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Margaret Clifford, another red-headed Tudor heiress |
Everyone knows about Frances Brandon and her daughters the Grey sisters, but how many know about Eleanor Brandon and her daughter Margaret Clifford. From
Stephanie Mann:
Margaret Stanley, Countess of Derby, who died on September 28, 1596, is
another example of an heir to Elizabeth I who found out how dangerous
that position was. Like the Grey sisters, Catherine and Mary (and Jane
before them), she was an heir because her grandmother (on her mother's
side) was Mary Tudor, former Queen of France, wife of Charles Brandon,
1st Duke of Suffolk, and Henry VIII's younger sister. Her father was
Henry Clifford, 2nd Earl of Cumberland and her mother Lady Eleanor
Brandon, the Brandon's second daughter.
Because she was a possible successor, whom she would marry was an
important decision. John Dudley, the 1st Duke of Northumberland
suggested in 1552 that she should marry his son Guildford, but Edward VI
was opposed to that alliance (thus Dudley had that son available to
marry Lady Jane Grey); then Dudley's brother Andrew was mentioned.
Finally, when Mary I came to the throne, Margaret Clifford married Henry
Stanley, 4th Earl of Derby. As this blog explains her situation:
She was the great granddaughter of Henry VII and according to
Henry VIII’s will if anything happened to Elizabeth she would become
queen of England. She therefore became Elizabeth’s heir presumptive. It
was not a good place to be.
Before then she’d managed to avoid
becoming a pawn in the game of crowns through her father’s forethought
and then through her own lack of popularity. In 1553 the Duke of
Northumberland had proposed to marry her to either his son, Guildford,
or his brother, Sir Andrew Dudley, but Cumberland refused the match on
his daughter’s behalf and took no part in the attempt to make Lady Jane
Grey queen (sensible man).
Instead, Margaret was married with
Queen Mary’s blessing in Westminster Abbey in February 1555 to Henry
Stanley, Lord Strange. He was descended from the Woodvilles, Howards,
Nevilles and a certain Thomas Stanley who happened to be married to
Margaret Beaufort and who sat around on hillsides during key battles of
the Wars of the Roses waiting to see how it would all pan out – landing
the title Earl of Derby for his pains.
By 1557 Margaret was
recorded as saying that Lady Jane Grey’s treason had excluded her
sisters, Catherine and Mary Grey, from the succession, thus making
Margaret, Queen Mary’s heiress presumptive…yes I know there was
Elizabeth to take into consideration but Mary’s relationship with her
sister was fraught by 1557. Mary was fond of stating that Elizabeth had
the look of lute player Mark Smeaton. There was also the fact that
Elizabeth was notably not Catholic whereas Margaret was. . . .
But Mary I was more obedient to the wishes of her father and the
decisions of Parliament to interfere with the line of succession. Her
great hope was to have a son to displace Elizabeth, not contravene the
settled succession. Nevertheless, Margaret's troubles continued apace as
she
speculated on her opportunity to succeed Elizabeth I during her reign:
Lady Strange developed a dangerous interest in alchemy, to which
she had been introduced by her father. An interest in the occult,
although widespread among Elizabethans, could be a dangerous hobby; an
interest in fortune-telling especially so for one in Margaret's position
on the periphery of the succession dispute. From 1572, Margaret was
countess of Derby. She consulted with wizards "with a vain credulity,
and out of I know not what ambitious hope”, according to William Camden,
and lost the Queen’s
favor. In 1578 she was accused of employing a "magician", actually a
well-known physician named Dr. Randall, to cast spells to discover how
long Queen Elizabeth would live. According to one source, Randall was
hanged and Margaret was banished from court and spent the rest of her
life, eighteen years, in the custody of her kinsman, Thomas Seckford
(d.1587), Master of Requests, to whom she was related through his
mother, Margaret (d. 1557), the daughter of Sir John Wingfield (d. 1509)
of Letheringham, and aunt of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. Later she had a series of keepers, although she was allowed to live in her own house at Isleworth. (Read more.)
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