Dan Snow's History Hit - Mary, Queen of Scots
Episode Date: February 26, 2025This is the story of the incredible rise and fall of Mary, Queen of Scots. She was queen of Scotland, she was queen of France, and she could have been queen of England. She led armies, lived as a fugi...tive, became embroiled in love affairs and spent nearly two decades in jail.Dan is joined by the great Kate Williams, a presenter, historian and professor at Reading University, to take us through the twists and turns of Mary's tumultuous life.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Dougal Patmore.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com.
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Hi everybody, welcome to Dan Snow's History Hit.
She was Queen of Scotland, she was Queen of France.
She arguably had a better claim to be Queen of England than her cousin Elizabeth.
I'm talking, of course, about Mary Stuart, Mary Queen of Scots.
A woman raised to the highest pinnacle by fate and also thrust down to the deepest depths.
Those closest to her, brothers, lovers, husbands, cousins, abandoned her, fought against her, assaulted her, and would eventually kill her.
She sat on the throne of France, she led armies, she escaped as a desperate fugitive, and she spent 19 years
in English prison. Who was Mary? Why did so many people seek to have power over her? And in the end,
why was she such an existential threat to Tudor England, that they precipitated a war against
Spain, the greatest superpower on earth,
by executing her? All your answers here with Kate Williams, one of my favourite contributors.
The very brilliant historian, author and broadcaster, professor of public engagement
at the University of Reading, an absolute legend, biographer of Mary, Queen of Scots. She wrote a
book in 2019 called Rival Queens. She is going to take us on a whistle stop tour of the life and times of mary queen of
scots enjoy t-minus 10 atomic bombs dropped on hiroshima god save the king no black white unity
till there is first and black unity never to go to war with one another again and liftoff
and the shuttle has cleared the tower.
Hello, Kate Williams. Welcome back to the podcast.
Hi, Dan. Thrilled to be here. Great to see you.
It's good to see you too. Right, let's talk about Mary, Queen of Scots. Well,
she was literally the Queen of Scots. She was queen when she was born.
That's so true. Mary, Queen of Scots, was Queen at six days old. We
have had younger monarchs, monarchs in utero, but Mary was six days after her birth. She was Queen
of Scotland. And Mary started out with everything. She had power, riches. She was a queen from a baby
and she had French royal blood, Scottish royal blood, English royal blood, all these incredible gifts.
And Mary became Queen of Scots so young because her father, James V, died.
He'd been terribly beaten by the English at the Battle of Solway Moss.
This was a time really when the English are non-stop harassing the Scots, non-stop fighting the Scots.
And James V was beaten at the Battle of Solway Moss, fell very ill afterwards.
And I'm afraid to say that during the 16th century, it wasn't quite like now.
We don't always say, just a healthy baby.
That's all I want, a healthy baby.
They wanted a boy.
And James was ill.
And then when he was told he had a baby daughter, two earlier sons had died, he was so
devastated that I think, I have to say, it pushed him over the edge. And that was the end of the
king. Apparently, although recorded by James's enemy, he said, come with a lass and we'll gang
with a lass. He was talking about the house of Stuart. He was saying it began in the 14th century with
Marjorie Bruce, and it will end with a lass, which was his daughter, Mary Queen of Scots.
That was his prediction, that the House of Stuart would be ended by Mary Queen of Scots. His fear
was that with a queen, with a daughter, he was seen as so weak that the English would just
invade in a flash. So she was a disaster for him and he died.
Well, he was wrong. It didn't end with Mary. In fact, it ended with, hang on, it ended with Anne.
So he was right. Anne was the final steward. So there you go.
Isn't it fascinating that he was right in a way it didn't end with Mary, whose blood, of course,
courses through all the monarchs, but ended with Anne, who was also
a lass. And it's interesting, well, I'm getting ahead of myself, but in Mary, Queen of Scots'
fantastic, beautiful, bling tomb, which we'll talk about in Westminster Abbey, there are other
minor royals buried in and around there. And some of them are Anne's children who died. And so the
Stuarts that were hoped to continue the line were buried with Mary.
