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A14194 The historie of the life and death of Mary Stuart Queene of Scotland; Annales rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum regnante Elizabetha. English. Abridgments Camden, William, 1551-1623.; Udall, William.; Elstracke, Renold, fl. 1590-1630, engraver. 1624 (1624) STC 24509A; ESTC S117760 156,703 264

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the Queene to these conditions namely To acknowledge the Religion established in Scotland To submit themselues to the King and also to Mourton as his Regent and to his successors in the gouernment To renounce the authoritie of all others To account them Traitors by authoritie of Parlament that attempted any thing against the Religion the King or Regent That the sentence against the Hamiltons and the Gordons should be repealed c. But these conditions William Kircaldy Lord of Grange the Lord Hume Lidington and the Bishop of Dunkelden and others who thought the Queene of Scotland to be iniuriously vsed would vpon no termes admit but fortified the Castle of Edenburgh of which Grange was Captaine placed therein by Murrey looking for aid from France and the Duke of Alba but Sir William Drury being sent into Scotland with forces out of England to ioine with the Scots the same Castle was yeelded in the three and thirtieth day of the siege and so the Castle and all the prisoners were deliuered vnto the Regent who hanged Kircaldy without mercie spared Hume and others at the request of Queene ELIZABETH Lidington was sent to Lieth where he died not without suspicion of poison And to the end that England might also bee more secure from clandestine attempts at home on the behalfe of the Queene of Scotland Iohn Lesly Bishop of Rosse who very faithfully had serued his Queene yet with the destruction of many men and danger of more was deliuered out of prison and commanded to depart out of England and went into France fearing Southampton whom by his appeaching he had brought in danger and also Henry Howard the Duke of Norfolkes brother to mollifie whose anger hee wrote an Apologie He was scarce departed but his secret Letter-carrier Henry Cokin was taken and by him was Morgan detected who prompt to doe some exploit for the Queene of Scotland and desirous to haue done somewhat forthwith fled away Atsloe the Physitian for the Papists and Goad Doctors of Physicke and Francis Berty because they had secret commerce of letters with her were put certaine moneths in prison And for the same cause Henry Goodyer and Richard Louder were called into question In the meane while Rosse did not pretermit any part or dutie of a most faithfull subiect to the Queene of Scotland towards the Emperour the Pope the French King and the Catholike Princes of Germanie who euery one gaue good words and hopes but yet performed nothing And also the Duke of Alba in whom he put his greatest trust did at this time depart out of the Low-Countries to his great griefe Anno 1574. HEnry the third of that name King of France and his mother did all that they could by secret deuices to get the young King of Scotland into France and to get Mourton out of his office of Regent sending secretly Scots out of the French Guard for this purpose into Scotland which thing the Queene of Scotland desired much being perswaded that if her sonne were in France out of danger that shee and the Papists in England should be dealt withall more mildly For hereupon she thought it would come to passe that the faction in Scotland hitherto countenanced by the authoritie of the Kings name would decay and come to nothing and that the English men would feare him more and more as hee grew vp in yeeres as well from France as out of Scotland And as much did the French men wish the same secretly fearing lest the Regent of Scotland depending wholly on the English should dissolue the ancient league betweene the Scots and the French Yet when the Regent earnestly requested that a league of mutuall defence betweene England and Scotland might bee made hee was not heard perhaps for that he requested withall that an annuall pension might bee assigned vnto him and vnto certaine other Scots But they were heard who with a small suspicion touched the Queene of Scotland the Countesse and Earle also of Shrewsburie as though they had wrought a mariage betweene Charles Vncle vnto the King of Scotland vnto whom the King had lately in the Parlament confirmed the Earledome of Lennox and Elizabeth Candish daughter to the Countesse of Shrewsburie by her former husband without the Queenes knowledge For which cause the mothers of both them and others were kept in prison and all the fault was laid vpon the Queene of Scotland And when sundry suspicions grew of the intent and purpose of this mariage Henry Earle of Huntingdon was made Lord President of the Councell in the North with new and secret instructions concerning this matter Anno 1575. THis yeere died in Scotland the most Noble Lord Iames Hamilton Duke of Chasteauleroy and Earle of Arran who was the Grand-childes sonne of Iames the second King of Scotland by his daughter the Tutor of Queene MARIE of Scotland and Gouernour of the Kingdome and heire designed while she was