Mary Boleyn
Born
c. 1499/1500
Died
19 July 1543 (aged 43-44)
Spouse
Sir William Carey of Aldenham (m.1520-1528)
Sir William Stafford of Chebsey (m. 1534-1543)
Children
Henry Carey 1st Baron Hunsdon
Catherine Carey Lady Knollys
Anne Stafford
Edward Stafford
Parents
Thomas Boleyn 1st Earl of Wiltshire
Lady Elizabeth Howard
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Mary Boleyn c 1499 19 July 1543 was a member of the English Boleyn family which enjoyed considerable influence during the reign of King Henry VIII of England Mary was the sister of Queen consort Anne Boleyn some historians claim she was the younger sister but her children believed Mary was the elder sister as do most historians today Mary was one of the mistresses of King Henry VIII It has been alleged that she bore two of the King s children Mary was also rumored to be a mistress of Henry VIII s rival King Francis I of France This portrait hangs in Hollyrood Palace Edinburgh Scotland The inclusion of this picture in an oval inner frame makes it possible that the original was painted as a pendant to the similar portrait of her husband Henry Carey Mary Boleyn is an ancestor of many notables including Charles Darwin Winston Churchill Elizabeth Bowes Lyon Diana Princess of Wales Sarah Duchess of York
http://www.flickr.com/photos/60861613@N00/3640331106/
Mary Boleyn: Biography, Portrait, Primary Sources
Mary Boleyn was the sister of King Henry VIII's second wife, the infamous Anne Boleyn. ... Information about the life of Mary Boleyn is sketchy at best. ...
Mary Boleyn was the sister of King Henry VIII's second wife, the infamous Anne Boleyn. ... Information about the life of Mary Boleyn is sketchy at best. ...
Mary Boleyn (c. 1499/1500 19 July 1543) was the sister of English queen consort Anne Boleyn and a member of the Boleyn family which enjoyed considerable influence during the reign of King Henry VIII of England. Some historians claim she was Anne's younger sister but her children believed Mary was the elder sister as do most historians today.
Dark side of London
London is cosmopolitan, and it’s undeniably glamorous and chic but there is a dark underside to this historic city that has seen its fair share of violence.
London is cosmopolitan, and it’s undeniably glamorous and chic but there is a dark underside to this historic city that has seen its fair share of violence.
Mary Boleyn c 1499 July 19 1543 was a member of the famous aristocratic Boleyn family which enjoyed considerable influence during the early part of the 16th century Mary was one of the mistresses of King Henry VIII of England and also allegedly of his rival King Francis I of France She was married twice and most historians believe she was the elder sister of Queen Anne Boleyn Some still claim that she may have been the younger sister though her children and Anne s daughter believed Mary to be the elder
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Mary BOLEYN
I want to thank Marilee Mongello, of the English History.net, for the research she had done about Mary Boleyn ... Information about the life of Mary Boleyn is sketchy at best. ...
I want to thank Marilee Mongello, of the English History.net, for the research she had done about Mary Boleyn ... Information about the life of Mary Boleyn is sketchy at best. ...
Mary was one of the mistresses of Henry VIII. It has been alleged that she bore two of the King's children though Henry did not acknowledge either of them as he did with Henry Fitzroy his son by Bessie Blount. Mary was also rumoured to have been a mistress of Henry VIII's rival King Francis I of France.1 She was also the maternal aunt of Queen Elizabeth I of England.
Mary Boleyn.
The elder daughter of Thomas Boleyn, later 1st Earl of Wiltshire and Ormonde and Elizabeth Howard, Mary Boleyn was born in around 1502 at Blickling Hall in Norfolk. ...
The elder daughter of Thomas Boleyn, later 1st Earl of Wiltshire and Ormonde and Elizabeth Howard, Mary Boleyn was born in around 1502 at Blickling Hall in Norfolk. ...
Mary Boleyn married twice: first to Sir William Carey whom she wed in 1520 and second to Sir William Stafford a soldier. This latter marriage to a man so far beneath her station angered her sister Queen Anne and resulted in Mary's banishment from the royal court in 1534. She spent the remainder of her life in obscurity.
