MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS

(Mary Stuart), 1542–87, only child of James V of Scotland and Mary of Guise. Through her grandmother Margaret Tudor, Mary had the strongest claim to the throne of England after the children of Henry VIII. This claim (and her Roman Catholicism) made Mary a threat to Elizabeth I of England, who finally had her executed. However, Mary's son, James VI of Scotland, succeeded Elizabeth to the English throne as James I. Mary's reported beauty and charm and her undoubted courage have made her a particularly romantic figure in history. She is the subject of Schiller's great drama Maria Stuart, of an opera by Donizetti, and of plays by Vittorio Alfieri, A. C. Swinburne, and Maxwell Anderson.

Early Life

Born at Linlithgow in Dec., 1542, Mary became queen of Scotland on the death of her father only 6 days later. Mary of Guise betrothed her daughter to the French dauphin (later Francis II) and sent the girl to France in 1548 to be brought up by her powerful relatives the Guise family. In 1558, Mary and Francis were married under an agreement that would unite the crowns of Scotland and France if the union produced male issue. At the same time Mary signed a secret contract that bequeathed Scotland to France should she die without issue. The young couple was crowned in 1559, but Francis died the following year. The accession of Charles IX in France led to the fall of Mary's Guise uncles. This situation, together with the recent death of her own mother, prompted Mary to return to Scotland in 1561.

As a Frenchwoman and a Catholic, Mary faced a nation of hostile subjects, but her charm and beauty quickly won over many lords and commoners. She took as her principal counselors her illegitimate half brother James Stuart (later earl of Murray) and William Maitland, both friends of England, thus dispelling fears of a return of French interference in Scottish affairs. She also accepted the establishment of the Presbyterian Church and, under pressure from John Knox and his associates, consented to certain laws against Catholics. She refused, however, to abandon the Mass in her own chapel or to approve a law for compulsory attendance at Protestant services.

Darnley and Bothwell

Mary's chief diplomatic project was to secure recognition as successor to the English throne, and she sought a marriage that would reinforce her claim. In 1565 she married her English Catholic cousin, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, whose descent from Margaret Tudor gave him a claim to the English throne almost as close as Mary's. Murray and some other Protestant nobles opposed the marriage and tried to raise a revolt, but they were defeated and fled to England.

Though infatuated with him at first, Mary soon came to dislike her husband and consistently refused his demands for the crown matrimonial (i.e., parliamentary assurance of power during her lifetime and after). Chagrined at his own lack of power and jealous of David Rizzio, an Italian musician who had become Mary's most trusted friend, Darnley joined a plot against Rizzio. In Mar., 1566, a band of nobles led by Darnley and the earl of Morton broke into Mary's apartment and murdered Rizzio, perhaps hoping that the shock would prove fatal to the pregnant queen. Mary talked Darnley over to her side, escaped to Dunbar to be joined by the earl of Bothwell and other loyal nobles, and so defeated the coup.

In June, 1566, Mary bore her son, James. According to tradition, about this time she fell in love with Bothwell, who had been consistently loyal to her. Darnley, meanwhile, had succeeded in making himself ever more unpopular, and all the royal counselors urged Mary to get rid of him. On the night of Feb. 9, 1567, the house in which Darnley was staying was blown up, and Darnley was found strangled outside. Bothwell was universally suspected of the murder, but was acquitted by a packed court. On Apr. 24, Mary was intercepted by Bothwell on her way to Edinburgh and carried off to Dunbar Castle. In the ensuing two weeks Bothwell secured a divorce from his wife, and on May 15 he and Mary were married by Protestant rites.

Aroused by outraged Protestant preachers, the Scots rebelled. Mary had lost the support of the people and the lords, first by her failure to punish the man believed to be her husband's murderer and then by the flagrant act of marrying him. She was forced to surrender to the rebels at Carberry Hill on June 15. Bothwell escaped, only to die insane in a Danish prison. Imprisoned at the castle of Lochleven, Mary abdicated in favor of her son and named Murray regent. In May, 1568, she escaped and soon accumulated a considerable force of men. However, she was defeated by Murray at Langside, near Glasgow, and she immediately fled to N England.

