- Christina of Denmark
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For other people named Christina of Denmark, see Christina of Denmark (disambiguation).
Christina of Denmark Duchess consort of Milan Tenure 4 May 1534 - 24 October 1535 Duchess consort of Upper Lorraine Tenure 14 June 1544 - 12 June 1545 Regent of Lorraine Regency 12 June 1545 - 15 April 1552 Spouse Francesco II Sforza, Duke of Milan
Francis I, Duke of LorraineIssue Charles III, Duke of Lorraine
Renata, Duchess of Bavaria
Dorothea, Duchess of Brunswick-CalenbergHouse House of Oldenburg Father Christian II of Denmark Mother Isabella of Austria Born November 1521
Nyborg, DenmarkDied 10 December 1590 (aged 69)
Tortona, Alessandria, Duchy of MilanBurial Cordeliers Convent, Nancy, Lorraine Religion Roman Catholicism Christina of Denmark (November 1521–10 December 1590) was a Danish princess who became Duchess-consort of Milan, then Duchess-consort of Lorraine. She was also the Regent of Lorraine in the years 1545-1552 during the minority of her son and a claimant to the thrones of Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
Contents
Background
Christina was the younger surviving daughter of King Christian II of Denmark and Norway and Isabella of Austria, sister of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. She was born in Nyborg in central Denmark in 1521. She left Denmark at her father's deposition in 1523 and was raised in the Netherlands.
On 4 May 1534 Christina was married by proxy to Francesco II Sforza, Duke of Milan, who died in 1535 leaving her widowed when she was fourteen. She and Francesco had no children.
After the death of her first husband Francesco Sforza, Christina went to live at the court of her aunt, the Governor of the Netherlands, Dowager Queen Mary of Hungary. Christina was a favorite of Mary.
Marriage proposal
After Jane Seymour, the third wife of Henry VIII, died in 1537, Christina was considered as a possible bride for the English king. The German painter Hans Holbein was commissioned to paint portraits of noblewomen eligible to become the English queen. On 10 March 1538, Holbein arrived in Brussels with the diplomat Philip Hoby to meet Christina. Hoby arranged with Benedict, the Master of Christina's household, for a sitting the next day. Christina sat for the portrait for three hours wearing mourning clothes. Her rooms in Brussels were hung with black velvet, black damask and a black cloth-of-estate.[1] Christina, then only sixteen years old, made no secret of her opposition to marrying the English king, who by this time had a reputation around Europe for his mistreatment of wives. She supposedly told an English ambassador that "If I had two heads, one should be at the King of England's disposal." It was also obvious that Mary of Hungary was less than enthused with the match, being no admirer of Henry VIII. Henry pursued the match until January 1539, when the attitude of Mary made it obvious that the match would never take place. Thomas Wriothesley, the English diplomat in Brussels, advised Thomas Cromwell that Henry should; "fyxe his most noble stomacke in some such other place."[2]
Duchess and Regent of Lorraine
On 10 July 1541, Christina married Francis, Duke of Bar. Francis had been betrothed to Anne of Cleves, who became the fourth wife of Henry VIII. Francis succeeded his father as Duke of Lorraine in 1544. He valued her political advice greatly, which was noted at the Council of Speyer (1544). Francis died in 1545, leaving Christina as Regent of Lorraine and the guardian of her minor son. In 1552, France invaded Lorraine and she was forced to resign as regent and give up her son to be raised at the French court as a hostage.
Christina fled to the Netherlands. When her aunt died in 1558, she worked to be appointed the new Governor and Regent of the Netherlands. This did not succeed, and when Margaret of Parma was appointed regent, she returned to Lorraine.
Titular queen and claimant
In Lorraine, Christina served as advisor to her son and acted as his regent whenever he was absent. At the same time, she styled herself the rightful "Queen of Denmark, Norway and Sweden". In late 1550s and 1560s, the adventurer Wilhelm von Grumbach and his allies, who occasionally included Peder Oxe, attempted to dethrone her second cousin king Frederick II of Denmark in Christina's favor. Christina also conspired to marry her daughter Renata to Frederick II of Denmark in about 1560, and then to Eric XIV of Sweden in an alliance against Denmark during the war between Denmark and Sweden in 1563-1570. All of these efforts came to nothing.
In 1578, she left for Tortona in Italy, a fief given to her by her first husband, were she lived to her death styled as "Madame of Tortona".