That's, I think, a really fascinating point. But yes, so King James was heartbroken when he heard
he had a daughter and died. And so Mary is now Queen at six days old. What an amazing position,
but also what a vulnerable position. Right, because although we've,
apologies for the spoiler, everyone there, Mary does end up dead. She is vulnerable now because of her age and in, it was going to be a washout, a catastrophe. But actually, having a daughter put Henry VIII into a mind of a different plan,
which was marrying the little Mary to his son Edward, the future Edward VI, and by that way,
creating a unity through marriage. So what you see now is Henry withdraws to a degree and starts to say, OK, I'll stop attacking Scotland all the time if you just marry Mary to my son.
So give her over. And of course, that would be expected that Mary would go to the English court very early on.
She would be brought up in the English court as a future wife, Edward VI.
And it would mean the submission of Scotland to England in the same way that her wife was seen as submissive to her husband, Scotland would be submissive to England through marriage.
So that was Henry's strategy. So he actually did draw back. And that gives Mary of Guise,
Mary's mother. So Mary Queen of Scots' mother is Mary of Guise. It's a big question. What is she
going to do? Is she going to marry Mary, Queen of Scots, to Edward VI and thereby
create this submission of Scotland to English desires? Or is she going to do something else?
So it's so funny that Mary's children would end up on the throne of England,
but via a different route. What does Mary, her mother, decide to do?
Well, big question. Actually, I should say, Dan, before I get to go too much further,
just to the listeners, that basically everyone in this entire story
is called James and Mary.
Everyone's called James or Mary.
And so if ever anyone's thinking, who is she talking about now?
It's just someone called James or Mary, everyone.
So yes, we do have the odd Edward in there or Henry on the English side,
but in Scotland, it's all James and Mary.
So we have Mary, Queen of Scots, and her mother is also called Mary as well.
Mary of Guise, who was King James V's second wife.
And she was from a very powerful family in France.
The Guises, I think we could say they were the 16th century Kardashians, if the Kardashians had had their eyes set on political power as opposed to
influencing. So they were very powerful. She was a geese. And she'd actually had the option
to marry Henry VIII. She'd been a young widow. And prize on the marriage market, you can't stay
a widow for long. And she'd had the option of two men. She'd had the option of James V of Scotland
and Henry VIII. And she was heard to say that she didn't really think she had
the right type of neck to marry Henry VIII. I mean, I've seen pictures. It's very long. I don't
know what she was saying. The executioner could have got a right old purchase on that. So she
thought she hadn't got the right kind of neck to marry Henry VIII. So she married into the Scottish
royal family. And Scotland was seen as tough for the French. The French thought it was a very bad
climate and French people died there. But she was a determined woman and she wanted to keep power for her daughter.
And she didn't want her to marry into the English royal family, to marry Edward VI and for Scotland and Mary to be subservient.
So she sort of played Henry VIII along for a while.
She played him along for a while.
She sort of said, I don't really know.
I'm not really sure.
sort of said, I don't really know, I'm not really sure. And then she turned tail and said, no,
I'm actually going to marry Mary to the future King of France. So this little baby has two suitors for her hand, all of them children. It's future King of England, Edward VI, and there's a
future King of France, the Dauphin Francis. So Mary decides to marry Mary, Queen of Scots,
to the future Dauphin. And that means Mary, Queen of Scots, to the future Dauphin. And that means
Mary, Queen of Scots, will be sent abroad to Paris to be brought up in the French court at the age of
five. And she goes along to the French court at the age of five without her mother, but with her
half-brother, who was called James, and her four ladies-in-waiting. I'm sure the listeners can guess the names of
those four ladies-in-waiting of Mary, Queen of Scots. They were called Mary, Mary, Mary and Mary.
So as I said, everyone's called James and Mary in the entire story. And we really should change
our names, Dan, to James and Mary for the duration of this podcast. I think that would be great.
So Mary goes over to marry into the French royal family. And this is a real question. I subtitled
my book, The Betrayal of Mary, Queen of Scots. And this is a real question. I subtitled my book,
The Betrayal of Mary, Queen of Scots. And we can see many betrayals through her life, can't we? The
husbands, the English, Cecil around Elizabeth I. But is this a betrayal? Because one, it keeps
Mary, Queen of Scots safe. She isn't going to be kidnapped by Henry VIII to seize for his son.
