Grafton Manor

Grafton Manor was built in the village of Grafton Regis in the south Northamptonshire.

Gradton Manor in The White Queen
From 1100 to 1348, the manor was in the hands of a Norman monastery whose bailiff or lessee probably occupied the house. It wasn’t until 1440 that the mansion officially became a 'manor house' which belonged to the Woodville family during which time the village was known as Grafton Woodville.

The manor was the birthplace of Elizabeth Woodville, queen consort to King Edward IV. Elizabeth was the first commoner to marry a King of England. Elizabeth was born on the 3rd February 1437 to Richard Woodville and Jacquetta of Luxembourg, the Dowager Duchess of Bedford. Her siblings were also born at the family home: Lewis Woodville (c. 1438), Anne Woodville (1438/9 – 30 Jul. 1489), Anthony Woodville, (c. 1440 – 25 Jun. 1483), John Woodville (c. 1444 – 12 Aug. 1469), Jacquetta Woodville (1445–1509), Lionel Woodville (c. 1446 – Jun. 1484), Eleanor Woodville (d. c. 1512), Margaret Woodville (c. 1450 – 1490/1), Martha Woodville (d. c. 1500), Richard Woodville (1453 – Mar. 1491), Edward Woodville, (1454/8 – 28 Jul. 1488), Mary Woodville (c. 1456 – 1481), and Catherine Woodville (c. 1458 – 18 May 1497).

Elizabeth and her two boys Thomas & Richard Grey
The Woodvilles were an respectable family, were genteel rather than noble, a reasonably-landed and wealthy family that had previously produced Commissioners of the Peace, Sheriffs, and MPs rather than peers of the realm. Richard Woodville was a knight and his father had made a good career in royal service, rising to be Chamberlain to John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford and Richard followed in his father footsteps into service with the Duke, and so first met Jacquetta of Luxembourg who at the time was the Duchess but would become his wife later on.

Elizabeth met King Edward on the road to Northampton to plead for the protection of her widows' jointure and the rights of her sons and he was so ensnared by her feminine wiles that he wanted her to become his mistress but she refused anything except marriage and they were secretly married on the 1st May 1464.

Elizabeth and Edward’s grandson Henry VIII stayed at Grafton with Anne Boleyn during a hunting trip giving “regis” to the village’s name. The manor is now a privately owned hospital.


Grafton Manor seems a lovely place and I would love to visit it one day.
Sheriff Hutton Castle
The Ruins of Sheriff Hutton
Sheriff Hutton Castle is in the village of Sheriff Hutton in North Yorkshire. The castle is now a ruin but it was once it was a magnificent dwelling, of princely proportions; a classic quadrangle, with a magnificent hall.

Sheriff Hutton was once held by Bertram de Bulmer, the Sheriff of York who died in 1166. It was then passed to the Neville family and in 1382, John Neville, secured a license to crenellate the walls making it a castle.

The original castle was built by Bertram de Bulmer who was Sheriff of York during the reign of King Stephen. The stone castle was later built at the western end of the village by John, Lord Neville in the late fourteenth century. In 1377, John obtained a charter for a market on Monday and an annual fair on the eve of the exaltation of the Holy Cross (September 14).

The castle passed to John's son, Ralph Neville, the first Earl of Westmorland. Upon Ralph's death in 1425, the Neville estates were partitioned. The younger Ralph retained the title and the Durham estates and Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, later known as "Warwick the Kingmaker", inherited the Yorkshire estates, including Sheriff Hutton.

Upon the death of Richard Neville at the Battle of Barnet in 1471, his lands were given to Richard, Duke of
King Richard III in The White Queen
Gloucester, brother of Edward IV. Richard often stayed at the castle during his tenure as Lord of the North and its proximity to York made it convenient to Richard.

In 1484, Richard III (Duke of Gloucester) established a royal household for his nephewsthe young Edward, Earl of Warwick, son of George of Clarence, and John, Earl of Lincoln. In July 1484, Richard established the Council of the North that lasted for 150 years, with its chief headquarters at Sheriff Hutton and Sandal Castle.

In 1485, while awaiting for the invasion of Henry Tudor, Richard sent his niece, Elizabeth of York, her sisters, and the Earls of Warwick, Lincoln, Lord Morley and John of Gloucester, to the castle as he knew that if Tudor won he would never dare go to Yorkshire.

The castle became the property of Henry VII and, in 1525, Henry VIII granted it to his son, Henry Fitzroy, who had been newly created as Duke of Richmond and Warden-General of the Marches.

In 1537 Thomas Howard, the second Duke of Norfolk made repairs to the castle but, following the Council's relocation to York in the mid sixteenth century, the castle went into decline. In 1572 Henry, Earl of Huntingdon paid for repairs on the castle in the hope that the President of the Council would use the castle as a residence, and he described it as an 'olde Castell aamoste ruinated.'

In 1618 Sheriff Hutton was acquired by the Ingram family in 1622, and stone from the castle was used to build Sheriff Hutton House. The castle remained in the Ingram family until the early twentieth century, by which time the ruins were being used as a farmyard. It was designated a scheduled ancient monument in the 1950s, and has recently undergone some repairs by English Heritage.

The years haven't been kind to this great building, and although it's scale is still impressive, it has fallen to virtual ruin.


I have never been to Sheriff Hutton nor Yorkshire but it is defiantly on my list of places to visit.

The Tower of
London
The Tower of London
The Tower of London is such an iconic symbol of London and has dominated London's skyline for nearly a millennium. It is like the Hollywood sign in LA or the  Eiffel Tower in Paris. The Tower has a fascinating past which is both amazing and bloody.

The tower wasn't just a defence for London or a place to keep thieves, traitors and criminals but it was also a royal palace for the royal family.

