James II
James was the son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria and was born at St James' Palace on 14th October 1633 and succeeded his brother as King in 1685. During the English Civil War he escaped to Holland and served in continental armies. The Roman Catholic James reigned for only four years and finally left England in December 1688 for exile in France and he was declared to have abdicated. His daughter Mary then reigned jointly with her husband, and James' nephew, William of Orange (as William III and Mary II).
Marriage
He married, while Duke of York, Anne Hyde, a maid of honour to his sister, daughter of the future Lord Chancellor. They married in secret at Breda in 1659 and later publicly in London in 1660. She was buried in Westminster Abbey. His second marriage was to Mary of Modena by proxy on 30th September 1673.
Coronation
The coronation of James II and his queen Mary of Modena took place on 23rd April 1685. Francis Sandford wrote a history of this coronation which included the names of all those who walked in the processions from Westminster Hall to the Abbey and extensive engravings of both the procession and ceremony. The Dean of Westminster, Thomas Sprat, wore a rich cope of purple velvet embroidered with gold and silver. The king was crowned by Archbishop Sancroft and the service omitted the Communion as James was a Catholic (he had been anointed and crowned following the Catholic rite in the chapel at Whitehall the previous day). There seemed to be "bad omens" on the day of the coronation – the crown appeared to be about to fall off his head and at the moment of crowning the Royal Standard at the Tower of London was torn by the wind.
Watch: James II and the early Coronation
Burial
He died at St Germain in France on 6th September 1701. His tomb there was despoiled during the French Revolution.
Further reading
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004
History of the coronation of James II and Queen Mary...by Francis Sandford, 1687
His royal bed, one of the earliest surviving in the world, and also a gold and silver bed made to mark his second marriage, can be seen in the showrooms at Knole House in Kent (March-October)
(Royal Collection) [Public domain] via Wikimedia Commons
This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library
Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster