Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley

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Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Murder of Lord Darnley Page 75

by Alison Weir


  Clernault, in State Papers in the Public Record Office, CSP Scottish and Papal Negotiations

  Book of Articles

  Deposition of William Powrie, in Pitcairn

  Bothwell

  Pitcairn

  CSP Spanish

  Clernault, in State Papers in the Public Record Office, CSP Scottish and Papal Negotiations

  Buchanan. See the sketch of the murder scene in the Public Record Office for the positions of the bodies.

  Herries; Knox

  Buchanan; CSP Spanish

  Knox

  Buchanan

  Pitcairn

  Additional MSS.

  The Book of Articles states that it was Bothwell, but it is more likely that Mary would have been informed of Darnley’s death before Bothwell was.

  Bothwell

  Buchanan

  Bothwell

  Clernault, in State Papers in the Public Record Office, CSP Scottish and Papal Negotiations

  CSP Venetian

  Bothwell

  Ibid.; Knox

  Knox. The Book of Articles alleges that Darnley’s body was “left lying in the yard [sic] where it was apprehended the space of three hours” before “the rascal[ly] people transported him to a vile house near the room where before he was lodged.” This is obviously a distortion of the truth.

  Bothwell

  Ibid.

  Ibid.

  Now in the Public Record Office.

  Nau

  Crawfurd: Memoirs

  Papal Negotiations

  Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer, 15 February 1567

  In his Detectio, Buchanan wrote that this was the custom in Scotland also, and de Silva reported that Robert Melville had left Mary “confined to her chamber, with the intention of not leaving it for forty days, as is the custom of widows there” (CSP Spanish). However, there is no evidence that either of the two previous widowed Queens, Margaret Tudor, wife of James IV, and Marie de Guise, wife of James V, ever observed this custom.

  Melville

  In his Detectio and The Book of Articles, Buchanan states that Mary slept till noon, but in his History, he claims that she slept most of the day. This is another example of the inconsistencies in his narratives.

  Nau

  Mary herself reported this in a letter written on 16 February 1567 to Mondovi, who in turn reported it to Alessandria (Papal Negotiations) .

  Knox

  The Book of Articles states that Darnley “remained 48 hours as a gazing stock,” but this cannot be true. His body was laid in state on 12 February, and it would have taken a day or so for the embalming processes to be completed.

  Melville

  Sloane MSS.

  Keith

  Keith; Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer

  Book of Articles

  Buchanan; Book of Articles; CSP Scottish

  17. “NONE DARE FIND FAULT WITH IT”

  Adam Blackwood, a Catholic supporter of Mary whose work was published in 1581 in France, is the only source to mention torture. He states that these deponents “had been extraordinarily racked” and beaten with hammers “to draw some one word against their mistress,” but they refused to say anything to condemn her.

  The texts of the depositions quoted in this chapter are to be found in Pitcairn, Anderson: Collections, and Goodall. Three modern works that have proved very useful for this chapter are Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field, which is the result of ten years’ research and sets out to show that Darnley was responsible for the explosion, a theory that is now largely discredited; Gore-Browne: Bothwell, which reaches the same conclusion; and Thomson: Crime of Mary Stuart, which attempts to reconstruct the murder from the depositions.

  CSP Scottish

  For a fuller discussion of 16th-century gunpowder, see Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field.

  Book of Articles

  CSP Scottish

  Melville

  CSP Scottish. Hepburn says that Bothwell had 14 counterfeit keys; Ormiston mentions only 13. The lockable doors were as follows:

  Front door from quadrangle

  Side door in alley leading to cellar/kitchen

  Downstairs door to stairs

  Door to Queen’s garderobe

  Door to Queen’s bedchamber (2 keys)

  Door to downstairs passage to garden

  Door to passage leading to Prebendaries’ Chamber

  Door to Prebendaries’ Chamber

  Upstairs door to stairs (used as cover for Darnley’s bath)

  Door to King’s garderobe

  Door to King’s bedchamber

  Door to postern gate in Flodden Wall

  N.B. There was no lock on the back door, which was bolted on the inside. Allegations that the conspirators had two keys to this door are spurious.

  There were therefore 13 keys to the house.

