1 | <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
|
---|
2 | <html>
|
---|
3 | <head>
|
---|
4 | <meta name="content"
|
---|
5 | content="Mary Stuart Mary Queen of Scots 1542-1587 biography">
|
---|
6 | <meta name="page_topic"
|
---|
7 | content="Mary Stuart Queen of Scots 1542-1587 biography">
|
---|
8 | <meta name="author" content="Marilee Mongello">
|
---|
9 | <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage 5.0">
|
---|
10 | <meta name="ProgId" content="FrontPage.Editor.Document">
|
---|
11 | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
|
---|
12 | content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
|
---|
13 | <meta http-equiv="Content-Language" content="en-us">
|
---|
14 | <title>Mary, Queen of Scots: Biography, Portraits, Primary Sources</title>
|
---|
15 | <style fprolloverstyle="">A:hover {color: #0000FF; font-weight: bold}
|
---|
16 | </style>
|
---|
17 | </head>
|
---|
18 | <body link="#0000ff" vlink="#0000ff" alink="#0000ff">
|
---|
19 | <div align="center">
|
---|
20 | <center>
|
---|
21 | <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="4" width="94%">
|
---|
22 | <tbody>
|
---|
23 | <tr>
|
---|
24 | <td valign="bottom" colspan="3"> <img border="0"
|
---|
25 | src="maryqosbiography.gif"
|
---|
26 | width="764" height="103">
|
---|
27 | <p> Mary, queen of Scots is one of the most fascinating and
|
---|
28 | controversial monarchs of 16th century Europe. At one time, she
|
---|
29 | claimed the crowns of four nations - Scotland, France, England and
|
---|
30 | Ireland. Her physical beauty and kind heart were acknowledged
|
---|
31 | even by her enemies. Yet she lacked the political skills to rule
|
---|
32 | successfully in Scotland. Her second marriage was unpopular and
|
---|
33 | ended in murder and scandal; her third was even less popular and ended
|
---|
34 | in forced abdication in favor of her infant son. She fled to
|
---|
35 | England in 1568, hoping for the help of her cousin, Elizabeth I.
|
---|
36 | Her presence was dangerous for the English queen, who feared Catholic
|
---|
37 | plotting on Mary's behalf. The two queens never met and Mary
|
---|
38 | remained imprisoned for the next nineteen years. She was executed
|
---|
39 | in 1587, only forty-four years old. By orders of the English
|
---|
40 | government, all of her possessions were burned. In 1603, upon
|
---|
41 | Elizabeth's death, Mary's son became king of England as James I.</p>
|
---|
42 | </td>
|
---|
43 | </tr>
|
---|
44 | <tr>
|
---|
45 | <td><br>
|
---|
46 | </td>
|
---|
47 | <td><br>
|
---|
48 | </td>
|
---|
49 | <td><br>
|
---|
50 | </td>
|
---|
51 | </tr>
|
---|
52 | <tr>
|
---|
53 | <td valign="top" width="48%"> <img border="2"
|
---|
54 | src="maryqosbiographyblack.jpg"
|
---|
55 | width="400" height="521"></td>
|
---|
56 | <td width="4%"><br>
|
---|
57 | </td>
|
---|
58 | <td valign="top" width="48%">
|
---|
59 | <p> </p>
|
---|
60 | <p> <font size="2"><b>FURTHER READING</b><br>
|
---|
61 | You may also view a <a
|
---|
62 | href="maryqoschronology.html">
|
---|
63 | chronology</a> of her life, read <a
|
---|
64 | href="../primary.html">Primary Sources</a>,
|
---|
65 | including letters written by Mary, view <a
|
---|
66 | href="http://www.marileecody.com/maryqosimages.html">portraits of Mary</a>
|
---|
67 | and her contemporaries, test your knowledge of Mary's life at <a
|
---|
68 | href="../tudor1.html">Tudor Quizzes</a>,
|
---|
69 | and learn more about her famous cousin, <a
|
---|
70 | href="../monarchs/eliz.html">Queen
|
---|
71 | Elizabeth I</a>.</font></p>
|
---|
72 | <p> <font size="2"> <a
|
---|
73 | href="maryqosbiography.html#Sources">
|
---|
74 | Click here to view sources</a> for this biography; and <a
|
---|
75 | href="maryqosbiography.html#Weblinks">
|
---|
76 | click here for weblinks</a> related to Mary, queen of Scots. My
|
---|
77 | personal favorite is </font><font size="2" face="Times New Roman"> <a
|
---|
78 | href="http://www.marie-stuart.co.uk/">The Marie Stuart Society of
|
---|
79 | Scotland</a> website.</font></p>
|
---|
80 | <p> </p>
|
---|
81 | <p> </p>
|
---|
82 | <p> <font face="Times New Roman" size="2"><b>NEWS April
|
---|
83 | 2004<br>
|
---|
84 | </b>Two new studies of Mary, queen of Scots have arrived in
|
---|
85 | bookstores. Jane Dunn's <i> <a
|
---|
86 | href="http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/catalog/display.pperl?0375408983">
|
---|
87 | Elizabeth and Mary: Cousins, Rivals, Queens</a></i> is a dual biography
|
---|
88 | with a beautiful selection of portraits and judicious use of primary
|
---|
89 | sources. John Guy's <i> <a
|
---|
90 | href="http://www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com/catalog/titledetail.cfm?titleNumber=688331">
|
---|
91 | Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart</a></i> (published in the
|
---|
92 | UK as <a
|
---|
93 | href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/184115752X/ref=pd_sim_b_dp_2/026-6790542-2760433">
|
---|
94 | <i>My Heart is My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots</i>)</a>
|
---|
95 | is the first biography dedicated to the Scottish queen in over thirty
|
---|
96 | years. Its central thesis argues that Burghley was the true
|
---|
97 | villain of Mary's story.<span style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
|
---|
98 | </span><b><br>
|
---|
99 | September 2004</b>: I am working on a new, detailed biography of
|
---|
100 | Mary. Please check back soon.</font></p>
|
---|
101 | </td>
|
---|
102 | </tr>
|
---|
103 | </tbody>
|
---|
104 | </table>
|
---|
105 | </center>
|
---|
106 | </div>
|
---|
107 | <blockquote>
|
---|
108 | <blockquote>
|
---|
109 | <p> </p>
|
---|
110 | <p><b><font face="Arial"><a name="Biography"></a></font> </b> <font
|
---|
111 | face="Times New Roman" size="4">'As a sinner I am
|
---|
112 | truly conscious of having often offended my Creator and I beg him to
|
---|
