The Tudor Society

14 December – Mary I is buried

On this day in Tudor history, 14th December 1558, Queen Mary I was buried at Westminster Abbey.

Mary had died on 17th November 1558 and had left instructions for Catherine of Aragon's remains to be moved from Peterborough and for them to be reinterred with Mary's remains so that mother and daughter could be together.

Did this happen?

Find out all about Mary I's burial, and who did join her in death, in today's talk.

Also on this day in history:

Transcript:

On this day in Tudor history, 14th December 1558, just under a month after her death, Queen Mary I, daughter of King Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, was buried at Westminster Abbey.

Mary who had only reigned for just over five years, had died on 17th November 1558, and her half-sister, Elizabeth, had become Queen Elizabeth I.
Although Mary had left instructions in her will for her mother Catherine of Aragon's remains to be exhumed and brought to London, so that mother and daughter could be buried together, her instructions were ignored. Mary was buried by herself at Westminster, with just stones marking her resting place.

On 13th December 1558, Mary’s remains had been processed from St James’s Palace to Westminster. In his diary, Henry Machyn, a merchant tailor and citizen of London, recorded that her coffin was carried by chariot and there was a painted effigy of her, which he described as “adorned with crimson velvet and her crown on her head, her septre on her hand, and many goodly rings on her fingers.

Machyn records that at the door of the abbey, Mary’s coffin was met by “4 bishops and the abbot, mitred in copes and incensing the body”. Her remains lay there “all night under her hearse, and her grace was watched. And there were a hundred poor men in good black gowns bearing long torches, with hoods on their heads, and arms on them; and a-bout her the guard bearing staff-torches in blake coats; and all the way chandlers having torches, to give them that had their torches burnt out.”

Mary was buried the following day, this day in 1558, and Machyn records her funeral in his diary too:

“The 14 day of December was the queen’s mass; and all the lords and ladies, knights and gentlewomen, did offer. And there was a man of arms and horse offered; and her coat of armour, and sword, and target, and banner of arms, and 3 standards; and all the heroldes about her; and there my lord bishop of Winchester made the sermon; and there was offered cloth of gold and velvet, whole pieces and other things.
After the mass all done, her grace was carried up to the chapel the king Henry the VII builded, with bishops mitred; and all the officers went to the grave and after they break their staves, and cast them in-to the grave; in the mean time the people plucked down the cloth, every man a piece that could catch it, round a-bout the church, and the arms. And afterwards, my lord bishop of York, after her grace was buried, he declared a collation, and as soon as he had made an end, all the trumpets blew a blast, and so the chief mourners and the lords and knights, and the bishops, with the abbot, went in-to the abbey to dinner, and all the officers of the queen’s court.”

In 1606, in the reign of King James I, Elizabeth I’s remains were moved from their resting place in Henry VII's vault to join her sister Mary’s remains. James I erected a monument bearing Elizabeth I’s effigy, but not one of Mary, and the Latin inscription on the monument can be translated as:
“Partners both in throne and grave, here rest we two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary, in the hope of the Resurrection.”

Exit mobile version