Ten Royal Weddings to Remember
For centuries, British monarchs have had their marriages tested by war, infidelity, politics and diplomatic intrigue
- By Sarah Zielinski
- Smithsonian.com, March 21, 2011, Subscribe
Kate Middleton and Prince William are just the latest young couple to walk down the aisle and into the pages of British royal history. But what she wears and who attends the wedding are merely the beginning of the story. Royal marriages, in particular, are special and the Brits’ and have run the gamut from fairy tale to bigamy to beheading.
William the Conqueror and Matilda
William resulted from an affair between Robert, the Duke of Normandy, and Arlette, the daughter of a tanner. Though he succeeded his father as duke, the first time he proposed to Matilda of Flanders, she refused him, citing his bastard birth. But he courted her for seven years and eventually she relented—stories say she agreed only to prevent a fight between William and her father after William hit her or dragged her from her horse. They wed in 1053. Thirteen years later, William claimed the English throne. Their marriage was tempestuous—he has affairs, she puts one of his mistresses to death—but productive; they had at least 10 children. And when she died in 1083, William reportedly was heartbroken.
Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine
Eleanor was queen of France and duchess of Aquitaine in 1151 when she met an 18-year-old Henry Plantagenet, then visiting the French court. She had been married to Louis VI since she was 15, but despite bearing him two daughters and accompanying him on a crusade, the marriage was failing. And when it was annulled the next year, she quickly married the much younger Henry, who would become king of England in 1154. Their strong personalities clashed, however, and Henry’s fiery temper and philandering didn’t help. When three of their sons—Henry, Richard and Geoffrey—rebelled in 1172, fighting amongst themselves for their family’s domain, Eleanor took their side. Henry forgave his sons but not his wife; he imprisoned her, mostly at Sarum Castle near Salisbury, until he died in 1189.
Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville
According to legend, Edward IV met Elizabeth Woodville, a widow with two young boys, beneath an oak tree in Whittlebury Forest and instantly fell in love, or perhaps lust, on April 30, 1464. After she refused to become his mistress, they married the next day, or perhaps in August (the history is muddled), though the marriage did not become public until later that year. The church and Privy Council did not approve—the couple was mismatched—he a king, she a commoner, the daughter of a lowly knight. And to make matters worse, her family had supported the Lancasters, who Edward had deposed during the War of the Roses. Over the next 15 years, though, Elizabeth would give birth to three sons and seven daughters. Two of the sons would survive until after their father’s death in 1483, but Edward’s younger brother, Richard, convinced Parliament to void their parents’ marriage, depose his nephew Edward V, and make him king. The two young boys would be placed in the Tower and soon disappear.
Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn
Henry VIII wed six times, but his marriage to Anne Boleyn stands out. Anne was a member of the household of Henry’s first wife, Catherine of Aragon, in 1525 when he began his infatuation with her. His quest to divorce Catherine and marry Anne would eventually sever England from Catholicism and the Pope and create the Anglican Church. Henry divorced his queen and married Anne in May of 1533, and she gave birth to a daughter, Elizabeth, in September. But the romance would not last. In 1536, Anne was accused and convicted of adultery, incest and conspiring to kill the king. And on May 19 she was beheaded on Tower Hill. Eleven days later, Henry married wife number three, Jane Seymour.
William and Mary
Mary reportedly wept for an entire day after her father, James, the Duke of York (later King James II), told her that she would marry her cousin, William of Orange in two weeks—she didn’t want to live in Holland. King Charles II had hoped that wedding his niece Mary to a Protestant would help the popularity of his Roman Catholic brother James, who was his heir. Mary was popular among the Dutch and devoted to her husband. They had no children, though, and Mary had at least one miscarriage. In 1685, her father became king, but the Protestants were unhappy with him and became worried he would start a Catholic dynasty once he had a son in 1688. They asked William to invade. When he did, James fled to France. William and Mary became joint sovereigns in 1689 under the newly established English Bill of Rights. Mary died of smallpox in 1694, William of a fall from his horse in 1702.
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Comments (7)
Kinda skipped over Liz & Phil, didn't we? I'd love to hear the details of how England had to "de-Greek" him, as the queen once shared with Nia Vardalos.
Posted by Nancy on April 22,2011 | 04:54 PM
Great article, but Victoria wore black for 40 years, not 50, unless you count the first 10 years she was buried...
Posted by lewarcher on April 22,2011 | 11:32 AM
I will remember Diana as long as I am alive.
Posted by Sana Ullah on April 14,2011 | 02:05 AM
Diana is truly missed and was such a good mother
Posted by Eileen Mathews on April 11,2011 | 05:42 PM
Not the best Mother of the Groom dress I've ever seen - and beautiful Diana's dress has way too much frou-frou!
Posted by Mary M. Abramson on April 11,2011 | 04:34 PM
Lady Diana was a amazing woman , I hope that Prince William & Kate are blessed with a wonderful marraige.
Posted by Dixie Durcan on April 7,2011 | 08:25 PM
Princess Diana was SOOOO pretty!!
Posted by Becca on March 25,2011 | 05:51 PM