113 | forgive me, but as a Queen and Sovereign, I am aware of no fault or
|
---|
114 | offence for which I have to render account to anyone here
|
---|
115 | below.' </font><font face="Times New Roman"><i><font
|
---|
116 | size="2">Mary, queen of Scots to her
|
---|
117 | jailer, Sir Amyas Paulet; October 1586</font></i></font></p>
|
---|
118 | <hr>
|
---|
119 | <p>In November 1542, King James V of Scotland, lay dying at his
|
---|
120 | beloved Falkland Palace, built just five years earlier. He was
|
---|
121 | devastated by his army's defeat by the English at Solway Moss and saw
|
---|
122 | little hope for the future. At Falkland, he was told that Mary of
|
---|
123 | Guise, his French-born wife once wooed by Henry VIII, had given birth
|
---|
124 | to a daughter at Linlithgow Palace on December 8. This was a
|
---|
125 | feast-day in honor of the Virgin Mary and many took it as a good omen
|
---|
126 | for the little <font face="Arial"> <img height="407"
|
---|
127 | alt="sketch of Mary, queen of Scots, age 12 or 13, by Clouet"
|
---|
128 | src="maryqosmain13.jpg"
|
---|
129 | width="250" align="left" border="1"></font>princess; for her father,
|
---|
130 | however, it was otherwise. Upon receiving news of Mary's birth,
|
---|
131 | he reportedly said, 'Woe is me. My dynasty came with a lass. It
|
---|
132 | will go with a lass.' James's ancestor, Robert II, had become
|
---|
133 | King of Scots in 1371. The son of Robert the Bruce's daughter
|
---|
134 | Marjorie
|
---|
135 | and Walter, the High Steward of Scotland, Robert was nearest in
|
---|
136 | succession to the throne. He called his new dynasty
|
---|
137 | 'Stewart,' a variation on his father's title; in France, it was spelled
|
---|
138 | Stuart. Mary's father, James V, believed this lineage had ended with
|
---|
139 | his daughter's birth. He certainly never contemplated that his
|
---|
140 | grandson would one day rule both Scotland and its old enemy,
|
---|
141 | England. James died within a week of Mary's birth and, before she
|
---|
142 | was even a year old, the child was crowned queen of Scots. </p>
|
---|
143 | <p> The regents of Scotland made a treaty with
|
---|
144 | Henry VIII in which Edward, Henry's long-awaited and precious son,
|
---|
145 | would wed Mary. But Henry VIII became increasingly erratic and
|
---|
146 | despotic in his later years and continued to send his army north.
|
---|
147 | In 1546, Henry also encouraged the murder of Cardinal Beaton, a great
|
---|
148 | Scots patriot; the proof - shortly before the murder, he had offered
|
---|
149 | one
|
---|
150 | thousand pounds for expenses associated with a plot to murder
|
---|
151 | Beaton. After this, the Scots were determined to avoid the
|
---|
152 | proposed English marriage. In July 1548, they sent the five-year-old
|
---|
153 | Mary to France, her mother's homeland. The Scots Parliament had
|
---|
154 | agreed to her marriage with Francis, the heir of Henry II, king of
|
---|
155 | France from 1547 to 1559. Mary sailed from Dumbarton Castle to
|
---|
156 | France, using this route to avoid English ships patrolling the English
|
---|
157 | Channel. According to most contemporary reports, Mary was
|
---|
158 | exceptionally lovely (even in an age when most noble women were
|
---|
159 | accorded the title of 'fair' or 'beautiful'), intelligent and full of
|
---|
160 | vitality. One French observer wrote admiringly: 'It is not
|
---|
161 | possible to hope for more from a Princess on this earth.' From
|
---|
162 | this vantage point, Mary's life seemed to be set on a glorious course;
|
---|
163 | but like a later foreign queen of France, Marie Antoinette, Mary's life
|
---|
164 | was not destined to be peaceful and happy. </p>
|
---|
165 | <p> When Mary left for Scotland, she traveled
|
---|
166 | with the children of Scotland's nobility, including the 'Four Maries,'
|
---|
167 | the women who would stay with her throughout her later imprisonment and
|
---|
168 | execution. They were Mary Fleming, Mary Seton, Mary Beaton and
|
---|
169 | Mary Livingstone. Mary Seton was the only one to die unmarried
|
---|
170 | and lived on until 1615, praying for Mary's soul and giving alms in her
|
---|
171 | memory. The group arrived in France in August 1548. </p>
|
---|
172 | <center>
|
---|
173 | <hr width="100%">
|
---|
174 | <p> <u><font size="+1">France, 1548-61</font></u></p>
|
---|
175 | </center>
|
---|
176 | <p>Mary was given a royal welcome in France by King Henry II.
|
---|
177 | He ordered that she would have precedence over his own daughters as she
|
---|
178 | was sovereign of an independent country and also because she was to wed
|
---|
179 | his heir, the Dauphin. The king also became very fond of the
|
---|
180 | child, saying, 'The little Queen of Scots is the most perfect child I
|
---|
181 | have ever seen.' While in France, Mary's maternal grandmother,
|
---|
182 | Antoinette de Guise, wrote to her daughter in Scotland that Mary was
|
---|
183 | 'very pretty, graceful and self-assured.' </p>
|
---|
184 | <p> Mary was 5 when she first met the
|
---|
185 | four-year-old Dauphin, her betrothed husband. According to most
|
---|
186 | contemporaries, they were close and affectionate with one another even
|
---|
187 | as children. They traveled from one royal palace to another -
|
---|
188 | Fountaineblea to Meudon, or to Chambord or Saint-Germain. They
|
---|
189 | were always attended to by a retinue of servants and, even then, Mary
|
---|
190 | had developed a fondness for animals, especially dogs, which was to
|
---|
191 | continue throughout her life. Mary was also educated in the
|
---|
192 | traditional manner of French princesses; she spoke French and learned
|
---|
193 | Latin, Italian, Spanish and a little Greek. She learned to dance,
|
---|
194 | sing, play the lute as well as converse on religious matters. Her
|
---|
195 | religious tutor was the prior of Inchmahome, a Scottish priest.
