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Henrietta MariaHenrietta Maria
Namesake of Maryland

Michael Humphries, MA

           The Golden Age of Discovery provided adventurers and cartographers the opportunity to name far and exotic new lands, their features, and increase their knowledge of the geography of the earth.  New colonies were founded by European nations in search of riches and a more direct passage to the treasures of the East Indies.  After landing and establishing a base of operations it became necessary to name landmarks that would guide others and serve as reference points in which to compose maps.  Casually naming islands, rivers, and mountains as they unfolded resulted in the early explorers becoming hard pressed to continue supplying original names.  Personal names, Indian names, and names of English towns and counties reminiscent of home were used as well as religious namesakes to describe the vast wilderness.  Captain John Smith on his epic voyage of exploration on the Chesapeake Bay in 1608 named several land forms after his crew members and himself including Smith Point, Smith Island and Russel’s Island.  Indian names have lasted throughout the years, although the spellings have changed radically, and have placed in our minds and vocabulary the legacy of a people that first inhabited this countryside.  Names such as Chesapeake, Chaptico, Potomac, Patuxent and Wicomico echo the traditions and culture that preceded the English settlements by thousands of years.  Today these reminders offer mute testimony to those first Marylanders.

 

            The influence of religion on the adventures’ daily lives is revealed in the names that were given to prominent islands and rivers on the trail from England to the colonies in America.  The Chesapeake Bay was first known as St. Michael’s Bay by the Maryland colonists and, of course, the first landed on St. Clement’s Island and later established their capital at St. Mary’s City.  The freedom that allowed the colonists and adventurers to put names on hand drawn maps as they encountered new and strange lands did not extend to the naming of colonies themselves.  This privilege was reserved to the monarchs to name either for themselves or for members of their families.

 

            Returning from a recent ill-fated colonization attempt In the harsh northern latitudes of Newfoundland, George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore, approached Charles I for a substitute patent in a more mild climate nearer Virginia.  After Queen Henrietta Mariaagreeing that Calvert would be granted a charter for lands north of the Potomac River, the question of naming the new colony was mentioned.  Calvert had omitted the name of the colony in his petition in the hope that Charles I would bestow his approval on the new venture by writing his choice on the document.  Charles I clearly wrote Henrietta Maria…after his queen, Mary.  The naming of Mary’s Land, Terra Maria, and the founding of the colony offered a religious haven and opportunity to begin again to colonists regardless of their religious beliefs.  George Calvert introduced a revolutionary concept of “Freedom of Conscience”, which is another way of stating Religious Toleration, when religious toleration would be included in the first Ten Amendments to the United States Constitution and would be remembered as the “….Chief Glory of this State…”

 

            Henrietta Maria, namesake of Maryland, descended from a long line of European nobility.  Named after her father, King Henry IV of France she was also the daughter of Marie de Medici, an Italian princess who later would be crowned the Queen of France.  Political marriages involving royalty of different countries allowed monarchs to form alliances that might otherwise be impossible to obtain.  After the Protestant Reformation, which allowed King Henry VIII to become both head of church and state, England entered an era that was highlighted by religious persecutions and dissension.  In order to lessen the strained relations between France and England, Prince Charles of England and Henrietta Maria of France entered into a marriage contract that would unite the royal families of both countries.  Although Henrietta Maria was a Catholic, she was allowed to marry Charles as a result of a prenuptial agreement through the representative of both countries.  It is interesting to note that one of the stipulations of the marriage agreement allowed the French to settle Canada without English interference.  Although only fifteen years of age, the new bride left her native France to join her new husband, the newly crowned King of England, Charles I. 

 

            Problems within the realm were centered around religious disputes and the ensuing regulations enacted to prevent religious dissenters from holding government positions unless the office holder was a member of the Church of England.  This policy eliminated all Catholic and Puritans from office and led to dissension within the ranks of both the nobility and merchants.  In 1629, Charles I reiterated his right to govern without Parliament claiming his authority derived from the doctrine recognizing the “Divine Right of Kings” with power emanating directly from Heaven.  With this, Charles I dismissed the Parliament although he was to convene this body again in 1640 when the treasury was near bankruptcy.  For eleven year England would be ruled without benefit of the laws and revenue producing efforts of Parliament.