Contents
1 Early life
2 Royal affair in France
3 Royal mistress
4 Sisters rise to power
5 Second marriage
6 Issue
7 Depictions in fiction
8 Non-fiction
9 Styles
10 Ancestry
11 Footnotes
12 References
Early life
Mary Boleyn - The Tudors Wiki
Mary Boleyn, as played by Perdita Weeks born c. 1499 - died July 19, 1543 Character's backstory : famous for being the...
Mary Boleyn, as played by Perdita Weeks born c. 1499 - died July 19, 1543 Character's backstory : famous for being the...
Mary was probably born at the family seat in Blickling Hall Norfolk and grew up at Hever Castle Kent.2 She was the daughter of a wealthy diplomat and courtier Thomas Boleyn 1st Earl of Wiltshire and his wife Lady Elizabeth Howard Countess of Wiltshire the eldest daughter of Thomas Howard 2nd Duke of Norfolk.
Mary Boleyn
Mary Boleyn on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and more, ...
Mary Boleyn on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and more, ...
There is no concrete evidence of her exact date of birth but it was sometime between 1499 and 1508. Most historians suggest that she was also the eldest of the three Boleyn children who survived infancy.3 The evidence suggests that the surviving Boleyns believed Mary to have been the eldest child; in 1597 her grandson Lord Hunsdon claimed the title of Earl of Ormond on the grounds that he was the Boleyns legitimate heir. According to the strict rules of aristocratic inheritance if Anne had been the elder sister the title would have belonged to her daughter Queen Elizabeth I since a title descended through the eldest female line in the absence of a male line. However Queen Elizabeth was said to have offered Henry Mary's son the title as he was dying but he declined it. If Mary was the eldest Boleyn Henry would have inherited the title upon his grandfather's death without the need to claim it.4 There is more evidence to suggest that she was older than Anne.5 Furthermore she was married off first on February 4 1520 and by tradition an elder daughter would be married before her younger sister. In 1532 when Anne was made marquess of Pembroke she was referred to as "one of the daughters of Thomas Boleyn." Were she the eldest that would likely have been mentioned. Either way most historians now accept Mary as the eldest child placing her birth some time in 1499.6
Mary Boleyn
The Other Boleyn Girl! Visit this site providing a short biography, facts and information about Mary Boleyn.Fast and accurate details and facts about the life and ...
The Other Boleyn Girl! Visit this site providing a short biography, facts and information about Mary Boleyn.Fast and accurate details and facts about the life and ...
It was once believed that it was Mary who began her education abroad and spent time as a companion to Archduchess Margaret of Austria; but it is now clear that it was her sister Anne who did so. Mary was kept in England for most of her childhood. She was sent abroad in 1514 around the age of fifteen when her father secured her a place as maid-of-honour to the Kings sister Princess Mary who was going to Paris to marry King Louis XII of France. After a few weeks many of the Queen's English maids were sent away but Mary Boleyn was allowed to stay probably because her father was the new English ambassador to France. Even when Queen Mary left France after she was widowed on 1 January 1515 Mary Boleyn remained joining the court of Louis's successor Francois I and his queen consort Claude.
Royal affair in France
the dates when each first came to France are sketchy It is known that Mary returned to England first to be married in 1519 Anne did not return to England for her own marriage until 1522 Mary s earlier marriage is very strong evidence for her being eldest In those days younger sisters just were not married off before elder sisters Girls had no choice but were contracted in
http://www.squidoo.com/boleyngirls?utm_campaign=direct-discovery&utm_medium=sidebar&utm_source=rejoicemusic
The Anne Boleyn Files " Mary Boleyn
Mary Boleyn :The Anne Boleyn Files examines the truth about Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII, and the Tudors
Mary Boleyn :The Anne Boleyn Files examines the truth about Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII, and the Tudors
Mary was joined in Paris by her father Sir Thomas and also her sister Anne who had been studying in the Netherlands for the last year. Mary supposedly embarked on several affairs including one with King Francis himself.7 Although some historians believe that the reports of her sexual affairs are exaggerated the French king referred to her as "The English Mare" and as "una grandissima ribalda infame sopra tutte" ("a great slag infamous above all").789
The Anne Boleyn Files " Mary Boleyn
Mary Boleyn :The Anne Boleyn Files examines the truth about Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII, and the TudorsTag
Mary Boleyn :The Anne Boleyn Files examines the truth about Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII, and the TudorsTag
She returned to England in 1519 where she was appointed a maid-of-honour to Catherine of Aragon the queen consort of Henry VIII.10
Royal mistress
Mary Boleyn
Pedigree report of Mary Boleyn, daughter of Thomas Boleyn and Elizabeth Howard, born about 1500 in Blickling Hall, Norfolk, Norwich, England. ...