  In one deposition Paris says this incident took place on Friday, in the other, on Saturday. The latter is more likely to be correct. Paris made his deposition more than two years later, so an allowance must be made for a lapse in memory.

  This close no longer exists; it led off the Grassmarket, which lies to the south of Edinburgh Castle and the Royal Mile.

  Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field

  The Book of Articles states incorrectly that Hob Ormiston was Black Ormiston’s father.

  Hay claimed that Bothwell was walking up and down the Canongate while the powder was being transported, which took place between 8 p.m. and 10:15 p.m., but Powrie claimed that he did not begin shifting the powder until 10 p.m.

  Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field

  Gore-Browne

  Nau; Lennox says nothing about Paris giving a signal.

  Nau

  The accounts by Hay, Hepburn, Powrie and Dalgleish of Bothwell’s return journey to Kirk o’Field are almost identical.

  Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field; CSP Scottish

  CSP Scottish

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Venetian

  CSP Scottish

  It was later alleged that Bothwell himself had lit the fuse, but there is no evidence that he went into the house.

  Calendar of Letters and State Papers . . . in Rome. This story was told by Hepburn just before his execution, to another prisoner, Cuthbert Ramsay, who repeated it in 1576 in Paris as evidence in support of Mary’s plea for an annulment of her marriage to Bothwell.

  Buchanan

  18. “THE CONTRIVERS OF THE PLOT”

  Papal Negotiations

  CSP Scottish

  Ibid.

  CSP Venetian

  Sloane MSS.

  Cited by Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field

  CSP Scottish; Diurnal of Occurrents

  CSP Scottish; Melville

  Spottiswoode

  Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland

  Teulet

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; CSP Scottish; CSP Foreign

  Cabala

  Notably Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field, and Gore-Browne.

  CSP Foreign

  CSP Scottish

  Keith

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Scottish

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; Tytler

  Papal Negotiations

  Bothwell

  Papal Negotiations

  CSP Spanish

  Morton’s confession, in Pitcairn

  CSP Spanish; Teulet

  CSP Foreign

  Papal Negotiations

  Gore-Browne

  Sloane MSS.

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Venetian

  Report of Sir William Drury, in CSP Scottish

  CSP Venetian

  Ibid.

  Papal Negotiations

  Diurnal of Occurrents

  Pepys MSS.

  19. “GREAT SUSPICIONS AND NO PROOF”

  Buchanan

  CSP Foreign

  Buchanan; Camden

  Melville

  Inventaires

  Keith

/>   CSP Scottish; The Book of Articles is in the Hopetoun MSS. in the Register House, Edinburgh

  Buchanan

  Ibid.

  Book of Articles

  Lennox Narrative

  Drury to Cecil, 19 February 1567, in CSP Scottish; Moray’s Journal, in Cotton MSS. Caligula. Mary’s surviving letters from this correspondence with Lennox are all in Scots, which suggests that they were not written by Mary herself but by her Council on her behalf.

  Keith

  Labanoff

  Buchanan

  CSP Spanish

  Inventaires

  Papal Negotiations

  CSP Spanish

  Ibid.

  Drury to Cecil, CSP Scottish; Drury does not mention Hay.

  Diurnal of Occurrents; Clernault, in Papal Negotiations . Knox claimed incorrectly that Darnley was buried in Holyrood Abbey.

  Under Charles II the chapel royal was demolished and the royal remains removed to a new vault in Holyrood Abbey, which was now designated the new chapel royal. During the Glorious Revolution of 1688, a mob vandalised the abbey and forced open the royal vault but did not disturb the bodies. When the abbey roof collapsed in 1768, the vault was opened again and Darnley’s skull was removed along with that of Madeleine of France, first wife of James V.

  Darnley’s skull was examined in 1798 and found to bear the marks of syphilis. After three changes of ownership, it was presented to the Royal College of Surgeons in 1869. See Bingham: Darnley.

  By the 19th century, the royal vault was in a ruinous condition, and several of Darnley’s bones were removed; one was advertised for sale in a Harrogate newspaper. The vault has since been restored.

  Papal Negotiations

  Leslie

  Diurnal of Occurrents

  Ibid.

  Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field

  State Papers in the Public Record Office

  Buchanan; Book of Articles

  Report of the King of Scots’ Death, in CSP Scottish

  Keith

  CSP Scottish

  Antonia Fraser

  CSP Scottish. Drury recorded that he passed through Berwick on 19 February.

