| Scottish
Independence Guide: Mary Stuart, Mary Queen of Scots
Mary
Stuart, born at Linlithgow, 8 December, 1542; died at Fotheringay, 8 February,
1587. She was the only legitimate child of James V of Scotland. His death (14
December) followed immediately after her birth, and she became queen when only
six days old.
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.
So the wooing began. Abbeys in Melrose, Jedburgh, Dryburgh
and Holyrood were sacked. Concerns for Mary's safety soon mounted as Henry's
forces ran riot over the Scots. After the disastrous Battle of Pinkie Cleugh,
she was sent to France, 7 August, 1548, where she was excellently
educated, as is now admitted by both friend and foe. On 24 April, 1558, she
married the dauphin Francis and, on the death of Henri II, 10 July, 1559, became
Queen Consort of France.
This apparent good fortune was saddened by the loss of Scotland. Immediately
after the accession of Elizabeth, her council made plans to "help the divisions"
of Scotland by aiding those "inclined to true religion". The revolution broke
out in May, and with Elizabeth's aid soon gained the upper hand. There were
dynastic, as well as religious, reasons for this policy. Elizabeth's birth being
illegitimate, Mary, though excluded by the will of Henry VIII, might claim the
English Throne as the legitimate heir. As the state of war still prevailed
between the two countries, there was no chance of her being accepted, but her
heralds did, later on, emblazon England in her arms, which deeply offended the
English Queen. Mary's troubles were still further increased by the Huguenot
rising in France, called le tumulte d'Amboise (6-17 March, 1560), making it
impossible for the French to succour Mary's side in Scotland.
At last the starving French garrison of Leith was obliged to yield to a large
English force, and Mary's representatives signed the Treaty of Edinburgh (6
July, 1560). One clause of this treaty might have excluded from the English
throne all Mary's descendants, amongst them the present reigning house, which
claims through her. Mary would never confirm this treaty. Francis II died, 5
December, and Mary, prostrate for a time with grief, awoke to find all power
gone and rivals installed in her place. Though the Scottish reformers had at
first openly plotted her deposition, a change was making itself felt, and her
return was agreed to. Elizabeth refused a passport, and ordered her fleet to
watch for Mary's vessel. She sailed in apprehension of the worst, but reached
Leith in safety, 19 August, 1561.
For a Catholic monarch who was also a woman, turbulent,
Protestant Scotland was unlikely to be an easy place to be. The political revolution, the vast appropriations of
church property, and the frenzied hatred of Knox's followers for Catholicism
made any restoration of the old religion impossible. Mary contented herself with
the new and, by her moderation and management, left time for a gradual return of
loyalty. But though she ruled, she did not yet govern. She issued, and
frequently repeated, a proclamation accepting religion as she had found it --
the first edict of toleration in Great Britain.
In 1562 Father Nicholas de Gouda visited her from Pope Pius IV, not without
danger to his life. He reported himself sadly disappointed in the Scottish
bishops, but was almost enthusiastic for the "devout young queen", who "numbers
scarce twenty summers" and "is without a single protector or good counsellor".
Though she still counteracts the machinations of the heretics to the best of her
power . . . there is no mistaking the imminent danger of her position". That was
true. Mary was a woman who leant on her advisers with full and wife-like
confidence. But, living as she did amongst false friends, she became an utterly
bad judge of male advisers. All her misfortunes may be traced to her mistaking
flashy attractions for solid worth. Other sovereigns have indeed made favourites
of objectionable persons, but few or none have risked or sacrificed everything
for them, as Mary did, again and again.
Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, a great-grandson of Henry VII of England, with
claims to both English and Scottish crowns, had always a possible candidate for
Mary's hand, and, as more powerful suitors fell out, his chances improved. He
was, moreover, a Catholic, though of an accommodating sort, for he had been
brought up at Elizabeth's court, and she in February, 1565, let him go to
Scotland. Mary, at first cool, soon fell violently in love. The Protestant lords
rose in arms, and Elizabeth backed up their rebellion, but Mary drove them
victoriously from the country and married Darnley before the dispensation
required to remove the impediment arising from their being first cousins had
arrived from Rome. But she did leave enough time for a dispensation to be
granted, and it was eventually conceded in a form that would suffice, if that
were necessary, for a sanatio in radice.
