Mary Queen of Scots




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Mary was fifteen, and François fourteen, when they were married with spectacular pageantry and magnificence, in the cathedral of Notre Dame, Paris.

Adored by his parents and grandfather, François nonetheless, grew up timid, stammering, sickly and undersized.



‘a hundred times more beautiful than a goddess of heaven … her person alone was worth a kingdom.’

All of Paris was expected to turn out to celebrate with the royal family, and the route between the Palais de Louvre and Notre Dame, would have been cleaned and decorated with flowers and banners richly decorated with the fleur de lys of France, and the bride’s personal emblem, the marigold.


‘dressed in clothing as white as lilies, made so sumptuously and richly it would be impossible to describe.
Two young ladies carried the marvellously long train’ while ‘round her neck was a pendant of inestimable value, with chokers, gems, and other magnificent riches.
On her head she wore a gold crown ornamented with pearls, diamonds, rubies, sapphires, emeralds.
In the middle of the crown was a fine red jewel, valued at 500,000 écus or more.‘

The strong willed Mary was keen to not just impress upon the people, her own taste on her wedding day, but also emphasise her virginity and show off her famously pale redheaded beauty, which would have been accentuated by a pure white dress.

These were to last for fifteen days, and included all manner of balls, banquets, parades, before closing with a huge tournament at the Palais de Tournelles in the Marais.
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