In 1066 William Duke of Normandy conquered England for the Normans, therefore ending Saxon rule in Britain. The Saxons that still lived in England were not happy with their new ruler. In 1078, William had a great stone fortress built in the heart of the city. No-one had seen a building of magnitude in this corner of Europe before. William wanted his fortress to stand as his legacy to England and to show his wealth and power. It captured the hearts and minds of the Londoners and today the world.

Throughout the ages, Kings and Queens have added, expanded and changed the Tower.
William never saw the Tower finished but his great-great-great grandson Henry III had a great impact on this iconic fortress. Henry transformed it into the Tower of London that millions visit each year; a royal palace by improving and expanding, building beautifully decorated lodgings for himself and Queen Eleanor.

The King did not spend a great deal of time at the Tower – he stayed only 11 times in his 56 years
London's First Zoo
reign. Although it was important that the Tower was fit for a king, it was not a favourite residence.
Henry used the Tower specifically as a bolt-hole in times of political crisis. During his reign, lions, a polar bear and an elephant were kept at the Tower, all diplomatic gifts from other rulers.

Henry’s eldest son, Edward, became Edward I of England. He built the outer defences of the Tower of London including the rooms known as the Medieval Palace. He moved the London Mint into the Tower and kept prisoners there too.

Edward was known for fighting the Scottish but before then he fought the Welsh, sending the head of the Welsh Prince Llewellyn “the Last” to decorate the Tower of London. This made his eldest son the first English Prince of Wales in 1301.

Edward III was the next King to make his mark on the Tower. His father Edward II was not particularly interested in politics and war. Edward extended the wharf part way along the riverfront to help with loading and unloading goods, especially military supplies for the Hundred Years’ War between England and France.

The need for storage space was such that crossbows and armour were kept in former royal lodgings
St Thomas' Tower
in St Thomas’ Tower. Edward’s military successes in the Hundred Years’ War also led to two kings being imprisoned at the Tower: Edward’s brother-in-law, David II of Scotland, was held at the Tower for 11 years after his capture in 1346 and John II of France was captured by Edward’s son, the Black Prince, in 1356.

Richard II’s reign began and ended at the Tower. His magnificent coronation procession set out from the Tower to Westminster Abbey in 1377. In 1399, it was at the Tower that he was pressured to sign away the crown to his cousin, Henry, son of the powerful John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster.

Richard used the fortress as a place of refuge in times of political crisis. However, in 1381, while he was riding out to Mile End to talk to the leaders of the Peasants’ Revolt, rebels surged into the Tower seeking ‘traitors’. Some went to the royal lodgings, sat on the king’s bed and asked Richard’s mother, the famously beautiful Joan of Kent, to kiss them! Joan fainted.

Archbishop Simon Sudbury, one of the architects of the hated Poll Tax, was rather less fortunate – he was dragged from the Tower and murdered on Tower Hill.

The Tower was a key stronghold in the conflict now during The Cousins’ War also known as The War of the Roses from 1455 to 1485. In 1460, Yorkist forces besieged the Tower where cannons were set up on the other side of the Thames to bombard the fortress and Henry’s men were forced to surrender. With his Yorkist rival installed as King Edward IV, the deposed Henry was on the run. Captured in 1465, he was taken ‘as a traitor and criminal’ to the Tower.

Five years later he was released by his supporters and briefly reinstated as king, but it was not to
Henry VI ~ A Prisoner
last. Henry was overturned once more and returned to the Tower where he died in mysterious circumstances on 21 May 1471.

Edward’s supporters claimed he died of grief, although others said his corpse bled on the pavement when it was laid out in St Paul’s. According to tradition, he was stabbed while praying in the Wakefield Tower.

Henry possibly suffered from catatonic schizophrenia which made him unfit to rule. For over a year he didn’t recognise anyone or seem to understand anything. When he recovered, he had no memory of the time he’d been ill.

Edward had his brother George Duke of Clarence executed in the Tower for plotting with France. Clarence was drowned in a barrel of Malmsey wine on the 18th February 1478. His younger brother, Richard, benefited from the outlandish execution. According to Tudor chroniclers, Richard was in the Tower when Henry VI died. One writer alleged Henry was ‘strykked with a dagger’ by Richard himself.

One of the greatest mysteries in history took place at the Tower of London in 1483; the disappearance of the Princes in the Tower.

The 'Princes in the Tower' were Edward (1470-1483) and Richard (1473-1483), the sons of Edward IV. Shortly after Edward was crowned Edward V, he and his brother disappeared and were never seen alive again.

Edward and Richard were the only surviving sons of King Edward IV. Edward was born in 1470 while Richard was born in 1473. Edward IV had come to the throne as a result of the Wars of the Roses and managed to restore a certain amount of stability to the country.

Edward and Richard ~ The Princes in the Tower 
Edward IV died suddenly on 9 April 1483 and his eldest son was proclaimed Edward V at Ludlow. The boys' uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, was named as protector. Elizabeth Woodville and her supporters attempted to replace Gloucester with a regency Council. As the new king, Edward V, travelled towards London from Ludlow Castle in Wales, he was met by Gloucester and escorted to the capital, where he was lodged in the Tower of London. In June, Edward was joined by his brother, the Duke of York.

The boys were declared illegitimate because it was alleged that their father was contracted to marry someone else before his marriage to Elizabeth Woodville thus making their marriage invalid and their children bastards.

In July 1483, Richard, Duke of Gloucester was crowned Richard III. The two boys were never seen again. It was widely believed that their uncle had them murdered. To this day no one knows what really happened to them.

Henry VIII executed two of his wives at the Tower on the charge of adultery which only one was guilty of.