As soon as the victory had been won, Darnley was found to be changeable,
quarrelsome, and, presumably, also vicious. He became violently jealous of David
Rizzio, who, so far as we can see, was perfectly innocent and inoffensive, a
merry fellow who helped the queen in her foreign correspondence and sometimes
amused her with music. Darnley now entered into a band with the same lords who
had lately risen in rebellion against him: they were to seize Rizzio in the
queen's presence, put him to death, and obtain the crown matrimonial for Darnley,
who would secure a pardon for them, and reward them. The plot succeeded: Rizzio,
torn from Mary's table, was poignarded outside her door (9 March, 1566).
Mary, though kept a prisoner, managed to escape, and again triumphed over her
foes; but respect for her husband was no longer possible. Her favourite was now
James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell, who had served her with courage and fidelity,
in the late crisis. Then a band for Darnley's murder was signed at Ainsley by
most of the nobles who had been implicated in the previous plots. Darnley, who
had been ill in Glasgow, was brought back to Edinburgh by his wife, and lay that
night in her lodgings at Kirk o' Field. At two the next morning (10 February,
1567) the house was blown up by powder, and the boy (he had only just come of
age) was killed. Inquiry into the murder was most perfunctory. Bothwell, who was
charged with it, was found not guilty by his peers (12 April), and on the 24th
he carried Mary off by force to Dunbar, where she consented to marry him.
Bothwell thereupon, with scandalous violence, carried a divorce from his wife
through both Protestant and Catholic courts, and married Mary (15 May). Exactly
a month later the same lords as before raised forces against their whilom
confederate and the queen, whom they met at Carberry Hill. Bothwell was allowed
to escape, but Mary who surrendered on the understanding that she should be
treated as a queen, was handled with rough violence and immured in Lochleven
Castle.
The original documents on which a verdict as to her guilt should be formed
have perished, and a prolonged controversy has arisen over the evidence still
accessible. The tendency of modern schools is to
regard Mary as a participant, though in a minor and still undetermined degree,
in the above-mentioned crimes. The arguments are far too complicated to be given
here, but that from authority may be indicated. There were several well-informed
representative Catholics at Edinburgh during the critical period. The pope had
sent Father Edmund Hay, a Jesuit; Philibert Du Croc was there for France,
Rubertino Solaro Moretta represented Savoy, while Roche Mamerot, a Dominican,
the queen's confessor, was also there. All these, as also the Spanish ambassador
in London, represent the Bothwell match as a disgrace involving a slur on her
virtue. Her confessor only defends her from participation in the murder of her
husband. The most perfect documentary evidence is that of the so-called "casket
letters", said to have been written by Mary to Bothwell during the fatal crisis.
If, on the one hand, their authenticity still lacks final proof, no argument yet
brought forward to invalidate them has stood the test of modern criticism.
The defeat at Carberry Hill and the imprisonment at Lochleven were blessings
in disguise. The Protestant lords avoided a searching inquiry as much as Mary
had done; and she alone suffered, while the others went free. This attracted
sympathy once more to her cause. She managed to escape, raised an army, but was
defeated at Langside (13 May, 1568) and fled into England, where she found
herself once more a prisoner. She did not now refuse to justify herself, but
made it a condition that she should appear before Elizabeth in person. But Cecil
schemed to bring about such a trial as should finally embroil Mary with the
king's lords, as they were now called (for they had crowned the infant James),
and so keep the two parties divided, and both dependent on England. This was
eventually accomplished in the conferences at York and Westminster before a
commission of English peers under the Duke of Norfolk. The casket letters were
then produced against Mary, and a thousand filthy charges, afterwards embodied
in Buchanan's "Detectio".
Mary, however, wisely refused to defend herself,
unless her dignity as queen was respected. Eventually an open verdict was found.
"Nothing has been sufficiently proved, whereby the Queen of England should
conceive an evil opinion of her sister" (10 January, 1569). Cecil's astuteness
had overreached itself. Such a verdict from an enemy, was everywhere regarded as
one of Not Guilty, and Mary's reputation, which had everywhere fallen after the Bothwell match, now quickly revived. Her constancy to her faith, which was
clearly the chief cause of her sufferings, made a deep impression on all
Catholics, and St. Pius V wrote her a letter, which may be regarded as marking
her reconciliation with the papacy (9 January, 1570).