Her son was Charles III, Duke of Lorraine, namesake of her uncle, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. Her daughter, Renata of Lorraine, married William V, Duke of Bavaria, and it is through her that the current Danish, Norwegian and Swedish royal families are descended.
Children
By Francis I of Lorraine
Name Birth Death Notes Charles 15 February 1543 14 May 1608 married 19 January 1559 Claude of Valois and had issue. Renata 20 April 1544 22 May 1602 married 22 February 1568 William V, Duke of Bavaria and had issue. Dorothea 20 August 1545 2 June 1621 married 1575 Eric II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Calenberg and had no issue. Depictions In Popular Culture
Television
She was portrayed by Sonya Cassidy in an episode of The Tudors.
Literature
- Helle Stangerup, In the Courts of Power, 1987.
- Marianne Malone, The Sixty-Eight Rooms, 2010.
Ancestry
Ancestors of Christina of Denmark 16. Dietrich, Count of Oldenburg 8. Christian I of Denmark 17. Helvig of Schauenburg 4. John of Denmark 18. John, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach 9. Dorothea of Brandenburg 19. Barbara of Saxe-Wittenberg 2. Christian II of Denmark 20. Frederick II, Elector of Saxony 10. Ernest, Elector of Saxony 21. Margaret of Austria 5. Christina of Saxony 22. Albert III, Duke of Bavaria 11. Elisabeth of Bavaria 23. Anna of Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Einbeck 1. Christina of Denmark 24. Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor 12. Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor 25. Eleanor of Portugal 6. Philip I of Castile 26. Charles the Bold 13. Mary, Duchess of Burgundy 27. Isabella of Bourbon 3. Isabella of Austria 28. John II of Aragon 14. Ferdinand II of Aragon 29. Juana Enriquez 7. Joanna of Castile 30. John II of Castile 15. Isabella I of Castile 31. Isabella of Portugal References
- (Danish) KVinfo.dk
Preceded by
Claude of FranceDuchess consort of Milan
1533-1535Succeeded by
Maria Manuela, Princess of PortugalPreceded by
Renée de Bourbon-MontpensierDuchess consort of Lorraine
1544-1545Succeeded by
Claude of ValoisThe generations start from the children of Réné II1st Generation 2nd Generation Princess Christina of Denmark · Marguerite d'Egmont · Princess Joanna of Savoy · Catherine Romula de Lorraine* · Louise de Rieux · Anna d'Este3rd Generation Princess Claude of France · Marie de Luxembourg · Marguerite de Chabot · Princess Henriette of Savoy · Catherine of Cleves4th Generation Princess Catherine of Navarre · Margherita Gonzaga · Christina of Salm · Catherine Henriette de Bourbon, Légitimée de France · Marguerite Philippe du Cambout · Marie de Rohan · Henriette Catherine de Joyeuse5th Generation Nicole de Lorraine* · Béatrice de Cusance · Claude Françoise de Lorraine* · Anne Élisabeth de Lannoy · Élisabeth de La Tour d'Auvergne · · Françoise de Montault de Navailles · Anne d'Ornano · Christine d'Estrées · Anne de Lorraine* · Catherine de Neufville · Catherine de Goyon de Matignon · Marie Madeleine d'Epinay · Françoise Adélaide de Noailles · Marie Françoise de Valois6th Generation Eleanor of Austria, Queen of Poland · Princess Anne Élisabeth de Lorraine* · Charlotte de Rochechouart de Mortemart · Marie Therese de Stramboni · Innocentia Catherine du Plessis · Marie Françoise de Brancas · Marie Louise Jeannin de Castille · Élisabeth de Roquelaure · Anne Marguerite Gabrielle de Beauvau · Jeanne Henriette Marguerite de Durfort · Élisabeth Marguerite d'Orléans7th Generation Élisabeth Charlotte d'Orléans · Hélène Julie Rosalie Mancini · Louise Charlotte de Gramont · Auguste de Coëtquen · Louise de Rohan8th Generation Anna Zetzner · Viktoria Folliot de Crenneville · Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria · Marie Louise de Rohan- also a princess of Lorraine in her own right
Categories:- 1522 births
- 1590 deaths
- Female regents
- Regents of Lorraine
- Duchesses of Milan
- Duchesses of Lorraine
- Swedish princesses
- Danish princesses
- Norwegian princesses
- Pretenders to the Norwegian throne
- Disinherited European royalty
- Portrait by Hans Holbein the younger
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