Anne Boleyn, had proved unable to bear a living son for the King and Henry was anxious to marry a woman who could, he accused Anne of adultery and treason which she was innocent of. Henry VIII's fifth wife was the cousin of Anne and an alluring teenager named Catherine Howard. Henry married Catherine three weeks after his divorce to Anne of Cleeves and rumours of Catherine's past and present love affairs reached a furious Henry. She was arrested at Hampton Court Palace and later taken to the Tower of London where she was beheaded in February 1542, aged about 21.

When Henry only legitimate son Edward IV laid on his deathbed at the age of 15 his advisors feared his sister, Mary, would bring back the Catholic Faith so they had Edward name his cousin
Lady Jane Grey ~ The Nine Days Queen
Jane Grey as his heir.

Jane was the great-granddaughter of Henry VII through his younger daughter Mary. In May 1553, she was married to Lord Guildford Dudley, a younger son of Edward's chief minister, John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland.

When Mary heard the news of her brother’s death and usurping of the throne she headed towards London with an army. Jane was imprisoned in the Tower where she was convicted of high treason in November 1553, which carried a sentence of death, although her life was initially spared. Wyatt's rebellion of January and February 1554 against Queen Mary I's plans to marry Philip of Spain led to the execution of both Jane and her husband on Tower Green.

Lady Jane Grey had an excellent humanist education and a reputation as one of the most learned young women of her day. She was a pawn in the political game of her family and one of the saddest figures in the history of the Tower.

Mary also imprisoned her half-sister Elizabeth in the Tower of London in 1554 for suspected involvement in a plot against her, led by the traitor Sir Thomas Wyatt but it soon became clear that there was not enough evidence against Elizabeth, and she was released into house arrest in the country.

When Elizabeth entered into the Tower as a prisoner she said ‘Oh Lord! I never thought to have come here as a prisoner.’ In 1559, Elizabeth returned to the Tower under very different circumstances; for her coronation.

On 14th January, after the traditional celebrations, she left the fortress to ride through the City of London to Westminster Abbey.

The Tower from the sky
When the Stuarts came into power after the death of Elizabeth, the Tower was hardly used by the Royal household but as a fortress.


Now the Tower of London acts as a major tourist attraction bring in millions of visitors each year. I really enjoyed my visit there and want to go again. I advise that if you ever go to London the Tower is the place to visit but mind out for the ghosts.




Mary Stuart

Queen of Scots
"En ma Fin gît mon Commencement..."
"In my End is my beginning..."

Mary Queen of Scots is probably one of the most fascinating women of the 16th Century. Like her cousins: Mary Tudor, Jane Grey (she was beheaded by Mary after 9 days) and Elizabeth Tudor she was a Queen in her own right. But unlike her cousins she became Queen at only six days old.


The Young Mary Queen of Scots

Her father was King James V and his second wife Mary of Guise. Mary was born prematurely on the 8th day of December in the year of 1542 at Linlithgow Palace where James had also been born nearly 30 years previously.

Mary Queen of Scots
James had fought at Battle of Solway Moss between the English and Scottish about the Protestant Reformation; Henry VIII had broken from Rome and wished for his nephew to do the same. James took ill shortly after this and whatever the cause was; he was on his deathbed at Falkland Palace when Mary was born. Sir George Douglas of Pittendreich brought the news of the king's death to Berwick. He said the King had died at midnight on Thursday 15th December; the king was talking but delirious and spoke no "wise words." James V was buried at Holyrood Abbey in Edinburgh.

Before he died, he is reported to have said, "it came wi a lass, it'll gang wi a lass" (meaning "It began with a girl and it will end with a girl"). This was either a reference to the Stewart dynasty's accession to the throne through Marjorie Bruce, daughter of Robert the Bruce or to the medieval origin myth of the Scots nation, recorded in the Scotichronicon in which the Scots people are descended from the Princess Scota.


With James dead Mary was Queen of Scotland at the age of six days old as the King's only legitimate child. Mary was baptised at Church of St Michael as a Roman Catholic. Until Mary reached her majority Scotland was ruled by a regent; Cardinal Beaton, and the Earl of Arran (who was next in line to the throne) but Beaton's claim was based on a version of the late king's will that his opponents dismissed as a forgery and Arran, with the support of his friends and relations, became the regent until 1554 when Mary's mother managed to remove and succeed him.

At the age of only six months a treaty between Scotland and England was drawn up at Greenwich, London which declared at the age of 10 Mary would marry Prince Edward. The treaty was signed on the 1st of July 1543. Mary’s maternal grandmother was Margaret Tudor who was King Henry VIII sister so the young children were second cousins and a dispensation from the Pope had to be attained until they could be married.

The Coronation of Mary
The treaty meant peace between the two countries. Beaton rose to power in Scotland and began to push a pro-Catholic French marriage for the young Queen who was moved to the safety of Stirling Castle. Regent Arran resisted the move, but backed down when Beaton's armed supporters gathered at Linlithgow. Mary and her mother to Stirling on 27 July 1543 by Earl of Lennox who had 3,500 armed men. Mary was crowned in the castle chapel on 9th day of September 1543, with "such solemnity as they do use in this country, which is not very costly".

Shortly before Mary's coronation, Scottish merchants headed for France were arrested by Henry, and their goods impounded. The arrests caused anger in Scotland, and Arran who was a Protestant) joined Beaton and became a Catholic. The Treaty of Greenwich was rejected by the Parliament of Scotland in December and renewal of the Auld Alliance between France and Scotland prompted Henry's "Rough Wooing", a military campaign designed to impose the marriage of Mary to his son. English forces mounted a series of raids on Scottish and French territory and in May 1544, the English Earl of Hertford (later Duke of Somerset) raided Edinburgh, and the Mary was moved to Dunkeld for her safety.