Elizabeth's Prisoner

Elizabeth welcomed Mary to England and refused to turn her over to the Scottish government. She then persuaded both parties to present their cases before an English tribunal, first at York and then at Westminster (1568–69). At the inquiry Murray presented the famous Casket Letters, poems and letters allegedly written by Mary to Bothwell that supposedly proved her share in the plot against Darnley. Mary insisted that parts of the letters were forgeries, and the available evidence suggests that this was the case. In any event, the judgment was that the abdication and Murray's regency were legal, but that Mary's complicity in Darnley's murder was unproven (as it remains).

Mary became a prisoner of the English government, living for the next 16 years in the lenient custody of the earl of Shrewsbury and then under the stricter surveillance of Sir Amias Paulet. She schemed ceaselessly to regain her liberty and was party to a succession of plots that would have raised her to the English throne with the help of a Catholic uprising and a Spanish invasion. The uncovering of such plots, real and alleged, some involving important English nobles in schemes to murder Elizabeth, led Parliament to clamor for Mary's execution.

Elizabeth refused to take action until the discovery by Sir Francis Walsingham of a plot led by Anthony Babington. The evidence implicated Mary, and she was arrested and taken to Fotheringay Castle. At her trial Mary defended herself with eloquence and dignity, but there was no doubt of her complicity. Elizabeth hesitated to sign the death warrant, but after assurance from James in Scotland that he would not interfere, and under great pressure from her counselors, she reluctantly consented. Mary was beheaded at Fotheringay on Feb. 8, 1587.

Bibliography

See biographies by T. F. Henderson (1905, repr. 1969) and A. Fraser (1969, repr. 1984); studies by G. M. Thomson (1967) and I. B. Cowan, comp. (1971).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Mary Queen of Scots  - 6903 results

