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MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS MCLEANSCOTLAND ARE LOOKING FOR INTERESTED PEOPLE TO MAKE UP A TOUR COINCIDING WITH THE LIFE OF MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS. Interested persons should please e mail us at: Mary@mcleanscotland.co.uk with notes of interest. ALONG with Robert the Bruce, Mary is probably the best known of Scotland's monarchs, due to the dramatic and tragic nature of both her life and reign. Mary was born in Linlithgow Palace on December 8th 1542. She became queen at only six days old following the death of her father, James V. As female heir to the kingdom of Scotland, Mary was promised in marriage to Henry VIII's son, Edward. Although this would cement a pact with England, the match did not go down well with the population of Scotland, who regarded France as their natural ally. The marriage was soon off. Needless to say, Henry VIII would not be denied and so began his 'rough wooing' of Scotland to convince the powers that be that they better reconsider his marriage plans - or else. Abbeys in Melrose, Jedburgh, Dryburgh and Holyrood were sacked. Concerns for Mary's safety mounted as Henry's forces ran riot over the Scots. After the disastrous Battle of
Pinkie Cleugh, she was sent to live in France and,
in 1558 she married the French dauphin, Francois.
The series of tragedies that mark Mary's life
continued as Francois was stricken with an infection
and died in 1560. After her husband's death, Mary
returned to Scotland to finally rule as queen in
situ, but for a Catholic monarch who was also a
woman, turbulent, Protestant Scotland was unlikely
to be an easy place to be. The problems that Mary
faced were made worse by her marriage to Lord
Darnley in 1565. Darnley was a fellow Catholic,
which infuriated the Scots' protestant noblemen, and
was said to be both immature and violently
temperamental. He had strong links to both Scots and
English monarchies and any child that the couple had
would have a good claim to both thrones. This
prospect displeased Elizabeth I who anyway felt that
Mary should not have married Darnley (who was an
English subject) without consulting her first. By
the time she found herself pregnant with the future
James VI, she already had problems with the new
husband, who felt that he should enjoy more power
and influence as 'king'. Darnley's behaviour led to
one of the most notorious events of Mary's reign
when, in concert with a group of noblemen, he burst
into the queen's apartment and stabbed her secretary
Rizzio to death in front of her eyes. This, along
with Darnley's increasingly aggressive behaviour
towards her, would lead to a royal assassination
when Darnley was killed at Kirk O' Fields (in
Edinburgh's Royal Mile) in February 1567. Darnley's
assassination caused uproar in Scotland, but the
fact that the Earl of Bothwell (suspected to be
responsible) was to shortly become Mary's third
husband was the last straw. The noblemen acted once
more and she was soon taken captive and imprisoned
in Loch Leven castle. |
![]() MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Born: 7 Dec 1542, Linlithgow Palace, Scotland
www.marie-stuart.co.uk Marie Stuart Society Website |
