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Mary of Modena

Mary of Modena (Italian: Maria Beatrice Eleonora Anna Margherita Isabella d'Este;[1] 5 October [O.S. 25 September] 1658 – 7 May [O.S. 26 April] 1718) was Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland as the second wife of James II and VII. A devout Catholic, Mary married the widower James, who was then the younger brother and heir presumptive of Charles II.[2] She was uninterested in politics and devoted to James and their children, two of whom survived to adulthood: the Jacobite claimant to the thrones, James Francis Edward, and Louisa Maria Teresa.[3]

Mary of Modena
Portrait from the studio of Willem Wissing, painted sometime between 1676 and 1685
Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland
Tenure6 February 1685 – 11 December 1688
Coronation23 April 1685
Born(1658-10-05)5 October 1658
Ducal Palace, Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio
Died7 May 1718(1718-05-07) (aged 59)
Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Paris, France
Burial
Convent of the Visitations, Chaillot, France
Spouse
(m. 1673; died 1701)
Issue
among others
Names
Maria Beatrice Eleonora Anna Margherita Isabella d'Este
HouseEste
FatherAlfonso IV, Duke of Modena
MotherLaura Martinozzi
ReligionCatholicism
Signature

Born a princess of the northwestern Italian Duchy of Modena, Mary is primarily remembered for the controversial birth of James Francis Edward, her only surviving son. It was widely rumoured that he was smuggled into the birth chamber in a warming pan in order to perpetuate her husband's Catholic Stuart dynasty. James Francis Edward's birth was a contributing factor to the "Glorious Revolution", the revolution which deposed James II and VII, and replaced him with Mary II, a Protestant, James II's eldest daughter from his first marriage to Anne Hyde (1637–1671). Mary II and her husband, William III of Orange, would reign jointly over all three kingdoms.

Mary went into exile in France, being known as the "Queen over the water" among the Jacobites. She lived with her husband and children at Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, provided by King Louis XIV. Mary was popular among Louis XIV's courtiers; James, however, was considered a bore. In widowhood, Mary spent time with the nuns at the Convent of Chaillot, frequently during summers with her daughter, Louisa Maria Teresa. In 1701, when James II died, young James Francis Edward, aged 13, became king in the eyes of the Jacobites. Given that he was too young to assume the nominal reins of government, Mary represented him until he reached the age of 16. When young James Francis Edward was asked to leave France as part of the settlement from the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, which ended the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714), Mary of Modena stayed, despite having no family there, her daughter Louisa Maria Teresa having died of smallpox. Fondly remembered by her French contemporaries, Mary died of breast cancer in 1718.

Early life (1658–1673)

 
Alfonso IV d'Este, Duke of Modena, Mary's father, in a portrait by Justus Sustermans

Maria Beatrice d'Este, the second (but eldest surviving) child of Alfonso IV, Duke of Modena, and his wife, Laura Martinozzi, was born on 5 October 1658 NS[note 1] in Modena, Duchy of Modena, Italy. Her only younger brother, Francesco, succeeded their father as Duke upon the latter's death in 1662, the year Mary turned four.[4] Mary and Francesco's mother, Laura, was strict with them and acted as regent of the duchy until her son came of age.[5][6] Mary's education was excellent;[7] she spoke French and Italian fluently, had a good knowledge of Latin and, later, mastered English.[8][9]

Mary was described by contemporaries as "tall and admirably shaped", and was sought as a bride for James, Duke of York, by Lord Peterborough.[10][11] Lord Peterborough was Groom of the Stole to the Duke of York. A widower, James was the younger brother and heir of Charles II of England.[12] Duchess Laura was not initially forthcoming with a reply to Peterborough's proposal, hoping, according to the French ambassador, for a "grander" match with the eleven-year-old Charles II of Spain.[13][14] Whatever the reason for Laura's initial reluctance, she finally accepted the proposal on behalf of Mary, and they were married by proxy on 30 September 1673 NS.[15]

Modena was within the sphere of influence of Louis XIV of France, who endorsed Mary's candidature and greeted Mary warmly in Paris, where she stopped en route to England, giving her a brooch worth £8,000.[16][note 2] Her reception in England was much cooler.[18] Parliament, which was entirely composed of Protestants, reacted poorly to the news of a Catholic marriage, fearing it was a "Papist" plot against the country.[18] The English public, who were predominantly Protestant, branded the Duchess of York – as Mary was thereafter known as until her husband's accession – the "Pope's daughter".[19] Parliament threatened to have the marriage annulled,[19] leading Charles to suspend parliament until 7 January 1674 OS, to ensure the marriage would be honoured and safeguarding the reputation of his House of Stuart.[12]

Duchess of York (1673–1685)

Household

 
James, Duke of York (King James II from 1685), in a portrait by Sir Peter Lely

The Duke of York, an avowed Catholic, was twenty-five years older than his bride, scarred by smallpox and afflicted with a stutter.[20] He had secretly converted to Catholicism around 1668.[21] Mary first saw her husband on 23 November 1673 OS, on the day of their second marriage ceremony.[22][23] James was pleased with his bride.[24] Mary, however, at first disliked him, and burst into tears each time she saw him.[25] Nonetheless, she soon warmed to James.[3] From his first marriage to the commoner Anne Hyde, who had died in 1671, James had two daughters: Lady Mary and Lady Anne.[26] They were introduced to Mary by James with the words, "I have brought you a new play-fellow".[26] Unlike Lady Mary, Lady Anne disliked her father's new wife.[27] Mary played games with Anne to win her affection.[27]

The Duchess of York received £5,000 annually to cover her personal expenses and those of her own household, headed by Carey Fraser, Countess of Peterborough; it was frequented by ladies of her husband's selection: Frances Stewart, Duchess of Richmond and Anne Scott, 1st Duchess of Buccleuch.[12][28][29][30] That the Duchess of York loathed gambling did not stop her ladies compelling her to do so almost every day.[31] They believed that "if she refrained, it might be taken ill".[31] Consequently, Mary incurred minor gambling debts.[31]

The birth of the Duchess of York's first child, Catherine Laura, named after Queen Catherine, on 10 January 1675 OS represented the beginning of a string of children that would die in infancy.[32] She was also on excellent terms with Lady Mary and visited her in The Hague after the younger Mary had married William of Orange. She travelled incognito and took Anne with her.[33]

