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  1. Christina, Duchess of Lorraine and Milan. v. t. e. Christina of Denmark (Danish: Christine af Danmark; November 1521 – 10 December 1590) was a Danish princess, the younger surviving daughter of King Christian II of Denmark and Norway and Isabella of Austria. By her two marriages, she became Duchess of Milan, then Duchess of Lorraine.

  2. The source of the vertical shadow to the right is ambiguous, but is perhaps intended to suggests other objects nearby, in Christina’s space. The picture eventually passed into the collection of the Dukes of Arundel. In 1880 the fifteenth Duke loaned the portrait to the National Gallery, and it became one of its most admired pictures.

  3. Jan 5, 2024 · Christina of Milan, Duchess of Milan, used an unusual tool to avoid becoming one of Henry VIII’s unfortunate wives—the royal portrait. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. The year was 1538, and King Henry VIII of England was back in the marriage market. His third wife, Jane Seymour, had died in childbirth a year ...

  4. Sep 3, 2013 · All of this meant Christina spent most of her childhood motherless and fatherless. As she grew older, Christina developed into quite the beauty – and her Hapsburg blood made her an attractive prize on the marriage market. After considering his choices, Charles V married her off to Francesco Sforza, Duke of Milan, a man 26 years her senior.

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  5. Apr 18, 2022 · English: Holbein painted this portrait of Christina of Denmark, the young widowed Duchess of Milan, for Henry VIII of England, who was considering her as a possible wife. Thomas Cromwell sent Holbein to Brussels, accompanied by Philip Hoby, to draw the duchess, and she sat for him for three hours. John Hutton, the English representative in ...

  6. Tag this. This elegant young woman is Christina of Denmark, the youngest daughter of King Christian of Denmark. In 1538, King Henry VIII of England was looking for a fourth wife, after the death of Jane Seymour the previous year. As Henry’s official court artist, Holbein was sent to Brussels to capture the 16-year-old Christina’s likeness.

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  8. Christina, younger daughter of Christian II of Denmark and Isabella of Austria, sister of Charles V, was born in 1522. In 1533 she married by proxy the Duke of Milan, who died in 1535. Holbein visited Brussels in 1538, and for three hours Christina sat for a portrait. She wears mourning clothes.

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