Sophia Stuart

[6][7] Anne was attended by a midwife, Alice Dennis, and Peter Chamberlen, the surgeon to the queen,[8] who had both helped at the birth of Mary Stuart in April 1605.

[13] Ninth and last child of James I of England and Queen Anne of Denmark, her body was carried on the Thames in a barge covered with black velvet to be buried in Westminster Abbey on 26 June.

[16] Christian IV was entertained by the king at Theobalds while Anne remained at Greenwich, still in the apartments set aside for her confinement.

[19] Sophia's monument at Westminster Abbey resembling a stone crib was designed by Maximilian Colt and painted and gilded by John de Critz.

[21] Its Latin inscription may be translated, "Sophia, a royal rosebud untimely plucked by Fate and from James, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland, and Queen Anne her parents, snatched away, to flower again in the rose garden of Christ, lies here.

Sophie was the daughter of James VI and I and Anne of Denmark
Sophia's tomb (left) at Westminster Abbey is shaped like a crib with an arched hood; her face is turned away from the viewer, but visible in the mirror hanging on the wall above her tomb. [ 2 ]