Dowry of Mary (or Dowry of the Virgin, Our Lady's Dowry, and similar variations) is a title used in Roman Catholic contexts to refer to England.[1][2][3][4]
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The title originated in the Medieval period, when devotion to the Virgin Mary in England was particularly strong.[5][6] Mary was seen as a "special protectress" of England, who took personal interest in the country's affairs.[7] Though the title's precise origin is unknown, it had become widespread by the middle of the fourteenth century, and around the year 1350 a mendicant preacher claimed in a sermon that "it is commonly said that the land of England is the Virgin's dowry".[7] Around fifty years later, Archbishop Thomas Arundel, discussing Mary and the Incarnation, wrote that "we English, being ... her own Dowry, as we are commonly called, ought to surpass others in the fervour of our praises and devotions".[8] By the reign of Henry V, England was being referred to in Latin texts as dos Mariae, "dowry of Mary",[9] and according to chronicler Thomas Elmham English priests prayed to "the Virgin, protectress of her dower" on the eve of the Battle of Agincourt.[10]
The Wilton Diptych, completed around 1395, shows Richard II kneeling before the Virgin and Child. Carried by a nearby angel is the Cross of St George, the staff of which is surmounted by an orb featuring a minuscule map of England.[11] A similar work from the same era, a now-lost altarpiece, showed Richard handing the orb to Mary, with the inscription Dos tua Virgo pia haec est, "This is your dowry, Holy Virgin".[12][13]
In the wake of the English Reformation, the notion of England enjoying a special association or relationship with Mary became an important aspect of recusant Catholic spirituality.[14] The residents at English College owned a painting which depicted Mary being handed a scroll carrying the words "We will remain under the shade of your wings till the wickedness passes" by a group of kneeling Jesuits. The painting's superscription read Anglia dos Mariae, "England, Mary's dowry".[15]
Pope Leo XIII referred to England's association with the title in 1893. Addressing a group of Catholic pilgrims from England in Rome, he spoke of "the wonderful filial love which burnt within the heart of your forefathers towards the great Mother of God ... to whose service they consecrated themselves with such abundant proofs of devotion, that the kingdom itself acquired the singular and highly honourable title of 'Mary's Dowry.'"[16]