(Redirected from Henry Frederick Stuart):''For other people known as Henry, Prince of Wales see
Henry, Prince of Wales (disambiguation)''.
'Henry Frederick Stuart, Prince of Wales' (
19 February 1594 –
6 November 1612) was the eldest son of
James VI of Scots, I of England and
Anne of Denmark. His name comes from grandfathers
Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley and
Frederick II of Denmark.
Early life
He was born at
Stirling Castle and became
Duke of Rothesay,
Earl of Carrick,
Baron of Renfrew,
Lord of the Isles and
Prince and Great Steward of Scotland automatically on his birth. His tutor until he went to England was Sir
George Lauder of The Bass, a
Privy Counsellor - described as the King's "familiar councillor".
[1]
Prince of Wales
Following his father's accession to the throne of England in
1603, he became automatically
Duke of Cornwall, and was invested
Prince of Wales and
Earl of Chester in
1610, thus uniting the six automatic and two traditional Scottish and English titles held by heirs-apparent to the throne(s) ever since that date.
Later life, early death, consequences
Henry showed great promise. However, he died from
typhoid fever at the age of 18. (The diagnosis can be made with reasonable certainty from written records of the post-mortem examination.) Henry was buried in
Westminster Abbey. Prince Henry's death was widely-regarded as a tragedy for the nation, which apparently proved prophetic.
All of Henry's automatic titles passed to his younger brother,
Charles, who, until then, had lived in Henry's shadow – Charles was created Prince of Wales and Earl of Carrick four years later. Charles was not as well-regarded as Henry had been, and after he assumed the throne following the death of his father in 1625, his reign was marked by controversies, most notably conflicts with the English
Parliament. Following several years of the
English Civil War, he was tried and convicted of treason and was beheaded in 1649.
Ancestors
Legacy
Both
Prince Henry's Grammar School in
Otley,
West Yorkshire, and
Prince Henry's High School in
Evesham,
Worcestershire in
England are named after him.
The developments in North America were at an important stage as Henry grew up. In the southern portion of the
Colony of Virginia, a part which became now the
Commonwealth of Virginia in the
United States after the
American Revolutionary War some years later, three important locations were named in his honor: Cape Henry, Henricus, and Henrico:
★
Cape Henry is located the southern point where the
Chesapeake Bay meets the
Atlantic Ocean. It was named on
April 26,
1607 by the expedition led by
Christopher Newport which established
Jamestown on
May 14. The
Cape Henry Memorial and two historic lighthouses are now located in the
City of Virginia Beach adjacent to
First Landing State Park.
★ Sir
Thomas Dale was recruited for the Virginia Colony through efforts of Prince Henry, a response to management and discipline problems with the earliest colonists. He became the High Marshall of Virginia, effectively the colony's highest ranking law enforcement officer. Dale was discouraged by unhealthy conditions at Jamestown's location, and sought a better site as a potential improved replacement for Jamestown. His progressive but ill-fated
Henricus (named for Prince Henry) was established in 1612. Henricus became the major point of
Henrico Cittie (sic) in 1619. It was destroyed during the
Indian Massacre of 1622. The long-lost site of Henricus was rediscovered in the late 20th century, and was by then located in
Chesterfield County, which itself was established in 1749. Henricus is now part of a historical park.
★ Present-day
Henrico County was established by order of his younger brother, King
Charles I, in 1634 as one of the original eight
shires of Virginia. It is located adjacent to the state capital city of
Richmond, which was Henrico's
county seat for several hundred years, and became separate from it as an independent city in 1871. In the 21st century, Henrico remains extant in its original (county) political form and is regarded as one of the best-managed counties in the United States. In 1992 and again in 1993, ''City and State'' magazine ranked Henrico County as the second best fiscally managed county in the United States.
[2]
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles
★ '
19 February 1594 –
6 November 1612:' The Duke of Rothesay (Earl of Carrick, Lord of the Isles)
★ '
24 March 1603 –
6 November 1612:' The Duke of Cornwall
★ '
4 June 1610[3] –
6 November 1612:' The Prince of Wales (Earl of Chester)
Honours
★ 'KG':
Knight of the Garter, ''
14 June 1603 –
6 November 1612''
References
1. ''The Bass Rock in History'' in ''Transactions of the East Lothian Antiquarian and Field Naturalists' Society'', vol. 5, 1948: 55
2. http://dickglover.com/economic.php
3. The Prince of Wales – Previous Princes of Wales