Popish plot and exile

The Duchess of York's Catholic secretary, Edward Colman, was, in 1678, falsely implicated in a fictitious plot against the King by Titus Oates.[34] The plot, known as the Popish Plot, led to the Exclusionist movement headed by Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury.[35] The Exclusionists sought to debar the Catholic Duke of York from the throne.[36] Their reputation in tatters, the Yorks were exiled reluctantly to Brussels, a domain of the King of Spain, ostensibly to visit Lady Mary—since 1677 the wife of Prince William III of Orange.[37][38][39] Accompanied by her not yet three-year-old daughter Isabella and Lady Anne, the Duchess of York was saddened by James's extra-marital affair with Catherine Sedley.[40] She also received an encouraging visit from her mother, who was living in Rome, which revived her spirits.[41]

 
Mary of Modena in the year of her husband's accession, 1685, in a painting by Willem Wissing

A report that King Charles was very sick sent the Yorks back to England hastily .[42] They feared the King's eldest illegitimate son, James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, and the commander of England's armed forces, might usurp the crown if Charles died before their return.[42][43] That Monmouth enjoyed the support of the Exclusionists, who held a majority in the House of Commons of England, added to that danger.[42] Charles survived and felt that the Yorks returned to court too soon, so sent James and Mary to Edinburgh, where they stayed on-and-off for the next three years.[44][45] Lodging in Holyrood Palace, the Yorks had to make do without Ladies Anne and Isabella, who stayed in London on Charles's orders.[46] The Yorks were recalled to London in February 1680, only to return again to Edinburgh that autumn; this time they went on a more honourable footing: James was created King's Commissioner to Scotland.[47] Separated from Lady Isabella once again, Mary sank into a state of sadness, exacerbated by the passing of the Exclusion bill in the Commons.[48][49] Lady Isabella, thus far the only one of Mary's children to survive infancy, died in February 1681.[50] Isabella's death plunged Mary into a religious mania, worrying her physician.[50] At the same time as news reached Holyrood of Isabella's death, Mary's mother was accused falsely of offering £10,000 for the murder of the King.[50] The accuser, a pamphleteer, was executed by order of the King.[50]

The Exclusionist reaction that followed the Popish plot had died down by May 1682.[51] Exclusionist-dominated Parliament, suspended since March 1681, never again met in the reign of Charles II.[52] Therefore, the Duke and Duchess of York returned to England, and the Duchess gave birth to a daughter named Charlotte Mary in August 1682; Charlotte Mary's death three weeks later, according to the French ambassador, robbed James of "hope that any child of his can live"—all James's sons by Anne Hyde, his first wife, died in infancy.[53] James's sadness was dispelled by his revival in popularity following the discovery of a plot to kill the King and him.[54] The objective of the plot, known as the Rye House Plot, was to have Monmouth placed on the throne as Lord Protector.[55] The revival was so strong that, in 1684, James was re-admitted to the Privy Council after an absence of eleven years.[56]

Queen consort (1685–1688)

Despite all the furore over Exclusionism, James ascended his brother's thrones easily upon the latter's death – which occurred on 6 February 1685 OS – possibly owing to the risk that the said alternative might provoke another civil war.[57] Mary mourned Charles’ passing sincerely, recalling in later life, "He was always kind to me."[58] Mary and James's £119,000 coronation, occurring on 23 April OS, Saint George's Day, was planned meticulously.[59][60] Precedents were sought for Mary because a full-length joint coronation had not occurred since the ceremony performed for Henry VIII of England and Catherine of Aragon.[59]

 

Queen Mary's health had still not recovered after the death of Lady Isabella- so much so, in fact, that the Tuscan envoy reported to Florence that "general opinion turns [for Mary's successor] in the direction of the Princess, Your Highness's daughter".[61][62] France, too, was preparing for the Queen's imminent demise, putting forward the Duke of Enghien's daughter as its candidate to be James’ new wife.[61] The Queen was then trying to make her brother, the Duke of Modena, marry the former, Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici.[63]

In February 1687, the Queen, at the time irritated by the King's affair with Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, moved into new apartments in Whitehall; Whitehall had been home to a Catholic chapel since December 1686.[64][65] Her apartments were designed by Christopher Wren at the cost of £13,000.[66] Since the palace's renovation was thus far unfinished, the King received ambassadors in her rooms, much to the Queen's chagrin.[67] Five months later, shortly after the marriage talks with Tuscany collapsed, the Queen's mother, Duchess Laura, died.[68] Therefore, the whole English court went into mourning.[68] Duchess Laura left Mary "a considerable sum of cash" and some jewellery.[69] William III of Orange, James's nephew and son-in-law, sensed popular discontent with James's government; he used the death of Mary's mother as a guise to send his half-uncle, Count Zuylestein, to England, ostensibly to condole Queen Mary, but in reality as a spy.[70][71]

 
Mary II of England in a painting by Sir Peter Lely

Having visited Bath, in the hope its waters would aid conception, Queen Mary became pregnant in late 1687.[72] When the pregnancy became public knowledge shortly before Christmas, Catholics rejoiced.[73] Protestants, who had tolerated James's Catholic government because he had no Catholic heir, were concerned.[74] The Protestant disillusion came to a head after the child was known to be male and many Protestants believed the child was spurious;[75] if not, James II's Catholic dynasty would have been perpetuated.[75] Popular opinion alleged that the child, named James Francis Edward, was smuggled into the birth chamber as a substitute for the Queen's real but stillborn child.[75] This rumour was widely accepted as fact by Protestants, despite the many witnesses of the birth.[75][76] Mainly by mismanagement on James' part, these rumours had some excuse as from personal prejudice he had excluded many from the ceremony whose testimony must have been counted valid; most of the witnesses were Catholics or foreigners, and several, such as his daughter Anne and the Protestant prelates, or the maternal relatives of his daughters, whom the new birth would remove from the direct succession, were not present. Anne and her elder sister, Mary, suspected that their father had thrust a changeling upon the nation.[70] Count Zuylestein, returning to the Netherlands shortly after the birth, agreed with Anne's findings.[70]

Issued by seven leading Whig nobles, the invitation for William to invade England signalled the beginning of a revolution that culminated in James II's deposition.[77] The invitation assured William that "nineteen parts of twenty of the people throughout the kingdom" wished for an intervention.[77] The revolution, known as the Glorious Revolution, deprived James Francis Edward of his right to the English throne, on the grounds that he was not deemed the King's real son and later because he was a Catholic.[77] With England in the hands of William of Orange's 15,000-strong army, James and Mary decided to go into exile in France.[77] On 9 December 1688, Mary left London in disguise with the infant Prince of Wales and in the company of Victoria Davia-Montecuculi, under the arrangement of Antoine Nompar de Caumont. A few weeks after her arrival in France through Calais, James joined her. There they stayed at the expense of James's first cousin King Louis XIV, who supported the Jacobite cause.[77][78]

Queen over the water (1688–1701)

Reception at Louis XIV's court

 

