Mary i

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Mary i. Get inspired and try out new things.
7k people searched this
·
Last updated 1d
Portrait of Queen Mary I Mary I Of England, Sofonisba Anguissola, Italian Portraits, 1500s Fashion, History Dress, Historical Portraits, Lady Jane Grey, Mary Tudor, Late Period

Portrait of Queen Mary I by unknown artist, c.1590. English school. Oil on panel; 56 x 44.5cm. Sold at Christie’s in 2007 for £21,600. The portrait used to belong to Newburgh Priory near Coxwold, North Yorkshire, which was once visited by Mary’s aunt, Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland. The painting dates to a period when portraits of past royals were sought after. It may have even been part of a set of the Kings and Queens of England. Now owned by The Weiss Gallery…

159
Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn Reign Jewelry, Tudor Clothing, Elizabeth 1st, Lady Jane Grey, Period Jewelry, Tudor Dynasty, Tudor Era, Tudor History, Mary Stuart

Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn and half-sister to Mary I. The painting is attributed to William Scrots and was painted in the last years of Henry’s reign. This was painted at a time when Elizabeth and her sister enjoyed a friendly relationship, prior the days when it would become incredibly strained on grounds of religion and politics (and to some degree parentage).

5.4k
Mary I by the English School after Hans Eworth, c. 1550s-Though the later Tudor Era gowns, those we see in portraits from the Elizabethan Period, capture much of our attention, it is the form of this earlier style I find so pleasing.The classic mid-16th century English look is created in large part by the farthingale: an inverted small triangle of the bodice over a larger one of the skirt. Tudor Artifacts, Mary I Of England, Ludlow Castle, Tudor Queen, Elizabethan Costume, Mary Tudor, Tudor Fashion, Tudor Dynasty, Tudor Era

Mary I by the English School after Hans Eworth, c. 1550s-Though the later Tudor Era gowns, those we see in portraits from the Elizabethan Period, capture much of our attention, it is the form of this earlier style I find so pleasing.The classic mid-16th century English look is created in large part by the farthingale: an inverted small triangle of the bodice over a larger one of the skirt.

176
Mary i and more

Explore related boards

Related interests