Scots safe. She isn't going to be kidnapped by Henry VIII to seize for his son. It also means that the French king sends a lot of ships, a big army to Scotland because Henry VIII is invading
and Mary of Guise can't fight it back on her own. So French king sends big reinforcements and Henry
draws back because he's scared of the French king. So Mary of Guise protects her country. She protects
her daughter. But it does mean that Mary,
Queen of Scots, is sent overseas at a very young age. And she's treated like a marriage pawn,
a future queen consort, not a future queen regnant. And it makes Scotland subservient
to France. But most of all, I think when Mary comes back to be queen much later,
everyone always associates her with France,
and they attack her for being associated with France, because we know that one great thing
that Elizabeth I had, she had one of the worst possible childhoods, you could imagine,
childhoods and adolescence, you know, they're constantly threatened with having a head cut off
by a half-sister and a half-brother and sexually harassed. But she stayed in England and was always associated with England.
And that both gave her the power of calling herself an English queen,
but also meant that she could kind of create a network of advisors around her
as her sister, Mary I, grew weaker and closer to death.
And Mary, Queen of Scots, was associated with France,
and she was way out of the Scottish court and the
Scottish networks of power, and also the English networks of power. So Mary of Guise had to marry
Mary, Queen of Scots, to someone. There was no way they could have stayed in the little country,
being besieged by Scotland, and they would have been besieged by France if they'd turned them
down. So she couldn't have stayed single, but I think she was in an impossible position and she chose France.
It's a tough neighbourhood. Mary spends 10 years in France, becomes quite French.
She marries Francis, the Dauphin, the prince, in 1558.
And then she becomes his queen when he exceeds the throne in 1559.
So she's Queen of Scotland and France. Big deal.
She's Queen of Scotland. She's Queen of France. They have this marvellous wedding, this great
moment of a wedding, huge wedding, although there's a lot of symbolism in the wedding that
Scotland is subservient to France, but it's all, you know, marvellous symbolism. But then his father,
the King, dies in a jousting accident. So obviously, Dan, you and I were always trying
to build a time machine. That's our ultimate dream, isn't it? One day we'll build one, maybe in a few years, we'll actually build a
time machine. And we can all get into it for History Hit and travel wherever we want to go
and make podcasts in all these places. So this is our mission as historians to build a time machine.
But if this time machine does work, and people generally get into it, I'm just advising people
who go back to this period on two things, you know. Don't let a doctor come near you. Don't. Just eat some nettles or something, number one. And number two,
don't do any jousting because the King of France dies in a fatal jousting accident. It's very
dangerous. So I wouldn't do jousting because I'm hopeless at that kind of thing. But I could see
you being quite into jousting, Dan, and I'm going to forbid you from doing it when we go in our time
machine. I'd be happy to accede to that request.
No problem.
So Frances dies jousting.
Fatal mistake.
Henry VIII almost dies jousting.
Anyway, Frances dies jousting.
And so Mary's now queen.
So Mary's the wife of Francis II of France.
She's the queen.
She's a teenage queen.
But then when she's 18, her husband, the Dauphin, dies.
And she is now a widow.
She's a widow. And she's a widow in the French court and she's not welcome.
Her mother-in-law is perhaps one of the most formidable women in Europe ever.
And that's Catherine de' Medici.
And Catherine de' Medici, having not really had the most perfect marriage at the hands of the former king,
very much wants now to come into her power as a mature lady.
And she wants to be regent for her
son, for the much younger son. And Mary being around, she doesn't like that. So Mary's not
welcome. Mary's not welcome in the French court. And what use is that for her to be there anyway?
So her half-brother, as we call James, as they all are, half-brother called James. So he's the
son of James V by one of his mistresses. There are quite a few of them. are, half-brother called James. So he's the son of James V by one of his
mistresses. There are quite a few of them, but this half-brother, James, is the most powerful,
is a very powerful man. And he's got very powerful during Mary's life in France. And really to me,
James, the Earl of Moray, Mary's half-brother is her nemesis, is her enemy. He's her ultimate enemy.