|
---|
196 | When she was seven, her mother came to France to visit her; when Mary
|
---|
197 | of Guise returned to Scotland, neither realized that they would never
|
---|
198 | see each other again. </p>
|
---|
199 | <p> By the age of eleven, Mary was deemed to be
|
---|
200 | as intelligent and well-spoken as a woman of twenty-five by her doting
|
---|
201 | father-in-law. It is worth noting that the Guise family regarded
|
---|
202 | Mary as one of their own; not only was betrothed to the heir to the
|
---|
203 | throne but her mother was a Guise as well. Her uncle, Cardinal
|
---|
204 | Guise, taught her about statecraft, perhaps encouraging her natural
|
---|
205 | feelings of clemency and mercy. In fact, Mary was to be
|
---|
206 | remarkably free from bigotry during her short reign in Scotland, even
|
---|
207 | towards her subjects of a different religion. </p>
|
---|
208 | <p> <img
|
---|
209 | alt="portrait of Mary queen of Scots and her first husband, Francis II of France"
|
---|
210 | src="maryfrancis-crop.jpg"
|
---|
211 | align="left" border="1" width="170" height="226">
|
---|
212 | In 1555, Mary sent back letters to her mother in Scotland to be used
|
---|
213 | for administrative purposes and it is from these that we first see her
|
---|
214 | royal signature <img
|
---|
215 | src="marysig.jpg">'MARIE R'</a>.
|
---|
216 | In 1558, she married the Dauphin in an incredible celebration in
|
---|
217 | Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. Exceptionally tall for a woman in
|
---|
218 | the 16th century, Mary was every inch the regal Queen; she had an oval
|
---|
219 | face, shapely chin, and small mouth which were set off by her
|
---|
220 | golden-red hair, her large forehead, and hazel eyes. Many
|
---|
221 | considered Mary to be the most beautiful princess in Europe, much as
|
---|
222 | they had thought of her relative, Henry VIII's sister, <a
|
---|
223 | href="brandon.html">Mary</a>,
|
---|
224 | who had also come to France as queen for a short while. Mary was
|
---|
225 | not always in the best of health but, unlike her husband, there were no
|
---|
226 | immediate concerns for her life. </p>
|
---|
227 | <p> In 1558, <a
|
---|
228 | href="../monarchs/mary1.html">Queen Mary I</a>
|
---|
229 | of England passed away and Henry II of France encouraged his
|
---|
230 | daughter-in- law to assume the royal arms of England. In his
|
---|
231 | opinion - and that of most of Catholic Europe - Mary of Scotland was
|
---|
232 | the next heir to the English throne. This belief, of course,
|
---|
233 | would have serious repercussions throughout Mary's life.
|
---|
234 | Elizabeth I never forgot this first offense and never rested easily
|
---|
235 | while her Catholic relative was alive. But the matter was
|
---|
236 | smoothed over when Elizabeth was persuadd the assumption was due more
|
---|
237 | to Guise ambitions than Mary's actual wish. In 1559, Henry II of
|
---|
238 | France, died at the age of 40. Mary and her husband were crowned Queen
|
---|
239 | and King of France. But in June of 1560, Mary's mother died in
|
---|
240 | Scotland at the age of 45. And just six months later, her young
|
---|
241 | husband also died of an ear infection. Mary was understandably
|
---|
242 | devastated by this chain of tragic events. Thockmorton, the
|
---|
243 | English ambassador, commented that Francis had left 'as dolorous a wife
|
---|
244 | as she had good cause to be. By long watching with him during his
|
---|
245 | sickness and painful diligence about him' she had become exhausted and
|
---|
246 | made herself ill. She wrote a poem, in French, about her grief at
|
---|
247 | his death; this is a translation of one verse: </p>
|
---|
248 | <p><i>By day, by night, I think of him/ In wood or mead, or where I
|
---|
249 | be/ My heart keeps watch for one who's gone./ And yet I feel he's aye
|
---|
250 | with me.</i> </p>
|
---|
251 | <p> What was Mary to do next? She left for
|
---|
252 | Scotland, a land rife with religious and civil discord. Without waiting
|
---|
253 | for a safe-conduct pass from Elizabeth, whose ships were patrolling her
|
---|
254 | route, Mary set out for Scotland on 14 August 1561 and, five days
|
---|
255 | later, reached Leith, the port of Edinburgh. </p>
|
---|
256 | <center>
|
---|
257 | <p> </p>
|
---|
258 | <hr width="100%">
|
---|
259 | <p> <u><font size="+1">Scotland, 1561-68</font></u></p>
|
---|
260 | </center>
|
---|
261 | <p> Mary knew very well that she was succeeding
|
---|
262 | to a most troubled heritage. But after her recent years of loss
|
---|
263 | and grief, she was determined to make a bright future. Also, in
|
---|
264 | an age of religious persecution which earned her cousin Mary Tudor the
|
---|
265 | nickname 'Bloody Mary,' Mary was determined that every one of her
|
---|
266 | Scottish subjects should worship God as their conscience bade; there
|
---|
267 | would be no religious persecution under her rule. In this, she
|
---|
268 | resembled her cousin <a
|
---|
269 | href="../monarchs/eliz.html">Elizabeth I</a>.
