import/englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/boleyn.html indexed_doc HTMLPlugin 16721 boleyn.html boleyn.html en windows_1252 Mary Boleyn: Biography, Portrait, Primary Sources HTML http://englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/boleyn.html http://englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/boleyn.html HASH013ee95ca136b7e320400a8d 1522032934 20180326 1522033091 20180326 HASH013e.dir maryboleyn.gif:image/gif: maryboleynunknown.jpg:image/jpeg: <table border="0" cellpadding="3" width="100%" height="667"> <tr> <td width="25%" height="29"></td> <td valign="top" width="50%" height="29">&nbsp;</td> <td width="25%" height="29"></td> </tr> <tr> <td width="25%" height="3"></td> <td width="50%" height="3"><font size="3"></font></td> <td width="25%" height="3"></td> </tr> <tr> <td width="25%" height="610"></td> <td valign="top" width="50%" height="610"> <p align="center">&nbsp;</p> <p align="center"> <img border="0" src="_httpdocimg_/maryboleyn.gif" alt="Mary Boleyn" width="493" height="144"></p> <p align="center"> <img border="2" src="_httpdocimg_/maryboleynunknown.jpg" width="359" height="480" alt="portrait of Mary Boleyn by an unknown artist"></p> <blockquote> <p align="left"><br><font face="Arial" size="4">Mary Boleyn was the sister of King Henry VIII's second wife, the infamous Anne Boleyn.&nbsp; But she was also the king's mistress before her sister's ascendancy.&nbsp; She may also have given birth to Henry's son.</font></p> <hr> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p align="left">&nbsp;</p> </blockquote> </td> <td width="25%" height="610"></td> </tr> </table> <blockquote> <blockquote> <p>Information about the life of Mary Boleyn is sketchy at best.&nbsp; Before her sister's ascendancy, Mary was the most famous member of her family, a dubious honor since it was based upon her adulterous affair with King Henry VIII.&nbsp; There has been great debate over the exact year of her birth, with many researchers unable to agree on which Boleyn sister was older.&nbsp; Some speculate Anne was born in 1501 or 1502; others place it at 1507.&nbsp; The most recent scholarship supports 1507 as the year of Anne's birth.&nbsp; Mary was born a year later, in 1508.&nbsp; Their only surviving sibling was an older brother George, born in 1503. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mary was born at Hever Castle, the family seat.&nbsp; She was named after Princess Mary Tudor, the youngest child of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York.&nbsp; Her family was loyal to the Tudor dynasty but had Yorkist connections.&nbsp; Her mother was Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Thomas, earl of Surrey.&nbsp; His father, the 1st duke of Norfolk, had died fighting for Richard III against Henry VII.&nbsp; Mary's father, Thomas Boleyn, could trace his ancestry only to the 13th century.&nbsp; His family was originally from Norfolk where they lived as tenant farmers.&nbsp; In 1457, a Sir Geoffrey Boleyn was serving as Lord Mayor of London.&nbsp; He wed Anne, heiress of Lord Hoo and Hastings, and - through her - acquired Hever Castle in Kent and Blickling Hall in Norfolk.&nbsp; His son became a knight under Richard III and a baron under Henry VII.&nbsp; He married a great heiress as well; she was Margaret, daughter of Thomas Butler, 7th earl of Ormond.&nbsp; He was incredibly wealthy and bequeathed Margaret 36 manors.&nbsp; Their eldest child was Thomas Boleyn, Mary's father.&nbsp; Thomas had married Elizabeth Howard by 1501.&nbsp; Their three surviving children were born within the next 10 years. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In 1512, Thomas was one of three envoys assigned to the regent of Netherlands court.&nbsp; His skill in speaking French and his family connections secured the appointment.&nbsp; Once there, he was a great success with the regent, Margaret, archduchess of Austria.&nbsp; He used this friendship to secure a prestigious appointment for his eldest daughter, Anne; she was to reside with the regent's wards, sharing their royal education.&nbsp; This is the primary evidence that Anne was the elder sister.&nbsp; In such cases, the elder sister would receive the opportunity first. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; However, Mary was married before Anne - an unusual occurrence and one which led many to believe Mary was older.&nbsp; However, it is completely plausible that Anne was not married first because she was still in Europe, gaining a royal education and hoping to wed a foreign nobleman.&nbsp; Mary, on the other hand, wed a man named William Carey, a gentleman of the royal privy chamber on 4 February 1520.&nbsp; Though he was not a titled lord, his duties meant he had intimate contact with the king on a daily basis.&nbsp; He would be a valuable connection for the Boleyns.&nbsp; Henry used his attendants, with whom he spent his leisure hours, to carry out government work.&nbsp; Carey was 24 years old and Mary not quite twelve, young even for 16th century marriage.&nbsp; The consummation of the marriage was probably delayed for a few years. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mary's wedding was held a few weeks before her father returned from a mission abroad.&nbsp; This indicates that Thomas Boleyn had planned the marriage well in advance.&nbsp; The king gave the newlyweds a cash present - 6s.8d.; this was undoubtedly welcome since William Carey was a younger son and lacked money and lands.