Catherine of Braganza, the Portuguese Infanta, had …

Years: 1662 - 1662
May

Catherine of Braganza, the Portuguese Infanta, had been married by proxy on April 23, 1662, in Lisbon.

After arriving in Portsmouth on May 14, 1662, she and Charles are married in two more ceremonies—a Catholic one conducted in secret, followed on May 21 by a public Anglican service.

Catherine at twenty-three has married late for a woman of this time.

Her large dowry brings the port cities of Tangier and Bombay to British control.

The former is to have only a transitory significance, but the latter will have a major lasting influence on the development of the British Empire and the history of India, as the British will develop Bombay—which has only ten thousand inhabitants under the Portuguese—into a major center of commerce.

Catherine, being Roman Catholic, is not a particularly popular choice of queen.

As Roman Catholics are forbidden to take part in Anglican services, her religion prevents her from being crowned.

Parliament meanwhile introduces, on May 19, 1662, a tax on hearths.

Householders are required to pay a charge of two shillings per annum for each hearth, with half the payment due at Michaelmas and half at Lady Day.

Exemptions to the tax are granted, to those in receipt of poor relief, those whose houses are worth less than twenty shillings a year and those who pay neither church nor poor rates.

Also exempt are charitable institutions such as schools and almshouses, and industrial hearths with the exception of smiths' forges and bakers' ovens.

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