James was formally deposed on 11 December 1688 OS in England and on 11 May 1689 OS in Scotland and his daughter Mary II and her husband, William III, were made joint monarchs.[79] James, however, backed by Louis XIV of France, still considered himself king by divine right and maintained it was not within parliament's prerogative to depose a monarch.[80] Louis XIV gave the exiled royal couple the use of Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, where they set up a court-in-exile.[78][81]

Mary quickly became a popular fixture at Louis XIV's court at Versailles, where diarist Madame de Sévigné acclaimed Mary for her "distinguished bearing and her quick wit".[82] Questions of precedence, however, marred Mary's relations with Louis XIV's daughter-in-law, Maria Anna of Bavaria.[82] Since Mary had the privileges and rank of a queen, she outranked Maria Anna[82] Therefore, Maria Anna refused to see Mary, etiquette being a sensitive issue at Versailles.[83] In spite of this, Louis XIV and his secret wife, Madame de Maintenon, became close friends with Mary.[82] As there was no queen at the French court, nor a dauphine after Maria Anna's death in 1690, Mary took precedence over all the female members of the French court and French royal house, as did her daughter in her capacity of a royal princess until the next French dauphine appeared in 1711.[84] James, however, was largely excluded from French court life. His contemporaries found him boring and French courtiers frequently joked that "when one talks to him, one understands why he is here."[82][85] Mary gave birth to a daughter, Louise Mary, in 1692.[82] She was to be James and Mary's last child.

Initially supported by Irish Catholics in his effort to regain the thrones, James launched an expedition to Ireland in March 1689.[86] He abandoned it upon his defeat at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.[86] During James's campaign, Mary supported his cause throughout the British Isles: she sent three French supply ships to Bantry Bay and £2,000 to Jacobite rebels in Dundee.[87] She financed those measures by selling her jewellery.[88] Money problems plagued the Stuart court-in-exile, despite a substantial pension from Louis XIV of 50,000 livres.[78] Mary tried her best to assist those of her husband's followers living in poverty and encouraged her children to give part of their pocket money to Jacobite refugees.[89][90][91]

Estensi succession

The collapse of James's invasion of Ireland in 1691 upset Mary. However, news of the marriage of her brother, the Duke of Modena,lifted her spirits.[92] He married Margherita Maria Farnese of Parma.[92] When, in 1695, Mary's brother died, the House of Este was left with one progenitor, their uncle Cardinal-Duke Rinaldo.[93] Queen Mary, concerned for the dynasty's future, urged the Cardinal-Duke to resign his cardinalate, "for the good of the people and for the perpetuation of the sovereign house of Este".[94] Duke Rinaldo's bride, Princess Charlotte Felicitas of Brunswick-Lüneburg, was, according to Mary, "of an easy disposition best suited to [the Duke]".[94]

A bone of contention, however, arose over the Queen's inheritance and dowry.[95] Duke Rinaldo refused to release the former, and left the latter £15,000 in arrears.[96] In 1700, five years later, the Duke finally paid the Queen her dowry; her inheritance, however, remained sequestered and relations with Modena worsened again when Rinaldo allied himself with Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I.[97] Leopold was an enemy of Louis XIV, James and Mary's patron.[97]

Regency (1701–1704)

 
Queen Mary's coat of arms as Queen consort of England.[98] Depicting the Royal Coat of Arms of England, Scotland and Ireland impaled with a minor version of her father's arms as Duke of Modena. In light of religious sentiment at the time, it was presumed unwise to reproduce her father's arms in full, since the quarterings are divided by a "Pale Gules charged with the Papal keys ensigned with the Tiara".[99]

In March 1701, James II suffered a stroke while hearing mass at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, leaving him partially paralysed.[100] Fagon, Louis XIV's personal physician, recommended the waters of Bourbon-l'Archambault, to cure the King's paralysis.[101] The waters, however, had little effect, and James II died of a seizure on 16 September 1701.[102] Louis XIV, contravening the Peace of Ryswick and irritating William, declared James Francis Edward King of England, Ireland and Scotland as James III and VIII.[103] Mary acted as nominal regent for her minor son.[104] She presided over his regency council, too, although she was uninterested in politics.[104] Before his death, James II expressed his wish that Mary's regency would last no longer than their son's 18th birthday.[105]

 
James Francis Edward Stuart, Mary of Modena's only surviving son, in a portrait by Antonio David.[96]

Dressed in mourning for the remainder of her life, Queen Mary's first act as regent was to disseminate a manifesto, outlining James Francis Edward's claims.[106] It was largely ignored in England.[106] In Scotland, however, the confederate Lords sent Lord Belhaven to Saint-Germain, to convince the Queen to surrender to them custody of James Francis Edward and accede to his conversion to Protestantism.[106] The conversion, said Belhaven, would enable his accession to the English throne upon William's death.[107] Mary was not swayed by Belhaven's argument, so they reached a compromise: James Francis Edward, if he became king, would limit the number of Catholic priests in England and promise not to tamper with the established Church of England.[107] In exchange, the confederate Lords would do all in their power to block the passing of the Hanoverian succession in Scottish parliament.[107] When, in March 1702, William died, Lord Lovat declared for James Francis Edward at Inverness.[108] Soon after, Lovat travelled to the court-in-exile at Saint-Germain and begged Mary to allow her son to come to Scotland.[108] Lovat intended to raise an army of 15,000 soldiers in Scotland to seize the throne for James Francis Edward.[108] Mary refused to part with James Francis Edward and the rising failed.[108] Mary's regency ceased with her son's reaching of the age of 16.[109]

Later life

Having wished to become a nun in her youth, Queen Mary sought refuge from the stresses of exile at the Convent of the Visitations, Chaillot, near Paris, where she befriended Louis XIV's penitent mistress, Louise de La Vallière.[110] There, Mary stayed with her daughter for long periods almost every summer.[111] It was here, too, in 1711, that Queen Mary found out that, as part of the embryonic Treaty of Utrecht, James Francis Edward was to lose Louis XIV's explicit recognition and be forced to leave France.[111] The next year, when James Francis Edward was expelled and Louise Mary died of smallpox, Mary was very upset;[112] according to Mary's close friend Madame de Maintenon, Mary was "a model of desolation".[112] Deprived of the company of her family, Queen Mary lived out the rest of her days at Chaillot and Saint-Germain in virtual poverty, unable to travel by her own means because all her horses had died and she could not afford to replace them.[113]

Following her death from cancer on 7 May 1718, Mary was remembered fondly by her French contemporaries, three of whom, Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate, the Duke of Saint-Simon and the Marquis of Dangeau, deemed her a "saint".[114][115] Mary's remains were interred in Chaillot among the nuns she had befriended.[116]