in her minoritie At such time as he had deliuered her vnto the French men hee was made Duke of Chasteauleroy in France then chiefe of the three Gouernours of Scotland appointed by MARIE in her captiuitie Whose cause while he defended most constantly he being a plaine and well-meaning man was vexed with all manner of politike and craftie deuices by turbulent and vnquiet minded people Anno 1577. DOn Iohn d'Austria had made a perpetuall edict at Gaunt to giue satisfaction to the Estates of the Netherlands for their aggrieuances which the Prince of Orange vtterly condemning opportunely heard that Don Iohn intended to marrie the Queene of Scotland on which he willingly laid hold and forthwith certified Queene ELIZABETH thereof by Famier thereby to withdraw her minde from peace yet she as one ignorant thereof by Daniel Rogers shewed her gladnesse of the perpetuall edict of peace though now she had certaine knowledge that Don Iohn by the perswasion of the Earle of Westmerland and the English fugitiues and forward fauour of the Pope and the Guises had in hope swallowed that mariage and withall the Kingdomes of England and Scotland and had already appointed to surprize the I le of Man in the Irish Sea as a fit place to inuade England out of Ireland and the West borders of Scotland wherein the Queene of Scotland had many assured friends as also in the opposite side of England North-wales Cumberland Lancashire and Cheshire where most of the inhabitants were earnest Papists But indeed Don Iohn as wee haue learned of Perez Secretarie to the King of Spaine before now ambitiously minded when hee had lost the hope of the Kingdome of Tunise had dealt couertly with the Pope about the expulsion of Queene ELIZABETH the marrying of the Queene of Scotland and the conquest of England and vnknowne to Philip had preuailed so farre that the Pope as out of the care of the common good moued Philip to make warre against England and Don Iohn himselfe being to depart into the Low-Countries had prosecuted it earnestly in Spaine and afterwards by
IACOB MAG BRIT REG. MATER SERENISSIMA MARIA REGINA The most excellent Princesse Mary queene of Scotland and Dowager of France Mother to our Soueraigne lord James of greate Brittaine France Ireland king THE HISTORIE OF THE LIFE AND DEATH OF Mary Stuart QVEENE OF SCOTLAND LONDON Printed by Iohn Haviland for Richard Whitaker and are to be sold at the signe of the Kings Head in Pauls Church-yard 1624. TO THE KINGS MOST EXCELLENT MAIESTIE Most Dread Soueraigne ZENO the Philosopher being asked how a man might attaine wisdome answered By drawing neere vnto the dead O the Sepulchers of our Ancestors how much more doe they teach than all the studie bookes and precepts of the learned And herein due praise must needs be ascribed vnto Historie the life of memorie and the mirrour of mans life making those Heroick acts to liue againe which otherwise would be buried in eternall forgetfulnesse whereby the minde a greedy hunter after knowledge is enflamed by affecting the seuerall perfections of others to seeke after excellent things and by feruent imitation to attaine to that glory which is gotten by vertu● For these causes most renowned Soueraigne when I considered Plutarke laying aside the studie of Philosophic to thinke the time well imploied in writing the liues of Theseus of Aristides and of other inferiour persons and knowing how farre the lustre and splendor of Princes shineth beyond the brightnesse of others euery one standing for a million of the common people And being sensible that it is infused euen by nature euery man to desire and to be delighted with the relation and story of his owne Ancestors and predecessors For these reasons I presumed to present vnto your Highnesse this Treatise of the life and death of your Royall Mother the Lady MARY STVART Queene of Scotland A History most fit for this your Meridian of Great Britaine and yet neuer published in the English tongue before Wherein although I confesse the slendernesse of my skill in the exornation and beautifying of the stile and thereby may worthily incurre the reproofe of the learned yet if your Maiesty vouchsafe your gracious and Princely acceptation all faults therein shall easily bee couered and blotted out Therefore I become your humble Orator praying no other thing than the Sunne Diall of the Sunne Aspice me vt aspiciar most humbly beseeching the Almighty to blesse your most Excellent Maiestie with a long happie and prosperous reigne Your Sacred Maiesties most humble subiect WIL. STRANGVAGE THE PREFACE TO THE ENSVING HISTORIE IT is a thing most true and some finde it by experience that here below in this world there is nothing eternall And how can it be otherwise when the great Kings and Princes of the earth who seeme to be created of the most pure substance of the Elements of a matter as may bee said for their excellency incorruptible of the fine gold of Euilath and of the best mould to the patterne of the fairest Ideas and beare and carry the Image and Seale of all puissance as the chiefe impression of natures worke in the plaine greatnesse of Maiestie which engraueth their forehead with a gracious statelinesse Yet doe we see them euery day who seeme vnto men to