Pedigree report of Mary Boleyn, daughter of Thomas Boleyn and Elizabeth Howard, born about 1500 in Blickling Hall, Norfolk, Norwich, England. ...
Soon after her return Mary was married to William Carey a wealthy and influential courtier on 4 February 1520 and Henry VIII was a guest at the couple's wedding.citation needed At some point Henry and Mary began an affair and although the timing is unclear some say it began in 1521.11 The affair was never publicised and Mary never enjoyed the fame wealth and power that acknowledged mistresses in France and other countries sometimes had.12 The affair is believed to have ended prior to the birth of Mary's second child Henry Carey in March 1526 and thought to have lasted for five years.1113 Her first child Catherine was born in 1524.
During the affair or sometime after it was rumoured that one or both of Mary's children were fathered by the king.1415 One witness noted that Mary's son Henry Carey bore a resemblance to Henry VIII.11 John Hale Vicar of Isleworth some ten years after the child was born remarked that he had met a 'young Master Carey' who was the king's purported bastard child.11 No other contemporary evidence exists to support the argument that Henry was the kings biological son.
Henry VIII's wife Catherine of Aragon had been briefly married to Henry's elder brother Arthur but Arthur had died just a few months into the marriage when he was a little over fifteen years old. Henry later used that as the justification for the annulment of his marriage to Catherine on the grounds that her marriage to Arthur (assuming it was consummated) created an affinity between Henry and Catherine. When Mary became Henry's mistress a similar affinity was created between Henry and Anne according to some interpretations of church law. In 1527 during his initial attempts to obtain a papal annulment of his marriage to Catherine Henry also requested a dispensation to marry his mistress' sister.16
Sisters rise to power
Mary's sister Anne returned to England in January 1522; she soon joined the royal court as one of Queen Catherine's Maids-of-Honour. Anne achieved considerable popularity at court although the sisters are not thought to have been particularly close and they moved in different social circles.
Although Mary was alleged to have been more attractive than her sister Anne seems to have been more ambitious and intelligent. When the king took an interest in Anne she refused to become his mistress being shrewd enough to wait and not give in to his sexual advances until it was the most advantageous.17 By the middle of 1527 Henry was determined to marry her. This gave him further incentive to seek the annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon. A year later when Mary's husband died during an outbreak of sweating sickness Henry granted Anne Boleyn the wardship of her nephew Henry Carey. Mary's husband had left her with considerable debts and Anne arranged for Henry to be educated at a respectable Cistercian monastery. Anne interceded to secure Mary a small annual pension of 100.18
Second marriage
In 1532 when Anne accompanied Henry to Calais on a state visit to France Mary was one of her companions. Anne was crowned queen on 1 June 1533 and gave birth to her daughter (later to become Queen Elizabeth I) on 7 September. In 1534 Mary secretly married soldier William Stafford. Because Stafford was a commoner with a small income most historians believe their union to have been a love match.citation needed When the marriage was discovered Anne was furious and the Boleyn family disowned Mary probably for marrying without their permission and marrying beneath her station; the couple were banished from the royal court.
Mary's financial circumstances became so desperate that she was reduced to begging the Kings adviser Thomas Cromwell to speak to Henry and Anne on her behalf. She admitted that she might have chosen 'a greater man of birth and a higher' but never one that should have loved her so well nor a more honest man. And she went on 'I had rather beg my bread with him than to be the greatest queen in Christendom. And I believe verily ... he would not forsake me to be a king.' Henry however seems to have been indifferent to her plight; so Mary asked Cromwell to speak to her father her uncle and her brother but to no avail. It was Anne who relented sending Mary a magnificent golden cup and some money but still refusing to receive her at court. This partial reconciliation was the closest the two sisters came to since it is not thought that they met after Mary's court exile.
Mary's life between 1534 and her sister's execution on 19 May 1536 is difficult to trace. There is no record of her visiting her parents nor did she visit her sister Anne or her brother George when the latter was imprisoned in the Tower of London. There is also no evidence that she sent correspondence. Like their uncle Thomas Howard 3rd Duke to Norfolk she may have thought it wise to avoid association with her now-disgraced relatives.
Mary and her husband remained social outcasts living in retirement at Rochford Hall in Essex which was owned by the Boleyns. After Annes execution their mother retired from the royal court dying in seclusion just two years later. Her father Thomas died the following year. After the deaths of her parents Mary inherited some property in Essex. She seems to have lived out the rest of her days in obscurity and relative comfort with her second husband. She died in her early forties on 19 July 1543.
Issue
Her marriage to Sir William Carey (1500 22 June 1528) resulted in the birth of two children (however there were rumours that King Henry VIII was the biological father):
Catherine Carey (1524 15 January 1569). Rumoured1920 to have been the child of King Henry VIII. Maid-of-Honour to both Anne of Cleves and Catherine Howard she married a Puritan Sir Francis Knollys Knight of the Garter by whom she had issue. She later became Chief Lady of the Bedchamber to her cousin Queen Elizabeth I. One of her daughters Lettice Knollys became the second wife of Robert Dudley 1st Earl of Leicester the favourite of Elizabeth I.
Henry Carey 1st Baron Hunsdon (4 March 1526 23 July 1596). Also rumoured19 to have been the child of Henry VIII. He was ennobled by Queen Elizabeth I just after her coronation and later made a Knight of the Garter. When he was dying Elizabeth offered Henry the Boleyn family title of Earl of Ormond which he had long sought but he declined. He was married to Anne Morgan by whom he had issue.
Mary's marriage to Sir William Stafford (d. 5 May 1556) resulted in the birth of two children:
Anne Stafford () probably named in honour of Mary's sister Queen Anne Boleyn.
Edward Stafford (15351545).
Depictions in fiction
Mary was depicted in the 1969 film Anne of the Thousand Days and was played by Valerie Gearon.
A fictionalised form of her character also features prominently in the novels The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn by Robin Maxwell I Elizabeth by Rosalind Miles The Rose of Hever by Maureen Peters The Lady in the Tower by Jean Plaidy Mistress Anne by Norah Lofts The Concubine by Norah Lofts Anne Boleyn by Evelyn Anthony Dear Heart How Like You This by Wendy J. Dunn Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel Brief Gaudy Hour by Margaret Campbell Barnes and Young Royals: Doomed Queen Anne by Carolyn Meyer.
Mary has been the central character in three novels based on her life: Court Cadenza (later published under the title The Tudor Sisters) by British author Aileen Armitage Karen Harper's The Last Boleyn and The Other Boleyn Girl by Philippa Gregory. Gregory later nominated Mary as her personal heroine in an interview to the BBC History Magazine. Her novel was a bestseller and spawned five other books in the same series. However it was controversial especially with historians who found the work inaccurate in regards to historical events and individual characterizations.
The Other Boleyn Girl was made into a BBC television drama in January 2003 starring Natascha McElhone as Mary and Jodhi May as Anne. A Hollywood version of the film was released in February 2008 with Scarlett Johansson as Mary and Natalie Portman as Anne.
Non-fiction
Mary is also the subject of two non-fiction books The Mistresses of Henry VIII by Kelly Hart and Mary Boleyn: The True Story of Henry VIII's Mistress by Josephine Wilkinson.21
Styles
Mistress Mary Boleyn (14991520)
Lady Carey (15201529)
Lady Carey; Lady Mary Carey (15291532)
Lady Mary Stafford (15321543)
Mary Boleyn became Lady Carey upon her marriage to Sir William Carey in 1520. She then became Lady Mary Carey when her father was granted the titles of Earl of Ormond and Earl of Wiltshire.