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
Unnamed child March or May 1674 stillbirth[117]
Catherine Laura 10 January 1675 3 October 1675 died of convulsions.[117]
Unnamed child October 1675 stillbirth[117]
Isabel (or Isabella) 28 August 1676 2 or 4 March 1681 buried in Westminster Abbey on 4 March (Old Style) as "The Lady Isabella, daughter to the Duke of York"[118]
Charles, Duke of Cambridge 7 November 1677 12 December 1677 died of smallpox[117]
Elizabeth c. 1678  
Unnamed child February 1681 stillbirth[117]
Charlotte Maria 16 August 1682 16 October 1682 died of convulsions[117] and buried in Westminster Abbey on 8 October (Old Style) as "The Lady Charlotte-Marie, daughter to the Duke of York"[119]
Unnamed child October 1683 stillbirth[117]
Unnamed child May 1684 stillbirth[120]
James, Prince of Wales "the Old Pretender" 10 June 1688 1 January 1766 married 1719, Clementina Sobieska; had issue
Louisa Maria Teresa 28 June 1692 18 April 1712 died of smallpox[121]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ Modena and France used the Gregorian calendar, indicated by modern historians with the initials "NS" (for "New Style"), while England and Scotland (and some of central Protestant Europe, such as the Netherlands, Germany, and Switzerland) still used the older Julian calendar (designated by initials "OS" for "Old Style"). Therefore, for the duration of the 17th century, English/"Julian" dates were ten days behind Modena and France's Gregorian dates, with most of the rest of continental Catholic Europe. From 29 February 1700 to 14 September 1752, the difference was eleven days.
  2. ^ This is equivalent to £1355568 in present-day terms.[17]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Harris, p. 1
  2. ^ Oman, p. 30
  3. ^ a b Oman, p. 40
  4. ^ Oman, p. 14
  5. ^ Haile, p. 16
  6. ^ Oman, p. 15
  7. ^ Waller, p. 22
  8. ^ Waller, p. 23
  9. ^ Haile, p. 18
  10. ^ Fea, p. 70
  11. ^ Oman, p. 19
  12. ^ a b c Waller, p. 15
  13. ^ Oman, p. 10
  14. ^ Haile, p. 17
  15. ^ Haile, p. 24
  16. ^ Oman, p. 27
  17. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  18. ^ a b Fraser, King Charles II, p. 418
  19. ^ a b Oman, p. 28
  20. ^ Haile, p. 40
  21. ^ Waller, p. 135
  22. ^ Waller, p. 149
  23. ^ Haile, p. 41
  24. ^ Turner, p. 114
  25. ^ Oman, p. 31
  26. ^ a b Chapman, p. 33
  27. ^ a b Waller, p. 22
  28. ^ Waller, p. 24
  29. ^ Oman, p. 46
  30. ^ Oman, p. 38
  31. ^ a b c Oman, p. 45
  32. ^ Oman, p. 48
  33. ^ Marshall, p. 172
  34. ^ Fraser, King Charles II, p. 463
  35. ^ Fraser, King Charles II, p. 470
  36. ^ Haile, p. 76
  37. ^ Chapman, p. 67
  38. ^ Brown, pp. 10–12
  39. ^ Fea, p. 83
  40. ^ Oman, p. 56
  41. ^ Haile, p. 88
  42. ^ a b c Oman, p. 63
  43. ^ Fea, p. 85
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  45. ^ Turner, p. 171
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  49. ^ Haile, pp. 99–100
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  51. ^ Waller, p. 36
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  54. ^ Oman, p. 75
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  91. ^ Haile, p. 357
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  93. ^ Haile, p. 311
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  109. ^ Oman, plate xiv.
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Bibliography

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  • Brown, Beatrice Curtis (1929). Anne Stuart: Queen of England. Geoffrey Bles.
  • Chapman, Hester (1953). Mary II, Queen of England. Jonathan Cape.
  • Fraser, Antonia (2002). King Charles II Phoenix. ISBN 978-0-7538-1403-1
  • Fraser, Antonia (2007). Love and Louis XIV: The Women in the Life of the Sun King. Phoenix. ISBN 978-0-7538-2293-7
  • Gregg, Edward (1980). Queen Anne. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Haile, Martin (1905). Queen Mary of Modena: Her Life and Letters. J.M. Dent & Co.
  • Harris, Tim. (2007). Revolution: The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy 1685–1720. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-101652-8
  • Maclagan, Michael; Louda, Jiří (1999). Line of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. Little, Brown & Co. ISBN 1-85605-469-1
  • Marshall, Rosalind (2003) Scottish Queens, 1034–1714. Tuckwell Press.
  • Oman, Carola (1962). Mary of Modena. Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Starkey, David (2007). Monarchy: From the Middle Ages to Modernity. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-00-724766-0.
  • Turner, FC (1948). James II. Eyre & Spottswoode.
  • Uglow, Jenny (2009). A Gambling Man: Charles II and the Restoration. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-21733-5
  • Waller, Maureen (2002). Ungrateful Daughters: The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father's Crown. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-79461-5

External links

Mary of Modena
Born: 5 October 1658 Died: 7 May 1718
British royalty
Preceded by Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland
1685–1688
Vacant
Title next held by
Prince George of Denmark
as consort
Titles in pretence
Glorious Revolution — TITULAR —
Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland
1688–1701
Succeeded by

