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General: LAWRENCE S DELOREAN REPAIR AND SERVICES "BACK TO THE FUTURE OR SAINT LAWRENCE"?
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Da: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Messaggio originale) Inviato: 23/02/2025 18:58
Lawrence's DeLorean Repair and Services
LawrencesDeLoreanRepairAndServices
Website www.ohiodeloreans.com/Lawrence.htm
Provides Service
Owner Lawrence Lormand
Current status Open for Business
Phone (313) 506-3786
email lawrencesr@netzero.net
Address Dearborn Heights, MI 48125
USA

Lawrence's DeLorean Repair and Services provides DeLorean service to the Dearborn Heights, Michigan area. Services include tune-ups, repairs, restorations, frame removal, mechanical, steering, suspension and updates[1].

https://deloreantech.fandom.com/wiki/Lawrence%27s_DeLorean_Repair_and_Services


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80's Classic Back To The Future Doc Brown "Great Scott!" Custom Tee Any  Size | Back to the future, Doc brown, Great scott
great scott! on Tumblr
Madeleine de France, Queen of Scotland, 1536 by Corneille de Lyon
   

Madeleine de France, Queen of Scotland, 1536

(Madeleine de France (1520-37) Queen of Scotland, 1536 )

https://www.meisterdrucke.us/fine-art-prints/Corneille-de-Lyon/80721/Madeleine-de-France,-Queen-of-Scotland,-1536.html

Madeleine of Valois

 
 
 
Madeleine of Valois
Madeleine de Valois by Corneille de la Haye
Queen consort of Scotland
Tenure 1 January 1537 – 7 July 1537
 
Born 10 August 1520
Chteau de Saint-Germain-en-LayeSaint-Germain-en-Laye, France
Died 7 July 1537 (aged 16)
Holyrood PalaceEdinburgh, Scotland
Burial
Spouse
 
(m. 1537)​
House Valois-Angoulême
Father Francis I of France
Mother Claude, Duchess of Brittany

Madeleine of Valois (10 August 1520 – 7 July 1537) was a French princess who briefly became Queen of Scotland in 1537 as the first wife of King James V. The marriage was arranged in accordance with the Treaty of Rouen, and they were married at Notre-Dame de Paris in January 1537, despite French reservations over her failing health. Madeleine died in July 1537, only six months after the wedding and less than two months after arriving in Scotland, resulting in her nickname, the "Summer Queen".

Early life

[edit]
Madeleine (back right) with her mother and sisters, from the Book of Hours of Catherine de'Medici.

Madeleine was born at the Chteau de Saint-Germain-en-LayeFrance, the fifth child and third daughter of King Francis I of France and Claude, Duchess of Brittany, herself the eldest daughter of King Louis XII of France and Anne, Duchess of Brittany.

She was frail from birth, and grew up in the warm and temperate Loire Valley region of France, rather than at Paris, as her father feared that the cold would destroy her delicate health. Together with her sister, Margaret, she was raised by her aunt, Marguerite de Navarre until her father remarried and his new wife, Eleanor of Austria, took them into her own household.[1] By her sixteenth birthday, she had contracted tuberculosis.[2]

Marriage negotiations

[edit]

Three years before Madeleine's birth, the Franco-Scottish Treaty of Rouen was made to bolster the Auld Alliance after Scotland's defeat at the Battle of Flodden. A marriage between a French princess and the Scottish King was one of its provisions.[3] In April 1530, John Stewart, Duke of Albany, was appointed commissioner to finalize the royal marriage between James V and Madeleine.[4] However, as Madeleine did not enjoy good health, another French bride, Mary of Bourbon, was proposed.[5]

James V sent his herald James Atkinhead to see Mary of Bourbon,[6] and a contract was made for James to marry her. King James travelled to France in 1536 to meet Mary of Bourbon, but smitten with the delicate Madeleine, he asked Francis I for her hand in marriage. Fearing the harsh climate of Scotland would prove fatal to his daughter's already failing health, Francis I initially refused to permit the marriage.[7]

James V met Francis I and the French royal household between Roanne and Lyon on 13 October.[8] He continued to press Francis I for Madeleine's hand, and despite his reservations and nagging fears, Francis I reluctantly granted permission to the marriage only after Madeleine made her interest in marrying James very obvious. The court moved down the Loire Valley to Amboise, and to the Chteau de Blois, and the marriage contract was signed on 26 November 1536.[9]

Wedding at Notre-Dame

[edit]
Notre-Dame de Paris and its environs, known as the ParvisJean Marot, 17th century

