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Mary Tudor is often remembered through a single, brutal label: “Bloody Mary.”
But in the summer of 1553, she revealed a very different side of herself.
In this second part of my series on the two tough cookies of 1553, I explore how Mary I faced down danger, isolation, and overwhelming odds to claim her throne - not through force of arms, but through resolve, leadership, and legitimacy.
Drawing on contemporary accounts, including Robert Wingfield’s Vita Mariae, this video looks at:
- How years of pressure under Henry VIII and Edward VI shaped Mary’s resilience
- Why her flight to East Anglia in July 1553 was a calculated act of courage, not desperation
- How she rallied men, towns, and even the royal fleet, without a pitched battle
- And how her victorious entry into London marked the triumph of legitimacy over force
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