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A37340 A brief history of the life of Mary, Queen of Scots, and the occasions that brought her and Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, to their tragical ends shewing the hopes the Papists then had of a Popish successor in England, and their plots to accomplish them : with a full account of the tryals of that Queen, and of the said Duke, as also the trial of Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel : from the papers of a secretary of Sir Francis Walsingham / now published by a person of quality. M. D.; Walsingham, Francis, Sir, 1530?-1590. 1681 (1681) Wing D57; ESTC R8596 76,972 72

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was strangled in his bed and then his body cast forth into a Garden Who were the Contrivers and Actors of his murther must perhaps remain a secret till the Vniversal Assizes shall disclose all the wicked Policies of the world in their naked undisguised reality Common Fame laid it upon the Earl of Murray base Brother to the Queen a man subtil and ambitious and Morton a great stickler in those times and other their Confederates But they on the contrary charg'd it upon the Queen though without convincing proofs Thuanus L. 40. Ad finem anni 1566 speaks as if the Popes fingers were not altogether free from the fiains of this Princes Blood for says he Ad haec Pontificis ut passim jactabatur Caroli Lotaringi Cardinalis Literis Incitabantur nam cum per eum à Pontifice petiissent pecuniam ad Instaurandam majorum Religionem Respor sum fuerat frustra ipsos Conari nisi sublatis iis per quos stabat ne res exitum jortiretur They were hereunto exited as was commonly reported by the Letters of the Pope and the Cardinal of Lorain for when by him they desired money of the Pope to re-establish the old Roman Religion 't was answered that their endeavours were vain unless those were taken off through whose default it was that the thing was not already accomplish't perhaps his Holiness did not esteem the Lord Darnly then King to be fierce and active enough for the business for he is noted to be a man of a soft temper Gay and Amarous not addicted to War nor Master of any extraordinary Politicks This is certain that soon after her Majesty was advised again to Marry and James Hepburn Earl of Bothwell being then much in her favour and eminent for his Valour was recommended 't is said designedly by Murray and his party as a person most fit for her acceptance and though he were more than suspected to be concern'd in the murder yet being thereof in a pretended Legal manner acquitted and having obtain'd for that purpose a Divorce from his former Wife the Queen was prevail'd with to accept him for her Husband not without the consent of many of the Nobility This caused a suspition in many that she was conscious to the murder which most Historians represent as the chief design of the Conspirators in promoting of that unhappy Match and these suspitions were so far improv'd that quickly after Arms were raised on that pretence and Bothwell forc'd to fly and the Queen her self seized and made Prisoner in Lechlevyn under the custody of Murray's Mother formerly a Mistress to James the 5th where threatning to prosecute her for Incontinency and for the Kings murder and for Tyranny c. they at last wrought so far upon her as to compel her to resign her Kingdom to her Son then scarce Thirteen months old and to appoint Murray Regent during his Minority But after Eleven months Consinement she made her escape and declaring that these Concessions were extorted by Duress and just fear raised an Army of 7000 men which were defeated by Murray and the Queen forced to save her self by a flight of 60 Miles in one day to the house of the Lord Heris where dispairing of safety and promising her self better entertainment from Queen Elizabeth than from her own Subjects she from thence in a small Bark and with few friends put to Sea and Landed at Wickington in Cumberland May the 17th 1568. and immediately dispatch't Letters to the Queen of England desiring to be conducted to her presence who in Answer promised her assistance according to the Equity of her Cause but denied her Access for that she was held guilty of many Crimes and ordered her to be conveyed to Carlisle as a place of safety withal writing to the Regent of Scotland that he should come in Person or by sufficient Deputies to answer the Queen of Scots complaint against him and his accomplices and render sufficient reasons for deposing her or otherwise she would espouse her cause and with all the force she could make endeavour to resettle her in her Kingdom Whereupon Murray with seven more met at York several Noblemen commissionated by Queen Flizabeth to hear and treat of the matter amongst whom Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk was the chief and likewise the Bishop of Rosse and others impower'd by the Scottish Queen did there attend but after a long Treaty they broke up and nothing was concluded At this Treaty a proposal was secretly made some say by Murray others by the Bishop of Rosse to the Duke of Norfolk to marry the Queen of Scots which proved fatal to him as you will find by the following papers containing