be lasting and durable as eternity it selfe to quit the arches o● triumph and to yeeld themselues vnto the triumph o● death And more than that the most part of them finish their daies not in the sweet and calme waters like Pourcontrells but by a death disseasoned sometimes in their greene youth and flourishing age by the stormes and tempests as doe the Dolphins within the torrents billowes or waues of the sea tossed by diuers factions And it seemeth that this fatality pursueth ordinarily the most worthy and vertuous persons so that they finish their liues many times with violence or precipitation and not to goe vnto their death in a smooth path but to bee interrupted with some strange accident which cclipseth the bright shining lustre of their greatnesse which dasell the mindes of men that from below beheld them sitting aloft on the throne of Maiestie All which appeared most plainly and euidently to be true in the most worthy and royall Princesse MARY STVART Queene of Scotland who in all her life being tossed and turmoiled with infinite misfortunes concluded it with an vntimely death as followeth in the sequell of this Historie of her life and death MARY STVART Queene of Scotland was daughter vnto Iames the fist King of Scotland a wise and valiant Prince and of the Lady MARY of the Illustrious family of the Dukes of Lorraine whose fame for valour is renowned thorow all Christendome was borne on the eighth day of December in the yeere of our Lord 1541. She was not aboue eight daies old when her father died being left thus young the Noblemen of Scotland being diuided whereof the family of the Hamiltons and the Earle of Lynnox being the 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 the care of her mother who inclined vnto the French King at the age of six yeeres or thereabouts sent into France in the Gallies of Villagagnon a Knight of the Rhodes appointed by the French King vnto this seruice in the which voyage by the West Seas for in the other passage neere the Straits of Calice the Englishmen had laid a strong Nauy to intercept her she hardly escaped drowning by meanes of a storme or tempest that happened neere vnto the coast of little Brittaine in France where she afterward tooke land from whence she was conueyed vnto the Court of France where she was brought vp vnder her Curators the French King and the Dukes of Guise and by their exquisite care she drew in with the aire the sweetnesse of the humours of the countrey and in the end by the singular grace of nature and carefulnesse of her friends and Kinsfolks became with her age the fairest and goodliest Princesse of our time And beside this her rare beauty she had her vnderstanding and intendment so pure and perfect her iudgement so certaine surmounting and aboue the condition of her age and sex that it bred and caused in her a greatnesse of courage which was yet mixt and qualified with such sweetnesse and modesty that you could not see any thing more Royall any thing more gracious Her manners and priuate actions were such and were so well liked of generally that it caused King Henry the second of France and his Queene who was admired for her prudence to marry their eldest sonne Daulphin of France and heire of their Crowne vnto this Lady as vnto one well deseruing to be ioyned in mariage vnto their sonne heire apparant of the greatest kingdome in Europe And so vpon the foure and twentieth day of April in the yeere of our Lord 1558. Francis the Daulphin of France and MARY STVART Queene of Scotland were maried in the Church of Nostra Dama
receiued him and conueyed him vnto Burnham three miles from Windsor where the Queene then lay Foure daies after the Abbot of Dunfermelling deliuered the letters of Murrey Regent of Scotland vnto the Queene in which hee shewed her that the Duke dealt with him secretly at Hampton Court to fauour his mariage with the Queene of Scotland and that if hee would not he threatned him exceedingly and that hee promised to fauour it that he might preuent and auoid the await ambuscado laid by one Norton to kill him from whom and others the Duke gaue his word hee should returne without danger And that shortly after the Duke requested him by his letters written in Ciphers to giue his consent vnto the mariage Moreouer that the Duke did signifie vnto him by Boyd that hee would neuer forsake and abandon the Queene of Scotland and further that the agents of the same Queene had almost perswaded the R●gent that Queene ELIZABETH had consented to the mariage and also that she had offered to her the hope of the Kingdome of England And Queene ELIZABETH also found out that shee had signified vnto certaine Noblemen of England to winne them vnto her side that shee went about that businesse which would bee very necessary for the most certaine securitie of the Queene of England and the like safetie for both the Kingdomes The Duke who had secret and warie commerce of letters which were sent priuily in Ale-bottles with the Bishop of Rosse Leicester and Throgmorton was about this time examined about this mariage with the Queene of Scotland and his secret conferences with the Bishop of Rosse and confessed most things was sent to the Tower of London vnder the keeping of Sir Henry