 

            With the recall of Parliament, arrest warrants were issued for the king’s advisors as a result of their ill-advised economic policies.  Included on the list wereHenrietta Maria two close personal friends of King Charles I, the Earl of Strafford and Archbishop Laud.  Queen Mary was not beyond being arrested herself and during the trials of the king’s advisors an empty chair in the defendant’s dock remained throughout the ordeal.  This was a reminder to the Catholic Queen Mary that her position as queen would not necessarily protect her from the justice of the Puritan Parliament.   After finding the defendants guilty, Parliament took the unlikely step of sentencing the Earl of Strafford to death by beheading.  With the pleas of the Queen to Parliament to spare the life of this nobleman going unanswered the earl was soon put to death.  The failure of the king and queen to prevent this execution only further eroded their influence on Parliament and to stop the rioting that was beginning to paralyze the city as mobs roamed the streets of London calling for the abdication of the king and the expulsion of this Catholic queen.  In answer to the disorder, Queen Mary implored assistance from her godfather, Pope Urban VIII, and the King of France.  These measures only added fuel to the fire that was to ultimately result in the English Civil War.  With the death of the Earl of Strafford, Charles I made secret plans to rescue his surviving friend, Archbishop Laud.

 

            Forewarned, members of parliament quickly whisked the Archbishop to a more secure hiding place and thwarted the plans of the king.  As the anger of Londoners grew toward the royal couple Charles and Queen Mary fled London to the safety of Windsor Castle.  Queen Mary they requested permission for Parliament to leave the country to escort her ten year old daughter, Mary, to her new home in Holland.  Mary had recently married William of Orange thus forming an alliance with the royal family of Holland (Later William and Mary would return to rule England in 1688.)   Reluctantly granting permission, Parliament allowed the queen to leave England knowing fully well that her real mission was to raise support for her husband.

 

            After selling the jewels that she had smuggled out of England, the Queen bought enough munitions and armaments to fill fourteen ships.  In her absence, the situation had deteriorated with armies being raised to support or defy the rule of the King.  The fate of the kingdom, and that of the infant colony of Maryland, was decided on the battlefields of England in a murderous war that saw the nation brought to its knees.  The conflict saw England’s colonies languish as the echoes of the conflict extended across the ocean to divide the sparse population of Maryland into a local civil war that would result in the Calvert family losing control of the settlement.  Locally, Richard Ingle, a Puritan and supporter of Parliament sailed into the St. Mary’s River in 1644 attacked St. Mary’s City, looted plantations, seized ships, and forced the government of Leonard Calvert to flee across the Potomac to Virginia.  Later he would anchor off of St. Clement’s Island where he would meet with the local planters that supported Parliament in the Civil War.

 

            Queen Mary returned to England and although her entry was not a triumph, she was able to field a small army in support of her husband.  After the delivery of her daughter, Henriette-Anne in 1645, the queen was forced to leave her sanctuary at Exeter as the troops of Parliament laid siege to the walled city.  Fleeing to France the Queen was forced to remain there even after the capture and imprisonment of her husband after his defeat at Marston Moor.  The English Civil War was over.  The Puritans had come to power under Oliver Cromwell and a Commonwealth was proclaimed.  The monarchy was abolished and the rights of the queen and other members of the royal family were declared unlawful.  After a trial in which the king was found guilty by a majority of one vote, Charles I declared the court was illegal and reaffirmed his belief in the “Divine Right of Kings” to rule without exception.

 

            On the cold morning of January 30, 1649 England awoke to find her King, Charles I, had walked bravely to the executioner where he knelt and removed a miniature portrait of Queen Mary from around his neck before being beheaded.

 

            Denied her position as Queen of England by her husband’s successor, William Cromwell, remained in France in poverty supported only by her friends and relatives.  With her family either dead or distributed around Europe, Queen Mary was able to muster enough funds to purchase the Palace of Chaillot which she turned into a convent of Visitation of Our Land and a retirement home for noble ladies.  By 1660 Oliver Cromwell was dead and Parliament recalled the son of Queen Mary, Prince Charles, who was then crowned a Charles I of England.  Queen Mary once again returned to England where she was to witness her son’s coronation.  Once again disasters struck with the loss of her son Prince Henry and, shortly thereafter, Princess Mary from an outbreak of smallpox.  Leaving England for France for the last time, Queen Mary was able to see the marriage of her daughter Henriette-Anne to the brother of the King of France, Philip.  By 1669 the Queen, in ill health with pain and discomfort as her constant companions, began to fail.  Her daughter, Henriette-Anne returned to nurse her and suggested she take a narcotic to reduce her distress and allow her to sleep.  After taking the drug, Queen Mary, sixty years old faded into unconsciousness and never awoke.

 

            The following year Henriette-Anne followed her mother in death.

 

            The bravery and loyalty exhibited by Henrietta Maria, namesake of Maryland, should not be forgotten.

Her character surmounted the events that shaped her destiny and helped her maintain her dignity through trying times that saw her family devastated by disease, her father murdered, and her husband tried for treason and executed.

 


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