In May 1546, Beaton was murdered by Protestant lords and on 10th September 1547, nine months after the death of Henry VIII, the Scots suffered a heavy defeat at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh. Mary's guardians, fearful for her safety, sent her to Inchmahome Priory for no more than three weeks, and turned to the French for help.


Mary en France

The French king, Henry II, proposed to unite France and Scotland through a marriage between the young queen and his three-year-old son, the Dauphin Francis. On the promise of French military help, and a French dukedom for himself, Arran agreed to the marriage and Mary was moved, again for her safety, to Dumbarton Castle in February 1548. The English left a trail of devastation behind once more and seized the strategic town of Haddington. In June, the much awaited French help arrived at Leith to besiege and ultimately take Haddington. On 7th July 1548, a Scottish Parliament held at a nunnery near the town agreed to a French marriage treaty.

At five, Mary left Scotland from the port at Dumbarton on 7th August 1548 and arrived a week or more later at Roscoff or Saint-Pol-de-Léon in Brittany. was accompanied by her own court including two illegitimate half-brothers, and the "four Marys", four girls her own age, all named Mary, who were the daughters of some of the noblest families in Scotland along with Janet, Lady Fleming who was James V's half-sister, was appointed Mary’s governess.


The Convent of Morlaix
When Mary arrived in France she was sent to convent of Morlaix in northern France for her safety. She stayed at the convent until December 1557 when she arrived at the French Court where the Scottish Queen was greatly liked by everyone but her future mother-in-law Queen, Catherine d’Medici. It was in France that Mary learned to play lute and virginals, and was competent in prose, poetry, horsemanship, falconry and needlework, and was taught French, Italian, Latin, Spanish, and Greek, in addition to speaking her native Scots. Her future sister-in-law, Elisabeth of Valois, became a close friend of whom Mary "retained nostalgic memories in later life". Her maternal grandmother, Antoinette de Bourbon, was another strong influence on her childhood, and acted as one of her principal advisors. King Henry of France said "from the very first day they met, my son and she got on as well together as if they had known each other for a long time.”
Mary and Francis in Reign

 In December 1557 a group of Scottish Lords gave their promise to support the advancement 'the most blessed Word of God' and to push forward the Reformation in Scotland like England. How could they do this if their Queen was Catholic? They saw the marriage as a threat from France. They called themselves the Lords of the Congregation.

Mary and Francis were officially betrothed in April 19th 1558. The terms of the agreement allowed the Scots to maintain their traditional rights and would become united with France when Francis became King of France. It was also agreed that if Mary died without having children the Scottish throne would go to the Earl of Arran but a few days later on the 24th Mary married Francis at Notre Dame in Paris and a secret marriage agreement was signed by Mary giving control of Scotland to France if she died without having children.

The Wedding of Mary and Francis
In November of the same year, Mary Tudor Queen of England died either of ovarian cysts or uterine cancer. Many Roman Catholics in England recognised Mary as England’s rightful Queen as they believed that Elizabethwas a bastard and her parents’ marriage had not been valid and illegal. Mary’s claim to the English throne was based on the fact that she was the grand-daughter of Margaret Tudor and a direct descent from Henry VII. France backed up her claim.

In July 1559, Henry from a tourney accident and left his son and Mary France but Francis died in December 1560 after a reign of 17 months. 

Mary Queen of Scots Returns Home

Queen Mary "I have become Scotland! My heart,
my soul - every fiber of my being is Scotland"
Mary, who was about to become 18 years of age, was left widowed was in a difficult position and didn't want to stay in France and live under the domination of her mother-in-law Catherine d’Medici she decided to return to Scotland and take her chances with the Protestant reformers. Back in June Mary’s mother, Mary of Guise, died suddenly at Edinburgh Castle leaving the country in a state of civil war. It was said that she was poisoned by Protestant Scottish Lords.

Mary arrived back in her native country on the 19th August 1561 at port at Leith after 13 years away in France and was met by her illegitimate half-brother, Sir James Stewart. Many of her Scottish subjects did not trust her along with Elizabeth of England.

James Stewart was a leader of the Protestants who were opposed to Mary’s rule while John Knox (a Protestant reformer) preached against the Queen, condemning her for hearing Mass, dancing, and dressing too elaborately. She summoned him to her presence to remonstrate with him unsuccessfully, and later charged him with treason, but he was acquitted and released.


Looking For a Husband

To ensure the support of the Scottish Lords Mary decided to marry again. Elizabeth attempted to neutralise Mary by suggesting that she marry English Protestant Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, whom Elizabeth trusted and thought she could control. She sent an ambassador Thomas Randolph to tell Mary that if she married an English nobleman, Elizabeth would "proceed to the inquisition of her right and title to be our next cousin and heir". The proposal came to nothing maybe because the Dudley was unwilling to the match.

When a French poet visited Mary's court, Pierre de Boscosel de Chastelard, was apparently besotted by Mary and in early 1563, he was discovered during a security search hidden underneath her bed, apparently planning to surprise her when she was alone and declare his love for her. Mary was horrified and banished him from Scotland. He ignored the edict, and two days later he forced his way into her chamber as she was about to disrobe. She reacted with fury and fear, and when Moray rushed into the room, in reaction to her cries for help, she shouted, "Thrust your dagger into the villain!", which Moray refused to do as Chastelard was already under restraint. Chastelard was tried for treason, and beheaded. Maitland claimed that Chastelard's ardour was feigned, and that he was part of a Huguenot plot to discredit Mary by tarnishing her reputation.

Lord Darnley in Gunpowder, Treason & Plot
Back in February 1561, Mary met her English cousin, Henry Stewart Lord of Darnley. Henry was the son of Matthew Stewart and Margaret Douglas who Scottish aristocrats as well as English landowners had sent him to France ostensibly to extend their condolences while hoping for a potential match between their son and Mary. Margaret Douglas was Margaret Tudor’s daughter to her second husband Archibald Douglas so Mary and Henry were cousins in the first degree.