Even before this, a scheme for a declaration of nullity of the marriage with
Bothwell, and for a marriage with the Duke of Norfolk, had been suggested and
had been supported by what we should now call the Conservative Party among the
English peers, a sign that they were not very much impressed by the charges
against the Scottish queen, which they had just heard. Norfolk, however, had not
the initiative to carry the scheme through. The Catholics in the North rose in
his support, but, having no organization, the rising at once collapsed (14
November to 21 December, 1569). Mary had been hurried south by her gaolers, with
orders to kill her rather than allow her to escape. So slowly did posts travel
in those days that the pope, two months after the collapse of the rising, but
not having yet heard of its commencement, excommunicated Elizabeth (25 Feb.,
1570) in order to pave the way for the appeal to arms. Both the rising and the
excommunication were so independent of the main course of affairs that, when the
surprise they caused was over, the scheme for the Norfolk marriage resumed its
previous course, and an Italian banker, Ridolfi, promised to obtain papal
support for it. Lord Acton's erroneous idea, that Ridolfi was employed by Pius V
to obtain Elizabeth's assassination, seems to have arisen from a mistranslation
of Gabutio's Latin Life of St. Pius in the Bollandists (cf. "Acta SS.", May, IV,
1680, pp. 657, 658, with Catena, "Vita di Pio V", Mantua, 1587, p.75). Cecil
eventually discovered the intrigue; Norfolk was beheaded, 2 June, 1572, and the
Puritans clamoured for Mary's blood, but in this particular Elizabeth would not
gratify them.
After this, Mary's imprisonment continued with great rigour for yet fourteen
years, under the Earl of Shrewsbury and Sir Amias Paulet, at Sheffield Castle,
Tutbury, Wingfield, and Chartley. But she had so many sympathizers that notes
were frequently smuggled in, despite all precautions, and Mary's hopes of
eventual release never quite died.
The frequent plots of which historians so often speak are
empty rumours which will not stand historical investigation. Elizabeth's life
was never in danger for a moment. Plans for Mary's liberation were indeed
occasionally formed abroad, but none of them approached within any measurable
distance of realization.
Her eventual fall was due to her excessive confidence in Thomas Morgan, an
agent, who had shown great skill and energy in contriving means of passing in
letters, but who was also a vain, quarrelsome, factious man, always ready to
talk treason against Elizabeth. Walsingham spies therefore frequently offered to
carry letters for him, and eventually the treacherous Gilbert Gifford (a
seminarist who afterwards got himself made priest in order to carry on his
deceits with less suspicion) contrived a channel of correspondence, in which
every letter was sent to or from Mary passed through the hands of Elizabeth's
decipherer Thomas Phellips, and was copied by him. As Morgan was now in
communication with Ballard, the only priest, so far as we know, who fell a
victim to the temptation to plot against Elizabeth, Mary's danger was now grave.
In due course Ballard, through Anthony Babington, a young gentleman of
wealth, wrote, by Gifford's means, to Mary. It seems that the confederates
refused to join the plot unless they had Mary's approval, and Babington wrote to
inquire whether Mary would reward them if they "dispatched the usurper", and set
her free. As Walsingham had two or three agents provocateurs keeping company
with the conspirators, the suspicion is vehement that Babington was persuaded to
ask this perilous question, but positive proof of this has not yet been found.
Against the advice of her secretaries, Mary answered this letter, promising to
reward those who aided her escape, but saying nothing about the assassination
(17 July, 1586).
Babington and his fellows were now arrested, tried and executed, then Mary's
trial began (14 and 15 October). A death sentence was the object desired, and it
was of course obtained. Mary freely confessed that she had always sought and
always would seek means of escape. As to plots against the life of Elizabeth,
she protested "her innocence, and that she had not procured or encouraged any
hurt against her Majesty", which was perfectly true. As to the allegation of
bare knowledge of treason without having manifested it, the prosecution would
not restrict itself to so moderate a charge. Mary, moreover, always contended
that the Queen of Scotland did not incur responsibilities for the plottings of
English subjects, even if she had known of them. Indeed, in those days of royal
privilege, her rank would, in most men's minds, have excused her in any case.
But Lord Burghley, seeing how much turned on this point of privilege, refused
her all signs of royalty, and she was condemned as "Mary Stuart, commonly called
Queen of Scotland".
She was led to the scaffold on February 8th 1587, wearing
the red of a Catholic martyr. It is said that it took three blows to complete
the beheading and that when the executioner lifted her head by the hair for all
to view, he was left with only a wig in his hand as her head rolled on the
ground at his feet, lips still moving in prayer.
Mary
Queen of Scots - Timeline

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