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  1. Margaret and James IV were married at Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh on 8th August 1503 by the Archbishops of Glasgow and of York. Margaret was crowned following the nuptial mass, King James holding her around the waist for much of the ceremony and handing her the sceptre.

  2. Feb 12, 2020 · Margaret Tudor was the daughter of King Henry VII and older sister of King Henry VIII. She was promised in marriage to James IV of Scotland, part of the Treaty of Perpetual Peace between England and Scotland in 1502.

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  4. The Marriage Procession of James IV and Margaret Tudor Edinburgh A.D. 1503. Creative Commons CC by NC. About this artwork. This is the final panel in the suite of historical scenes on the walls of the Great Hall in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.

  5. 18th July, 2018 in History, Women in History. Margaret Tudor: English princess, Scottish queen. On 8 August 1503 Princess Margaret Tudor of England married King James IV of Scotland in Holyrood Abbey, becoming Queen of Scots and providing the Scottish throne with an heir, King James V.

  6. Aug 8, 2023 · On this day in Tudor history, 8th August 1503, King Henry VII's eldest daughter, Princess Margaret Tudor, married King James IV of Scotland at Holyrood Abbey. Margaret was just thirteen years old and James was thirty, and their marriage had been arranged by the 1502 Treaty of Perpetual Peace between England and Scotland.

  7. Jul 2, 2018 · On 24th January 1502, a Treaty of Perpetual Peace was agreed between Henry VII of England and James IV of Scotland. It was sealed the next day with the proxy marriage of Margaret Tudor and James IV of Scotland. The Earl of Bothwell, Patrick Hepburn, stood in for James IV who remained in Scotland.

  8. Margaret Tudor Marriage to James V. On 24 January 1502 Scotland and England concluded the Treaty of Perpetual Peace, which involved the marriage between the Princess Margaret and James IV (pictured below right), sixteen years her senior, which was completed by proxy.