his Tryal and Condemnation for the same And also it was given out that he had passed away her Right to the Crown of England to a Foreigner and that the same was ratified at Rome and Letters shewn wherein she accused Q. Eliz. for not performing her promises to her and boasted of Succors she expected from others which was confirmed by a discovery made That one Ridolph a Florentine Merchant was employed by Pius the fifth the then Pope to make a secret Commotion of Papists in England in her favour Whereupon she was removed to a place of greater security In the mean time Queen Eliz. had notice of the Intrigue between her and Norfolk upon which He was question'd but promising to desist and seeming to slight that Alliance was dismissed But presently a Rebellion was raised in the North by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland instigated by one Nicholas Morton a Popish Priest sent over by the Pope to pronounce Q. Eliz. an Heretick and to have lost on that account all right and soveraignty And these Popish Rebels proceeded to that outrage that at Durham they tore in pieces all the Bibles they could meet with But finding themselves too weak to withstand the Forces raised against them fled without fighting the first being betray'd in Scotland sent into England and Beheaded at York and the other died abroad miserably About the same time Murray Regent of Scotland upon a private Grudge was shot as he Rid along the street by one Hamilton and the Regency was conferr'd upon Matthew Earl of Lenox the young Kings Granfather he being Father to the late murder'd King before his Marriage with the Queen stiled the Lord Darnly Both the French and Spanish Kings were now urgent with Queen Elizabeth for the Queen of Scots liberty who made answer That as she would omit nothing that might serve for the reconciling the said Queen and her subjects so she must have leave to provide for her own and her peoples safety as Nature Reason and her own Honour required Whereupon finding those Forreign applications ineffectual Domestick Plots were set on foot to effect it by force and amongst the rest some eminent persons undertook it but being discovered were soon apprehended and some of the Conspirators executed Nor was it long but the
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE LIFE OF Mary Queen of Scots AND The Occasions that brought Her and Thomas Duke of Norfolk to their Tragical Ends. Shewing the hopes the Papists then had of a Popish Successor in England and their Plots to accomplish them With a full ACCOUNT of the TRYALS Of that QUEEN and of the said DUKE As also the TRIAL of PHILIP HOWARD Earl of Arundel From the Papers of a Secretary of Sir Francis Walsingham Now Published by a Person of Quality LONDON Printed for Tho. Cockerill at the Sign of the Three Legs in the Poultrey over-against the Stocks-Market 1681. A Preface to the following Tryals giving a brief Hystorical Account of the Life of Mary Queen of Scots and the occasions that brought both Her and the Duke of Norfolk to their Tragical Ends and the Earl of Arundel to his Trial c. IT may seem strange or unseasonable while the Press labours daily with the present Popish Plot to trouble the world with that which concerns only Those that so long ago are past and gone But as there are too many amongst us that question the Reality of the present Conspiracy so there are not a few that deny the Truth of those heretofore Or if they acknowledge any thing either of the Powder-Treason or Babingtons Conspiracy they extenuate the same almost to nothing by alledging that they were attempted by a few Private High-Spirited Gentlemen extreamly provoked with great Injuries and bitter usage which were the only causes of their desperate Resolutions for which they themselves sufficiently suffered and that therefore their Treasons are no more to be filed to the Account of their Church c. But by the following papers I conceive these Evasions will be silenced for thereby it will appear 1. That there was during a great part of Queen Elizabeths Reign a continued Series of Popish Treasons successively though God be blessed unsuccessfully carried on and that not by a few Desperado's but by a great number of persons of the most considerable Fortunes and Abilities of the Roman Catholick Religion 2ly That the main intentive and scope of the said Conspirators as every where they declare was to root out Protestantism and set up Popery unto which Attempts they were chiefly animated by the prospect of an immediate Popish Successor viz. the said Mary Queen of Scots 3ly That the Papists then were to make use of the same Vmbrage as now they do viz. to raise Lyes and Slanders of the Puritans and prerend that they designed Rebellion only to colour their own real Treasons as appears by the Queen of Scots Letter to Babington 4ly That these fatal Councils of the Guises and Popish Priests brought that great Princess who had the misfortune to be led by them to Ruine so that by endeavouring to anticipate the Succession she not only lost it but also her Life These and several other Remarkables which no doubt the Judicious Reader will observe in the perusal occasioned the publication of the ensuing papers at this time 'T is confessed the same