#catalina de aragon

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My Trastamara’s Girls - Part ThreeIsabella of Castille had 4 daughter, the 1st and the 3nd was

My Trastamara’s Girls - Part Three

Isabella of Castille had 4 daughter, the 1st and the 3nd was queen of Portugal, but her most famous daughters are Juanna of Castille and Catherine of Aragon.

Juanna of Castille or Juanna la Loca

Juana became known as Juanna la Loca (Joanna the Mad), because of her emotional disorders, which worsened with the affairs of her husband, Philip the Handsome, by whom she was completely in love.

Most historians now agree that she had melancholia, severe clinical depression, a psychosis, or a case of inherited schizophrenia. There is debate about the diagnosis that she was mentally ill considering that her symptoms were aggravated by non-consensual confinement and control by others who had assumed her royal powers.

c. 1500

Catherine of Aragon (Catalina de Aragon), queen of England

Catalina de Aragon as princess of Wales, when she still was married with prince Arthur, Henry VIII’s older brother and heir of english throne until his death. She became queen of England by her marriage with Henry VIII. Henry divorced her to marry Anne Boleyn. She and Henry was Queen Mary I’s parents.

As I relied on a picture of only her face, I used as reference, the dresses Elizabeth of York (her mother-in-law) and Isabella of Castile (her mother) to can make the skirt.

I was wondering make a real version of Catalina, since only had done the Tudor’s show version. Catalina was red, not brunet, and how I made her mother, sisters and daughter as red, it would be really weird if just she didn’t was according with she really was.

The 1st fanart was inspired in one of her most famous portraits when she stillwas just princess of Wales as wife of prince Arthur Tudor (c. 1502), and 2nd fanart was inspired in a George Stuart’s wax figure when she already was queen of England as the first wife of Henry VIII (c. 1530).

c. 1530

In the next posts we’ll see Juanna’s daughters

by mara sop


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My Henry VIII’s GirlsFinally I finished my Six Wives of Henry VIII from Madame Tussaud’s

My Henry VIII’s Girls

Finally I finished my Six Wives of Henry VIII from Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum!

I will not extend myself talking all over again about these six women. But I’ll put all of them here to you can see it better ;)

Hey how, let’s go?

Catalina de Aragon (or Catherine of Aragon)


Anne Boleyn


Jane Seymour


Anna von Kleve (or Anne of Cleves)



Kathryn Howard (or Katherine Howard)



Katherine Parr



Which one is your favorite?

16th Century

by mara sop


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Yesterday (december 15) was Catherine of Aragon’s birthday. Happy birthday to her!!!I’ve already m

Yesterday (december 15) was Catherine of Aragon’s birthday. Happy birthday to her!!!

I’ve already made some fanarts of her, even being a huge Anne Boleyn’s fan ;)

by mara sop


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My Trastamara’s Girls - Part SixEnding the line of Trastamara’s queens descendents of Is

My Trastamara’s Girls - Part Six

Ending the line of Trastamara’s queens descendents of Isabella of Castile, we have the daughters of Maria and Catalina (Catherine) of Aragon.

Isabella of Portugal (Maria of Aragon’s Daughter)

Isabella was the second child and eldest daughter of King Manuel I of Portugal and his second spouse, Infanta Maria of Castile and Aragon. She was named after her maternal grandmother, Isabella I of Castile, and her aunt Isabella, Princess of Asturias, who had been her father’s beloved first spouse.

Isabella had 3 children. Phillip II of Spain, the Holy Roman Empress Maria of Portugal and Joanna princess of Portugal.

She died in 1539, so this is a postumos portrait painted 9 years after her death.

And I just realized that I totally forgot of the Holy Roman Empress, the Archduchess Maria of Austria, spouse of Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Bohemia and Hungary, and her daughters Anne and Elizabeth of Austria, both queens. WOW!!! I’ll make her soon. I promise! ;)

Isabella’s portrait is from c. 1548

Maria had another daughter, the infanta Beatrice, married with Charles III, duke of Savoy. But she never was a queen neither her descendents.

 

Mary Tudor (Catherine of Aragon’s Daughter)

Queen Mary I of England, or Bloody Mary

Mary was the only surviver daughter of Henry VIII and Catalina de Aragon, and a huge catholic person. She became more famous because of her persecution of protestants during her reign than anything else, so she earned the nickname Bloody Mary.

Mary was a precocious child. Throughout Mary’s childhood, Henry VIII negotiated potential future marriages for her. When she was only two years old, she was promised to the Dauphin, the infant son of King Francis I of France, but the contract was repudiated after three years. In 1522, at the age of six, she was instead contracted to marry her 22-year-old first cousin, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. However, the engagement was broken off within a few years by Charles with Henry’s agreement.

But with the nullification of the marriage of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, Mary was considerated as bastard.

From 1531 until her mother’s death, Mary was often sick with irregular menstruation and depression, although it is not clear whether this was caused by stress, puberty or a more deep-seated disease. She was not permitted to see her mother, who had been sent to live away from court by Henry.

Mary and her first stepmother, Anne Boleyn, detested each other, and she also hate Katherine Howard, but apparently she got along quite well with Jane Seymour, Anne of Cleves and Katherine Parr.

As illegitimate child, Lady Mary loose everything, including her marriages proposals, and only had a new suitor when she was courted by Duke Philip of Bavaria from late 1539, but Philip was Lutheran and his suit for her hand was unsuccessful.

She finally got marriage after being crowned queen. At the age of 37, she married with her cousin Phillip II of Spain, but, but even with several psychological pregnancies, she died childless.

c. 1554

It’s really interesting analize the costumes of the Trastamara Girls to see the versatility of the fashion renaissance. When we think in the renaissance, we automaticaly visualize 3 or 4 especificy outfits, like the mid 1530s Tudor’s fashion, an elizabethan, an italian renaissance, and maybe an iberic style outfit…

And in the House of Trastamara’s fashion we can see the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance even in the 16th century, a huge influence of german renaissance, and of kind of hats, hoods and veils. Is really cool to see it.

by mara sop


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