mary, modena, this, article, about, british, queen, consort, wife, ranuccio, farnese, duke, parma, maria, este, italian, maria, beatrice, eleonora, anna, margherita, isabella, este, october, september, 1658, april, 1718, queen, england, scotland, ireland, seco. This article is about the British queen consort For the wife of Ranuccio II Farnese Duke of Parma see Maria d Este Mary of Modena Italian Maria Beatrice Eleonora Anna Margherita Isabella d Este 1 5 October O S 25 September 1658 7 May O S 26 April 1718 was Queen of England Scotland and Ireland as the second wife of James II and VII A devout Catholic Mary married the widower James who was then the younger brother and heir presumptive of Charles II 2 She was uninterested in politics and devoted to James and their children two of whom survived to adulthood the Jacobite claimant to the thrones James Francis Edward and Louisa Maria Teresa 3 Mary of ModenaPortrait from the studio of Willem Wissing painted sometime between 1676 and 1685Queen consort of England Scotland and IrelandTenure6 February 1685 11 December 1688Coronation23 April 1685Born 1658 10 05 5 October 1658Ducal Palace Modena Duchy of Modena and ReggioDied7 May 1718 1718 05 07 aged 59 Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye Paris FranceBurialConvent of the Visitations Chaillot FranceSpouseJames II of England m 1673 died 1701 wbr Issueamong othersIsabel StuartCharles Duke of CambridgeJames Prince of WalesLouisa Maria StuartNamesMaria Beatrice Eleonora Anna Margherita Isabella d EsteHouseEsteFatherAlfonso IV Duke of ModenaMotherLaura MartinozziReligionCatholicismSignatureBorn a princess of the northwestern Italian Duchy of Modena Mary is primarily remembered for the controversial birth of James Francis Edward her only surviving son It was widely rumoured that he was smuggled into the birth chamber in a warming pan in order to perpetuate her husband s Catholic Stuart dynasty James Francis Edward s birth was a contributing factor to the Glorious Revolution the revolution which deposed James II and VII and replaced him with Mary II a Protestant James II s eldest daughter from his first marriage to Anne Hyde 1637 1671 Mary II and her husband William III of Orange would reign jointly over all three kingdoms Mary went into exile in France being known as the Queen over the water among the Jacobites She lived with her husband and children at Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye provided by King Louis XIV Mary was popular among Louis XIV s courtiers James however was considered a bore In widowhood Mary spent time with the nuns at the Convent of Chaillot frequently during summers with her daughter Louisa Maria Teresa In 1701 when James II died young James Francis Edward aged 13 became king in the eyes of the Jacobites Given that he was too young to assume the nominal reins of government Mary represented him until he reached the age of 16 When young James Francis Edward was asked to leave France as part of the settlement from the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713 which ended the War of the Spanish Succession 1701 1714 Mary of Modena stayed despite having no family there her daughter Louisa Maria Teresa having died of smallpox Fondly remembered by her French contemporaries Mary died of breast cancer in 1718 Contents 1 Early life 1658 1673 2 Duchess of York 1673 1685 2 1 Household 2 2 Popish plot and exile 3 Queen consort 1685 1688 4 Queen over the water 1688 1701 4 1 Reception at Louis XIV s court 4 2 Estensi succession 5 Regency 1701 1704 6 Later life 7 Issue 8 Ancestry 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly life 1658 1673 Edit Alfonso IV d Este Duke of Modena Mary s father in a portrait by Justus Sustermans Maria Beatrice d Este the second but eldest surviving child of Alfonso IV Duke of Modena and his wife Laura Martinozzi was born on 5 October 1658 NS note 1 in Modena Duchy of Modena Italy Her only younger brother Francesco succeeded their father as Duke upon the latter s death in 1662 the year Mary turned four 4 Mary and Francesco s mother Laura was strict with them and acted as regent of the duchy until her son came of age 5 6 Mary s education was excellent 7 she spoke French and Italian fluently had a good knowledge of Latin and later mastered English 8 9 Mary was described by contemporaries as tall and admirably shaped and was sought as a bride for James Duke of York by Lord Peterborough 10 11 Lord Peterborough was Groom of the Stole to the Duke of York A widower James was the younger brother and heir of Charles II of England 12 Duchess Laura was not initially forthcoming with a reply to Peterborough s proposal hoping according to the French ambassador for a grander match with the eleven year old Charles II of Spain 13 14 Whatever the reason for Laura s initial reluctance she finally accepted the proposal on behalf of Mary and they were married by proxy on 30 September 1673 NS 15 Modena was within the sphere of influence of Louis XIV of France who endorsed Mary s candidature and greeted Mary warmly in Paris where she stopped en route to England giving her a brooch worth 8 000 16 note 2 Her reception in England was much cooler 18 Parliament which was entirely composed of Protestants reacted poorly to the news of a Catholic marriage fearing it was a Papist plot against the country 18 The English public who were predominantly Protestant branded the Duchess of York as Mary was thereafter known as until her husband s accession the Pope s daughter 19 Parliament threatened to have the marriage annulled 19 leading Charles to suspend parliament until 7 January 1674 OS to ensure the marriage would be honoured and safeguarding the reputation of his House of Stuart 12 Duchess of York 1673 1685 EditHousehold Edit James Duke of York King James II from 1685 in a portrait by Sir Peter Lely The Duke of York an avowed Catholic was twenty five years older than his bride scarred by smallpox and afflicted with a stutter 20 He had secretly converted to Catholicism around 1668 21 Mary first saw her husband on 23 November 1673 OS on the day of their second marriage ceremony 22 23 James was pleased with his bride 24 Mary however at first disliked him and burst into tears each time she saw him 25 Nonetheless she soon warmed to James 3 From his first marriage to the commoner Anne Hyde who had died in 1671 James had two daughters Lady Mary and Lady Anne 26 They were introduced to Mary by James with the words I have brought you a new play fellow 26 Unlike Lady Mary Lady Anne disliked her father s new wife 27 Mary played games with Anne to win her affection 27 The Duchess of York received 5 000 annually to cover her personal expenses and those of her own household headed by Carey Fraser Countess of Peterborough it was frequented by ladies of her husband s selection Frances Stewart Duchess of Richmond and Anne Scott 1st Duchess of Buccleuch 12 28 29 30 That the Duchess of York loathed gambling did not stop her ladies compelling her to do so almost every day 31 They believed that if she refrained it might be taken ill 31 Consequently Mary incurred minor gambling debts 31 The birth of the Duchess of York s first child Catherine Laura named after Queen Catherine on 10 January 1675 OS represented the beginning of a string of children that would die in infancy 32 She was also on excellent terms with Lady Mary and visited her in The Hague after the younger Mary had married William of Orange She travelled incognito and took Anne with her 33 Popish plot and exile Edit Main article Popish plot The Duchess