And this is a really fascinating difference
from England and Scotland to me in the sense that the illegitimate children of Henry VIII
are no threat to Mary I, Edward VI, Elizabeth I. There are plenty of other threats, but they are
not the illegitimate children of Henry VIII. But the illegitimate son of James V is a big threat
to Mary, Queen of Scots. And he really, I think, is the one who brings about her downfall.
There's a lot of interesting research on this.
I mean, we can all boo when he comes on stage.
Let's all boo.
So we can all shout boo, hiss, but he won't get off stage because he's very powerful.
So James contacts Mary and he says, come back to Scotland.
And what he wants is for Mary to be a puppet queen under his power.
That's what he wants.
James, the illegitimate son who can't
legitimately be king, but would be if his mother had been the queen, he wants to have power. He's
pretty much controlling the nobles of Scotland. They've not been brought to heel and oppressed
in the way that the English nobles have. The nobles in Scotland are very powerful. James is
in control of them all. There are a load of oligarchs and he's controlling the oligarchs. And he says to Mary, come back and be queen. And what he wants is her
to be his puppet queen. He can't be king, but he wants to rule through her and her to be his puppet
queen. And that's what he wants. And Mary comes back to Scotland with all four ladies in waiting,
Mary, Mary, Mary and Mary, and huge amounts of shopping. Mary, the Queen of Scots,
is a champion shopper. I mean, she was queen. She has bought huge amounts, and she takes them all
back to Scotland, of tapestries and furniture and books and jewellery and clothes. We know that
Elizabeth I had thousands of dresses. I think it's two or three thousand, we estimate. And Mary,
Queen of Scots, had a good amount of the same same and an incredible jewellery collection. She brings it all back on all these boats, comes and sets up
home in Edinburgh and everyone's delighted by her. They're all thrilled by the new wonderful queen.
She's absolutely marvellous. She's beautiful. They think she's fantastic. The whole court,
the court suddenly rivivifies into French grace and marvels. But we have a battle on our hands. And that is between
Mary and our half-brother, because she does not want to be his puppet queen. She wants to try and
be like Elizabeth I. Her cousin, they call each other sisters later, but they are cousins because
Henry VIII's sister was Mary, the Queen of Scots' grandmother. And she wants to be like Elizabeth I and reign rule for herself.
And so this sets James against her and he is determined to get power.
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wherever you get your podcasts. she has very unsuccessful married life doesn't she well first of all her yeah her first husband
died then her second husband also died very curiously talk to me about lord darnley yes
mary has some very bad husbands now elizabeth the, of course, she's a great virgin queen, so famous for
that. Mary just couldn't have been the virgin queen. There was just no way that that would be
possible for her in Scotland, because men were constantly trying to kidnap her and seize her
in the sense of trying to make her be their wife. So no one would have done that to Elizabeth I.
That simply wouldn't have happened. We have two completely different societies. And Mary didn't talk about being the Virgin Queen. That wasn't something she wanted. But there was no way she could have managed it. She had to get married. And she and Elizabeth had a very jolly friendship initially. They wrote letters to each other. They were very fond of each other. There was some talk of meeting. And they were going to meet in York. And this was going to be a huge fandango of a meeting. But then Elizabeth changed her mind and that was the end of that.
I do see the great unrequited love affair here as between Mary and Elizabeth.
And Mary was always devoted to Elizabeth.
All she wanted to do was have one meeting with Elizabeth and she never got it.
And Mary said to Elizabeth, you know, who shall I marry, Elizabeth? And Elizabeth said, hmm, well, let's think about that.
Who shall you marry?
And then Elizabeth said, i know who you should marry
you should marry robert dudley and she made him earl of leicester to make him more palatable to
mary and mary was not very pleased at that offer of robert dudley because dudley was a commoner
even though he was made earl of leicester by elizabeth obviously mary didn't like leicester
very much perhaps he was a common. His father had been a traitor.
And he was also said by many to be Elizabeth's close friend, possibly even more. So it was like Elizabeth was passing on an ex or not even an ex. And he was suspected in this very murky affair
of the death of his wife, Amy Robsart. Now, I don't think that he did kill her,
but certainly it all looked very suspicious, even though he was, I'm sure, innocent of her death.
