall which seemed more reliable 20 At the beginning of 1645 the governess of the children the Countess of Dorset fell seriously ill and died Shortly before her death Henry and Elizabeth were placed under the care of the Earl and Countess of Northumberland 2 16 18 which was reported in the newspapers on 13 March 1645 21 The Earl was a close friend of the King and therefore treated his children with all respect and care 22 Under the care of the Northumberlands the royal children spent a happy summer at one of the Earl s residences probably Syon House Elizabeth wrote about this to her older sister Mary on 11 September 1645 On the day on which the letter to Mary is dated hearings were held in Parliament on the maintenance of the royal children the composition of the servants the amount required for the maintenance of the children and their court as well as the place of their permanent residence were agreed The Earl of Northumberland was asked to choose one of the royal residences and he chose St James s Palace where Henry and Elizabeth were soon transferred Also the Earl managed to achieve a reduction in the number of protection of children for their comfort 22 In September the prince s brother the Duke of York found himself in a difficult position he was in Oxford where the plague was creeping up accumulated debts and lost all provisions In a letter to his father he asked permission to join his brother and sister in London The prince did not wait for an answer from his father but Parliament approved the move 23 and the placement of the prince under the guardianship of the Earl of Northumberland 18 and with a magnificent escort delivered the boy to St James Palace 23 The Duke of York remained with his brother and sister until April 1648 Father s arrest and execution edit nbsp King Charles I of England portrait by Anthony van Dyck c 1638 In March 1647 the Earl of Northumberland moved the royal children to Hampton Court Palace 24 but almost immediately they were recalled back to St James Palace 18 At the same time the Scots handed over Charles I to the English Parliament According to the decision of Parliament the King was to be placed under arrest in Caversham and before leaving Charles I 24 having learned how close his children were to him 18 asked to see them 24 In the summer of 1647 due to a new epidemic the Earl of Northumberland was forced to transport the royal children from one residence to another and ended up staying at Syon House 2 25 In August the arrested King was again transported to Hampton Court Palace from where on the 23rd he was allowed to leave for Syon House and see his children there 25 On 31 August the visit was repeated and on 7 September Henry with his brother and sister arrived at Hampton Court Palace to see their father 26 On one of these visits the King insisted that his youngest son should not be subjected to religious pressure it is not clear whether he feared the influence of Catholics or Protestants At the same time Charles I gave all three children a conflicting instruction to be faithful to the Anglican Church but more than that to their Catholic mother 18 In October Parliament planned to move the children to St James s Palace for the winter learning of this the King asked the government to allow the Earl of Northumberland to transmit letters between Charles I and his children and to allow them to visit their father from time to time Charles I request was granted 27 but in November 1647 the King managed to escape Upon learning of her father s escape Elizabeth took every opportunity to persuade her older brother the Duke of York to flee the country this was done probably according to the instructions given by Charles I earlier and in correspondence with Elizabeth 28 Thanks to the ingenuity of the princess 16 James managed to deceive the personal guard and disguised as a woman 18 in Elizabeth s chambers escaped to the continent to The Hague at the side of his sister Mary on 21 April 1648 29 Probably the King planned that Henry would also escape with the Duke of York but Elizabeth was afraid to let Henry go because he was too small After James s escape Parliament investigated and ordered the Earl of Northumberland to transport Henry and Elizabeth without delay to one of the residences Syon House or Hampton Court and the Earl chose Syon House 30 In August 1648 Charles I was again captured but in October he sent an encouraging letter from Newport to his daughter Elizabeth with his trusted servant Sir Thomas Herbert with whom the princess had a long conversation about her father 31 The fateful autumn and winter of 1648 remained vague for Henry and Elizabeth they did not receive any more news from their father in addition the Earl of Northumberland took them out of town for the whole winter and did not devote all the details of the