  Mahon: Tragedy of Kirk o’Field

  Labanoff

  Diurnal of Occurrents

  Cecil to Sir Henry Norris, 20 February 1567, in the Cecil Papers

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Foreign

  Ibid., report of 22 February 1567

  Papal Negotiations

  Anderson: Collections; Keith

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Venetian

  Labanoff

  Robert Melville to Cecil, 26 February 1567, CSP Scottish

  Anderson: Collections; Keith; Labanoff

  CSP Spanish

  Ibid.

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; CSP Scottish. There are several translations of this letter from the original French, which accounts for the various versions in different books. I have largely followed Froude’s translation

  CSP Scottish. The Diurnal of Occurrents claims that it was also proclaimed on 27 February.

  Letter of 28 February 1567, in CSP Foreign

  Leslie

  CSP Scottish

  Keith; Sir Henry Killigrew to Cecil, 8 March 1567, CSP Scottish

  Tytler

  Drury to Cecil, 27 February 1567, CSP Foreign

  Nau

  Drury to Cecil, 28 February 1567, CSP Foreign

  CSP Foreign

  Papal Negotiations

  Drury to Cecil, 28 February 1567, CSP Foreign

  Bothwell

  CSP Scottish; for the placard campaign, see also CSP Foreign; Birrel; Anderson: Collections

  CSP Scottish

  CSP Spanish

  Killigrew to Cecil, 8 March 1567, CSP Scottish

  Buchanan

  Bothwell

  Pitcairn; Anderson: Collections; Goodall

  Register of the Privy Seal

  Labanoff

  Killigrew to Cecil, 8 March 1567, CSP Scottish

  Bingham: Darnley; CSP Scottish. The two mermaid placards are now in the Public Record Office.

  CSP Spanish

  Register of the Privy Council

  Ibid.

  Papal Negotiations

  Teulet

  Diurnal of Occurrents

  Killigrew to Cecil, 8 March 1567, CSP Scottish

  Ibid. Anthony Standen had returned to England by 15 March, when Mary, or her Council, wrote to Robert Melville in London, asking him to seek the favour of the English government on Standen’s behalf (Labanoff).

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Scottish

  Ibid.

  Papal Negotiations

  Selections from Unpublished Manuscripts

  Ibid.; Keith

  20. “LAYING SNARES FOR HER MAJESTY”

  Papal Negotiations

  Ibid.

  For Moray’s letter and communication with Killigrew, see CSP Scottish

  CSP Foreign

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; CSP Scottish

  CSP Scottish

  Register of the Privy Council; Anderson: Collections

  Drury to Cecil, 20 March 1567, CSP Foreign

  Drury to Cecil, 29 March 1567, ibid.

  Teulet

  Drury to Cecil, 30 March 1567, CSP Foreign

  Papal Negotiations

  Ibid.

  Ibid.

  CSP Venetian

  Keith

  Bothwell

  Acts of the Parliament of Scotland; Diurnal of Occurrents

  Drury incorrectly states that Janet Beaton, the Lady of Buccleuch, was cited as co-respondent (CSP Foreign).

  CSP Venetian; CSP Foreign

  CSP Scottish

  Register of the Privy Council

  Birrel

  Drury to Cecil, 29 March 1567, CSP Foreign

  The word “prevent” did not acquire its present meaning until the 17th century.

  Labanoff

  CSP Spanish

  Ibid.

  CSP Foreign

  Ibid.

  Drury to Cecil, 29 March 1567, CSP Foreign

  Ibid.; Inventaires

  Register of the Privy Council; Keith; Anderson: Collections

  Hosack (see Book of Articles)

  Labanoff

  CSP Foreign. Cecil was aware of the divorce suit by 3 April.

  CSP Scottish

  Teulet

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Foreign

  De Silva to Philip II, 21 April 1567, CSP Spanish

  Ibid.

  Teulet

  Keith

  Cotton MSS. Caligula

  Mitchell

  Book of Articles

  Ibid.