They next met on Saturday 17th February 1565 at Wemyss Castle in Scotland, after which Mary fell in love with the "long lad" (he was over six feet tall). Elizabeth felt threatened by a marriage between the Scottish Queen and Lord Darnley as both Mary and Darnley were claimants to the English throne through her Aunt Margaret and their children would inherit an even stronger, combined claim since Elizabeth was unwed and possibly barren. Mary's insistence on the marriage seems to have stemmed from passion rather than calculation. The English ambassador at her court, Nicholas Throckmorton, reported that "the saying is that surely she is bewitched” and that marriage could only be averted "by violence".


Mary and Darnley's Marriage

Mary and Darnley married at Holyrood Palace on 29th July 1565, even though both were Catholic and a papal dispensation for the marriage of first cousins had not been obtained. The union infuriated Elizabeth, who felt the marriage should not have gone ahead without her permission, as Darnley was both her cousin and an English subject.

Wedding of Mary and Darnley in
Mary Queen of Scots (1971)
The Scottish people were not happy about having an Englishman as their King (even if he was a consort). Mary’s Brother James joined with other Protestant lords in open rebellion. Mary set out from Edinburgh on 26th August 1565 to confront them, and returned to Edinburgh the following month to raise more troops. In what became known as the Chaseabout Raid, Mary and her forces and the rebellious lords roamed around Scotland without ever engaging in direct combat. Mary's numbers were boosted by the release and restoration to favour of Lord Huntly's son, and the return of James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell (who would later become Mary 3rd husband) from exile in France. Unable to muster sufficient support, in October James left Scotland for asylum in England at Elizabeth’s Court in England. Mary broadened her privy council of both Catholics and Protestants.

Darnley soon became annoyed and un content with his position as King Consort, that he demanded the Crown Matrimonial, which would have made him a co-sovereign of Scotland with the right to keep the Scottish throne for himself if he survived his wife. Mary refused to make him co-sovereign, and their marriage soon became strained.  

Mary was with child by October 1565. Even though Darnley was about to have an son and heir; a claimant to thrones of Scotland and England, he was jealous of his wife’s friendship with her Catholic private secretary, David Rizzio, who was rumoured to be the father of the unborn child.
The Murder of David Rizzio
By March 1566, Darnley became part of a secret conspiracy with Protestant lords to “dispose” of Rizzio (he was nicknamed by most as Wee David) and on the 9th March, the group of the conspirators to murder Rizzio in front of the pregnant Mary at a dinner party with Rizzio and five close friends, including Bothwell which was held at Holyrood Palace.  The group dragged Rizzio from the table into the next room and stabbed him 56 times.

Over the next two days, a disillusioned Darnley switched sides, and Mary received her Half-Brother at Holyrood. On the night of 11th –12th March, Darnley and Mary escaped from the palace, and took temporary refuge in Dunbar Castle before returning to Edinburgh on the 18th  March where James, Argyll and Glencairn were restored to the council.


The Birth of a Son

The Birth of James
Mary's son by Darnley, James, was born on the 19th June 1566 in Edinburgh Castle and Mary wished for Darnley to accept the child was his in which he agreed to. The baby descendant from James V of Scotland and Henry VII of England, which made him the future King of two kingdoms.

In October 1566, Mary was staying at Jedburgh on the Scottish Borders when she made a journey on horseback of at least four hours each way to visit the Earl of Bothwell at Hermitage Castle, where he laid ill from wounds sustained in a skirmish with the Border Lords.  Mary's enemies used this to bring scandal to the Queen’s reputation by saying that the two were lovers, though Mary was accompanied by her councillors and guards.

My child will have a throne in Scotland and England...
That wicked barren English Queen wants my child dead,
you will protect him. You will protect him your very lives."
When she returned to Jedburgh, she suffered a serious illness of frequent vomiting, loss of sight, loss of speech, convulsions and periods of unconsciousness and it was thought that she was thought to be near death or dying but her recovery on the 25th October was credited to the skill of her French physicians.

At Craigmillar Castle, outside Edinburgh, at the end of November 1566, Mary and leading nobles held a meeting to discuss the "problem of Darnley" where divorce was discussed, but nothing was agreed to.


Darnley’s Assination

The Lords at the meeting decided without Mary's knowledge to get rid of Darnley by other means. 

"It was thought expedient and most profitable for the common wealth ... that such a young fool and proud tyrant should not reign or bear rule over them; ... that he should be put off by one way or another; and whosoever should take the deed in hand or do it, they should defend."
Darnley feared for his safety and after the baptism of his son at Stirling shortly before Christmas, he went back his father's estates in Glasgow. At the start of his journey, he was afflicted by a fever, possibly smallpox, syphilis, or the result of poison, and he remained ill for some weeks.
In late January 1567, Mary prompted her husband to come back to Edinburgh. He recuperated from his illness in a house belonging to the brother of Sir James Balfour at the former abbey of Kirk o' Field, just within the city wall. Mary visited him daily, so that it appeared a reconciliation was in progress.

Depiction of the Explosion at Kirk O' Field
On the night of the 9th February 1567, Mary visited her husband in the early evening and then attended the wedding celebrations of a member of her household, Bastian Pagez. During the early hours of the morning of the 10th, an explosion devastated Kirk o' Field, and Darnley was found dead in the garden, apparently smothered. There were no visible marks of strangulation or violence on the body. Bothwell, Moray, Secretary Maitland, James and Mary were all suspects with motives, but Mary was at church when the explosion happened. Elizabeth wrote to Mary of the rumours, "I should ill fulfil the office of a faithful cousin or an affectionate friend if I did not ... tell you what all the world is thinking. Men say that, instead of seizing the murderers, you are looking through your fingers while they escape; that you will not seek revenge on those who have done you so much pleasure, as though the deed would never have taken place had not the doers of it been assured of impunity. For myself, I beg you to believe that I would not harbour such a thought."

