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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > British And Irish History, Biographies > Mary Queen of Scots
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Mary Queen of Scots, British And Irish History, Biographies

Related Category: British And Irish History, Biographies

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.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Anthony Babington
Sir James Balfour
Bothwell, James Hepburn, 4th earl of
Darnley, Henry Stuart, Lord
Elizabeth I, queen of England
Guise
Hamilton, James, 2d earl of Arran
Henry VIII, king of England
Huntly, George Gordon, 4th earl of
Huntingdon, Henry Hastings, 3d earl of
James I, king of England
James V, king of Scotland
Sir William Kirkaldy of Grange
John Knox
Leicester, Robert Dudley, earl of
Lennox, Matthew Stuart, 4th earl of
John Leslie
William Maitland
Margaret Tudor
Mary of Guise
Morton, James Douglas, 4th earl of
Murray, James Stuart, 1st earl of
Norfolk, Thomas Howard, 4th duke of
Penal Laws
Reformation
David Rizzio
Thomas Randolph, English diplomat
Ruthven
Sir Ralph Sadler
Scotland
Stuart, British royal family
Stuart, John, 4th earl of Atholl
Sir Nicholas Throckmorton

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History > Modern Europe
History > Biographies


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