![]() ![]() It’s a tale of sexism, shifting national identity and good old-fashioned propaganda, all of which coalesced to create the image of an unchecked tyrant that endures today.īorn on February 18, 1516, Mary was not the long-awaited son her parents, Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, had hoped for. ![]() In the words of one contemporary chronicler, “It was said that no one could remember there ever having been public rejoicing such as this.”Ĭenturies later, however, the Tudor queen is remembered as one of the most reviled figures in English history: “ Bloody Mary.” This is a story of how a heroic underdog became a monarch who was then mythologized as a violent despot-despite being no bloodier than her father, Henry VIII, or other English monarchs. Still, she rode into London on August 3, 1553, to widespread acclaim. Historian Sarah Gristwood describes the ascension of Mary I as a “staggeringly bold” course of action undertaken with little chance of success. ![]() She seized it with unprecedented ambition from those who sought to thwart her. The first woman to rule England in her own right didn’t simply inherit the throne. ![]()
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