|
---|
270 | </p>
|
---|
271 | <p> <img alt="copy of a French miniature of Mary, painted c1565"
|
---|
272 | src="maryqos1565cr.jpg"
|
---|
273 | align="left" border="1" width="175" height="236">
|
---|
274 | The Scots received their new queen with great joy and
|
---|
275 | celebration. At once, she began to try and help them; within a
|
---|
276 | year of her arrival, one-sixth of all Church benefices was given to the
|
---|
277 | Protestant ministers to relieve their poverty. She also attempted
|
---|
278 | to strengthen the power of the Crown against Scotland's notoriously
|
---|
279 | difficult-to-control nobles. Of course, such a strategy would
|
---|
280 | lead to more peace and stability within the realm. As a result,
|
---|
281 | she was popular with the common people but not the nobility; she played
|
---|
282 | croquet, golfed, went for hunts and archery practice, sung, danced,
|
---|
283 | and, in general, showed an admirable zest for life. In 1562 the
|
---|
284 | English ambassador reported to Elizabeth, 'When the soldiers came back
|
---|
285 | from the night's sentry-duty, she said she was sorry she was not a man
|
---|
286 | to be all night on the fields and to walk the causeway with buff-coat,
|
---|
287 | steel-helmet, buckler, and broadsword.' </p>
|
---|
288 | <p> In 1563, Mary began the traditional 'royal
|
---|
289 | progress' throughout Scotland. In 1564, the fourth Earl of Atholl
|
---|
290 | organized a great hunt in honor of the queen and, yet again, Mary
|
---|
291 | charmed all who met her. Yet she also treaded dangerous ground
|
---|
292 | with her policy of non-discrimination and desire to unify the nation,
|
---|
293 | taking power away from the independent nobles. Though a Catholic,
|
---|
294 | Mary became friends with one of the most learned Protestants of the
|
---|
295 | time, George Buchanan. In the political realm, Mary kept up
|
---|
296 | peaceful relations with France, Spain, and England, though she never
|
---|
297 | met Elizabeth face-to-face. But, in 1566, her patience was tried
|
---|
298 | by the English ambassador's persistent and obvious spying; she ordered
|
---|
299 | him out of the kingdom and declared him persona non grata. And
|
---|
300 | her peace with France and Spain was kept without a treaty, though a
|
---|
301 | treaty would have given Scotland some measure of protection against
|
---|
302 | England in the possibility of conflict. However, Mary was aware
|
---|
303 | that any treaty could compromise her subjects, involving them in yet
|
---|
304 | another war and causing strife. Above all, she wanted peace and
|
---|
305 | prosperity, and she kept Scotland safely distanced from political
|
---|
306 | machinations. When the threat to Mary's reign finally came, it
|
---|
307 | was not from one of these outside powers; indeed, it came from within
|
---|
308 | her own nation. </p>
|
---|
309 | <p> <img alt="Mary's second husband, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley"
|
---|
310 | src="darnley-crop.jpg"
|
---|
311 | align="left" border="1" width="150" height="197">
|
---|
312 | As queen, Mary was more than aware that she should marry and provide
|
---|
313 | heirs to the throne. In July of 1565, she wed a cousin named
|
---|
314 | Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, a weak, vain, and unstable young man; like
|
---|
315 | Mary, he was also a grandchild of Henry VIII's sister Margaret.
|
---|
316 | Why Mary wed Darnley remains a mystery; he was superficially charming
|
---|
317 | and, unlike most men, taller than the queen. He was fond of
|
---|
318 | courtly amusements and thus a nice change from the dour Scottish lords
|
---|
319 | who surrounded her. But he never seemed to care for Mary and
|
---|
320 | sought far more power than she was willing to give him. When she
|
---|
321 | was six months pregnant in March of 1566, Darnley joined a group of
|
---|
322 | Scottish nobles who broke into her supper-room at Holyrood Palace and
|
---|
323 | dragged her Piedmontese secretary, David Riccio, into another room and
|
---|
324 | stabbed him to death. They claimed Riccio had undue influence
|
---|
325 | over her foreign policy but, in reality, they probably meant to cause
|
---|
326 | Mary, from watching this horrific crime, to suffer a miscarriage, thus
|
---|
327 | losing her child and her own life as well since one usually meant the
|
---|
328 | other in the 16th century. Mary certainly believed that Darnley,
|
---|
329 | angry because she had denied him the crown matrimonial, wanted to kill
|
---|
330 | her and the child, thus becoming King of Scots. But it is
|
---|
331 | unlikely that, had he been successful, Darnley would have long survived
|
---|
332 | his wife. </p>
|
---|
333 | <p> After Riccio's death, the nobles kept Mary
|
---|
334 | prisoner at Holyrood Palace. Entering the later stages of her
|
---|
335 | pregnancy, she was desperate to escape and - somehow - won over Darnley
|
---|
336 | and they escaped together. Three months later the future James VI
|
---|
337 | of Scotland was born and congratulations came from all over
|
---|
338 | Europe. Still young and healthy after the birth, Mary now had an
|
---|
339 | heir. This was the apex of her reign, her greatest and happiest
|
---|
340 | moment. In December 1566 James was baptized in the Chapel Royal
|
---|
341 | of Stirling Castle. Mary, once the fragile last hope of the Stewart
|
---|
342 | dynasty, was just 23 years old and had fulfilled one of a monarch's
|
---|
343 | greatest duties - providing a healthy son and heir. Elizabeth of
|
---|
344 | England, ten years older, watched these events with interest for, even
|
---|
345 | then, she knew her own future would be - by choice - unmarried and
|
---|
346 | childless. She could well imagine that Mary's son would be her
|
---|
347 | heir as well. </p>
|
---|
348 | <p> But this future soon seemed perilous for
|
---|
349 | James's birth provided only a temporary calm. The nobles who had
|
---|
350 | plotted with Darnley now felt betrayed by him; after all, they had
|
---|
351 | captured the queen and her potential heir, murdered her dear friend,
|
---|
352 | and were in a position to demand anything. But Darnley's decision
|
---|
353 | to help Mary escape infuriated them. In February of 1567 they had
|
---|
354 | Darnley's house, Kirk o' Field, blown up; Darnley's strangled body was
|
---|
355 | found in the garden. Many nobles were implicated, most
|
---|
356 | particularly James Hepburn, the Earl of Bothwell. Certainly Bothwell's
|
---|
357 | later life (imprisoned in Denmark, he died in 1578, virtually insane)
|
---|
358 | was a degree of punishment for this crime. However, in the
|
---|
359 | immediate aftermath of Darnley's murder, he met with Mary about six
|
---|
360 | miles outside of Edinburgh. He had 600 men with him and asked to
|
---|
361 | escort Mary to his castle at Dunbar; he told her she was in danger if
|
---|
362 | she went to Edinburgh. Mary, unwilling to cause further bloodshed
|
---|
363 | and understandably terrified, followed his suggestions.