In preparation for the wedding, Francis I bought clothes and furnishings for Madeleine; jewels and gold chains were supplied by Regnault Danet, linen and cloths by Marie de Genevoise and Phillipe Savelon, clothes by the tailors Marceau Goursault and Charles Lacquait, veils by Jean Guesdon, and trimmings by Victor de Laval, who also made passementerie for a bed that Francis gave the couple. The goldsmith Thibault Hotman made silver plate for Madeleine.[10][11] The merchants of the royal "argenterie", René Tardif and Robert Fichepain supplied silks and woollen cloth.[12] A quantity of gold and silver trimmings for embroidering the clothes of Madeleine and her ladies were ordered from Baptiste Dalverge, a wire-drawer.[13] A platform walkway was constructed from the Bishop's Palace to Notre-Dame de Paris.[14]

After a Royal Entry into Paris on 31 December 1536,[15] they were married at Notre-Dame on 1 January 1537.[2] There was a banquet that night in the Great Hall of the Palais de la Cité.[16] Over the next two weeks there were further celebrations and tournaments at the Chteau de la Tournelle and Louvre.[17] The wedding festivities in 1537 were similar to those of 24 April 1558, for the wedding of Mary, Queen of Scots, and Francis, Dauphin of France.[18]

Francis I provided Madeleine with a generous dowry of 100,000 écu, and a further 30,000 francs settled on James V. According to the marriage contract made at Blois, Madeleine renounced her and any of her heirs' claims to the French throne. If James died first, Madeleine would retain for her lifetime assets including the Earldoms of FifeStrathearnRoss, and Orkney with Falkland PalaceStirling Castle, and Dingwall Castle, with the Lordship of Galloway and Threave Castle.[19]

Queen of Scots

[edit]
Coat of arms of Madeleine of Valois as Queen consort of Scots

In February the couple moved to Chantilly, to Senlis and Compiègne, where James received the Papal gift of hat and sword.[20][21][22] They stayed two nights at the Chteau de La Roche-Guyon.[23] After months of festivities and celebrations, the couple left France for Scotland from Le Havre in May 1537. The French ships were commanded by Jacques de Fountaines, Sieur de Mormoulins.[24] On 15 May, English sailors sold fish to the Scottish and French fleet off Bamburgh Head.[25] Madeleine's health deteriorated even further, and she was very sick when the royal pair landed in Scotland. They arrived at Leith at 10 o'clock on Whitsun-eve, 19 May 1537.[26]

According to John Lesley the ships were laden with her possessions;

"besides the Quenes Hienes furnitour, hinginis, and appareill, quhilk wes schippit at Newheavin and careit in Scotland, was also in hir awin cumpanye, transportit with hir majestie in Scotland, mony costlye jewells and goldin wark, precious stanis, orient pearle, maist excellent of any sort that was in Europe, and mony coistly abilyeaments for hir body, with mekill silver wark of coistlye cupbordis, cowpis, & plaite."[27]

A list or inventory of wedding presents from Francis I also survives, including Arras tapestry, cloths of estate, rich beds, two cupboards of silver gilt plate, table carpets, and Persian carpets.[28][29] Francis I also gave James V three of the ships, the SalamanderMorsicher, and Great Unicorn.[30] Madeleine took up residence at Holyrood Palace on 21 May 1537.[31]

 
St Lawrence of Rome, Deacon and Martyr - Feast Day - August 10 2024 -  Catholic Saint of the Day
August 10: St. Lawrence - Catholic Telegraph
Saint Lawrence, a diacon and martyr, is celebrated on August 10th. He is the patron saint of the poor, cooks, and deacons. 
 
Life of Saint Lawrence
  • He was one of the seven deacons in the Roman church who served Pope Sixtus II. 
     
  • He was executed in 258 during the persecution of the emperor Valerian. 
     
  • He is known for giving the church's wealth to the poor and sick before his arrest. 
     
  • He is said to have been roasted alive on a gridiron. 
     
  • He is said to have joked with his executioners, "Turn me over; I'm done on this side!". 
     
Legacy of Saint Lawrence
  • He is considered one of the most venerated martyrs in Rome. 
     
  • Many people converted to Christianity after his death, including several senators who witnessed his execution. 
     
  • The Basílica of San Lorenzo Extramuros in Rome was built on the site of his burial. 
     
  • He is also invoked against fire and back pain. 
     
 
Italian tradition 
 
  • In Italy, August 10th is known as the night of St. Lawrence, when people look for shooting stars.
  • The stars are said to be the tears of St. Lawrence.


 
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