&nbsp; Henry's favor (and, more particularly, Mary's affair with Henry) helped in this respect - before his death in 1528, William had received two keeperships, a stewardship, an annuity, and manors in two counties.&nbsp; As to William's ancestry, he could trace his descent from Edward III; his mother was a cousin of Margaret Beaufort, Henry VII's mother.&nbsp; His aunt Catherine Spencer was married to Henry, fifth earl of Northumberland. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As William's wife, Mary had lodgings at court, information about royal policies, and the great opportunity to participate in all court events.&nbsp; Their first child, Catherine, was born about 1524 when Mary was just sixteen.&nbsp; Meanwhile, her family continued its ascendancy during these years.&nbsp; Personally, she and her sister Anne were two of eight women who participated in a celebration at York Place, Cardinal Wolsey's home.&nbsp; Anne played Perseverance and Mary was Kindness; they were clothed in white satin with bejeweled headdresses.&nbsp; This was in 1522; Mary was just fourteen.&nbsp; By the time she was seventeen, Mary was a first-time mother and Henry VIII's mistress.&nbsp; There is much circumstantial evidence to support this: <blockquote> <p>* in 1527, Henry was planning to marry Anne Boleyn.&nbsp; He sought and received a papal dispensation to marry the sister of a woman with whom he had engaged in illicit/unlawful intercourse.&nbsp; Anne had only one sister - Mary. </p> <p>* Reginald Pole reported the following - in 1528, a member of Parliament insulted the king's morals by accusing Henry of sleeping with Anne's mother <i>and</i> sister.&nbsp; Undoubtedly flustered, the king replied:&nbsp; "Never with her mother." <p>* the affair was known of in diplomatic circles - in 1532, Francis I of France met Mary face-to-face when she accompanied Henry and Anne to Calais.&nbsp; He mentioned her infamous behavior with her sister's spouse <i>before</i> the marriage to Anne.</blockquote> <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The affair was brief, ending in mid-1525 (probably July.)&nbsp; On 4 March 1526, Mary gave birth to a son, called Henry.&nbsp; He was widely assumed to be the king's son.&nbsp; He physically resembled the king, a&nbsp; fact often remarked upon.&nbsp; In 1535, for example, a man called 'young Master Carey' the king's son. </p> <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Perhaps more telling, Henry granted the Careys actual manors and estates during the affair and immediately before the child's birth.&nbsp; Before, the Careys had been granted rather minor offices.&nbsp; (You may recall that Henry publicly acknowledged another illegitimate son, born in 1519.&nbsp; This boy was called <a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ffitzroy.html">Henry Fitzroy</a> - the surname traditionally given to royal bastards - and was ennobled, given the title duke of Richmond.&nbsp; If Henry Carey was also his son, why didn't Henry do the same for him?&nbsp; The answer lies in his determination to divorce Katharine of Aragon and marry <a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fboleyn.html">Anne Boleyn</a>, the child's aunt.&nbsp; It is likely that even Henry VIII would have been too embarrassed to recognize his bastard son by his fiancee's younger sister.)&nbsp; Henry Carey was eventually ennobled as Lord Hunsdon by Elizabeth I, the queen who may have been his half-sister and was undoubtedly his cousin.&nbsp; Though he served her ably, Elizabeth only offered Hunsdon a title upon his deathbed.&nbsp; To this dubious honor, the old man aptly replied that if the queen hadn't thought him worth it while he was in health, he would not accept it while ill.<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mary Boleyn was referenced in <a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2flovelett.html">Henry's love letters to Anne</a> in 1528, the year her husband died.&nbsp; William had asked Mary to seek her sister's influence with the king; his elder sister, Eleanor, wanted the position of abbess at St Edith's Nunnery.&nbsp; The nuns wanted their prioress elevated to the position instead.&nbsp; Anne asked the king to intervene.&nbsp; In the end, Eleanor's dubious moral destroyed her chances.&nbsp; But the episode demonstrates Anne's willingness to help Mary; also, Mary clearly expected to benefit from her sister's closeness to the king. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; William Carey died on 23 June 1528 and Henry VIII promptly granted Anne Boleyn the wardship of her nephew (and possibly his son), two-year-old Henry Carey.&nbsp; In another letter to Anne, Henry remarked upon Mary's easy virtue.&nbsp; He and Anne were concerned that, after William's death, Mary's behavior would degenerate; in other words, she would be an embarrassment to the king and his intended wife. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In November 1530, Henry gave Anne 20 pds to redeem a jewel from Mary; it was probably a gambling debt.&nbsp; Two years later, Mary was one of thirty ladies who accompanied Henry and Anne on a visit to France (colorfully known to history as 'The Field of the Cloth of Gold'.)&nbsp; They stayed in Calais in late October, attending various events with Francis I; ostensibly, they were celebrating a new peace agreement.&nbsp; But it was also a chance to present Anne to a foreign king.&nbsp; When Henry wed Anne in 1533, Mary became a lady-in-waiting to her sister.&nbsp; It was only in 1534 that she and Anne had a serious conflict. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In 1534, Mary secretly married William Stafford.&nbsp; He was the younger son of Humphrey Stafford of Blatherwick in Northampton.&nbsp; This marriage was a disaster for her, excepting her personal happiness.&nbsp; Mary undoubtedly loved Stafford, a soldier she had met at Calais (he had been part of Henry VIII's retinue.)&nbsp; But her relatives - all newly ennobled and very self-conscious about their status - were outraged.&nbsp; He was a commoner, not fit for the queen's sister.&nbsp; Accordingly, Mary and her new husband were banished from court.&nbsp; (It is quite possible that her relatives planned to wed Mary to a nobleman, further cementing their rise to prominence; instead, her marriage was a step backwards socially.)&nbsp; In late 1534, while her father and brother received numerous grants, titles, and other gifts, Mary was reduced to begging Thomas Cromwell for assistance.&nbsp; Would he speak to Henry on her behalf?&nbsp; Mary hoped Henry would persuade Anne to forgive her but her former lover was less than helpful.&nbsp; So Mary asked Cromwell to speak to her father, her uncle, and her brother. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Meanwhile, her son was still living with his aunt, Queen Anne.&nbsp; He was being tutored by the great French poet, Nicholas Bourbon, clearly benefiting from the wardship.&nbsp; His mother's life between 1534 and her sister's execution in 1536 is difficult to trace.&nbsp; She seems to have resided at Rochford, Essex from the time of her disgrace to her death on 19 July 1543.&nbsp; When her sister fell into disfavor and Henry sought a divorce, his earlier affair with Mary was mentioned.&nbsp; Perhaps this would justify an annulment, even as Katharine of Aragon's marriage to his brother had?&nbsp; But no one seriously considered this (after all, there had been a papal dispensation) and it was more expedient to press other charges.&nbsp; Mary did not visit her sister when Anne was imprisoned in the Tower.&nbsp; Nor did she visit their brother George, also condemned to death.&nbsp; There is no evidence that she wrote to them, either.&nbsp; Like their uncle, the duke of Norfolk, she may have thought it wise to avoid association with her disgraced relatives. <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mary lived to see her children gain some royal favor.&nbsp; Her teenage daughter Catherine (born 1524) was appointed a maid of honor to Anne of Cleves, Henry VIII's fourth wife.&nbsp; Sometime in 1540, she made a good match, marrying Sir Francis Knollys.&nbsp; He was a member of Henry VIII's household.&nbsp; She also became one of her cousin Elizabeth Tudor's closest friends.&nbsp; Her daughter, Lettice Knollys, would later marry Elizabeth's great love, Robert Dudley; her son, the earl of Essex, would also be one of Elizabeth's favorites (though eventually executed for treason.)&nbsp; Henry Carey, whose paternity was the subject of such speculation, would be ennobled as Lord Hunsdon in Elizabeth's reign.&nbsp; Elizabeth was kind to her Boleyn relatives, especially Mary's children.&nbsp; Twenty-two years after Anne Boleyn's execution, a Boleyn was sole ruler of England.&nbsp; It was a triumph few could have predicted.<p>&nbsp;<hr WIDTH="100%"> <p> <font size="2">Some other stuff about Mary Boleyn that I've found: </font> </p> <p><font size="2">* Mary was considered more conventionally beautiful than Anne but lacked her sister's style and wit. <br>* As a child, Mary was taught French by Mademoiselle Semmonet;&nbsp; she also studied music (practicing on the lute, harp, viol, and virginals.) <br>* Mary also spent time in Archduchess Margaret's service; she was removed in 1518/19 by her father and placed in Katharine of Aragon's service. <br>* Anne and George Boleyn were very close and reportedly had little use for their sister, Mary.&nbsp; (This was reported by several foreign ambassadors.) </font> <p><font size="2">Note:&nbsp; I have read that Mary Boleyn accompanied Princess Mary Tudor to France, as a lady-in-waiting.&nbsp; However, the trip occurred in 1515; Mary would have been just 7 years old - so the assertion seems unlikely. </font> <p><font size="2">So the following questions remain: <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; * did she accompany Mary to France? <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; * did she use her influence with Mary Tudor to get Anne a position as lady-in-waiting to Katharine of Aragon (thus allowing Henry VIII and Anne to meet?)&nbsp; This has been mentioned in several books but, as I stated, it would mean Mary was a lady-in-waiting at the age of seven. </font> <p><font size=-1>I have used the spelling 'Boleyn' instead of 'Bullen' for one simple reason - it is how the family chose to spell it when they first rose to prominence.&nbsp; Certainly they thought 'Boleyn' was more elegant - I'll stay mum on that issue, but since most history texts also use 'Boleyn', it remains less confusing than switching between two surnames.</font><p align="center"><b> <font face="Times New Roman"> <a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fboleyn.html">Visit the Anne Boleyn website</a>.</font></b></p> <center> <p><font size=-1><a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fcitizens.html">to Tudor Citizens</a></font><br><font size=-1><a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor.html">to Tudor England</a></font></center> </blockquote> </blockquote> <!-- text below generated by server. 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