trial of the King a process that horrified him 16 However the royal children knew that on 26 January 1649 Charles I was convicted and sentenced to death 18 The day before the sentencing he asked to see the children a similar request was submitted to the government on 27 January On 29 January the day before the execution the King was allowed to see Henry and Elizabeth 2 18 32 after which the royal children were returned to Syon House 33 At their last meeting Charles I gave instructions to his children He feared that after his death Henry might be proclaimed King and made a puppet in the hands of Parliament The King knelt down in front of his son and said Now they will deprive your father of his head Listen my child what I say they will decapitate me and perhaps make you King But remember what I say You must not become King while your brothers Charles and James are both alive I oblige you not to become King before them 34 Eight year old Henry replied that he would rather be torn apart first 35 Change of guardians and death of sister edit nbsp The Children of Charles I by Margaret Isabel Dicksee 1895 There are no records of how the royal children spent the fateful hours of 30 January 1649 33 By this time their guardian the Earl of Northumberland had become very attached to the children of Charles I 33 He became one of five English peers who opposed the execution of the King 36 As a result the royal children were transferred to the care of the Earl and Countess of Leicester 18 at Penshurst Place 33 Elizabeth who did not want to move to new and in her opinion less benevolent guardians 37 again sent a request to Parliament to let her and Henry go to live with their sister Mary in Holland and again to no avail 33 The royal children accompanied by the Countess of Leicester and ten or eleven servants arrived at Penshurst on 14 June 1649 38 In Penshurst Place the Countess of Leicester was mainly involved in the upbringing of the royal children since the Earl was almost constantly in London The numerous children of the Earl and Countess became companions of Henry and Elizabeth 39 with them they sat at the table without royal honors but as members of the family 40 This was done on the basis of instructions given by Parliament 2 Here the royal children were lucky to have a mentor Robert Lovel 18 who was a maternal relative of the Earl of Leicester 33 and a supporter of the royalists 2 Shortly after being sent to the Leicester household rumors spread that royal children might be poisoned or sent to an insane asylum or charity school under the names of Harry and Bessie Stewart there were also fears that the children would become victims of the matrimonial plans of their guardians However most likely these rumors were spread by order of their mother Henrietta Maria who was in exile in France and had no basis 41 The Parliament had a real plan according to which the royal children were to be deprived of all their privileges transferred to the custody of a trusted family and raised in obscurity but this plan was not destined to come true immediately after the execution of Charles I Scotland proclaimed Henry s elder brother Charles II as its new king 35 In the summer of 1650 when it became known that Charles II had landed in Scotland it was decided to transfer Henry and Elizabeth to Carisbrook Castle on the Isle of Wight 42 where their father had previously been imprisoned under the care of Anthony Mildmay and his wife 35 Elizabeth was horrified at the prospect of being imprisoned in her father s former prison and petitioned for her and her brother to be left in Penshurst Place on the pretext of the princess s ill health but was unsuccessful Before leaving for Carisbrook Castle the number of the royal children s servants was reduced to four people including Lovel 2 they were deprived of their status of prince and princess and Henry of his the ducal title Elizabeth was now called Lady Elizabeth Stewart and Henry was named Harry Stewart or Mr Harry 43 On 23 August about a week after arriving at Carisbrook Castle 33 Elizabeth fell ill after playing outdoors On 8 September 1650 7 at 3 o clock in the afternoon she died 33 and ten year old Henry was left alone 35 Life abroad edit nbsp Prince Henry portrait by Adriaen Hanneman c 1653 This portrait was made during the prince s early exile in Paris Henry remained at Carisbrooke Castle until 1652 when Oliver Cromwell allowed the prince to leave the country 35 and provided him with funds to cover his travel expenses 2 Henry went to Holland to his sister Mary where he was warmly received by her and other relatives Here on Easter Sunday 1653 the prince was knighted in the Order of the Garter 35 Then at the special invitation of his mother the prince joined her in Paris 44 In 1653 his elder brother Charles II went to Germany 45 where