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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ANC-APO |
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ANNE OF DENMARK (1574-1619) , queen of James I. of England and VI. of Scotland, daughter of King Frederick II. of Denmark and Norway and of Sophia
she was married by proxy to King James, without dower, the alliance, however, settling definitely the Scottish claims to the Orkney and Shetland Islands. Her voyage to Scotland was interrupted by a violent stormfor the raising of which several Danish and Scottish witches were burned or executedwhich drove her on the coast of Norway, whither the impatient James came to meet her, the marriage taking place at Opslo (now Christiania) on the 23rd of November. The royal couple, after visiting Denmark, arrived in Scotland in May 1590. The position of queen consort to a Scottish king was a difficult and perilous one, and Anne was attacked in connexion with various scandals and deeds of violence, her share in which, however, is supported by no evidence. The birth of an heir to the throne (Prince Henry) in 1594 strengthened her position and influence; but the young prince, much to her indignation, was immediately withdrawn from her care and entrusted to the keeping of the earl
On the 24th of July Anne was crowned with the king, when her refusal to take the sacrament according to the Anglican use created some sensation. She communicated on one occasion subsequently and attended Anglican service occasionally; but she received consecrated objects from Pope Clement VIII., continued to hear mass, and, according to Galluzzi, supported the schemes for the conversion of the prince of Wales and of England, and for the prince's marriage with a Roman Catholic princess, which collapsed on his death in 1612. She was claimed as a convert by the Jesuits.' Nevertheless on her deathbed, when she was attended by the archbishop of Canterbury and the bishop of London, she used expressions which were construed as a declaration of Protestantism. Notwithstanding religious differences she lived in great harmony and affection with the king, latterly, however, residing mostly apart. She helped to raise Buckingham to power in the place of Somerset, maintained friendly relations with him, and approved of his guidance and control of the king. In spite of her birth and family she was at first favourably inclined to Spain, disapproved of her daughter Elizabeth's marriage with the elector palatine, and supported the Spanish marriages for her sons, but subsequently veered round towards France. She used all her influence in favour of the unfortunate Raleigh, answering his petition to her for protection with a personal letter of appeal to Buckingham to save his life. " She carrieth no sway in state matters," however, it was said of her in 16o5, " and, praeter rem uxoriam, hath'no great reach in other affairs." " She does not mix herself up in affairs, though the king tells her anything she chooses to ask, and loves and esteems her."2 Her interest
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2 Cal. of St. Pap.Venetian, x. 513.entirely suppress his admiration" a continued maskarado, where she and her ladies, like so many nymphs or Nereides, appeared . . . to the ravishment of the beholders," and " made the night more glorious than the day." Occasionally she even joined in the king's sports, though here her only recorded exploit was her accidental shooting
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Elizabeth, electress palatine and queen of Bohemia. BIBLIOGRAPHY.See Dr A. W. Ward's article in the Diet. of Nat. Biography, with authorities; Lives of the Queens of England, by A. Strickland (1844), vii.; " Life and Reign of King James I.," by A. Wilson, in History of England (1706); Istoria del Granducato di Toscana, by R. Galluzzi (1781), lib. vi. cap. ii.; Cal. of State PapersDomestic and Venetian ; Hist. MSS. Comm. Series , MSS, of Marg. of Salisbury, iii. 420, 438, 454, ix. 54; Harleian MSS. 5176, art. 22, 293, art. 106. Also see bibliography to the article on JAMES I.(P. C. Y.) End of Article: ANNE OF DENMARK (1574-1619) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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