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...Merriman THE ROUGH WOOINGS Mary Queen of Scots, 1542-1551 Marcus Merriman...shows the earliest image of Mary Queen of Scots. The crown reminds us that...Haddington 300 The Betrothal of Mary Queen of Scots to the Dauphin of France 309...
...Politics of Religion in the Age of Mary, Queen of Scots The Earl of Argyll and...practice during the age of Mary, Queen of Scots, and it explains how the crises...OF RELIGION IN THE AGE OF MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS The Earl of Argyll and...
...and about Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots Lisa Hopkins Newark...and about Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots / Lisa Hopkins. p. cm...History and criticism. 5. Mary, Queen of Scots, 1542-1587-In literature...
...ACCOUNTS AND PAPERS RELATING TO MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS. EDITED BY ALLAN J. CROSBY...to the history and fate of Mary Queen of Scots, but derived from different...incurred in the maintenance of Mary Queen of Scots during the last two years...
...1491-1547-Literary art. 5. Mary, Queen of Scots, 1542-1587-Literary art. 6...Writing to Control: The Verse of Mary, Queen of Scots Lisa Hopkins 35 "mes...The Oxburgh Hanging, by Mary, Queen of Scots 106 Figure 3: Pastime with...
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Mary Queen of Scots. by Timothy G. Elston Retha M. Warnicke. Mary Queen of Scots. Routledge Historical Biographies...of Mary Stewart. Retha Warnickes Mary Queen of Scots is a good, but difficult, biography...
...Heart Is My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots. by Retha Warnicke...popular writer Antonia Fraser in Mary Queen of Scots (1969, 1994)with the major...howled. Unlike Jenny Wormald, Mary Queen of Scots: Politics, Passion, and a Kingdom...
...and Poetry at the Courts of Mary Queen of Scots and James VI. by Retha...and Poetry at the Courts of Mary Queen of Scots and James VI. By Sarah M. Dunnigan...1580s during the reigns of Mary, Queen of Scots, and her son James VI. The...
Mary, Queen of Scots and the Casket Letters...Armstrong Starkey Mary, Queen of Scots and the Casket Letters...at the time, and Mary was not given the...deal with copies in Scots, English, and French...Marys foreknowledge of Darnleys murder and...
...Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots. by Anne Lake...Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen of Scots. Newark, DE: University...recollections of the queen: when Cleopatra...Hopkins thinks of Lears "Come oer...in part because "Mary" evokes Catholic...
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Mary Queen of Scots and the French Connection: Alexander...by Alexander Wilkinson MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS, was a very French figure. In 1548...the evolving relationship between Mary, Queen of Scots, and French public opinion. As we...
...Heart Is My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots. by Derek Wilson My Heart is My Own The Life of Mary Queen of Scots John Guy Fourth Estate...surely become the biography of Mary Queen of Scots for years to come.
...April 24th, 1558 Mary became Queen of Scots when she was less...was signed with the Scots, which provided that...eventually be united under Mary and Francis as one...Scotland a mere adjunct of France. ILLUSTRATION...presence of Henry II, Queen Catherine de Medici...
...trial and execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, it was a remarkably...they also brought the Queen of Scots to the fore as a rival to both. The basis of Mary Stuarts claim from...decision over the Queen of Scots. Without Mary the Enterprise of...
...Dudley is created Earl of Leicester. 1565 Marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to Henry Lord Darnley. 1566 Birth of Robert Devereux...to assassinate Elizabeth; trial and conviction of Mary Queen of Scots (Oct). 1587 Elizabeth signs Marys death warrant...
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THE LIST: OPERA REVIEW: A Killer Queen; Mary, Queen of Scots English Touring Opera, Malvern Festival Theatre...preposterous it may be, but Donizettis Maria Stuarda (Mary, Queen of Scots in this translation) has a powerful score which more...
...Font Linked: Liberty Smith and Mary, Queen of Scots. Byline: Jim McBeth SHE...shares her special day with Mary, Queen of Scots. Mary Stuart was baptised in...Palace, West Lothian, where Mary, Queen of Scots was born in 1542. Historians...
Mary Queen of Scots Gets the Full Hollywood Star Treatment...most dazzlingly beautiful. Now Mary Queen of Scots is to be portrayed on the silver...said: I would always hope that a Mary Queen of Scots film would shoot in Scotland.
How Mary, Queen of Scots Became a Scarlett Woman. Byline...Sexiest Woman Alive, is to star as Mary, Queen of Scots in a multi-million-dollar production...There have been several films about Mary, Queen of Scots, including a 1936 version directed...
Mary Queen of Scots Death Warrant Saved. A copy of the warrant for the execution of Mary Queen of Scots has been saved for the nation after it was acquired by the library...
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encyclopedia articles on: Mary Queen of Scots  - 77 results

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MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS (Mary Stuart), 1542...Linlithgow in Dec., 1542, Mary became queen of Scotland on the death of...Protestant preachers, the Scots rebelled. Mary had lost the support of the people and the lords...
...Elizabeth and seat the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots on the throne. English Puritans...succession. The chief claimant was Mary Queen of Scots, but her Catholicism made her...name her successor the son of Mary Queen of Scots, James VI of Scotland, who...
MARY OF GUISE gez, 1515 60, queen consort of James V of Scotland and regent for her daughter, Mary Queen of Scots . The daughter of Claude de Lorraine, duc de Guise , she was also known as Mary of Lorraine. Before her marriage (1538) to James...
STUART, MARY see Mary Queen of Scots . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...1536? 1578, Scottish nobleman; third husband of Mary Queen of Scots . Though a Protestant, he was a strong partisan of the Catholic regent, Mary of Guise, mother of Mary Queen of Scots. In 1562, Bothwells old enemy, James Hamilton, earl...
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