are not so exactly taken as the Tryals of the present Age The Ingenious Skill of Speedy and short writing being much improved since those times yet it is evident by the Manuscript that there was no little care and diligence used therein so that nothing material seems to have escaped nor do any Historians give so punctual an Account of the Transactions as these papers which before never saw the Light concerning the Authentickness and Truth of which the Antientness of the hand-writing of the Original might be a sufficient Testimony had we not another more probable Argument which is That they were lately found amongst some Ancient papers that heretofore belonged to a Secretary of Sir Francis Walsingham an eminent Minister of State at that juncture For whose use 't is very credible the same were so curiously collected Besides If any shall be be at the pains to examine them they will find them to agree in the main with the Histories of those times not only with the Learned Cambden and the rest of our own Writers but with the Great Thaunus nay with the Jesuit Strada too But for the satisfaction of those Readers that are not so conversant in History that they may the better understand what they meet with in these Tryals we conceive it will not be unwelcome to prefix a brief Account of the Life and unhappy Fortunes of the Illustrious Mary of Scotland on whose Adventures all these prosecutions did depend wherein we shall impartially state matter of Fact without the Reflections of Buchanan or intollerable flatteries of Causin the Jesuit Mary Queen of Scots was the daughter and sole Legitimate Issue of James the fifth King of Scotland and of Mary his Queen a daughter of the house of Lorrain born in December 1541. she was scarce eight dayes old when the King her Father dyed and the Scottish Nobility being divided into Factions whereof the Family of the Hamiltons and the Earl of Lenox were the respective Heads The one side supported by King Henry the eighth of England and the other by the French King Henry the second she was by her Mother who being a French-woman inclined unto that Kings Interest sent into France about five or six years of Age to learn the Accomplishments of that Court. There she was educated under the French King and the house of Guise her Uncles who being desperate Enemies to the Reformation seasoned her with violent principles against the Protestant Religion she was a Lady very proper and beautiful of a great Wit and Courage beyond her Sex These Advantages and much more several important Reasons of State induced the French King to conclude her a fit Match for his Son the Dauphin For hereby they thought themselves not only sure to unite the Kingdoms of France and Scotland she being Sovereign Queen of the latter as he was Heir apparent to the former but also had a prospect of the Crown of England looking upon this Mary of Scotland as Great Grand-child to King Henry the seventh to be the next Heiress thereunto after Mary who had by this time mounted the English Throne For as for her sister Elizabeth they not only knew her to be one they called an Heretick but also gave out she was Illegitimate and so on both Accounts represented her as uncapable to succeed Hereupon a Marriage was solemnized between the Dauphin and this Princess Apr. 24th 1588. in Nostredam Church at Paris On the 27th of November following Queen Mary of England after a short Reign rendred infamous to all Posterity by the Butcheries committed on Protestants departed this Life And though Elizabeth according to her undoubted Right was with the general consent and applause of the Lords Commons and all the people proclaimed Queen and most happily succeeded her in the Throne yet had the Guises inveigled the French-King into such strong hopes of adjoyning England to the Crown of France by the aforesaid Title of
Duke being found by intercepted Letters notwithstanding his aforesaid promises still to continue his affection to and correspondence with the Scottish Queen was brought to his Trial here printed and for the Crimes therein specified condemned and beheaded Some few days after his Execution William Lord de la Ware and others were sent to the Queen of Scots who was then full of grief and sorrow for his death owning that a contract of Marriage had passed between him and her to expostulate with her and charge her with divers matters as that she had usurp'd the Title and Arms of the Realm of England and had not renounced the same as she ought to have done by the Treaty of Edenbourgh that she had sought to Marry with the Duke of Norfolk a Subject of England without the Queens privity and to effect the same Marriage had tried all means by her Agents and Ministers to rescue the said Duke out of Prison by force that she had raised the Rebellion in the North and relieved the Rebles after they were put to flight in Scotland and the Low-Countries that she had by Ridolph the Italian importun'd both the Pope and the King of Spain and others for Forrein Forces to invade England that she had conspired with several English Subjects to take her out of Prison by force and proclaim her Queen of England that she had received Letters from the Pope wherein to use his own words he promised to cherish her