he moved his court a year later 46 he offered to take Henry with him but their mother insisted that the prince stay in Paris 35 Henrietta Maria believed that after a long stay in England Henry should improve his education in the capital of France Charles II yielded to his mother on the condition that she would not force Henry to change his faith 45 With his mother the prince who had not seen her since the age of two could not establish a good understanding because during the separation he became a zealous Protestant and Henrietta Maria was a staunch Catholic 3 The widow of Charles I went against the will of her eldest son and late husband to whom she also promised not to persuade her youngest sons to change their faith 35 and tried to convert not only Henry but also her other son James Duke of York to Catholicism 47 The more mature James became fascinated with his mother s religion 48 49 but did not convert to Catholicism until many years after her death 50 51 Henrietta Maria could not give up trying to make her youngest son a Catholic because she believed that only the true church could save his soul At first she acted cautiously and did not even send away his teacher Robert Lovel who professed Anglicanism from his son Henry visited his brother James and on his return to Paris found that his teacher had been sent back to England 35 The prince was transferred to the care of the Aumonier d of Henrietta Maria Walter Montagu abbot of a monastery near Pontoise 45 who was supposed to take care of the religious education of fourteen year old Henry 35 In the absence of Lovel the prince succumbed to the abbot s persuasion and agreed to get acquainted with Catholicism but was deeply indignant at the actions of his mother Not getting a quick result Henrietta Maria joined Montague and began to persuade her son to change religion but Henry was adamant and it was decided to send him to a Jesuit College 45 When news of his mother s actions reached Charles II he became furious 52 and immediately sent the Marquess of Ormonde to Paris to bring Henry to him in Cologne Initially Henry refused to leave Paris and Ormond agreed with his decision 45 At the same time the prince assured his mother that he intended to adhere to the Protestant religion in all dangers to which she stated that she did not want to see him anymore When Henry returned from another Anglican service he found that on the orders of Henrietta Maria his horses had been taken out of the stables bedding removed from his bed and orders had been given to the kitchen not to cook food for the prince this meant that the prince was effectively kicked out of the palace 45 52 Henry moved into the house of Lord Hutton where he spent two months while the Marquess of Ormond collected funds to send the prince to his brother in Cologne 45 Thus Henrietta Maria s attempts to convert Henry to Catholicism not only failed and angered the royalists and Charles II 53 but also completely ruined her relationship with her younger son 45 Henry remained with Charles in Cologne until 1656 In July 1655 their sister Mary visited them then together they made a trip to Frankfurt where they visited the fair incognito 54 although they did not manage to remain unrecognised 52 Prior to this Henry had also visited Mary in the Netherlands a couple of times with his brother and alone In 1656 the brothers left for Bruges where Henry became a member of the Archers of Saint George 45 In December 1656 Henry became colonel of the old English regiment of the Spanish army and volunteered with his brother James to enter the service of the Spanish in 1657 in the Low Countries 45 52 The mother of the princes opposed she believed that Henry was too young to become a soldier 3 The prince did not listen to her and fought side by side with his brother in the defence of Dunkirk on 17 June 1658 55 where both showed great courage When the city fell Henry managed to escape capture by gathering some of the scattered troops and making a desperate breakthrough through the enemy battle formations In the battle the prince lost his sword and while Villeneuve the groom of the Prince de Ligne was looking for the lost weapon Henry covered him with a pistol 45 On 26 February 1657 or 1658 Charles II knighted his brother on 27 October 1658 he introduced him to his Privy Council 45 and on 13 May 1659 he restored to him the title of Duke of Gloucester and additionally bestowed him the title of Earl of Cambridge 3 8 45 52 Stuart Restoration and death edit nbsp 18th century posthumous print of Henry Duke of Gloucester by George Vertue Following the restoration of the monarchy in England in 1660 Henry accompanied his brother Charles II to his homeland 3 52 the costs of their trip were again paid by Parliament 45 Henry settled in the Palace of Whitehall 3 and on 31 June 1660 he