By the end of February, Bothwell was generally believed to be guilty of Darnley's assassination. Darnley's father demanded that Bothwell be tried before the Estates of Parliament, to which Mary agreed, but Lennox's request for a delay to gather evidence was denied. In the absence of Lennox, and with no evidence presented, Bothwell was acquitted after a seven-hour trial on the 12th April. A week later, Bothwell managed to get more than two dozen lords and bishops to sign the Ainslie Tavern Bond, in which they agreed to support his aim to marry the queen.

Marriage Number Three

Mary visited her son at Stirling for the last time between the 21st and 23rd May. On her way back to Edinburgh on the 24th April, Mary was abducted by Lord Bothwell and his men and taken to Dunbar Castle, where most people believed that Bothwell had raped the Queen.

On the of 6th May, Mary and Bothwell returned to Edinburgh and on the 15th May, at either Holyrood Palace or Holyrood Abbey, they were married in a Protestant ceremony. Bothwell and his first wife, Jean Gordon, who was the sister of Lord Huntly, had divorced twelve days previously.

Mary and Bothwell
Mary had believed that many nobles supported her marriage to Bothwell but she was wrong, as things soon turned sour between the newly elevated Bothwell (created Duke of Orkney and consort of the Queen) and his old peers, and the marriage became deeply unpopular.
The Scottish Catholics considered that the marriage unlawful, since they did not recognise Bothwell's divorce or the validity of the Protestant service. Both Protestants and Catholics were shocked that Mary should marry the man accused of murdering her husband.

Twenty-six Scottish peers, known as the confederate lords, turned against Mary and Bothwell, and raised an army against them. Mary and Bothwell confronted the lords at Carberry Hill on June 15th, but there was no battle as Mary's forces deserted during negotiations. Bothwell was given safe passage from the field, and the lords took Mary to Edinburgh, where crowds of spectators denounced her as an adulteress and murderer. The following night, she was imprisoned in Loch Leven Castle, on an island in the middle of Loch Leven. Between the 20th and 23rd July, Mary miscarried twins and was forced to abdicate in favour of her one-year-old son James on the 24th and her brother James was made regent, while Bothwell was driven into exile and imprisoned in Denmark. 


Prisoner

Loch Leven
With the help George Douglas, Loch Leven’s owner, Mary escaped on the 2nd of May 1568 and managed to raise an army of 6000 men, and met her brother’s smaller forces at the Battle of Langside on the 13th. With her army defeated Mary fled south to the safety of England to beg for Elizabeth’s aid; spending the night at Dundrennan Abbey, she crossed the Solway Firth into England by fishing boat on the 16th where she landed at Workington, Cumberland and stayed overnight at Workington Hall. On the 18th, she was taken into protective custody at Carlisle Castle by local officials.

The Trial of Mary
Mary expected Elizabeth to help her regain her throne because they were kin but Elizabeth was cautious, and ordered an inquiry into the conduct of the confederate lords and the question of whether Mary was guilty of the murder of her husband who was one of Elizabeth’s subjects. Mary was moved by the English authorities to Bolton Castle, Yorkshire in mid-July, because it was further from the Scottish border but not too close to London. A commission of inquiry, or conference as it was known, was held in York and later Westminster between October and January 1569 while in Scotland, her supporters fought a civil war against Regent James and his successors.

Mary refused to acknowledge the power of any court to try her since she was an anointed queen, and refused to attend the inquiry at York personally and instead sent representatives in her place but Elizabeth forbade her attendance anyway. In evidence against Mary, James presented eight unsigned letters said to be from Mary to Bothwell, two marriage contracts and a love sonnet or sonnets said to have been found in a silver-gilt casket, decorated with the monogram of Mary’s first husband. Mary denied writing them, argued that her handwriting was not difficult to imitate and insisted they were forgeries.

They are widely believed to be crucial as to whether Mary shared the guilt for Darnley's murder. The chair of the commission of inquiry, the Duke of Norfolk, described them as horrible letters and diverse fond ballads, and sent copies to Elizabeth, saying that if they were genuine they might prove Mary's guilt.

The Scottish Queen’s letters did not appear publicly until the Conference of 1568, although the Scottish privy council had seen them by December 1567. Some of Mary's contemporaries who saw the letters had no doubt that they were genuine, among them was the Duke of Norfolk, who secretly conspired to marry Mary in the course of the commission, although he denied it when Elizabeth alluded to his marriage plans, saying "he meant never to marry with a person, where he could not be sure of his pillow".

Elizabeth, as she had wished, concluded the inquiry with a verdict that nothing was proven, either against the confederate lords or Mary and for over-riding political reasons, Elizabeth wished to neither convict nor acquit her cousin of murder, and there was never any intention to proceed judicially; the conference was intended as a political exercise. In the end, James returned to Scotland as its regent and Mary remained in custody in England. Elizabeth had succeeded in maintaining a Protestant government in Scotland, without either condemning or releasing her fellow sovereign.

Plots

Tutbury Castle
On the 26th day of January 1569, Mary was moved to Tutbury Castle under the custody of the George Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury and his wife Bess of Hardwick where she was housed with the promise that Elizabeth will help restore her to her throne Scotland. She was permitted her own domestic staff, which never numbered less than 16, and needed 30 carts to transport her belongings from house to house. Her chambers were decorated with fine tapestries and carpets, as well as her cloth of state on which she had the French phrase En ma fin est mon commencement ("In my end lies my beginning") embroidered. Her bed linen was changed daily, and her own chefs prepared meals with a choice of 32 dishes served off silver plates. She was occasionally allowed outside under strict supervision, spent seven summers at the spa town of Buxton, and spent much of her time doing embroidery. Her health declined, perhaps through porphyria or lack of exercise, and by the 1580s, she had severe rheumatism in her limbs, rendering her lame.

