Thursday, March 25, 2021

Three Times A Queen

If there was ever a woman who was born to be queen, it was Mary, Queen of Scots.

Mary Stuart was born to King James V of Scotland and Mary of Guise (France) at Linlithgow Palace, Scotland on Dec 8, 1542. Her  father died only 6 days later. As the King's only surviving legitimate heir, Mary was recognized as Queen of Scotland with her mother serving as Regent. (Queen x 1)

At the age of 5, Mary was sent to the court of King Henry II and his wife Queen Catherine de Medici of France for both her safety and to secure a future marriage that would result in an alliance between the Scottish and French nations. Mary's mother's family, the Guises, also supported her. Eventually, Mary did marry Prince Francis making her the Queen Consort of France, until Francis died. (Queen x 2)

Mary also had English Tudor blood which made her a legitimate heir to the English throne. At this time, there was much religious turmoil between Catholicism and Protestantism. Mary, being Catholic, was considered the next logical sovereign of England to the faithful Catholic believers over her protestant cousin Princess Elizabeth I (the future Queen Elizabeth I). (Queen x 3)

Unfortunately, being born with a great destiny doesn't mean your ending is a happy one. Mary's rule was plagued with hardships from the very beginning, but it was her unwise marriages and scandals that caused her downfall.

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On the run again after her latest scandal, Mary decided to evade her pursuers by trusting her life to her cousin Elizabeth in England. Naively, Mary believed the words of kindness in the letters sent to her. Unfortunately, Mary's very presence in England caused Elizabeth problems and so Elizabeth had little choice, but to imprison Mary. She couldn't leave Mary roaming free to encourage a Catholic uprising.

Mary was held prisoner for many years and was eventually implicated in a plot to assassinate Queen Elizabeth. It is possible that Queen Elizabeth's chief advisor set Mary up in order to win Elizabeth's approval to sentence Mary to death and be done with her.

History shows that Elizabeth was reluctant to grant Mary a death sentence, but it is not known if the hesitance was because of familial love (even though they never met in person) or because Mary was a Queen in her own right and Elizabeth didn't want to start a precedence of assassinating anointed Queens. It is probably a bit of both.
 

 


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