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Thursday, May 7, 2015

The Last Catholic Consort of England Dies in 1718

Queen Mary Beatrice of Modena died on May 7, 1718--after living in exile since the "Glorious" Revolution of 1688. She had known great trouble throughout her life after marrying James, the Duke of York. Exiled during the Popish Plot and the Exclusionist Crisis in 1678, she had endured her husband's affairs, including one with Catherine Sedley even as they were in exile. She, like Catherine of Aragon before her, had also experienced several pregnancies that ended in miscarriages, stillbirths, or infant death. Finally, she bore her son James Francis Edward Stuart, and her success led their final exile and fall--or at least, was a contributing cause because the English feared a Catholic heir--so off she and her infant son went to exile in France. Then James II joined her, with his Court in exile, at St. Germain-en-Laye.

She served briefly as her son's regent when James II died in 1701 and would not accede to Scottish demands that her son, James III, renounce Catholicism for the throne of Scotland--but compromised on restrictions of the number of Catholic priests in England and leaving the Church of England intact when he should succeed William of Orange. Perhaps Mary of Modena erred in not allowing the young king to go Scotland in 1702 and she ended her regency when he turned 16.

Mary of Modena remained at St. Germain-en-Laye but also spent time at the Convent of the Visitation nuns at Chaillot in Paris (destroyed, of course). She had wanted to be a nun before her marriage in 1673 and thus her attraction to the convent, where she met the former mistress of Louis XIV, Louise de la Valliere. Her daughter Louisa Maria had been born in France in 1692, but died in 1711 of smallpox--and the loss her daughter, along with the departure of her son after the Treaty of Utrecht removed French support of his claim to the throne, devastated her. She was buried in the Convent of the Visitation and thus her grave has been lost. She died of cancer on May 7, 1718, alone in France as James Francis Edward was exiled after France recognized the Hanoverian succession in the Treaty of Utrecht.

Some in France called her a saint; she had certainly endured many vicissitudes: exile, the unfaithfulness of her husband, little babies dying, widowhood, the loss of her daughter, and separation from her son--and by all reports, Queen Mary Beatrice responded to these sorrows by relying on prayer and her Catholic faith.

5 comments:

  1. Wasn't there also a Catholic bride of George IV, whom he repudiated so as not to loose the throne?

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  2. Yes--Maria Fitzherbert; their marriage was illegal under the Royal Marriages Act and the Act of Succession of 1701. But of course she was never Queen Consort because George IV instead married Caroline of Brunswick--who also was never recognized as Queen Consort, because George hated her! George IV still opposed Catholic Emancipation in spite of having been married to a Catholic!
    http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06085a.htm

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  3. I am a nun of the Visitation Order and would love to have your insights into St. Claude la Colombiere's influence on Mary of Modena and on her devotion to the Sacred Heart. Also, how the English people were influenced by them. Claude, as you know, went from Paray-le-Monial and St. Margaret Mary to London to become the chaplain of Mary of Modena, then Duchess of York. Your site is fascinating. Loved your book too and am eagerly awaiting your new one.

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    1. Thank you for your comment and for reading my book! I don't know about his influence on Mary of Modena, but I have commented on how he suffered because of the Popish Plot, being imprisoned and becoming so ill before finally being released and returning to France: https://supremacyandsurvival.blogspot.com/2012/02/st-claude-at-court-of-st-james.html

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    2. Would there have been some oversight?

      Considering James VII and II as a saint may not be wrong, he did heal 50 women.

      However, he was not yet KING James back when St Claude was chaplain to his wife.

      The Jesuit saint came back to Paray 1681 and King James II of England became such 1685.

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