of York s Catholic secretary Edward Colman was in 1678 falsely implicated in a fictitious plot against the King by Titus Oates 34 The plot known as the Popish Plot led to the Exclusionist movement headed by Anthony Ashley Cooper 1st Earl of Shaftesbury 35 The Exclusionists sought to debar the Catholic Duke of York from the throne 36 Their reputation in tatters the Yorks were exiled reluctantly to Brussels a domain of the King of Spain ostensibly to visit Lady Mary since 1677 the wife of Prince William III of Orange 37 38 39 Accompanied by her not yet three year old daughter Isabella and Lady Anne the Duchess of York was saddened by James s extra marital affair with Catherine Sedley 40 She also received an encouraging visit from her mother who was living in Rome which revived her spirits 41 Mary of Modena in the year of her husband s accession 1685 in a painting by Willem Wissing A report that King Charles was very sick sent the Yorks back to England hastily 42 They feared the King s eldest illegitimate son James Scott 1st Duke of Monmouth and the commander of England s armed forces might usurp the crown if Charles died before their return 42 43 That Monmouth enjoyed the support of the Exclusionists who held a majority in the House of Commons of England added to that danger 42 Charles survived and felt that the Yorks returned to court too soon so sent James and Mary to Edinburgh where they stayed on and off for the next three years 44 45 Lodging in Holyrood Palace the Yorks had to make do without Ladies Anne and Isabella who stayed in London on Charles s orders 46 The Yorks were recalled to London in February 1680 only to return again to Edinburgh that autumn this time they went on a more honourable footing James was created King s Commissioner to Scotland 47 Separated from Lady Isabella once again Mary sank into a state of sadness exacerbated by the passing of the Exclusion bill in the Commons 48 49 Lady Isabella thus far the only one of Mary s children to survive infancy died in February 1681 50 Isabella s death plunged Mary into a religious mania worrying her physician 50 At the same time as news reached Holyrood of Isabella s death Mary s mother was accused falsely of offering 10 000 for the murder of the King 50 The accuser a pamphleteer was executed by order of the King 50 The Exclusionist reaction that followed the Popish plot had died down by May 1682 51 Exclusionist dominated Parliament suspended since March 1681 never again met in the reign of Charles II 52 Therefore the Duke and Duchess of York returned to England and the Duchess gave birth to a daughter named Charlotte Mary in August 1682 Charlotte Mary s death three weeks later according to the French ambassador robbed James of hope that any child of his can live all James s sons by Anne Hyde his first wife died in infancy 53 James s sadness was dispelled by his revival in popularity following the discovery of a plot to kill the King and him 54 The objective of the plot known as the Rye House Plot was to have Monmouth placed on the throne as Lord Protector 55 The revival was so strong that in 1684 James was re admitted to the Privy Council after an absence of eleven years 56 Queen consort 1685 1688 EditDespite all the furore over Exclusionism James ascended his brother s thrones easily upon the latter s death which occurred on 6 February 1685 OS possibly owing to the risk that the said alternative might provoke another civil war 57 Mary mourned Charles passing sincerely recalling in later life He was always kind to me 58 Mary and James s 119 000 coronation occurring on 23 April OS Saint George s Day was planned meticulously 59 60 Precedents were sought for Mary because a full length joint coronation had not occurred since the ceremony performed for Henry VIII of England and Catherine of Aragon 59 Queen Mary with her son James Francis Edward by Benedetto Gennari the Younger Queen Mary s health had still not recovered after the death of Lady Isabella so much so in fact that the Tuscan envoy reported to Florence that general opinion turns for Mary s successor in the direction of the Princess Your Highness s daughter 61 62 France too was preparing for the Queen s imminent demise putting forward the Duke of Enghien s daughter as its candidate to be James new wife 61 The Queen was then trying to make her brother the Duke of Modena marry the former Anna Maria Luisa de Medici 63 In February 1687 the Queen at the time irritated by the King s affair with Catherine Sedley Countess of Dorchester moved into new apartments in Whitehall Whitehall had been home to a Catholic chapel since December 1686 64 65 Her apartments were designed by Christopher Wren at the cost of 13 000 66 Since the palace s renovation was thus far unfinished the King received ambassadors in her rooms much to the Queen s chagrin 67 Five months later shortly after the marriage talks with Tuscany collapsed the Queen s mother Duchess Laura died 68 Therefore the whole English court went into mourning 68 Duchess Laura left Mary a considerable sum of cash and some jewellery 69 William III of Orange James s nephew and son in law sensed popular discontent with James s government he used the death of Mary s mother as a guise to send his half uncle Count Zuylestein to England ostensibly to condole Queen Mary but in reality as a spy 70 71 Mary II of England in a painting by Sir Peter Lely Having visited Bath in the hope its waters would aid conception Queen Mary became pregnant in late 1687 72 When the pregnancy became public knowledge shortly before Christmas Catholics rejoiced 73 Protestants who had tolerated James s Catholic government because he had no Catholic heir were concerned 74 The Protestant disillusion came to a head after the child was known to be male and many Protestants believed the child was spurious 75 if not James II s Catholic dynasty would have been perpetuated 75 Popular opinion alleged that the child named James Francis Edward was smuggled into the birth chamber as a substitute for the Queen s real but stillborn child 75 This rumour was widely accepted as fact by Protestants despite the many witnesses of the birth 75 76 Mainly by mismanagement on James part these rumours had some excuse as from personal prejudice he had excluded many from the ceremony whose testimony must have been counted valid most of the witnesses were Catholics or foreigners and several such as his daughter Anne and the Protestant prelates or the maternal relatives of his daughters whom the new birth would remove from the direct succession were not present Anne and her elder sister Mary suspected that their father had thrust a changeling upon the nation 70 Count Zuylestein returning to the Netherlands shortly after the birth agreed with Anne s findings 70 Issued by seven leading Whig nobles the invitation for William to invade England signalled the beginning of a revolution that culminated in James II s deposition 77 The invitation assured William that nineteen parts of twenty of the people throughout the kingdom wished for an intervention 77 The revolution known as the Glorious Revolution deprived James Francis Edward of his right to the English throne on the grounds that he was not deemed the King s real son and later because he was a Catholic 77 With England in the hands of William of Orange s 15 000 strong army James and Mary decided to go into exile in France 77 On 9 December 1688 Mary left London in disguise with the infant Prince of Wales and in the company of Victoria Davia Montecuculi under the arrangement of Antoine Nompar de