And I think that other people killed her to frame him and make sure he didn't marry Elizabeth I.
It did look bad. So Mary said, I'm not going to marry him. And also even worse, Elizabeth said,
you marry Robert Dudley, and then you come down and live in the English court.
Elizabeth said, you marry Robert Dudley, and then you come down and live in the English court.
And that would have been, to use a famous phrase, a rather crowded marriage, Elizabeth, Mary,
Dudley. Elizabeth and Dudley would all be off riding together. And Mary was so annoyed at this suggestion that she married Dudley, that she actually decided to marry someone, Henry Lord Darnley, and that was guaranteed to infuriate Elizabeth
because they are Scottish aristocrats, English landowners. The parents have really wanted to
marry her from the word go. They are both grandchildren of Margaret Tudor and he has
a claim to the English throne. So this is a problem because Mary has a claim to the English
throne. If Elizabeth doesn't have a
child, Mary, Queen of Scots, is the closest in blood to the English throne. So she is,
if Elizabeth doesn't have a child, the closest in blood to get the throne. And blood matters to the
Tudors. We know this. Blood is really important. So Mary married to Darnley and having a child. Now that child has a very powerful claim to the English throne
and that makes everything very dangerous.
So Mary's great power comes from the fact
that she's so close to the English throne,
but this also condemns her.
This also makes her dangerous.
Elizabeth isn't so terrified of her.
Elizabeth's confident.
Elizabeth's advisors are terrified that
when Elizabeth dies, Mary, Queen of Scots, will get the throne and Mary, Queen of Scots, will take
revenge on everyone who wasn't nice to her, including all the advisors. So Elizabeth is
infuriated by the marriage of Mary to Darnley. And also our dreaded baddie, the Earl of Moray,
James, he's also infuriated by Mary marrying Darnley. He doesn't
like Darnley. It's interesting, Mary at the beginning of her reign, she created a good
tolerance between Protestant and Catholic. She made it very clear that even though she was Catholic,
she didn't want the country to be Catholic. Some aristocrats were concerned about religion because
they were truly religious people. Some aristocrats just didn't want to have to give up that land that
they got from all the monasteries. So Mary said, you know, I'm not taking it back. We're staying as it is. This is the country
that it is, but I'm Catholic. And the Earl of Moray started whipping up hatred against Mary among the
Protestant nobles. And we have a real problem here. We start to have a real problem. There starts to
be a lot of tensions between Mary and the nobles led by her half-brother. And it reaches a terrible height when Mary gets
pregnant because getting pregnant is fantastic for a queen consort. Absolutely marvellous. Isn't
it great? That's what you do. Pop them out. 10, 15, 20, marvellous. Pop them out. But for a queen
pregnant, it's more complicated because a baby, particularly a boy, you can be deposed for him.
Even if he hasn't even got any teeth, you can be deposed for him. And you could be deposed for him even if he hasn't even got any teeth you can be deposed
for him and you could be deposed for a girl as well so as soon as Mary gets pregnant these powerful
Scottish aristocrats start to harass her more in the hope that when the baby comes they can chuck
her out and they can be regent for the baby and do what they want with Scotland get power so Mary
is very pregnant when she's having a lovely evening in with some friends and her
private secretary, David Rizzio, who's very hated because he's Catholic, but he's a red herring.
And all the nobles break in, they grab him, they stab Rizzio to death in front of Mary.
She's pregnant. She's terrified. She says they wave a gun at her stomach and she's totally
terrified. And they drag him down the stairs and Darnley stabs him too in this huge dramatic moment. And then they take Mary prisoner in the sense that
they want to take Mary prisoner until she has the baby, then they'll just keep her in prison forever.
But interestingly, Darnley switches sides and was like, actually, they're not going to make me king,
they're going to do me dirty. I'm going to go back to Mary. And then Mary and Darnley seem to be
reconciled. Mary has her baby, a little boy on the 19th of
June, 1566. And he's called, as you can imagine, James. And this birth of a son precipitates the
desire of the nobles to get her and also get Darnley. And what happens is the baby's born in
June, in the February following that June, so not a year after, Darnley is in Edinburgh.
He's recovering from illness in a house just outside of Edinburgh.
