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2007-03-22 11:54:26 · 9 answers · asked by FrEsHmAn*19 1 in Society & Culture Royalty

9 answers

I do not believe Elizabeth died a virgin or childless. There has been rumors since she was queen of her secret marriage to Robert Dudley and a son born to them.

http://www.sirbacon.org/gallery/tudor.html

http://www.sirbacon.org/gallery/liz1.html

Here are two links to painting of Elizabeth one during her pregnancy and one of her with two children. The one of her pragnant hangs in Hampton Court and was titled "Queen Elizabeth" and was later changed,

This link is two a drawing of Elizabeth and Francis Bacon her son, it is in the British Museum.

This link is to another page with much more info on Sir Francis Bacon's life.

http://www.sirbacon.org/links/parentage.htm

Elizabeth's second child another boy Robert Earl of Essux was In the Tower of London , in the Beauchamp Tower, in which he was imprisoned before his execution for treason, in 1601, there is an inscription carved into the stone wall which is still covered by a glass panel. It reads: "Robart Tidir"--the old spelling of Tudor. In the reference book in the Beauchamp Tower, this surname is twice deliberately misspelt Tider.http://www.sirbacon.org/gallery/tower.html


In Canonbury Tower, Islington, in London, in the top room of the tower, there is an inscription on one of the walls, dating from the reign of Charles I. Bacon rented this house for nine years, from 1616 to 1625. In this inscription, all the kings and queens of England are listed, from William the Conqueror to Charles I . Between the names of Elizabeth and James I, there is a name that has been scratched out. The first letter may have been an F. What this name is, and why it was erased are two questions that remain unanswered.
http://www.sirbacon.org/canonb4text.html

http://www.sirbacon.org/gallery/bessex.html

I suggest you do a lot of reading on this. This was a time when a word against a king or Queen would land you on the scaffold and Elizabeth had more than one person sent there for gossip of her having had a child. History is nothing more than what the people in power wish us to know.

http://www.geocities.com/christicrutchfield/sir_francis_bacon.htm
Another great site on some oddities about his life and foster parents.

2007-03-25 12:38:48 · answer #1 · answered by Petra 5 · 0 0

Queen Elizabeth 1 Family Tree

2016-10-05 04:09:34 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Her father was Henry the Vlll he had three children Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward. Edward(from his their wife) ruled as a boy king but died before he had children. Then a cousin Jane Grey (who's grandmother on her mothers side was the sister of Henry the Vlll) ruled for nine days. Mary (from his first wife) ruled fro a short time and also had no children and died. Elizabeth (from his second wife) then ruled for over sixty years never marred and had no children. Elizabeth was Also related to Mary Queen of Scots. Mary Queen of Scots mother was also a sister of Henry the Vllll. Mary queen of Scots died but she did have a child. So When Elizabeth died the descendant of Mary Queen of Scots, James, took over the English throne. In a nut-shell.

2007-03-23 03:00:30 · answer #3 · answered by heidi t 3 · 0 0

She had no children that is how King James VI of Scotland became King James I of England because she picked him as her heir. He was actually related I believe. But what won him the spot was that he was not a catholic and neither was Queen Elizabeth I. His mother Mary Queen of Scots was and that is one of the reasons that he as a child had been taken from her so that he would be raised by his uncle or something like that who was not catholic.

2007-03-22 12:55:00 · answer #4 · answered by Ddvanyway 4 · 0 0

James VI of Scotland was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, who was Elizabeth's cousin. Though there were other claimants to Elizabeth's throne, they were descended from Lady Jane Grey's sisters, and had been disqualified from the succession by Henry VIII's will. James was the closest heir, and was Protestant, having been raised by Protestant tutors, after the Scottish Reformation and after his mother lost her throne.

2007-03-23 01:14:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

elizabeth had no direct decendants. Her family tree was
extensive if you go back before the tudor dynasty. Here's a link:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_monarchs_family_tree

2007-03-24 13:47:11 · answer #6 · answered by babygirl 4 · 0 0

Queen Elizabeth I was the third child and second daughter of Henry VIII; her mother was Anne Boleyn. She succeeded her half-sister Mary Tudor ("Bloody Mary"), daughter of Catherine of Aragon, who had followed her sickly half-brother, Edward VI, son of Jane Seymore, neither of whom had children, and ruled for many years. Since Elizabeth I never married, she had no heirs, and following her death, James IV of Scotland (the son of Mary Queen of Scots) became James I of England. (He is James of the King James version of the Bible.) His heir was Charles I who was beheaded by Oliver Cromwell (of the Protectorate), following a civil war. Charles I's son, Charles II, eventually became king when the Protectorate was overthrown, and the Restoration ensued. Charles II had no legitimate children, so following his death, his brother James became King James II, but because he was Catholic, he was deposed and replaced by his daughter Mary and her husband, William of Orange of the Netherlands; they also had no offspring, so that after their deaths, Mary's sister Anne became Queen. (The Stuart son and grandson of James II, both named Charles, remained pretenders to the throne throughout their lifetimes but never achieved enough of a following to regain the throne. Also, Charles II's eldest illegitimate son, James, the Duke of Monmouth, attempted to prove that his parents had actually been married and made a claim upon the throne, losing his head for his efforts!). Queen Anne likewise had no descendents and was succeeded by the German Georges (I, II, III, and IV), their claim to the throne issuing through the sister of Charles I. George III was King during the American Revolution, and George IV was the father of Queen Victoria. She was succeeded by Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII (the Duke of Windsor who abdicated the throne), George VI, and Queen Elizabeth II whose heir, of course is Prince Charles with his heir being William.

2007-03-23 14:57:41 · answer #7 · answered by Lynci 7 · 0 0

well, here is another one http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_I_of_England#Ancestors

as for decendants, she didn't have any. She was called the Virgin Queen (because she didn't have any kids not because she was a Virgin ;-) )

2007-03-22 12:38:23 · answer #8 · answered by christian 2 · 0 0

Try this site: http://www.wwp.brown.edu/project/rich/tree.html

2007-03-22 12:02:52 · answer #9 · answered by Angela D 2 · 0 0

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