|
---|
364 | Bothwell's noble friends had previously pressed her to marry him and
|
---|
365 | he, too, had told her she needed a strong husband who could help unify
|
---|
366 | the nobles behind her. Mary had refused the proposal then,
|
---|
367 | preferring to marry Darnley, but now she knew herself to be
|
---|
368 | powerless. She also had an infant son to consider. So she
|
---|
369 | consented to wed Bothwell, hoping that this would finally stabilize the
|
---|
370 | country. Also, Bothwell showed <img
|
---|
371 | alt="Mary's third husband, James Hepburn, Lord Bothwell"
|
---|
372 | src="bothwell.jpg"
|
---|
373 | align="left" width="226" height="224"> Mary an agreement the nobles
|
---|
374 | had signed which indicated they were prepared to accept him as their
|
---|
375 | overlord. In May 1567 they wed at Holyrood and Mary wrote to the
|
---|
376 | foreign courts that it was the right decision for her country. </p>
|
---|
377 | <p> But the nobles were still not to be
|
---|
378 | trusted. Now, they were angry that Bothwell would be all-powerful
|
---|
379 | and they decided to wage war against him. Barely a month after
|
---|
380 | the marriage, rebel nobles and their forces met Mary's troops at
|
---|
381 | Carberry Hill, 8 miles south-east of Edinburgh. The nobles
|
---|
382 | demanded that Mary abandon Bothwell, whom they had earlier ordered her
|
---|
383 | to wed. She refused and reminded them of their earlier
|
---|
384 | order. To avoid the bloodshed of battle, she turned herself over
|
---|
385 | and the rebels took her to Edinburgh while Bothwell struggled to rally
|
---|
386 | troops of his own. Mary was taken to Lochleven Castle and held
|
---|
387 | prisoner in that island fortress; fearing for her own life, she became
|
---|
388 | desperately ill. She was forced to sign a document abdicating the
|
---|
389 | crown in favor of her year-old son. At the end of that month,
|
---|
390 | July 1567, James was crowned king and James Stewart, the Earl of Moray,
|
---|
391 | Mary's bastard half-brother, became Regent. Moray wasted no time
|
---|
392 | in repaying Mary's earlier kindness to him by stealing her son and
|
---|
393 | jewels. Of course, Scottish history reveals that all these
|
---|
394 | nefarious nobles came to a bad end - Moray was murdered just 3 years
|
---|
395 | later and the next regents were also killed; in fact, her son James had
|
---|
396 | one of the traitors executed in 1580, when he was just a teenager. </p>
|
---|
397 | <p> Mary's cause was aided in 1568 when John Hay,
|
---|
398 | before his execution, made a statement from the scaffold that told how
|
---|
399 | the nobles had murdered Darnley. Before this, the nobles had
|
---|
400 | attempted to make the people believe Mary was responsible. Now,
|
---|
401 | she was able to win sympathy and friends. George Douglas, one of
|
---|
402 | the brothers of her keeper at Lochleven, helped her escape. After
|
---|
403 | 10 months of captivity, she was free to fight for the throne. Her
|
---|
404 | supporters gathered an army and, on their way to Dumbarton Castle, a
|
---|
405 | battle was fought at Langside, Glasgow. Mary's forces lost and
|
---|
406 | she was forced to flee with her supporters. Against all advice,
|
---|
407 | she was determined to go south and ask Elizabeth I for support.
|
---|
408 | As James's godmother and Mary's cousin as well as a fellow independent
|
---|
409 | Queen, Mary felt certain Elizabeth would help her. As most know,
|
---|
410 | this was the beginning of yet another chapter of suffering and misery
|
---|
411 | for Mary. </p>
|
---|
412 | <p> </p>
|
---|
413 | <hr width="100%">
|
---|
414 | <center>
|
---|
415 | <p><u><font size="+1">The Final Years, 1568-87</font></u></p>
|
---|
416 | </center>
|
---|
417 | <p>Mary set sail for England on 16 May 1568. She soon arrived
|
---|
418 | in Workington, Cumbria; Elizabeth did not know what to do and kept Mary
|
---|
419 | guarded in the north. After all, without Mary's knowledge, she
|
---|
420 | had been helping her enemies, promising money and <img
|
---|
421 | alt="Mary, queen of Scots and Lord Darnley, as portrayed by Vanessa Redgrave and Timothy Dalton in the film 'Mary Queen of Scots', 1971"
|
---|
422 | src="maryqos-film.jpg"
|
---|
423 | align="left" border="1" width="280" height="247"> sanctuary in return
|
---|
424 | for their treacherous behavior against their queen. Elizabeth's
|
---|
425 | motives for this were obvious - Mary was the closest Catholic claimant
|
---|
426 | to the English throne and Elizabeth knew some of her subjects were not
|
---|
427 | above hoping she could be deposed and Mary made queen of both Scotland
|
---|
428 | and England. So she had determined to keep her cousin's kingdom
|
---|
429 | in continual strife; if Mary was busy at home, she would have less
|
---|
430 | chance to plot against Elizabeth. But Elizabeth's conscience was
|
---|
431 | determined to be clear so she appointed commissioners to look into the
|
---|
432 | matter; they met throughout 1568 and 1569. In December of 1569,
|
---|
433 | the so-called Casket Letters were first presented at Westminster.
