no, she was never a queen consort, she was a Queen in her own right.
She was Queen regent of Scotland in her own right, she was briefly Queen consort of France until her husband the king of France died. And she was heiress presumptive of Queen Elizabeth I.
Mary Queen of Scots first spouse was Francis II of France. As Mary's husband, he would have been Royal consort of Scotland.
Mary Queen of Scots full name was simply Mary Stewart(later Stuart due to the French difficulty with the letter 'w'). However, her title was "Queen of Scotland", "Queen of Scotland and Princess consort of France", "Queen of Scotland and France" and "Queen Dowager of Scotland" respectively.
i believe it's queen of scots, as in 'Mary Queen of Scots'. however, i could be wrong.
She had married Francis, the eldest son of the King of France. When he became king of France she became Queen Consort (ie wife of the king). She was also Queen of Scotland as Mary I in her own right (Queen Regnant)
The Queen Consort may hold the title of Dowager Queen. In some states, if the Queen Consort's child becomes the monarch, the Queen may take a title such as 'Queen Mother'.
The next monarch was James I of England the son of Mary, Queen of Scots! He was a convert to Anglicanism from protestant ism. [calvinistic,] his wife who was Queen Ann of Denmark, a Roman Catholic was Queen Consort! The next reigning Queen as it were, was, Queen Mary II, wife of William of Orange thee usurper!
Mary, Queen of Scots (8 December 1542 - 8 February 1587), also known as Mary Stuart or Mary I of Scotland, was Queen of Scotlandfrom 14 December 1542 to 24 July 1567 and Queen consort of France from 10 July 1559 to 5 December 1560.
Mary Queen of scots signed nosj
Queen Mary ( died l953) was the Queen Consort of George V.
Mary, Queen of Scots
The White Queen in the story Alice in Wonderland is fictional. The White Queen in the TV series "The White Queen" is based on a real person. White Queen was a nickname given to Elizabeth Woodville, who was the Queen Consort of England and wife to King Edward IV of England.