Did Elizabeth and her half-sister, Mary Tudor, have a good relationship?

 Did Elizabeth   and her half-sister, Mary Tudor, have a good relationship?

Henry’s other daughter, Mary Tudor, had effectively been bastardised when the king divorced her mother, Catherine of Aragon. Following the birth of Elizabeth, an Act of Parliament declared the 17-year-old Mary illegitimate.


Both Elizabeth and Mary ended up reigning as queen of England, but what did the half-sisters  think of each other? As historian Tracy Borman reveals, the two daughters of Henry VIII were not necessarily fearsome rivals…

Historian Tracy Borman explains…

“They should have been enemies from the get-go, but in fact they were very close when Elizabeth was a child. This was because Mary – who was 17 years older than her half-sister – took pity on Elizabeth.


“When Elizabeth’s mother, Anne Boleyn, was executed, Elizabeth was ousted from favour. She didn’t really have anything to do with her father, Henry VIII. It was thanks to Mary – who was quite a maternal and kind woman (we don’t often see that side of her) – that Elizabeth was rehabilitated with their father.

They should have been enemies from the get-go, but in fact they were very close when Elizabeth was a child

“Elizabeth also learnt from Mary. She learnt what not to do, actually. Mary married a foreigner, Philip of Spain, which was an anathema to her English subjects, who tended to hate foreigners. As a queen, she’d also been very dogmatic in matters of religion and that had alienated more people.


“Elizabeth, when she became queen, decided not to marry. Because who would you choose? She also sought a more moderate religion, and not famously to make ‘windows into men’s hearts’.”

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