Mary II, Queen of England
Wife and Co-Regent of William III
A.D. 1662 - 1694
Mary II was born at St. James Palace,
Westminster, on April 30, 1662. She was the daughter of James
II by Anne Hyde, his first wife.
She was married at the age of fifteen
to William, Prince of Orange, on November 4, 1677. Two weeks after
her marriage Mary and William sailed to the Hague and here they
lived until February 12, 1689, when accepting a solemn invitation
from the states of England she followed her husband to London.
The throne was declared vacant by the
flight of James II and William and Mary were crowned as next heirs
on April 11, 1689. Though Mary was declared joint possessor of
the throne with her husband, yet the administration of the government
was left entirely to him. She was not slighted in the least because
this arrangement was according to Mary's own wishes. She is quoted
as saying, "There is but one command which I wish him to obey,
and that is 'Husband love your wives'. For myself, I shall follow
the injunction, 'Wives, be obedient to your husbands in all things.'"
She kept the promise voluntarily made,
and all her efforts were directed to promote her husband's happiness,
and make him beloved by the English people. He had great confidence
in her abilities, and when, during his absence in Ireland and
on the continent, she was left the regent of the kingdom. She
managed parties at home with much wisdom, and governed with a
discretion not inferior to his own.
Queen Mary adhered strongly to the Protestant
religion and was fiercely loyal to the Church of England. She
evidently considered its preservation a paramount duty, even when
opposed to the claims of affectionate submission.
The unfriendly terms on which she lived
with her sister, afterward Queen Anne, have often been alluded
to as a blemish on Mary's character. But political jealousies,
and the foolish attachment of Anne to overbearing favorites, may
sufficiently account for this breach.
Aside from this alienation from her
sister, Mary was in truth, an amiable and excellent queen, and
by her example made industry and domestic virtue fashionable.
She died of smallpox at Kensington in the year 1694.