|
---|
434 | They were supposedly letters and other papers belonging to Bothwell and
|
---|
435 | found in his casket (letter box). They disappeared soon
|
---|
436 | afterwards and only translations and copies remain. However, few
|
---|
437 | believed they were either real or important at the time for Elizabeth,
|
---|
438 | in January 1569, released a statement that 'Nothing had been
|
---|
439 | sufficiently proved, whereby the Queen of England should conceive an
|
---|
440 | evil opinion of her good sister.' Everyone took this to mean that
|
---|
441 | Mary was not guilty of any conspiracy alleged in the letters. </p>
|
---|
442 | <p> But in this same year, conservative nobles in
|
---|
443 | England supported an idea that Mary should wed the Duke of
|
---|
444 | Norfolk. This also indicated that Elizabeth, and most English
|
---|
445 | nobles, believed Mary innocent of Darnley's murder and any charges in
|
---|
446 | the Casket Letters. But Elizabeth did not consent to the marriage
|
---|
447 | and kept Mary under lock and key. Soon, this arrangement had
|
---|
448 | settled into stone; Mary was moved from prison to prison, eventually
|
---|
449 | ending up at Fotheringhay Castle, about 70 miles north-west of London
|
---|
450 | and as close to Elizabeth as she ever came. Of course, Mary
|
---|
451 | plotted from the very beginning to escape. She felt justified in
|
---|
452 | doing so since she was being held against her will. However, as
|
---|
453 | the years passed, the plots grew more outlandish and murderous.
|
---|
454 | Mary's imprisonment was only to end with her execution.<br>
|
---|
455 | <br>
|
---|
456 | <b>Read a more detailed account of <a
|
---|
457 | href="../monarchs/eliz3.html">Mary's
|
---|
458 | arrival in England</a> and <a
|
---|
459 | href="../monarchs/eliz4.html">the plots
|
---|
460 | which led to her trial and execution</a> at the <i>Queen Elizabeth I</i>
|
---|
461 | website.</b> </p>
|
---|
462 | <p> In October of 1586, Mary was put on trial at
|
---|
463 | Fotheringhay for plotting to kill Elizabeth and claim the English
|
---|
464 | throne. Elizabeth's last letter to Mary was delivered at the
|
---|
465 | start of the trial: </p>
|
---|
466 | <blockquote>
|
---|
467 | <p>You have in various ways and manners attempted to take my life
|
---|
468 | and to bring my kingdom to destruction by bloodshed. I have never
|
---|
469 | proceeded so harshly against you, but have, on the contrary, protected
|
---|
470 | and maintained you like myself. These treasons will be proved to you
|
---|
471 | and all made manifest. Yet it is my will, that you answer the nobles
|
---|
472 | and peers of the kingdom as if I were myself present. I therefore
|
---|
473 | require, charge, and command that you make answer for I have been well
|
---|
474 | informed of your arrogance. <br>
|
---|
475 | Act plainly without reserve, and you will sooner be
|
---|
476 | able to obtain favour of me. <br>
|
---|
477 | Elizabeth.</p>
|
---|
478 | </blockquote>
|
---|
479 | <p> Mary defended herself admirably though she
|
---|
480 | had no friends or supporters at the trial and, essentially, the verdict
|
---|
481 | had been decided before the proceedings had begun. Mary admitted
|
---|
482 | her desire to escape but stated, 'I have not procured or encouraged any
|
---|
483 | hurt against Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth.' And she appealed for
|
---|
484 | mercy, mentioning her own reputation for tolerance and kindness: 'My
|
---|
485 | subjects now complain they were never so well off as under my
|
---|
486 | government.' But she also accepted the inevitable, telling the
|
---|
487 | assembled nobles, 'May God keep me from having to do with you all
|
---|
488 | again.' When the verdict was read to her, she said, 'I do not
|
---|
489 | fear to die in a good cause.' </p>
|
---|
490 | <p> The trial lasted just two days and was over
|
---|
491 | on 16 October 1586 but it was not until 7 February 1587 that she was
|
---|
492 | told she would be executed the next morning. She asked for her
|
---|
493 | chaplain but was refused this last comfort. The Earl of Kent
|
---|
494 | said: 'Your life would be the death of our religion, your death would
|
---|
495 | be its life.' In fact, Mary had been a tolerant ruler in Scottish
|
---|
496 | religious matters. But such was the extreme religious upheaval of
|
---|
497 | the time, tolerance itself was a sign of weakness. The
|
---|
498 | death-sentence was signed by Elizabeth who later argued that her
|
---|
499 | secretary Davison had deceived her as to its contents; she said she
|
---|
500 | would not have signed it otherwise. Her letter to Mary's son
|
---|
501 | James about the execution, written on 14 February, is a remarkable
|
---|
502 | document:</p>
|
---|
503 | <blockquote>
|
---|
504 | <p>My dear Brother, I would you knew (though not felt) the
|
---|
505 | extreme dolor that overwhelms my mind, for that miserable accident
|
---|
506 | which (far contrary to my meaning) hath befallen. I have now sent this
|
---|
507 | kinsman of mine, whom ere now it hath pleased you to favour, to
|
---|
508 | instruct you truly of that which is too irksome for my pen to tell you.