Neuill Knight being bitterly reproued that hee had departed from the Court without leaue obtained and charged as though he had intended to rebell Two daies after the Bishop of Rosse was examined in like manner and Robert Ridolph the Gentleman of Florence whom the Bishop of Rosse others vsed familiarly is deliuered vnto the custodie of Francis Walsingham The Earle of P●mbrooke is commanded to keepe his house and is priuately examined yet in regard of his Nobilitie and old age hee had the fauour that his examination was not set downe in writing Which thing he required because he could not write Some Noblemen were forbidden the Court as priuie to these matters who humbly confessed that they with the Duke agreed to the mariage which Murrey had first propounded yet so that the Duke the Queene of Scotland and they willed that the matter should bee referred vnto the Queene before the mariage was to be solemnized and desired pardon for their offence In like manner the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland who were of this counsell submitted themselues vnto Sussex Lord President of the North and besought him to make intercession vnto the Queene for their pardon Also sundry Pamphlets came out against this mariage and against the Queene of Scotland and the right by which shee claimed to become heire vnto England wherein they shewed their wits with such malapert saucinesse that the Queene thought once to haue forbidden them by seuere edict and permitted the Bishop of Rosse winking thereat to make answer who forthwith set forth a booke vnder the name of Morgan Philips against them wherein hee defended the honour of his Queene her right to succeed and the gouernment of women for this also was impugned but ingenuously acknowledged afterward in his Commentaries that he had his arguments for her right of succession secretly from Anthonie Browne chiefe Iustice in the common Place and Carrell an excellent good common Lawyer Shortly after befell the rebellion in the North raised by the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland with many other Gentlemen Who when they vnderstood for certaine that the Queene of Scotland whom to set at libertie they had principally taken armes was caried away from Tutburie vnto Couentrie vnder the keeping of the Earles of Shrewsburie and Huntingdon and also moued with the great preparation of the Queene they with a few others fled into Scotland Anno 1570. THe rebellion in England being now quenched Murrey Regent of Scotland laboured diligently that the Queene of Scotland might be deliuered into his hands and for that cause he both offered hostages and also to restore vnto them the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland and brought to passe that the Bishop of Rosse as the kindler of the rebellion was committed vnto the custodie of the Bishop of London Then to purchase the good will of Queene ELIZABETH in the moneth of Ianuarie he came with an armie into the borders of Scotland towards England to hunt out the English rebels of whom he tooke a few and those of small account but at last hee found the Earle of Northumberland lurking about Hartlawe amongst the theeues on the borders discouered by his host one of the Grayhams who betraied him and sent him vnto Lochleuin to be kept and in this iourney he annoied and spoiled the borders exceedingly But in the same moneth after hee had taken great paines and thought himselfe in great securitie he was shot from out of a priuie place thorow the body a little beneath the nauell with a Bullet as he rode thorow the streets of Lithquo by one Hamilton who escaped by and by into France and liued certaine yeeres after oftentimes protesting that he did it to reue●ge himselfe of a priuate grudge against him hee not being able to endure patiently the iniuries he offered vnto him For Murrey had banished the fellow for that hee had stood for the Queene and imprisoned him threatning now and then to hang him vntill he resigned and gaue away vnto a seruant o● Murrey a littleground which came to him by his wife whereupon his wife fell mad and in a furious rage he brake prison and committed the murder Neither could the man after bee perswaded in France when he seemed to be a man fit for a desperate action to attempt the same against the Admirall Coligni oftentimes saying that he was the reuenger of his owne iust griefe for which he was sorie but he would not be the reuenger of another mans neither for gold nor request Hereupon was there much talke of the Regent that was slaine thorow all Britaine The most wondering at vaine matters namely the dreame of his mother of the Lion and the Dragon fighting in her wombe after that King Iames the fifth had had his pleasure on her Among the wiser sort according to their partiall affections commended he was by some for destroying the Romane Religion in Scotland the conseruation of the King a childe the equall administration of iustice and his munificence and liberalitie toward learned men and B●chanan aboue the rest On the other side he was reproued by others as though he tooke religion for a cloake and enriched himselfe and his friends with the spoiles of the Church and how hee was not onely iniurious but also