Ancestry
Ancestors of Mary Boleyn
16. Sir Thomas Boleyn (1421)22
8. Sir Geoffrey Boleyn (1437c. 1463)22
17. Anne Bracton22
4. Sir William Boleyn (1505)22
18. Thomas Hoo Baron Hoo and Hastings (c. 1455)22
9. Ann Hoo (c. 1425c. 1484)22
19. Elizabeth Wychingham22
2. Thomas Boleyn 1st Earl of Wiltshire (14771538/9)
20. James Butler 4th Earl of Ormond (13921452)23
10. Thomas Butler 7th Earl of Ormond (1450)23
21. Joan Beauchamp (1396-1430)23
5. Margaret Butler (c. 14541539/1540)22
22. Sir Richard Hankford (13971431)23
11. Anne Hankford (c. 14311485)23
23. Lady Anne de Montagu (14001457)23
1. Mary Boleyn (1499/15001543)
24. Sir Robert Howard (13851436)
12. John Howard 1st Duke of Norfolk (14251485)
25. Lady Margaret Mowbray25
6. Thomas Howard 2nd Duke of Norfolk (14431524)
26. Sir William de Moleyns (13781425)26
13. Catherine Moleyns (1424-1465)26
27. Marjery Whalesborough (1438)26
3. Lady Elizabeth Howard (14801538)24
28. Sir Philip Tilney (-c.1453)29
14. Sir Frederick Tilney29
29. Isabel Thorp (1436)29
7. Elizabeth Tilney (before 14451497)2728
30. Sir Lawrence Cheney (c. 13961461)29
15. Elizabeth Cheney29
31. Elizabeth Cokayne29
Footnotes
Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII X no.450.
Letters of Matthew Parker p.15.
Ives p. 17; Fraser p. 119; Denny p. 27. All three scholars argue that Mary was the eldest of the three Boleyn children.
Hart Kelly (June 1 2009). The Mistresses of Henry VIII (First ed.). The History Press. ISBN 0752448358. http://books.google.com/booksidr6HGPAAACAAJ.
The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn: The Most Happy by Eric Ives
Antonia Fraser The Wives of Henry VIII p.119 Alfred A. Knopf New York 1992
a b Weir Alison (2002). "Henry VIII: The King and His Court" p. 216. New York: Ballantine Books
Charles Carlton Royal Mistresses (1990)
Denny p. 38
Bruce p. 13
a b c d Weir Alison (2002). "Henry VIII: The King and His Court" p. 216-217. New York: Ballantine Books
Alison Weir pp. 133 134
See Letters & Papers viii.567 and Ives pp. 16 - 17.
Ives Eric William (2004). "The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn" p. 369 (note 75). Malden MA: Blackwell Pub.
Weir Alison (1991). "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" p. 133-134. New York: Grove Weidenfeld
Kelly Henry Angsar: The Matrimonial Trials of Henry VIII pp42 ff
Weir p. 160
Karen Lindsey p. 73
a b Hart pp.60-63
Sally Varlow "Knollys Katherine Lady Knollys (c.15231569)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn Oxford University Press Oct 2006; online edn Jan 2009 accessed 11 April 2010
ISBN 1848680899
a b c d e f g h Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p11285.htm#i112843. Retrieved 26 October 2007
a b c d e f Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p11285.htm#i112844. Retrieved 26 October 2007
Lady Elizabeth Howard Anne Boleyn's mother was the sister of Lord Edmund Howard father of Catherine Howard (fifth wife of King Henry VIII) making Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard first cousins.
Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p338.htm#i3380. Retrieved 26 October 2007
a b c Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p339.htm#i3381. Retrieved 26 October 2007
Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p10298.htm#i102977. Retrieved 26 October 2007
Elizabeth Tilney is the paternal grandmother of Catherine Howard.
a b c d e f Lundy Darryl. "thePeerage". http://www.thepeerage.com/p10299.htm#i102982. Retrieved 26 October 2007
References
Bruce Marie-Louise: Anne Boleyn (1972)
Denny Joanna: Anne Boleyn: A New Life of England's Tragic Queen (2004)
Fraser Antonia: The Wives of Henry VIII (1992)
Hart Kelly: The Mistresses of Henry VIII The History Press (2009)
Ives Eric: The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn (2004)
Lindsey Karen: Divorced Beheaded Survived: A Feminist Reinterpretation of the Wives of Henry VIII (1995)
Lofts Norah: Anne Boleyn (1979)
Weir Alison: The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1991)
Persondata
Name
Boleyn Mary
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth
Place of birth
Date of death
19 July 1543
Place of death




