|
---|
509 | I beseech you that as God and many more know, how innocent I am in this
|
---|
510 | case : so you will believe me, that if I had bid aught I would have bid
|
---|
511 | by it. I am not so base minded that fear of any living creature or
|
---|
512 | Prince should make me so afraid to do that were just; or done, to deny
|
---|
513 | the same. I am not of so base a lineage, nor carry so vile a mind. But,
|
---|
514 | as not to disguise, fits not a King, so will I never dissemble my
|
---|
515 | actions, but cause them show even as I meant them. Thus assuring
|
---|
516 | yourself of me, that as I know this was deserved, yet if I had meant it
|
---|
517 | I would never lay it on others' shoulders; no more will I not damnify
|
---|
518 | myself that thought it not. <br>
|
---|
519 | The circumstance it may please you to have of this bearer. And for your
|
---|
520 | part, think you have not in the world a more loving kinswoman, nor a
|
---|
521 | more dear friend than myself; nor any that will watch more carefully to
|
---|
522 | preserve you and your estate. And who shall otherwise persuade you,
|
---|
523 | judge them more partial to others than you. And thus in haste I leave
|
---|
524 | to trouble you: beseeching God to send you a long reign. <br>
|
---|
525 | Your most assured loving sister and cousin, <br>
|
---|
526 | Elizabeth R.</p>
|
---|
527 | </blockquote>
|
---|
528 | <p>A year later, the Catholic Philip V of Spain invaded England
|
---|
529 | with his Armada, perhaps - to some degree - urged on by Mary's
|
---|
530 | execution. </p>
|
---|
531 | <p> <img
|
---|
532 | alt="Laslett John Pott's painting 'Mary Queen of Scots being led to execution', 1871"
|
---|
533 | src="maryqos-death.jpg"
|
---|
534 | align="left" border="1" width="400" height="282">
|
---|
535 | Mary did not retire until two in the morning on the last day of her
|
---|
536 | life. She spent her final hours making a will and generously
|
---|
537 | providing to those who had served her faithfully. Early on the
|
---|
538 | morning of 8 February 1587, dressed in black satin and velvet, she
|
---|
539 | entered the Great Hall of Fotheringhay Castle. She commanded her
|
---|
540 | servant, Melville, to go to her son and tell him that she had never
|
---|
541 | done anything to compromise their kingdom of Scotland. Mary was
|
---|
542 | calm and composed before the several hundred spectators present; she
|
---|
543 | listened while the execution warrant was read and then prayed aloud in
|
---|
544 | English for the Church and her son. She also mentioned Queen
|
---|
545 | Elizabeth and prayed for her to continue to serve God in the years to
|
---|
546 | come. </p>
|
---|
547 | <p> Mary comforted her weeping servants, her
|
---|
548 | friends and supporters to the last. They helped her undress;
|
---|
549 | beneath her all-black gown, she wore a red petticoat and bodice.
|
---|
550 | Her women helped her attach the long red sleeves. Mary thus died
|
---|
551 | wearing the liturgical color of Catholic martyrdom. She gave them
|
---|
552 | her golden rosary and Agnus Dei, asking them to remember her in their
|
---|
553 | prayers. Her eyes were covered with a white cloth. While
|
---|
554 | her servants wept and called out prayers in a medley of languages, she
|
---|
555 | laid her neck upon the block, commended herself to God and received the
|
---|
556 | death-stroke. But the executioner was unsteady and the first blow
|
---|
557 | cut the back of her head; Mary whispered, 'Sweet Jesus', and the second
|
---|
558 | blow descended.</p>
|
---|
559 | <p> When the executioner lifted her head and
|
---|
560 | cried out, 'God save the Queen,' a macabre surprise occurred.
|
---|
561 | Mary, queen of Scots had worn an auburn wig to her execution. It
|
---|
562 | was left in the executioner's hand as her head, with its short, grey
|
---|
563 | hair, fell to the floor.</p>
|
---|
564 | <p> Mary had always loved animals and her little
|
---|
565 | Skye terrier had brought her great comfort during the years in
|
---|
566 | prison. It had curled itself around her feet while she knelt at
|
---|
567 | the block and died just days after the queen. As queen of Scots,
|
---|
568 | Mary's motto had been 'In my end is my beginning'. And certainly
|
---|
569 | the end of her life marked the beginning of her legend. The
|
---|
570 | Catholic nations which had condemned her behavior during Darnley's
|
---|
571 | murder and the marriage to Bothwell now celebrated her as a
|
---|
572 | martyr. Her former brother-in-law, Henri III of France, held a
|
---|
573 | funeral mass at Notre-Dame, where Mary had wed Francis almost thirty
|
---|
574 | years before. Accounts of her execution, illustrated by crude
|
---|
575 | woodcuts, were sold throughout Europe. She was now the
|
---|
576 | sympathetic heroine; the past could be forgotten.</p>
|
---|
577 | <p> Sixteen years later, Mary's son
|
---|
578 | became King of England and Scotland. In 1612, he moved her body
|
---|
579 | to Westminster Abbey, London, constructing a magnificent tomb which
|
---|
580 | rivaled Elizabeth I's. In her <i> Essay on Adversity</i>,
|
---|
581 | written in 1580 while she was imprisoned, Mary had written of rulers:
|
---|
582 | 'Tribulation has been to them as a furnace to fine gold - a means of
|
---|
583 | proving their virtue.' It was a fitting epitaph for her own
|
---|
584 | infamous life.</p>
|
---|
585 | <center>
|
---|
586 | <p><font size="2">You can <a
|
---|
587 | href="../maryqos-letter.html"> read
|
---|
588 | Mary's last letter</a>, written to Henri III of France just six hours
|
---|
589 | before her execution, <br>
|
---|
590 | as well as <a href="../exmary.html">an
|
---|
591 | eyewitness account of her execution</a> at the <i>Primary Sources </i>
|
---|
592 | section.<br>
|
---|
593 | </font></p>
|
---|
594 | <hr> </center>
|
---|
595 | </blockquote>
|
---|
596 | </blockquote>
|
---|
597 | <p align="center"><font face="Times New Roman"> <font size="2"> <b> <a
