She was born at the Louvre Palace and brought up as a Roman Catholic. This made her an unpopular choice of wife for the English King, whom she married by proxy on May 11 1625, shortly after his accession to the throne. They were married in person at St Augustine's Church, Canterbury, Kent, on June 13 1626. However, her religion made it impossible for her to be crowned with her husband in an Anglican service. Initially their relationship was cold. Henrietta Maria had brought many servants with her from France, all of them Catholic, and all costing the King a lot of money to maintain. It is said that eventually Charles sent this retinue home, only allowing his teenage bride to retain her chaplain and two ladies in waiting. Finding her sadly watching the retinue depart for France at the window of a palace, Charles angrily and forcibly dragged his wayward queen away. Charles had intended to marry a daughter of Philip III of Spain, but a mission to Spain in 1623 had failed. Every time the two would meet, they would start arguing, and would separate, not seeing each other for weeks. They would meet again, and have to separate again, because they could not stop argueing.
Henrietta Maria was not close to George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, the King's favourite. However, after Buckingham was murdered by John Felton in August 1628, her relationship with the King improved and they finally found deep bonds of love and affection. Her refusal to give up her Catholic faith alienated her from many of the people and certain powerful courtiers such as William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury and Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford. Charles, on the other hand, had definite leanings towards Catholicism, and, once he had reached maturity, did not share his father's sexual ambivalence.
| Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Charles James, Duke of Cornwall | 13 March, 1629 | 13 March, 1629 | Died young. No issue. |
| Charles II, King of England | 29 May, 1630 | 6 February, 1685 | Married Catherine of Braganza (1638 - 1705) in 1663. No issue. |
| James II, King of England | 14 October, 1633 | 16 September, 1701 | Married (1) Anne Hyde (1637 - 1671) in 1659. Had issue; Married (2) Mary of Modena (1658 - 1718) in 1673. Had issue. |
| Henry, Duke of Gloucester | 8 July, 1640 | 18 September, 1660 | Died young. No issue. |
| Mary, Princess Royal | 4 November, 1631 | 24 December, 1660 | Married William II, Prince of Orange (1626 - 1650) in 1648. Had issue. |
| Elizabeth, Princess of England | 29 December, 1635 | 8 September, 1650 | Died young. No issue. |
| Anne, Princess of England | 17 March 1637 | 8 December 1640 | Died young. No issue. |
| Catherine, Princess of England | 29 January, 1639 | 29 January, 1639 | Died young. No issue. |
| Henrietta Anne, Princess of England | 16 June 1644 | 30 June 1670 | Married Philip I, Duke of Orléans (1640 - 1701) in 1661. Had issue |
In August 1642, when the conflict began, she was in Europe. She continued to raise money for the Royalist cause, and did not return to England until early 1643. She landed at Bridlington in Yorkshire with troops and arms, and joined the Royalist forces in northern England, making her headquarters at York. She remained with the army in the north for some months before rejoining the King at Oxford. The collapse of the king's position following Scottish intervention on the side of Parliament, and his refusal to accept stringent terms for a settlement led her to flee to France with her sons in July 1644. Charles was executed in 1649, leaving her almost destitute.
Henrietta Maria died at Château de Colombes, and was buried in the royal tombs at Saint Denis Basilica near Paris.
1609 births | 1669 deaths | Parisians | House of Bourbon | Princesses of France | Women in war | English queen consorts | Scottish queen consorts | House of Stuart
Henrietta Maria von Frankreich | Enriqueta María de Francia | Henriette de France (1609-1669) | Henrietta Maria | Henrietta Maria da França | Henrietta Maria of France | Henrietta Maria av Frankrike | アンリエッタ・マリア
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"Henrietta Maria of France".
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