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See also: queen See also: consort of See also: Charles II. of
See also: England, daughter of See also: John IV. of
See also: Portugal, and of Louisa de Gusman, daughter of the duke of See also: Medina Sidonia, was See also: born on the 15/25 of See also: November 1638 at Villia Vicosa
.
She was early regarded as a useful See also: medium for contracting an See also: alliance with England, more necessary than ever to Portugal after the treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659 whereby Portugal was ostensibly abandoned by See also: France
.
Negotiations for the See also: marriage began during the reign of Charles I., were renewed immediately after the Restoration, and on the 23rd of See also: June, in spite of See also: Spanish opposition, the marriage contract was signed, England securing See also: Tangier and Bombay, with trading privileges in See also: Brazil and the See also: East Indies, religious and commercial freedom in Portugal and two million Portuguese crowns (about .300,000) ; while Pgrtugal obtained military and See also: naval support against See also: Spain and liberty of worship for See also: Catherine
.
She reached England on the 13th of May 1662, but was not visited by Charles at Portsmouth till the 20th
.
The next See also: day the marriage was solemnized twice, according to the See also: Roman Catholic and See also: Anglican usages
.
Catherine possessed several See also: good qualities, but had been brought up. in a conventual seclusion and was scarcely a wife Charles would have chosen for himself
.
Her See also: personal charms were not potent enough to wean Charles away from the society of his mistresses, and in a few See also: weeks after her arrival she became aware of her painful and humiliating position as the wife of the selfish and licentious See also: king
.
On the first presentation to her of Lady
See also: Castlemaine, Charles's See also: mistress en titre, whom he insisted on making lady of her bedchamber, she fainted away
.
She withdrew from the king's society, and in spite of See also: Clarendon's attempts to moderate her resentment, declared she would return to Portugal rather than consent to a See also: base compliance
.
To overcome her resistance nearly the whole of her Portuguese retinue was dismissed
.
She was helpless, and the violence of her grief and anger soon changed to passive resistance, and then to a See also: complete forbearance and complaisance which gained the king's regard and favour
.
In the midst of Charles's debauched and licentious See also: court, she lived neglected and retired, often deprived of her due allowance, having no ambitions and taking no See also: part in See also: English politics, but keeping up rather her See also: interest in her native country
.
As the prospect diminished of her bearing See also: children to Charles, several schemes were set on See also: foot for procuring a See also: divorce on various pretexts
.
As a Roman Catholic and near to the king's See also: person Catherine was the See also: special See also: object of attack by the inventors of the Popish See also: Plot
.
In 1678 the See also: murder of See also: Sir Edmund See also: Berry Godfrey was ascribed to her servants, and Titus See also: Oates accusedher of a design to See also: poison the king
.
These charges, of which the absurdity was soon shown by See also: cross-examination, nevertheless placed the queen for some See also: time in See also: great danger
.
On the 28th of November Oates accused her of high treason, and the See also: Commons passed an address for her removal and that of all the Roman Catholics from See also: Whitehall
.
A series of fresh depositions were sent in against her, and in June 1679 it was decided that she must stand her trial; but she was protected by the king, who in this instance showed unusual chivalry and earned her gratitude
.
On the 17th of November See also: Shaftesbury moved in the See also: House of Lords for a divorce to enable the king to marry a See also: Protestant and have legitimate issue; but he received little support, and the See also: bill was opposed by Charles, who continued to show his wife " extraordinary affection." During the winter the calumnies against the queen were revived by Fitzharris,who, however, before his execution in 1681 confessed to their falsity; and after the revival of the king's influence subsequent to the See also: Oxford parliament, the queen's position was no more assailed
.
During Charles's last illness in 1685 she showed great anxiety for his reconciliation with the Romish See also: Church, and it was probably effected largely through her influence
.
She exhibited great grief at his
See also: death
.
She afterwards resided at See also: Somerset House and at See also: Hammersmith, where she had privately founded a convent
.
She interceded with great generosity, but ineffectually, for See also: Monmouth the same See also: year
.
On the loth of June 1688 she was See also: present at the See also: birth of the See also: prince of See also: Wales and gave evidence before the council in favour of the genuineness of the See also: child
.
She was still in England at the Revolution, having delayed her return to Portugal to prosecute a lawsuit against the second See also: earl of Clarendon, formerly her See also: chamberlain
.
She maintained at first good terms, with
See also: William and Mary; but the practice of her
See also: religion aroused jealousies, while her establishment at Somerset House was said to be the home of cabals against the See also: government; and in 1691 she settled for a See also: short time at Euston
.
She See also: left England finally with a train of one See also: hundred persons in See also: March 1692, travelling through France and arriving at
See also: Lisbon on the loth of See also: January 1693
.
She took up her residence at the palace of Bemposta, built by herself, near Lisbon
.
In 1703 she supported the See also: Methuen Treaty, which cemented still further the alliance between Portugal and England, and in 1704 she was appointed See also: regent of Portugal during the illness of her See also: brother King Pedro II., her administration being distinguished by several successes gained over the Spaniards
.
She died on the 31st of See also: December 1705, bequeathing her great See also: wealth, the result of long hoarding, after the payment of See also: divers charitable legacies, to King Pedro; and was buried with great ceremony and splendour at Belem
.
See L
.
C
.
See also: Davidson, Catherine of See also: Braganza (1908)
.
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