|
---|
598 | href="maryqoschronology.html"><br>
|
---|
599 | </a> </b> <a
|
---|
600 | href="maryqoschronology.html">CHRONOLOGY</a>
|
---|
601 | <br>
|
---|
602 | The major events of her life.</font></font></p>
|
---|
603 | <p align="center"><font face="Times New Roman"> <a
|
---|
604 | href="http://www.marileecody.com/maryqosimages.html"><font size="2">IMAGES<br>
|
---|
605 | </font> </a><font size="2">Portraits of the queen, her friends and
|
---|
606 | family, with
|
---|
607 | commentary.</font></font></p>
|
---|
608 | <p align="center"> <font face="Times New Roman"> <a
|
---|
609 | href="../primary.html"><font size="2">PRIMARY
|
---|
610 | SOURCES</font></a></font><font size="2" face="Times New Roman"><br>
|
---|
611 | Letters written by Mary, as well as an
|
---|
612 | eyewitness account of her execution.</font></p>
|
---|
613 | <p align="center"><font face="Times New Roman" size="2"> <a
|
---|
614 | href="../tudor1.html">Tudor Quizzes<br>
|
---|
615 | </a>Test your knowledge of Mary's
|
---|
616 | life and times.</font></p>
|
---|
617 | <p align="center"><font face="Times New Roman" size="2"><a
|
---|
618 | href="../monarchs/eliz.html">Queen
|
---|
619 | Elizabeth I<br>
|
---|
620 | </a>Learn about Mary's famous cousin.</font></p>
|
---|
621 | <p align="center"><font face="Times New Roman" size="2"> <a
|
---|
622 | href="../relatives.html">to Tudor
|
---|
623 | Relatives</a><br>
|
---|
624 | </font></p>
|
---|
625 | <div style="text-align: left; margin-left: 80px;"><br>
|
---|
626 | <small><a name="Sources"></a><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sources:</span>
|
---|
627 | Life of Mary, Queen of Scots (2 vol) by George Chalmers - </small>
|
---|
628 | <small>My Heart is My Own by John Guy</small> - <small>Mary, Queen of
|
---|
629 | Scots: The Daughter of Debate by Marjorie Bowen</small> - <small>Mary,
|
---|
630 | Queen of Scots: The Daughter of Debate (yes, same title - earlier book)
|
---|
631 | by Sir Arthur MacNalty</small> - <small>The Castles, Palaces, and
|
---|
632 | Prisons of Mary of Scotland by Charles MacKie</small> - <small>On the
|
---|
633 | Trail of Mary, Queen of Scots by JK Cheetham</small> - <small>The
|
---|
634 | Queen of Scots by Stefan Zweig</small> - <small>Mary, Queen of Scots
|
---|
635 | by Antonia Fraser</small> - <small>Mary, Queen of Scots by Susan
|
---|
636 | Watkins</small> - <small>Two Queens in One Isle by Alison Plowden - </small><small>The
|
---|
637 | Casket Letters: A Solution to the Mystery of Mary, Queen of Scots
|
---|
638 | and the Murder of Lord Darnley by MH Davison - </small><small>Tudor
|
---|
639 | Cousins: Rivals for the Throne by Dulcie Ashdown - </small><small>All
|
---|
640 | the Queen's Men by Gordon Donaldson - The First Trial of Mary, Queen of
|
---|
641 | Scots by Gordon Donaldson - Mary, Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord
|
---|
642 | Darnley by Alison Weir - In My End is My Beginning: A Life of Mary,
|
---|
643 | Queen of Scots by James Mackay - Mary Queen of Scots: A Study in
|
---|
644 | Failure by Jenny Wormald - The Oxford Illustrated History of Tudor and
|
---|
645 | Stuart Britain, edited by John Morrill - Two Queens in One Isle by
|
---|
646 | Alison Plowden - New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors by
|
---|
647 | Susan Brigden - The Life of Mary, Queen of Scots by Agnes Strickland -
|
---|
648 | The Mystery of Mary Stuart by Andrew Lang - Mary, Queen of Scots and
|
---|
649 | Her Accusers by John Hosack - Scotland Under Mary Stuart: An Account of
|
---|
650 | Everyday Life by Marjorie Bowen - Elizabeth and Mary by Jane Dunn -
|
---|
651 | Original Letters Illustrative of English History, edited by Henry Ellis
|
---|
652 | - Mary, Queen of Scots: A Study of the Lennox Narrative in the
|
---|
653 | University Library of Cambridge, edited by Reginald H. Mahon - The
|
---|
654 | Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland by Raphael Holinshed -
|
---|
655 | Letters of Mary, Queen of Scots, and Documents connected with her
|
---|
656 | personal history, edited by Agnes Strickland<br>
|
---|
657 | </small><br>
|
---|
658 | <br>
|
---|
659 | <small><a name="Weblinks"></a><span style="font-weight: bold;">Weblinks: </span>
|
---|
660 | </small><small><font face="Times New Roman"><a
|
---|
661 | href="http://www.marie-stuart.co.uk/">The Marie Stuart Society of
|
---|
662 | Scotland</a> This is the most detailed Mary, queen of Scots site
|
---|
663 | on the web. It has a lengthy biography of the queen,
|
---|
664 | samples of her poetry and letters, and much more - too much to list
|
---|
665 | here, in fact. </font></small>
|
---|
666 | <p><font face="Times New Roman"><small><a
|
---|
667 | href="http://www.geocities.com/les_valois/">Mary, queen of Scots</a>
|
---|
668 | This site is currently available in French. It's beautifully
|
---|
669 | designed and has lots of information; go visit and try out your foreign
|
---|
670 | language skills! Its creator also made this <a
|
---|
671 | href="http://www.geocities.com/sarah_n_bernard/">Lady Jane Grey site</a>.<br>
|
---|
672 | </small></font></p>
|
---|
673 | <p><font face="Times New Roman"><small><a
|
---|
674 | href="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09764a.htm">The Catholic
|
---|
675 | Encyclopedia's biography of Mary</a>, with links to other topics.<br>
|
---|
676 | </small> </font></p>
|
---|
677 | </div>
|
---|
678 | </body>
|
---|
679 | </html>
|
---|
680 | <!-- text below generated by server. PLEASE REMOVE --><!-- Counter/Statistics data collection code --><script language="JavaScript" src="http://hostingprod.com/js_source/geov2.js"></script><script language="javascript">geovisit();</script><noscript><img src="http://visit.webhosting.yahoo.com/visit.gif?us1108082705" alt="setstats" border="0" width="1" height="1"></noscript>
|
---|
681 | <IMG SRC="http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=76001524&t=1108082705" ALT=1 WIDTH=1 HEIGHT=1>
|
---|