as the Hen doth her Chickins and to account those that stood for her the true Children of the Church Lastly that she had procured the Popes Bull against the Queen and had suffered her self publickly to be stiled Queen of England by her Ministers in Forrein Courts Whereunto protesting First That she was a free absolute Queen and subject to none she with a settled countenance and courage answered 1. That she had not usurped the Title and Arms of England but that the King of France and her Husband had imposed them upon her being very young and under the direction of her Husband and therefore not to be laid upon her for a fault and that as she did not after her Husband's death so neither would she claim them as long as Queen Elizabeth or any Children she might have should live 2. That she never imagined any detriment or hurt to the Queen by her Marriage with the Duke of Norfolk being perswaded it would be for the good of the Common-wealth and that she did not renounce it because she had given her Faith and Troth unto him 3. That she willed the Duke by some means to get out of danger and Prison which she did out of the duty she owed to him as her Husband 4. That she had not raised rebellion nor was privy to the same but was always ready to reveal all attempts against the Queens life 5. That she never relieved the English Rebels only that in her Letters she recommended the Countess of Northumberland to the Duke of Alva 6. That she used Ridolph whom she knew to be highly in the Popes favour in many matters yet receiv'd no Letters from him 7. That she never moved any to attempt her deliverance yet that she willingly gave ear unto them that offered their labour therein and for that purpose that she communicated to Rolston and Hall a private Character 8. That she had receiv'd sometimes Letters from the Pope very pious and consolatory wherein were no such Expressions or Phrases 9. That she procured not the Bull that she only saw the Printed Copy thereof and when she had read it she threw it into the fire 10. That if any in Forrein parts writ or nam'd her otherwise than they ought they and not she were to answer it 11. That she never by Letters required aid of the Pope or the King of Spain to invade England but only to be restored into her Kingdom by their means and not without the Queens privity 12 But if any question or doubt be made of those Letters of effecting the Marriage by force of Arms she requested since she was born of the Royal Blood of England that she might answer Personally in the next Parliament How far these specious Allegations were credited by Queen Elizabeth we find not 't is certain they produc'd little effect towards her delivery But on the contrary it being about the same time discovered that she held Correspondence with Spain and that the Lord Seton who landed in Essex disguised like a Mariner had brought a promise of Aid to her from the Duke of Alva she was confined more strictly and with greater Guard Likewise in Scotland to prevent the Duke of Guises design which was to make use of the Duke of Lenox's favour with the King to withdraw his affection from the English the Earl of Gowry and others resolve by all means to remove Lenox and the Earl of Arran from the King To accomplish which while Lenox was gone from Perth where the King then lay to Edenburgh and Arran also was absent the said Earl of Gowry with the Earls of Mar and Lindsey and others take an opportunity to invite the King to the Castle of Rewthen and there detained him not permitting him to walk abroad and removing all his trusty Servants cast Arran into Prison enforc'd the King to call home the Earl of Angus and send away Lenox into France As also by his Letters to Queen Elizabeth to own and approve of all these proceedings Which were much regretted by the Queen his Mother who on this occasion wrote a long Letter to Queen Elizabeth lamenting her own and her Sons deplorable fortune and did it so Pathetically that Queen Elizabeth was much affected with it and a serious debate was moved in her Council thereupon and most of them inclin'd to set her at liberty on these Terms and Conditions 1. That she and her Son should promise to practise nothing hurtful to Q. Elizabeth and the Realm of England 2. That she would voluntarily confess that whatsoever was done by Francis the Second the French King her Husband against Q. Elizabeth was done against her will and that she should utterly disallow the same as unjust by confirming the Treaty of Edenburgh 3. That she should condemn all the practises ever since that time and ingenuously renounce them 4. She should bind her self not to practise any thing directly or indirectly against the Government of the Realm of England in Ecclesiastical or Civil affairs but by all manner of means oppose her self and resist such practisers as publick enemies 5. That she shall challenge or claim no right unto her self in the Kingdom of England during the Life of Queen Elizabeth and that afterward she will submit her right of Succession unto the Estates of England 6. And to the end that she may not hereafter use any cavil and say That she condescended to these Conditions being a Prisoner and by coaction she her self should not only swear unto them but also