Caumont A few weeks after her arrival in France through Calais James joined her There they stayed at the expense of James s first cousin King Louis XIV who supported the Jacobite cause 77 78 Queen over the water 1688 1701 EditReception at Louis XIV s court Edit Louis XIV of France in a portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud 1701 78 James was formally deposed on 11 December 1688 OS in England and on 11 May 1689 OS in Scotland and his daughter Mary II and her husband William III were made joint monarchs 79 James however backed by Louis XIV of France still considered himself king by divine right and maintained it was not within parliament s prerogative to depose a monarch 80 Louis XIV gave the exiled royal couple the use of Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye where they set up a court in exile 78 81 Mary quickly became a popular fixture at Louis XIV s court at Versailles where diarist Madame de Sevigne acclaimed Mary for her distinguished bearing and her quick wit 82 Questions of precedence however marred Mary s relations with Louis XIV s daughter in law Maria Anna of Bavaria 82 Since Mary had the privileges and rank of a queen she outranked Maria Anna 82 Therefore Maria Anna refused to see Mary etiquette being a sensitive issue at Versailles 83 In spite of this Louis XIV and his secret wife Madame de Maintenon became close friends with Mary 82 As there was no queen at the French court nor a dauphine after Maria Anna s death in 1690 Mary took precedence over all the female members of the French court and French royal house as did her daughter in her capacity of a royal princess until the next French dauphine appeared in 1711 84 James however was largely excluded from French court life His contemporaries found him boring and French courtiers frequently joked that when one talks to him one understands why he is here 82 85 Mary gave birth to a daughter Louise Mary in 1692 82 She was to be James and Mary s last child Initially supported by Irish Catholics in his effort to regain the thrones James launched an expedition to Ireland in March 1689 86 He abandoned it upon his defeat at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 86 During James s campaign Mary supported his cause throughout the British Isles she sent three French supply ships to Bantry Bay and 2 000 to Jacobite rebels in Dundee 87 She financed those measures by selling her jewellery 88 Money problems plagued the Stuart court in exile despite a substantial pension from Louis XIV of 50 000 livres 78 Mary tried her best to assist those of her husband s followers living in poverty and encouraged her children to give part of their pocket money to Jacobite refugees 89 90 91 Estensi succession Edit The collapse of James s invasion of Ireland in 1691 upset Mary However news of the marriage of her brother the Duke of Modena lifted her spirits 92 He married Margherita Maria Farnese of Parma 92 When in 1695 Mary s brother died the House of Este was left with one progenitor their uncle Cardinal Duke Rinaldo 93 Queen Mary concerned for the dynasty s future urged the Cardinal Duke to resign his cardinalate for the good of the people and for the perpetuation of the sovereign house of Este 94 Duke Rinaldo s bride Princess Charlotte Felicitas of Brunswick Luneburg was according to Mary of an easy disposition best suited to the Duke 94 A bone of contention however arose over the Queen s inheritance and dowry 95 Duke Rinaldo refused to release the former and left the latter 15 000 in arrears 96 In 1700 five years later the Duke finally paid the Queen her dowry her inheritance however remained sequestered and relations with Modena worsened again when Rinaldo allied himself with Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I 97 Leopold was an enemy of Louis XIV James and Mary s patron 97 Regency 1701 1704 Edit Queen Mary s coat of arms as Queen consort of England 98 Depicting the Royal Coat of Arms of England Scotland and Ireland impaled with a minor version of her father s arms as Duke of Modena In light of religious sentiment at the time it was presumed unwise to reproduce her father s arms in full since the quarterings are divided by a Pale Gules charged with the Papal keys ensigned with the Tiara 99 In March 1701 James II suffered a stroke while hearing mass at the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye leaving him partially paralysed 100 Fagon Louis XIV s personal physician recommended the waters of Bourbon l Archambault to cure the King s paralysis 101 The waters however had little effect and James II died of a seizure on 16 September 1701 102 Louis XIV contravening the Peace of Ryswick and irritating William declared James Francis Edward King of England Ireland and Scotland as James III and VIII 103 Mary acted as nominal regent for her minor son 104 She presided over his regency council too although she was uninterested in politics 104 Before his death James II expressed his wish that Mary s regency would last no longer than their son s 18th birthday 105 James Francis Edward Stuart Mary of Modena s only surviving son in a portrait by Antonio David 96 Dressed in mourning for the remainder of her life Queen Mary s first act as regent was to disseminate a manifesto outlining James Francis Edward s claims 106 It was largely ignored in England 106 In Scotland however the confederate Lords sent Lord Belhaven to Saint Germain to convince the Queen to surrender to them custody of James Francis Edward and accede to his conversion to Protestantism 106 The conversion said Belhaven would enable his accession to the English throne upon William s death 107 Mary was not swayed by Belhaven s argument so they reached a compromise James Francis Edward if he became king would limit the number of Catholic priests in England and promise not to tamper with the established Church of England 107 In exchange the confederate Lords would do all in their power to block the passing of the Hanoverian succession in Scottish parliament 107 When in March 1702 William died Lord Lovat declared for James Francis Edward at Inverness 108 Soon after Lovat travelled to the court in exile at Saint Germain and begged Mary to allow her son to come to Scotland 108 Lovat intended to raise an army of 15 000 soldiers in Scotland to seize the throne for James Francis Edward 108 Mary refused to part with James Francis Edward and the rising failed 108 Mary s regency ceased with her son s reaching of the age of 16 109 Later life EditHaving wished to become a nun in her youth Queen Mary sought refuge from the stresses of exile at the Convent of the Visitations Chaillot near Paris where she befriended Louis XIV s penitent mistress Louise de La Valliere 110 There Mary stayed with her daughter for long periods almost every summer 111 It was here too in 1711 that Queen Mary found out that as part of the embryonic Treaty of Utrecht James Francis Edward was to lose Louis XIV s explicit recognition and be forced to leave France 111 The next year when James Francis Edward was expelled and Louise Mary died of smallpox Mary was very upset 112 according to Mary s close friend Madame de Maintenon Mary was a model of desolation 112 Deprived of the company of her family Queen Mary lived out the rest of her days at Chaillot and Saint Germain in virtual poverty unable to travel by her own means because all her horses had died and she could not afford to replace them 113 Following her death from cancer on 7 May 1718 Mary was remembered fondly by her French contemporaries three of whom Elizabeth