York princesses marry Dauphin of France and King of Spain

James II while, Duke of York wished to see his two daughters, Mary and Anne married to Louis, the Dauphin of France and Carlos II of Spain but parliamentary opposition meant neither of these matches took place. Instead they married the Protestant princes, William of Orange and George of Denmark. However if the French and Spanish matches had taken place what would have happened when James Francis Edward Stuart is born in 1688. Would any kind of Glorious Revolution have taken place?
 
I'm no expert on this period but would think quite possibly not. One of the factors that made The Glorious Revolution so appealing is that the previous heir, Mary, was a staunch Protestant as was her husband William (and also Anne and her hubby George). As both Mary and Anne would presumably have to convert to Catholicism on their marriages to Louis and Carlos they would become less appealing alternatives for the throne. William of Orange was James's nephew and so still a possible replacement King but this would have caused all sorts of problems with France and Spain who would have pushed for the rights of their Dauphine and Queen respectively.
 
James II while, Duke of York wished to see his two daughters, Mary and Anne married to Louis, the Dauphin of France and Carlos II of Spain but parliamentary opposition meant neither of these matches took place. Instead they married the Protestant princes, William of Orange and George of Denmark. However if the French and Spanish matches had taken place what would have happened when James Francis Edward Stuart is born in 1688. Would any kind of Glorious Revolution have taken place?

The only way James is seeing either of these two matches happening is if Charles II has kids of his own (maybe as Catherine of Braganza thought, two boys and a girl). Parliament will be unlikely to allow the Princess Royal to wed a Frenchman or a Spaniard (just in case), but the duke of York's daughters are probably a-go. Or, James has a surviving son(s) from his first marriage that render the inheritance of the crown of England by a French/Spanish prince unlikely in the foreseeable future.

NOTE: Maybe I'm the only one, but I thought that this was referring to two of Edward IV's daughters marrying Charles VIII and the son of Ferdinand and Isabella.
 
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