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      • No match with Duke Wilhelm was agreed, but a second suitor actually visited in person – Duke Philip of Bavaria. Mary met him in person, and he seemed eager to marry her – even taking the liberty of kissing her, which gave rise to rumours that a wedding would swiftly follow.
      tudortimes.co.uk › people › mary-i-life-story
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  2. On 8 December 1539, Philip visited the court of King Henry VIII of England, with the hope of obtaining the hand of the King's daughter Lady Mary Tudor. This potential match was part of King Henry's plans of an alliance with the Protestant German Princes against the Emperor.

    • Diplomatic Tool
    • The Wedding Arrives
    • An Absent Husband
    • Mary I's 'Other Philip' – Anne of Cleves' Cousin

    Born in February 1516, Mary Tudor was the only surviving child of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. As a result, she was launched upon the marriage market early, being engaged first to the infant son of Francis I of France at the age of two and then to her cousin Charles, Holy Roman Emperor, at six. 1. Read more | What sort of relationship did Ma...

    The next day, 24 July, was the day before the wedding. Mary sent her tailor to Philip with two suits in the French style, one of crimson brocade, another in rich brocade adorned with gold thread, pearls and diamond buttons. French fashions were prominent at the English court, but they differed substantially from Spanish costume. Philip did not obje...

    After becoming King of Spain in 1556, Philip spent long periods of their brief marriage abroad, during which time Mary experienced a second phantom pregnancy. Increasingly, the queen retreated into her faith as her only comfort. Philip was pursuing his military campaign in the Netherlands when Mary fell ill and died, in November 1558. She was only ...

    The closest Mary came to marriage before Philip of Spain was with his namesake, Philip, Duke of Palatinate-Neuburg. Thirteen years her senior, he was a member of the Wittelsbach family, a cousin of Anne of Cleves and had distinguished himself against the Turks, earning the name of “the Warrior.” In the late 1530s, when Henry VIII was seeking Protes...

  3. Linda Porter, in her new biography of Mary says only that Duke Phillip of Bavaria was a German Lutheran who professed never to have been to a Mass. He was thirteen years Mary's senior. Mary was not minded to marry, but would comply with whatever her father's wishes were. Phillip did seem to be sincerely interested in Mary for herself.

  4. Mary I (18 February 1516 – 17 November 1558), also known as Mary Tudor, and as "Bloody Mary" by her Protestant opponents, was Queen of England and Ireland from July 1553 and Queen of Spain and the Habsburg dominions as the wife of King Philip II from January 1556 until her death in 1558.

  5. Duke Philip of Bavaria is a character in The Tudors. A German prince and a member of the Protestant League, he appears in " The Undoing of Cromwell " as a potential suitor for Princess Mary Tudor, having been encouraged to pursue her by his cousin (and Mary's new stepmother) Anne of Cleves.

  6. Mary dances with Duke Philip of Bavaria, with whom she fell in love despite his Protestantism. At the start of season 3, Mary hopes for reconciliation with her father thanks to the influence of his new wife Jane Seymour, who like her is a Catholic.

  7. Jan 23, 2024 · But in the season finale, we also see a snippet of a side story with a romance between Henry’s daughter, Mary Tudor, and Anne of Cleves’ cousin, Philip of Bavaria. It’s actually an incredibly sweet story and unlike a lot of The Tudors is actually based on historical events! Le gasp!

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