In May 1569, Elizabeth attempted to mediate the restoration of Mary in return for guarantees of the Protestant religion, but a convention at Perth rejected the deal overwhelmingly. Norfolk continued to scheme for a marriage with Mary, and Elizabeth imprisoned him in the Tower of London between October 1569 and August 1570.

Early in the following year, James was assassinated in Linlithgow on 23rd  January 1570 by James Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh, a supporter of Mary. James left his wife Agnes Keith widowed and his three daughters Elizabeth (8), Annabel and Margaret fatherless.

The regent’s death coincided with a rebellion in the North of England, led by Catholic earls, which persuaded Elizabeth that Mary was a threat. English troops intervened in the Scottish civil war, consolidating the power of the anti-Marian forces. Elizabeth's principal secretaries Sir Francis Walsingham and William Cecil, Lord Burghley, watched Mary carefully with the aid of spies placed in Mary's household.

In 1571, Cecil and Walsingham uncovered the Ridolfi Plot, which was a plan to replace Elizabeth with Mary with the help of Spanish troops and the Duke of Norfolk. Norfolk was executed, and the English Parliament introduced a bill barring Mary from the throne, to which Elizabeth refused to give royal assent.

To discredit Mary, her letters were published in London but the plots centred on Mary continued, and after the Throckmorton Plot, Walsingham introduced the Bond of Association and the Act for the Queen's Safety, which sanctioned the killing of anyone who plotted against Elizabeth and was aimed at preventing a putative successor from profiting from her murder. In April 1585, Mary was placed in the stricter custody of Sir Amias Paulet, and at Christmas she was moved to a moated manor house at Chartley.

Trial

On the 11th August 1586, Mary was arrested while out riding and taken to Tixall. In a successful attempt to entrap her, Walsingham had deliberately arranged for Mary's letters to be smuggled out of Chartley. Mary was misled into thinking her letters were secure, while in reality they were deciphered and read by Walsingham.

From these letters it was clear that Mary had sanctioned the attempted assassination of Elizabeth.
Fotheringhay Castle
She was moved to Fotheringhay Castle, Northamptonshire in a four-day journey ending on the 25th of September, and in October was put on trial for treason under the Act for the Queen's Safety before a court of 36 noblemen, including Cecil, Shrewsbury, and Walsingham.Mary denied the charges and was spirited in her defence, telling her triers, "Look to your consciences and remember that the theatre of the whole world is wider than the kingdom of England".

Mary drew attention to the facts that she was denied the opportunity to review the evidence, that her papers had been removed from her, that she was denied access to legal counsel and that as a foreign anointed queen she had never been an English subject and thus could not be convicted of treason.

Mary was convicted on the 25th and sentenced to death with only one commissioner, Lord Zouche, expressing any form of dissent. Despite this, Elizabeth hesitated to order her cousin’s execution, even in the face of pressure from the English Parliament to carry out the sentence. She was concerned that the killing of a anointed Queen set a discreditable precedent, and was fearful of the consequences, especially if in retaliation, Mary's son James formed an alliance with the Catholic powers and invaded England.

Elizabeth asked Paulet, Mary's final custodian, if he would contrive a clandestine way to "shorten the life" of Mary, which he refused to do on the grounds that he would not make "a shipwreck of my conscience, or leave so great a blot on my poor posterity". On 1st February 1587, Elizabeth signed the death warrant, and entrusted it to William Davison, a privy councillor and on the 3rd ten members of the Privy Council of England, having been summoned by Cecil without Elizabeth's knowledge, decided to carry out the sentence at once.

Execution of the Queen

At Fotheringhay on the evening of 7th  February 1587, Mary was told that she was to be executed the next morning. She spent the last hours of her life in prayer, distributing her belongings to her household, and writing her will and a letter to the King of France.

To Henri III, the Most Christian King of France

8th February 1587

Monsieur mon beau-frère, estant par la permission de Dieu...

Royal brother, having by God's will, for my sins I think, thrown myself into the power of the Queen my cousin, at whose hands I have suffered much for almost twenty years, I have finally been condemned to death by her and her Estates. I have asked for my papers, which they have taken away, in order that I might make my will, but I have been unable to recover anything of use to me, or even get leave either to make my will freely or to have my body conveyed after my death, as I would wish, to your kingdom where I had honour to be queen, your sister and old ally.

Tonight, after dinner, I have been advised of my sentence: I am to be executed like a criminal at eight in the morning. I have not had time to give you a full account of everything that has happened, but if you will listen to my doctor and my other unfortunate servants, you will learn the truth, and how, thanks be to God, I scorn death and vow that I meet it innocent of any crime, even if I were their subject. The Catholic faith and the assertion of my God-given right to the English throne are the two issues on which I am condemned, and yet I am not allowed to say that it is for the Catholic religion that I die, but for fear of interference with theirs. The proof of this is that they have taken away my chaplain, and, although he is in the building, I have not been able to get permission for him to come and hear my confession and give me the Last Sacrament, while they have been most insistent that I receive the consolation and instruction of their minister brought here for that purpose.
The bearer of this letter and his companions, most of them your subjects, will testify to my conduct at my last hour. It remains for me to beg Your Most Christian Majesty, my brother-in-law and old ally, who have always protested your love for me, to give proof now of your goodness on all these points: firstly by charity, in paying my unfortunate servants the wages due to them-this is a burden on my conscience that only you can relieve: further, by having prayers offered to God for a queen who has borne the title Most Christian, and who dies a Catholic, stripped of all her possessions. As for my son, I commend him to you in so far as he deserves, for I cannot answer for him.

