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Portrait of a noblewoman, possibly Catherine of Aragon c. 1502, or Mary Tudor, Queen of France c. 1514 Michael Sittow [19] Then-15-year-old Catherine departed from A Coruña on 17 August 1501 and met Arthur on 4 November at Dogmersfield in Hampshire.
In January 2013, the National Portrait Gallery in London revealed that its curators had recently discovered that a portrait at Lambeth Palace, formerly believed to have been a portrait of Catherine Parr, in fact depicts Catherine of Aragon. The National Portrait Gallery announced that the painting, which had hung in a private sitting room of ...
Attributed to British School, 16th century - Catherine of Aragon (1485-1536) - RCIN 404746 - Royal Collection.jpg Licensing This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art.
"Katherine of Aragon, by an Unknown artist, oil on panel, c. 1520, L246."; on loan to the National Portrait Gallery, London; Lent by permission of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Church Commissioners for England, 2011.
Horenbout_Catherine_of_Aragon_with_a_monkey.jpg (309 × 347 pixels, file size: 35 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The portrait was part of the diplomacy for the betrothal of Christian II to Margaret's niece Isabella of Austria. The portrait that is held in Copenhagen's Statens Museum for Kunst is probably a copy of a lost original or a second copy ordered from Sittow. [5] [12] Portrait of a noblewoman, possibly Catherine of Aragon c. 1500-05
Catherine of Aragon; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Catalina de Aragón; Gótico español; Usage on fi.wikipedia.org Katariina Aragonialainen; Michel Sittow; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Catherine d'Aragon; Michel Sittow; Usage on hr.wikipedia.org Dinastija Tudor; Artur, princ od Walesa; Usage on hu.wikipedia.org Aragóniai Katalin angol királyné ...
The Vyne Chapel is a Grade I listed Church of England chapel in The Vyne, Hampshire.The chapel's origins are early modern. The chapel is noted for its well preserved 16th century stained glass, featuring a rare portrait of a young King Henry VIII of England, his sister Margaret Tudor and Henry's wife Catherine of Aragon, all in prayer.