was already sitting in the House of Lords 52 On 13 June he was appointed Chief Steward of Gloucester and on 3 July he became Ranger of Hyde Park 45 52 Early in September 1660 Henry contracted smallpox an epidemic that raged in London 52 The prince died on 13 September 1660 3 before his brother Charles II s coronation 52 On 21 September his remains were moved to Somerset House from where they were taken by river to Westminster He was buried in Westminster Abbey in the vault of Mary Queen of Scots 45 52 56 Henry s death overshadowed the joy of a family reunion 52 A few weeks later Henry s elder sister Mary Dowager Princess of Orange also died of smallpox on her deathbed she wished to be buried next to her brother 57 The Earl of Clarendon an English historian statesman and father of the Duke of York s first wife wrote enthusiastically of Henry as one of the finest youth the most manly that I ever knew and a prince of extraordinary hopes who had a personality of comely and graceful with liveliness and the power of reason and understanding Gilbert Burnet believed that the prince had a different character than any of his brothers He was active and liked to do things had a penchant for special friendships and a quirky personality that tended to be very pleasant As Burnet wrote his death was mourned by many especially the King who had never been so upset 45 Charles II planned to betroth Henry to Princess Wilhelmine Ernestine of Denmark to reinforce the English Danish maritime alliance and King Frederick III of Denmark also agreed to the marriage but the prince s early death prevented this union Henry s death led to the fact that the throne eventually passed to William III and Mary II the children of Henry s older sister and older brother respectively 3 and later to the House of Hanover Titles styles honours and arms editTitles edit Though it is said that he was created Duke of Gloucester and Earl of Cambridge on 13 May 1659 he was probably styled as such from birth 8 Honours edit KG Knight of the Garter 4 April 1653 8 Arms edit nbsp Coat of arms of Henry as a son of the Sovereign nbsp Arms of Henry according to Elias Ashmole s Institutions Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter 58 Henry s own coat of arms is based on the royal coat of arms of the Stuarts The shield holders are burdened with a title tournament collar as in a shield on a green lawn a golden leopard armed with scarlet and crowned with a golden crown rising lion alert and a silver unicorn armed with gold topped like a collar with a golden crown with a chain attached to it 59 A four part shield with a silver tournament collar title the teeth of which are burdened with a Tudor rose a scarlet rose with a silver core and green leaves 60 in the 1st and 4th parts the English royal coat of arms four times in the 1st and 4th parts in the azure field three golden lilies France in the 2nd and 3rd parts in the scarlet field three golden leopards walking on the alert of a lion armed with azure one above the other in the 2nd part the coat of arms of Scotland in a golden field scarlet armed with azure a rising lion surrounded by a double flourishing and counter blooming inner border in the 3rd part the coat of arms of Ireland a gold harp with silver strings in an azure field 61 The shield is surmounted by a crown corresponding to the dignity of the children of the monarch with the owner s cap Above the crown is a crest a golden leopard crowned with a golden crown of the monarch s children with a silver title as in a shield around its neck also standing on a golden crown The shield is girded with the ribbon of the Order of the Garter 62 of dark blue velvet with a gold border woven with a gold inscription Honi soit qui mal y pense Shame on him who thinks ill of it Elias Ashmole s Institutions Laws and Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter lists a coat of arms with three roses one above the other on each prong of the title 63 Ancestry editAncestors of Henry Stuart Duke of Gloucester8 Henry Stuart Lord Darnley 64 4 James I of England VI of Scotland 9 Mary Queen of Scots 64 2 Charles I of England10 Frederick II of Denmark 65 5 Anne of Denmark11 Sophia of Mecklenburg 65 1 Henry Duke of Gloucester12 Anthony Duke of Vendome 66 6 Henry IV of France13 Joan III of Navarre 66 3 Henrietta Maria of France14 Francis I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany 66 7 Marie de Medici15 Joanna of Austria 66 Notes edit All dates in this article are in the Old Style Julian calendar in use in England throughout Henry s lifetime Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 James VI and I died in 1625 Anne of Denmark died in 1619 The duchy was assigned to the crown although the Earldom of Gloucester did not belong to the royal family 5 Chaplain or church officer who originally was