I have taken the liberty of sending you two precious stones, talismans against illness, trusting you will enjoy good health and a long and happy life. Accept them from your loving sister-in-law, who, as she dies, bears witness of her warm feelings for you. Again I commend my servants to you. Give instruction, if it please you, that for my soul's sake part of what you owe me should be paid, and that for the sake of Jesus Christ, to whom I shall pray for you tomorrow as I die, I be left enough to found a memorial mass and give the customary alms.

Your most loving and most true sister.

Marie Queen of Scotland

The scaffold that was erected in the Great Hall of the castle was two feet high and draped in black. It was reached by two or three steps and furnished with the block, a cushion for her to kneel on and three stools, for her and the earls of Shrewsbury and Kent, who acting witnesses.

The executioners knelt before her and asked for her forgiveness as was the custom. She replied, "I
The Execution of Mary
forgive you with all my heart, for now, I hope, you shall make an end of all my troubles."
Her servants, Jane Kennedy and Elizabeth Curle, and the executioners helped Mary to remove her outer garments, revealing a velvet petticoat and a pair of sleeves in crimson-brown, the liturgical colour of martyrdom in the Catholic Church, with a black satin bodice and black trimmings. As she disrobed she smiled and said that she "never had such grooms before ... nor ever put off her clothes before such a company"

After bidding her servants not to cry for her but instead pray for her. She was blindfolded by Mary Kennedy with a white veil embroidered in gold and knelt down on the cushion in front of the block, on which she positioned her head, and stretched out her arms. She recited “O my Lord and my God, I have trusted in Thee. O my dear Jesus, now liberate me. In shackle and chain, in torture and pain, I long for Thee. In weakness and sighing, in kneeling and crying, I adore and implore Thee to liberate me.”

The first blow missed the neck and cut into the back of the head (ouch!) and Mary was heard to whisper "Sweet Jesus" and the second blow almost severed the head and it took the third blow completely cut through the remaining sinew.
As the executioner then picked up the head and held it up in the air to show the audience saying “god save the queen” and the head rolled to the floor, the hair being a wig. Mary's hair was almost entirely grey from her long imprisonment so she wore a wig to hide the fact that she no longer had her strawberry blonde hair. 

Every relic was burned and every drop of blood washed away.  Her little Skye terrier which had managed to hide under her skirts and would not leave his dead mistress's side was also washed but refused thereafter to be fed (forget man’s best friend this proves dog’s can be a girl’s best friend.)
Mary's body was then subjected to further humiliations as her heart and organs were buried deep within the Castle where she had been beheaded while the body was then embalmed and incarcerated in a heavy lead coffin which remained unburied in the Castle until for 5 months and 22 days after the Queen’s execution, when it was taken at the dead of night for fear of public protest, to Peterborough Cathedral. Mary had requested to be buried in France but Elizabeth refused her cousin’s request.

When the news of the execution reached Elizabeth, she became indignant and asserted that Davison had disobeyed her instructions not to part with the warrant and that the Privy Council had acted without her authority. Elizabeth's vacillation and deliberately vague instructions gave her plausible deniability, to attempt to avoid the direct stain of Mary's blood. Davison was arrested, thrown into the Tower of London, and found guilty of misprision. He was released 19 months later after Cecil and Walsingham interceded on his behalf.

Burial

James looks at his mother's portrait in
Gunpowder, Treason and Plot Part
"If you could see me now."
Mary’s son by Darnley, James became Elizabeth’s sole heir and ascended to throne in 1603. He became James VI of Scotland and James I of England. Even though he never knew his mother he knew about her and what she looked liked. Mary had been brought up as a Catholic but her son was a Protestant and that was one of the reasons why Elizabeth left him as the Heir to England.
James ordered for his mother be reburied in Westminster Abbey, in a chapel opposite the tomb of Elizabeth I. In 1867, her tomb was opened to try to find the resting place of James I; he was ultimately found with him buried near his great-great grandfather Henry VII, but many of her other descendants, including Elizabeth of Bohemia, Prince Rupert of the Rhine and the children of Anne, Queen of Great Britain, were interred in Mary’s vault.

Legacy

The Other Queen
I personally think that Mary is an extremely fascinating woman. A Queen at six days old, brought up at the French court as a Princesse de la France to become Queen of France then Dowager Queen and then returning to her home country after 13 years as Queen of Scotland only to be chased into England where she would meet her end. She was both a Stuart of Scotland but also a Tudor of England. She was a ruthless ruler like her English Queen and I believe she would of been a fantastic Queen if she had been Protestant or been born a century earlier.

Mary makes a fascinating subject in the Media. The Other Queen by Philippa Gregory tells the story of Mary’s imprisonment in England through the eyes of Mary, Bessie Hardwick and George Talbot. Gregory stated “it is a challenge to write a novel about Mary Queen of Scots - so much has been written about her already - a play and an opera as well as dozens of histories. In this novel I looked at her long years of imprisonment and the extraordinary triangle that developed between her, her gaoler the Earl of Shrewsbury and his wonderful wife Bess of Hardwick. The dynamic between these three makes this novel not just an historical novel about the times but a psychological study of three people trapped together.”

Mary has been used in films for years; centuries after her death in 1587. Vannesa Redgrave played the Scottish Queen in 1971 British film Mary, Queen of Scots while Camille Rutherford took the part in the 2013 Swiss film Mary Queen of Scots. French actress Clémence Poésy took the part of Mary in Gunpowder, Treason and Plot in 2004.


Mary defiantly deserves to recognised as a brilliant Queen in her own right and should be celebrated in this blog.