Charlotte of the Palatinate the Duke of Saint Simon and the Marquis of Dangeau deemed her a saint 114 115 Mary s remains were interred in Chaillot among the nuns she had befriended 116 Issue EditName Birth Death NotesUnnamed child March or May 1674 stillbirth 117 Catherine Laura 10 January 1675 3 October 1675 died of convulsions 117 Unnamed child October 1675 stillbirth 117 Isabel or Isabella 28 August 1676 2 or 4 March 1681 buried in Westminster Abbey on 4 March Old Style as The Lady Isabella daughter to the Duke of York 118 Charles Duke of Cambridge 7 November 1677 12 December 1677 died of smallpox 117 Elizabeth c 1678 Unnamed child February 1681 stillbirth 117 Charlotte Maria 16 August 1682 16 October 1682 died of convulsions 117 and buried in Westminster Abbey on 8 October Old Style as The Lady Charlotte Marie daughter to the Duke of York 119 Unnamed child October 1683 stillbirth 117 Unnamed child May 1684 stillbirth 120 James Prince of Wales the Old Pretender 10 June 1688 1 January 1766 married 1719 Clementina Sobieska had issueLouisa Maria Teresa 28 June 1692 18 April 1712 died of smallpox 121 Ancestry EditAncestors of Mary of Modena8 Alfonso III d Este 123 4 Francesco I d Este 123 9 Isabella of Savoy 124 2 Alfonso IV d Este10 Ranuccio I Farnese Duke of Parma 125 5 Maria Caterina Farnese of Parma 123 11 Margherita Aldobrandini 126 1 Mary of Modena12 Vincenzo Martinozzi6 Hieronymus Martinozzi 122 13 Margherita Marcolini3 Laura Martinozzi 122 14 Peter Mazarini 127 7 Laura Mazarini 122 15 Ortensia BuffaliniNotes Edit Modena and France used the Gregorian calendar indicated by modern historians with the initials NS for New Style while England and Scotland and some of central Protestant Europe such as the Netherlands Germany and Switzerland still used the older Julian calendar designated by initials OS for Old Style Therefore for the duration of the 17th century English Julian dates were ten days behind Modena and France s Gregorian dates with most of the rest of continental Catholic Europe From 29 February 1700 to 14 September 1752 the difference was eleven days This is equivalent to 1355568 in present day terms 17 References EditCitations Edit Harris p 1 Oman p 30 a b Oman p 40 Oman p 14 Haile p 16 Oman p 15 Waller p 22 Waller p 23 Haile p 18 Fea p 70 Oman p 19 a b c Waller p 15 Oman p 10 Haile p 17 Haile p 24 Oman p 27 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 a b Fraser King Charles II p 418 a b Oman p 28 Haile p 40 Waller p 135 Waller p 149 Haile p 41 Turner p 114 Oman p 31 a b Chapman p 33 a b Waller p 22 Waller p 24 Oman p 46 Oman p 38 a b c Oman p 45 Oman p 48 Marshall p 172 Fraser King Charles II p 463 Fraser King Charles II p 470 Haile p 76 Chapman p 67 Brown pp 10 12 Fea p 83 Oman p 56 Haile p 88 a b c Oman p 63 Fea p 85 Haile p 92 Turner p 171 Oman p 67 Fea p 96 Waller p 35 Haile pp 99 100 a b c d Oman p 71 Waller p 36 Waller p 37 Haile p 109 Oman p 75 Oman pp 75 76 Fraser King Charles II p 569 Waller pp 143 144 Oman plate no VII a b Oman p 85 Haile p 129 a b Haile p 124 Waller p 40 Oman p 96 Fea p 138 Haile p 142 Oman p 98 Oman p 99 a b Haile p 159 Oman p 99 a b c Chapman p 144 Haile p 163 Waller p 11 Harris p 239 Waller p 12 a b c d Oman pp 108 109 Harris pp 239 240 a b c d e Waller p 216 a b c d Fraser Love and Louis XIV p 270 Harris p 325 Starkey p 190 Uglow p 523 a b c d e f Fraser Love and Louis XIV p 271 Fraser Love and Louis XIV pp 270 271 Edward T Corp A Court in Exile The Stuarts in France 1689 1718 2004 Oman p 148 a b Fea p 235 Oman p 158 Oman pp 158 159 Oman p 173 Oman p 207 Haile p 357 a b Haile p 282 Haile p 311 a b Haile p 312 Haile p 314 a b Oman p 184 a b Oman p 185 Maclagan Michael Louda Jiri p 27 Pinces John Harvey Pinces Rosemary 1974 The Royal Heraldry of England Heraldry Today Slough Buckinghamshire Hollen Street Press p 187 ISBN 0 900455 25 X Gregg p 127 Oman p 190 Fea p 285 Fraser Love and Louis XIV p 322 a b Oman p 196 Oman p 197 a b c Haile p 358 a b c Haile p 359 a b c d Haile p 363 Oman plate xiv Haile p 229 a b Oman p 221 a b Oman p 225 Oman p 242 Fraser Love and Louis XIV p 383 Oman p 245 Oman p 247 a b c d e f g Weir Alison 1996 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised Edition Random House London ISBN 0 7126 7448 9 p 260 Chester J L 1876 The Marriage Baptismal and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St Peter Westminster Vol 10 Harleian Society p 201 Chester 1876 p 206 Weir 261 Fraser Love and Louis XIV p 329 a b c de Saint Evremond Charles 1728 The works of Monsieur de St Evremond Translated by des Maizeaux London J and J Knapton J Darby A Battesworth p 106 a b c Biografia universale antica e moderna Universal ancient and modern biography in Italian Vol XIX presso Gio Battista Missiaglia 1824 p 61 Le Royaume d Italie vol I Les Manuscrits du C e d r e Dictionnaire Historique et Genealogique Les manuscrits du C E D R E Cercle d Etudes des Dynasties Royales Europeennes Dictionnaire Historique et Genealogique 131 132 1992 ISSN 0993 3964 Farnese Family at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Hanlon Gregory 2014 The Hero of Italy Odoardo Farnese Duke of Parma his Soldiers and his Subjects in the Thirty Years War Oxford University Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 19 151090 8 Lombard Paul 2000 Vice And Virtue Men of History Great Crooks for the Greater Good Algora Publishing p 56 ISBN 978 1 892941 21 3 Bibliography Edit Allan Fea 1909 James II and His Wives Meuthon and Co Brown Beatrice Curtis 1929 Anne Stuart Queen of England Geoffrey Bles Chapman Hester 1953 Mary II Queen of England Jonathan Cape Fraser Antonia 2002 King Charles II Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 1403 1 Fraser Antonia 2007 Love and Louis XIV The Women in the Life of the Sun King Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 2293 7 Gregg Edward 1980 Queen Anne Routledge amp Kegan Paul Haile Martin 1905 Queen Mary of Modena Her Life and Letters J M Dent amp Co Harris Tim 2007 Revolution The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy 1685 1720 Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 101652 8 Maclagan Michael Louda Jiri 1999 Line of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe Little Brown amp Co ISBN 1 85605 469 1 Marshall Rosalind 2003 Scottish Queens 1034 1714 Tuckwell Press Oman Carola 1962 Mary of Modena Hodder amp Stoughton Starkey David 2007 Monarchy From the Middle Ages to Modernity Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 00 724766 0 Turner FC 1948 James II Eyre amp Spottswoode Uglow Jenny 2009 A Gambling Man Charles II and the Restoration Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 21733 5 Waller Maureen 2002 Ungrateful Daughters The Stuart Princesses Who Stole Their Father s Crown Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 79461 5External links EditMary of Modena from the online Encyclopaedia Britannica Media related to Mary of Modena at Wikimedia Commons Portraits of Mary of Modena at the National Portrait Gallery London Mary of ModenaHouse of EsteBorn 5 October 1658 Died 7 May 1718British royaltyPreceded byCatherine of Braganza Queen consort of England Scotland and Ireland1685 1688 VacantTitle next held byPrince George of Denmarkas consortTitles in pretenceGlorious Revolution TITULAR Queen consort of England Scotland and Ireland1688 1701 Succeeded byMaria Clementina Sobieska Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary of Modena amp oldid 1153581330, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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