When
Mary Tudor became Queen - following the
disastrous end of a
nine-day rule by Lady Jane Grey - Elizabeth was nineteen years old. The country was in need of a strong leader, but many people were anxious.
Edward’s council had made mistakes, contributing to an
unstable economy. A series of bad harvests helped to force prices higher, and Britain’s currency was in trouble. Would Mary, and her advisors, be able to manage their way through difficult times?
After twenty years of
Tudor rule, Britain was reasonably stable on the religious front. Would Mary (a Catholic, like her mother) try to make Britain Catholic again? Would she allow religious freedom? Would she persecute Protestants?
Her mother (Catherine of Aragon, youngest daughter of
Ferdinand and Isabella) had been humiliated when Henry pushed her aside in favor of Anne Boleyn. Would Mary hold those facts (and her mother’s anguish) against her half-sister?
Those who hoped for status-quo, under
Mary I, must have been disappointed when Her Majesty announced whom she would marry. Aged thirty-seven when she became Queen, Mary wanted a child. The person she selected to have it with was
Philip of Spain, heir to the Spanish throne.
A Catholic,
Mary’s fiancé was the son of her cousin,
Charles V. Even people who shared her religious faith were concerned. It was one thing to marry a Catholic - even a powerful one - but the son of the
Holy Roman Emperor? Would Britain merely become an appendage of the
House of
Habsburg? Would the
Spanish Inquisition become part of Britain’s life as
it had elsewhere? Would people be condemned as heretics for practicing their Protestant faith? Would Elizabeth, the Queen’s heir and half-sister, also be required to conform to Mary’s religious beliefs?
History proves the peoples’ concerns were justified. Mary I became known as “Bloody Mary.”
Her younger husband became Philip II, King of Spain, at the same time that he was King of England. His position, it is said, allowed him to use some of Britain’s gold to fund non-British military objectives.
While Mary viewed her sister as a threat,
Philip advised a reconciliation. Historians believe that had it not been for her brother-in-law, Elizabeth may have died like her mother. At a future date, when they were at odds, Philip would remind Elizabeth of his role in sparing her life.
The Queen, meanwhile, had become very ill. Thinking she was expecting a child, she was devastated to learn she wasn’t even pregnant. In 1558,
she died without an heir, and Philip (who had essentially
deserted her) was no longer King of England.
The crown would next rest on the head of twenty-five-year-old
Princess Elizabeth. It would remain there for many decades.