in charge of distributing money to the deserving poor References edit Henry Duke of Gloucester National Portrait Gallery www npg org uk a b c d e f g h i j k Henderson 1891 p 108 a b c d e f g h i j Panton 2011 p 459 a b Henry Stuart Duke of Gloucester Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 4 May 2022 a b c d e f g Beatty 2003 p 43 a b Weir 2011 p 254 a b c Weir 2011 pp 253 254 a b c d e Weir 2011 p 253 Everett Green 1855 p 396 Everett Green 1855 p 394 Beatty 2003 p 35 Beatty 2003 p 36 Purkiss 2012 p 248 Purkiss 2012 p 126 a b Everett Green 1855 p 339 a b c d e f g Goodwin 1889 p 232 a b c Everett Green 1855 pp 340 341 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Beatty 2003 p 44 Everett Green 1855 p 342 a b c d Everett Green 1855 p 345 Everett Green 1855 p 348 a b Everett Green 1855 p 349 a b Everett Green 1855 pp 350 351 a b c Everett Green 1855 pp 352 353 a b Everett Green 1855 p 357 Everett Green 1855 pp 358 359 Everett Green 1855 p 361 Everett Green 1855 pp 364 365 Everett Green 1855 p 364 Everett Green 1855 p 365 Everett Green 1855 p 367 Everett Green 1855 p 368 a b c d e f g h Goodwin 1889 p 233 Beatty 2003 pp 44 45 a b c d e f g h i j Beatty 2003 p 45 Everett Green 1855 p 372 Everett Green 1855 p 373 Everett Green 1855 pp 375 376 Everett Green 1855 p 374 Everett Green 1855 p 375 Everett Green 1855 p 377 Everett Green 1855 p 381 Everett Green 1855 p 383 Henderson 1891 pp 108 109 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Henderson 1891 p 109 Kitson 1999 p 117 White 2006 p 192 Miller 2008 pp 58 59 Callow 2000 pp 144 145 Callow 2000 pp 143 144 Waller 2007 p 135 a b c d e f g h i j k l Beatty 2003 p 46 Cartwright 1900 pp 25 28 Goodwin 1893 p 401 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Gloucester Earls and Dukes of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 128 Chester 1876 p 152 Goodwin 1893 p 403 Ashmole 1672 pp 716 717 N 452 Boutell 2010 pp 245 246 Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family heraldica org Retrieved 7 May 2022 Vilinbakhov Georgy Medvedev Mikhail 1 April 1990 Heraldic album Sheet 2 Vokrug sveta in Russian Ashmole 1672 p 717 Ashmole 1672 p 716 a b Louda amp Maclagan 1999 p 27 a b Louda amp Maclagan 1999 p 50 a b c d Louda amp Maclagan 1999 p 140 Bibliography editAshmole Elias 1672 The Institution Laws amp Ceremonies of the Most Noble Order of the Garter J Macock Beatty Michael A 2003 The English Royal Family of America from Jamestown to the American Revolution McFarland pp 43 47 ISBN 978 0 7864 1558 8 Boutell Charles 2010 A Manual of Heraldry Historical and Popular 1863 Kessinger Publishing pp 245 246 ISBN 978 1 1652 9931 7 Callow John 2000 The Making of King James II The Formative Years of a Fallen King Gloucestershire Sutton pp 143 149 ISBN 978 0 7509 2398 9 Cartwright Julia 1900 Madame a life of Henrietta daughter of Charles I and Duchess of Orleans London Seeley and Co Ltd Chester Joseph Lemuel ed 1876 The Marriage Baptismal and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St Peter Westminster London Harleian Society Everett Green Mary Anne 1855 Lives of the Princesses of England Vol VI Henry Colburn pp 335 396 Goodwin Gordon 1889 Stephen Leslie ed Elizabeth 1635 1650 Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol XVII London Smith Elder amp Co pp 232 233 Goodwin Gordon 1893 Sidney Lee ed Mary Princess Royal of England and Princess of Orange Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol XXXVI London Smith Elder amp Co pp 400 404 Henderson Thomas Finlayson 1891 Leslie Stephen ed Henry 1639 1660 Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Vol CCLXVII London Smith Elder amp Co pp 108 109 Kitson Frank 1999 Prince Rupert Admiral and General at Sea London Constable ISBN 978 0 0947 9850 2 Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1999 1981 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe 2nd ed London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 3168 4820 6 Miller John 2008 James II New Haven Yale University Press pp 37 66 ISBN 978 0 3001 4341 6 Panton James 2011 Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7497 8 Purkiss Diane 2012 The English Civil War A People s History London Harper Collins UK ISBN 978 0 0073 6911 9 Waller Maureen 2007 Ungrateful Daughters The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father s Crown Macmillan pp 49 135 ISBN 978 1 4299 8209 2 Weir Alison 2011 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Random House ISBN 978 1 4464 4911 0 White Michelle A 2006 Henrietta Maria and the English Civil Wars Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 3942 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Stuart Duke of Gloucester amp oldid 1200129295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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