  CSP Foreign

  Ibid.; de Silva to Philip II, 21 April 1567, CSP Spanish

  Papal Negotiations

  CSP Foreign

  William Robertson: History of Scotland

  Gore-Browne

  21. “THE CLEANSING OF BOTHWELL”

  Knox did not take part in this campaign; after Darnley’s murder, he had retired from Edinburgh to work on his History of the Reformation.

  Letter to Cecil, 15 April 1567, CSP Foreign

  Goodall; Keith; CSP Scottish

  Drury to Cecil, 15 April 1567, in Tytler: Scotland

  Ibid. James Anthony Froude, the eminent but biased 19th-century historian, had no time for Mary and was not above inventing evidence against her. He alleges that she was seen to give Bothwell a friendly nod from her window as he rode off to the Tolbooth, and also asserts that Bothwell was riding Darnley’s horse. These details do not appear in contemporary sources but have been frequently repeated by other writers.

  CSP Scottish

  CSP Foreign

  Anderson: Collections

  Keith

  Buchanan

  Keith

  CSP Scottish

  10 May 1567, CSP Scottish

  CSP Foreign

  Diurnal of Occurrents

  CSP
Foreign

  Bothwell

  CSP Scottish

  CSP Spanish

  CSP Scottish. Drury sent a copy of one of these answers to Cecil on 19 April (CSP Foreign).

  Keith

  Ibid.; Gore-Browne

  Leslie and Nau also claimed that Bothwell’s acquittal was ratified by Parliament.

  De Silva to Philip II, 21 April 1567, CSP Spanish

  Acts of the Parliament of Scotland

  CSP Scottish

  The word “pit” meant “prison” in Scots.

  CSP Foreign

  For copies of the Ainslie’s Tavern Bond, see Cotton MSS. Caligula; Keith; Anderson: Collections; CSP Scottish

  Buchanan says the Bishops added their signatures the following day.

  Cotton MSS. Caligula

  CSP Spanish

  Both lists are in Keith.

  Keith

  CSP Scottish

  Ibid.

  Nau

  Ibid.

  Labanoff. This gives the lie to Throckmorton’s claim, made on 30 April in a letter to Leicester, that Mary and Bothwell had been married at Seton before she went to Stirling (CSP Foreign).

  Forster to Cecil, 24 April 1567, CSP Scottish

  Bothwell

  Nau

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; CSP Scottish

  CSP Scottish

  22. “WE FOUND HIS DOINGS RUDE”

  Diurnal of Occurrents; CSP Scottish

  Cecil Papers; Lang

  CSP Foreign

  Papal Negotiations; Labanoff

  CSP Scottish

  Cited by MacNalty

  The letter was sent via Drury.

  Cited by Plowden: Two Queens in One Isle

  Buchanan

  Estimates of the number of Bothwell’s men vary. Nau says there were 1,500, the Diurnal of Occurrents 800, Buchanan 600 and de Silva 400. The Diurnal is the most likely to be correct.

  Gore-Browne

  CSP Foreign

  Calendar of Letters and State Papers . . . in Rome (Cuthbert Ramsay’s evidence, 1576)

  Pitcairn; Anderson: Collections; Goodall

  State Papers in the Public Record Office; CSP Scottish. Some historians wrongly ascribe this letter to Lennox, claiming it was the one he wrote to his wife on 23 April.

  Register of the Privy Council; Diurnal of Occurrents

  De Silva to Philip II, 1 May 1567, CSP Spanish

  Diurnal of Occurrents; CSP Scottish; Melville; Gore-Browne. The exact location of the abduction has not been fully established. In an Act of Parliament of 1567, the place is referred to as being “near the bridges, commonly called Foulbriggs” (or Foulbridge), which Strickland identified with Fountainbridge, but this is only just south of the West Port and nowhere near the River Almond. The Diurnal says the abduction took place “between Kirkliston and Edinburgh at a place called The Bridges.” In the 17th century, there was a farm called The Bridges at the village of Over Gogar, which has now been swallowed up by Edinburgh’s suburban sprawl. Buchanan and Herries state that the location was “Almond Bridge,” while a pardon of October 1567 says “near the Water of Almond.” Birrel claims it was at “Cramond Bridge,” on the road between Edinburgh and South Queensferry. The likeliest location is a little way to the south of Cramond, in the area referred to in the text. (See Gore-Browne.)

 

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