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See also: queen of See also: James I. of
See also: England and VI. of Scotland, daughter of See also: King
See also: Frederick II. of See also: Denmark and See also: Norway and of See also: Sophia, daughter of Ulric III., duke of See also: Mecklenburg, was See also: born on the 12th of See also: December 1574
.
On the loth of See also: August 1589, in spite of Queen See also: Elizabeth's opposition,
she was married by
See also: proxy to King James, without dower, the See also: alliance, however, settling definitely the Scottish claims to the See also: Orkney and See also: Shetland Islands
.
Her voyage to Scotland was interrupted by a violent storm—for the raising of which several Danish and Scottish witches were burned or executed—which drove her on the See also: coast of Norway, whither the impatient James came to meet her, the See also: marriage taking place at Opslo (now See also: Christiania) on the 23rd of See also: November
.
The royal couple, after visiting Denmark, arrived in Scotland in May 1590
.
The position of queen See also: consort to a Scottish king was a difficult and perilous one, and See also: Anne was attacked in connexion with various scandals and deeds of violence, her share in which, however, is supported by no evidence
.
The See also: birth of an heir to the See also: throne (See also: Prince See also: Henry) in 1594 strengthened her position and influence; but the
See also: young prince, much to her indignation, was immediately withdrawn from her care and entrusted to the keeping of the See also: earl and countess of See also: Mar at See also: Stirling See also: Castle; in 1595 James gave a written command, forbidding them in See also: case of his See also: death to give up the prince to the queen t11 he reached the age of eighteen
.
The king's intention was, no doubt, to secure himself and the prince against the unruly nobles, though the queen's See also: Roman Catholic tendencies were probably another reason for his decision
.
Brought up a Lutheran, and fond of pleasure, she had shown no liking for Scottish Calvinism, and soon incurred rebukes on account of her See also: religion, " vanity," See also: absence from See also: church, "
See also: night waking and balling." She had become secretly inclined to Roman Catholicism, and attended mass with the king's connivance
.
On the death of Queen Elizabeth, on the 24th of See also: March 1603, James preceded her to
See also: London
.
Anne took See also: advantage of his absence to demand possession of the prince, and, on the " fiat refusal " of the countess of Mar, See also: fell into a passion, the violence of which occasioned a See also: miscarriage and endangered her See also: life
.
In See also: June she followed the king to England (after distributing all her effects in See also: Edinburgh among her ladies) with the prince and the coffin containing the See also: body of her dead infant, and reached Windsor on the 2nd of See also: July, where amidst other forms of See also: good See also: fortune she entered into the possession of Queen Elizabeth's 6000 dresses
.
On the 24th of July Anne was crowned with the king, when her refusal to take the See also: sacrament according to the See also: Anglican use created some sensation
.
She communicated on one occasion subsequently and attended Anglican service occasionally; but she received consecrated See also: objects from See also: Pope See also: Clement VIII., continued to hear mass, and, according to Galluzzi, supported the schemes for the conversion of the prince of See also: Wales and of England, and for the prince's marriage with a Roman Catholic princess, which collapsed on his death in 1612
.
She was claimed as a convert by the See also: Jesuits.' Nevertheless on her deathbed, when she was attended by the archbishop of See also: Canterbury and the See also: bishop of London, she used expressions which were construed as a declaration of Protestantism
.
Notwithstanding religious differences she lived in See also: great harmony and affection with the king, latterly, however, residing mostly apart
.
She helped to raise See also: Buckingham to power in the place of See also: Somerset, maintained friendly relations with him, and approved of his guidance and control of the king
.
In spite of her birth and See also: family she was at first favourably inclined to See also: Spain, disapproved of her daughter Elizabeth's marriage with the elector palatine, and supported the See also: Spanish marriages for her sons, but subsequently veered round towards See also: France
.
She used all her influence in favour of the unfortunate Raleigh, answering his petition to her for See also: protection with a See also: personal letter of See also: appeal to Buckingham to save his life
.
" She carrieth no sway in See also: state matters," however, it was said of her in 16o5, " and, praeter rem uxoriam, hath'no great reach in other affairs." " She does not mix herself up in affairs, though the king tells her anything she chooses to ask, and loves and esteems her."2 Her See also: interest in state matters was only occasional, and secondary to the pre-occupations of See also: court festivities, masks, progresses, dresses, jewels, which she much enjoyed; the court being, says Wilson—whose severity cannot
' See also: Fasti S
.
J., by P
.
Joannis Drews (pub
.
1723), p
.
16o
.
2 Cal. of St
.
Pap.—Venetian, x . 513.entirely suppress his admiration—" a continued maskarado, where she and her ladies, like so many See also: nymphs or Nereides, appeared
.
. . to the ravishment of the beholders," and " made the night more glorious than the See also: day." Occasionally she even joined in the king's See also: sports, though here her only recorded exploit was her accidental See also: shooting of James's " most See also: principal and See also: special See also: hound," See also: Jewel
.
Her extravagant See also: expenditure, returned by See also: Salisbury in 16o5 at more than £50,000 and by See also: Chamberlain at her death at more than £84,000, was unfavourably contrasted with the
See also: economy of Queen Elizabeth; in spite of large allowances and grants of estates which included Oatlands, See also: Greenwich See also: House and Nonsuch, it greatly exceeded her income, her debts in 1616 being reckoned at nearly £Io,000, while her jewelry and her See also: plate were valued at her death at nearly See also: half a million
.
Anne died after a long illness on the 2nd of March 1619, and was buried in See also: Westminster Abbey
.
She was generally regretted
.
The severe See also: Wilson, while rebuking her gaieties, allows that she was " a good woman," and that her character would stand the most prying investigation
.
She was intelligent and tactful, a faithful wife, a devoted
See also: mother and a staunch friend
.
Besides several See also: children who died in See also: infancy she had Henry, prince of Wales, who died in 1612, See also: Charles, afterwards King Charles I., and
Elizabeth, electress palatine and queen of Bohemia
.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.—See Dr A
.
W
.
See also: Ward's article in the
See also: Diet. of Nat
.
Biography, with authorities; Lives of the Queens of England, by A . Strickland (1844), vii.; " Life and Reign of King James I.," by A . Wilson, in See also: History of England (1706); Istoria del Granducato di Toscana, by R
.
Galluzzi (1781), See also: lib. vi. cap. ii.; Cal. of State Papers—Domestic and Venetian ; Hist
.
See also: MSS
.
See also: Comm
.
Series, MSS, of Marg. of Salisbury, iii
.
420, 438, 454, ix
.
54; Harleian MSS
.
5176, See also: art
.
22, 293, art
.
106
.
Also see bibliography to the article on JAMES I . (P . C . |
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