This week we welcome Andrea Zuvich as our guest blogger. William and Mary are the forgotten Stuarts (except to the Irish!) and we are very excited to find out a little bit more about them!
The story of William
& Mary is one of duty, love, war, heartbreak, betrayal, and revolution. It
was a real game of thrones. This was a unique reign as there was a joint King
and Queen upon the throne for the first time in English history.
Mary II, eldest
daughter of James, Duke of York (later James II) and niece of the Merry Monarch,
Charles II, was a romantic, naturally intelligent but poorly educated, beautiful,
feminine girl when she married William III of Orange in 1677.
William III, by
contrast, had lived a solemn lifestyle – one of hard work and duty. He was
Stadtholder, or Chief Magistrate, of the United Provinces/Dutch Republic (now
the Netherlands) and the constant threat from and warfare with Louis XIV’s
France always plagued his thoughts. His passions included hunting and
collecting artwork.
William was struck
by Mary’s sweet nature and stunned by her incredible beauty, and he immediately
asked Charles for her hand in marriage. Mary, then fifteen years old, was
devastated to learn that she would have to marry her first cousin William, who
was at first sight unattractive, morose, old, and a good deal shorter (William
and Mary’s height difference was almost the same as that between Nicole Kidman
and Tom Cruise). Remember, Charles II’s Restoration court was flamboyant and
colourful, whereas the Dutch Republic was more sombre and calm. Fortunately,
she soon fell completely in love with her husband, who was kind-hearted and
even funny with his intimates, and also with her adoptive country.
Within a few
months of their marriage, 1678, Mary became very happily pregnant. At around
four months pregnant, she decided to visit him at his encampment at Breda. Unfortunately,
the roads were rough and the coach jostled her about so violently, resulting in
a miscarriage. As there was no doctor around with knowledge of gynaecology, she
developed an infection. Eventually, in 1679, she became pregnant a second time,
but the damage from the first miscarriage was too great and she lost the baby
again. Call it wishful thinking, she had all the symptoms of pregnancy again in
1680, but no child came, the symptoms had been misdiagnosed and this was unbearable
for the young couple. Mary’s childlessness was a source of deep heartache for
her for the rest of her life.
William, in
sadness or desperation, turned to another. Imagine how heartbreaking it must
have been for Mary, who loved him passionately, to learn that he was carrying
on with her lady-in-waiting, Elizabeth Villiers, a woman she had grown up with.
There is still debate as to whether William’s relationship with Elizabeth
Villiers was sexual, as she never gave birth to any of his children, though the
affair presumably lasted for 15 years, and when she did marry, she quickly had
children. No letters between them, nothing at all, has survived. Elizabeth
remains shrouded in mystery. Perhaps we will never know what their relationship
was. One thing remains clear: William was not, unlike his uncles, a highly
sexed man. This can be attributed to his ill health – he had severe asthma, suffered
from headaches, haemorrhoids, and later, painfully swollen legs and feet.
Persistent rumours
of William’s homosexuality, popularised in Jacobite propaganda, cannot be
accepted due to lack of evidence. We even have William’s own writing against
it. When told of scurrilous rumours surrounding his relationship with his young
favourite, Arnold Joost von Keppel, he wrote, “I find it extraordinary that one
cannot have esteem for a young man without it being criminal.” (Sodomy was
illegal at this time).
Then, in 1688, the
Glorious Revolution occurred, in which the Immortal Seven – seven of the most
influential, powerful men in England – invited William to take the throne from
James II, his uncle/father-in-law, who was unpopular and Catholic. For a brief
summary, click here,
William and Mary
were crowned in 1689 at Westminster Abbey – he crowned in St. Edward’s Chair,
she in a copy of the chair which is on display at the Abbey museum today. Mary
was Queen regnant, like Elizabeth I had been (Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge
will become Queen consort when her
husband William becomes King, not Queen regnant).
Mary, though unfortunately not given the same excellent education as Elizabeth
I had had, was nevertheless a very intelligent woman and there were pamphlets
at the time which depicted her as the new Elizabeth.
Together they
purchased the home that would become Kensington Palace and they hired
Christopher Wren to remodel both it and Hampton Court Palace.
Their joint reign
was short-lived. In late 1694, Mary contracted hemorrhagic smallpox – the most
deadly strain of the disease. She considerately sent anyone who had not already
had the disease away from Kensington House and put her affairs in order. She
went through her journal and ripped out and burned pages that she did not wish
anyone else to see. Mary, aged only 32,
died in the early hours of the 28th December, 1694, leaving her
husband (who fainted) and the entire nation broken-hearted. To William, whose
father had died of smallpox a week before he was born, and who also lost his
mother to the same disease when he was ten, it was an earth-shattering blow. Her
body lay in state in the Banqueting House until the costly funeral at
Westminster Abbey, where “Music for the Funeral of Queen Mary” by Henry Purcell
was played.
After Mary’s
death, William ruled alone until his death in 1702, and in the intervening
years he had become more unpopular, the target of several assassination
attempts and he increasingly drank to excess. As he rode his favourite horse,
Sorrel, out on Home Park, Hampton Court; the horse stumbled on a molehill,
sending William flying off, breaking his collarbone in the fall. Within days
pneumonia had set in and William III died at Kensington House. Loathed by his
sister-in-law, Mary’s younger sister, now Queen Anne, he was interred with
little fanfare. A sad end for someone once heralded as the Protestant Champion
of Europe!
Andrea (aka 17th Century Lady) is a 17th century historian specialising in the late Stuarts & the middle Baroque composers. She went to the University of Central Florida and Oxford University and is a Garden History tour guide at Kensington Palace. She is currently writing a historical fiction book about William and Mary. You can find her at The Seventeenth Century Lady
Andrea (aka 17th Century Lady) is a 17th century historian specialising in the late Stuarts & the middle Baroque composers. She went to the University of Central Florida and Oxford University and is a Garden History tour guide at Kensington Palace. She is currently writing a historical fiction book about William and Mary. You can find her at The Seventeenth Century Lady