We should not forget the attempt to marry the future Charles I to Infanta Maria. He even travelled to Madrid to meet the Infanta. A lot has been written about that trip.
Thanks: your examples underscore what I've suspected -- that such alliances were mostly in the long-distant past. One basically has to jump the calendar by centuries to get from the marriage of Queen Mary I of England and that of Princess Ena of Battenberg (perhaps the marriage of Archduchess Maria Christina of Austria-Teschen shouldn't count as the first since the Tudor queen, since she was only a great-great-granddaughter of King George II of Great Britain). The same can said of the marriages of Philippa of Lancaster and King Charles II of England.
Religion and politics undoubtedly got in the way to prevent more such alliances. The house of Bourbon came to the Spanish throne with the accession of King Felipe V: I understand that several cadet branches of the said house broke off from his lineage -- e.g. the duchy of Parma and the kingdom of the Two Sicilies. It seems that over the centuries, the Spanish Bourbons largely intermarried with their fellow Bourbon cousins from these dynasties. Of course, they also intermarried with the Habsburgs and Braganzas. Later on, the Wittelsbachs entered the picture, when in 1856 Prince Adalbert of Bavaria (youngest son of King Ludwig I) established the so-called "Spanish" branch of the German royal house.
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