Mary is in her castle in Holyrood.
And there's this huge explosion, this massive explosion.
It rocks all of Edinburgh.
And Mary thinks, what's happening?
What's going on?
And what she hears is that Darnley's house has been blown up.
And he has been found with his valet smothered in the orchard nearby.
And it's fascinating because English spies were on the scene faster than anyone else.
And they drew this really incredible picture of what was going on.
The blown up house, the city walls, Darnley and his servants smothered in the orchard. And
it really does get quite clued up because beside Darnley and his servant are a chair, a rope,
a dagger, and two dressing gowns. I mean, what was that? It's one of history's great mysteries.
And I always want to make a programme with you trying to get to the bottom of that one. But so
Darnley is now dead, not from the explosion, from strangling. And quite soon she remarries. But this is the tragic moment.
What happens next? So Darnley's dead. There's huge amounts of suspicion. Who done it? Who did it?
And Mary knows who did it. Of course, it was her half-brother, the nobles around her. They did it.
They got rid of Darnley. They want to get rid of her. But she now looks
so bad that Elizabeth I says, you've got to investigate it. Catherine de Medici says,
you've got to investigate it. What's she going to do? Investigate her half-brother. And of course,
what she should have done is what the nobles later do. And they just put some servants on trial. And
they put the servants on trial and say it was them. And the servants go to the block shouting,
it wasn't me, it was you. But a show trial is obviously very popular in the 16th century. So Mary is surrounded by suspicion. She's terrified she's going to be
murdered next. And I don't think she's wrong that she was in people's sights. And she has no idea
what to do. And then she puts Bothwell, another James, James Bothwell, who was part of the group,
who was part of the noble group on trial. And he is found not guilty. But
actually, the very fact that there was a trial does settle down some of the restive feeling
against her. And she feels that, you know, it's okay. It's fine. Then things are calmer. She goes
to go and visit her son. Now, they all think that it's so funny, you know, considering what air and
life is like now, that they think the air in Edinburgh is very polluted. So they send baby James to live at Stirling in the countryside.
And Mary goes to see him.
And on her way back to Edinburgh, Mary is stopped on the way to Edinburgh by James Bothwell,
this man she's put on trial.
And he tells her there's rioting in Edinburgh.
You have to come with me.
And he has a lot more men with him.
So she does.
She trusts him. They
go back to a castle, a castle that she actually gave to him. And he slams the door, closes the
door, and he assaults her. He sexually assaults her. He does this because he wants to marry her.
This is the way he's going to get her to marry him because she has said no already.
This happens in April 1567. Darnley dies in February. This is
April. And already, Bothwell has gone to a lot of bishops and lords and said,
will you agree that you support me if I marry Mary, Queen of Scots? So he's already worked
out with the men. He said, oh, all men, I'm going to marry the Mary. I'm going to marry the Queen.
So that's okay by you. So they've all had a big boys chat about it. But she said no. So the way he's got to do it is by seizing her, assaulting her and kidnapping
her. And then she's in this terrible state. You know, she's been assaulted. And Mary believes now
that she has to marry him. And that's what was the culture at the time. If a father says, dear Fred,
you can't have my daughter, Egeltina, she can't have her,
most nice Freds will say, okay, fine, I'll find someone else. Bad Freds will try and kidnap her
and seize her because then she has to marry him. I mean, this happens in societies all over the
world still. And Mary was in the same situation as many heiresses in the same situation as Bean.
And she had no choice, she felt. She thought she was pregnant. I mean, she was pregnant. She had to agree to marry
Bothwell. And people say to him, why did she do it? Why did she marry him? And, you know,
what choice did she have? That is what happened to women. That was women's lives. She was a highly
religious person. She thought that's what women were expected to do. She thought she was pregnant.
It was a terrible sin to have children outside of wedlock and she was pregnant. You know, what choice did she have but to marry this man because
he had assaulted her? And I'm afraid to say that many marriages were founded in this sense. And by
us saying, oh, but why would Mary marry someone who raped her? I mean, we are literally looking at
the 16th century with 21st century eyes. I think that it's very interesting because everyone in the 16th
century agreed that this is what had happened. Mary, Bothwell himself, the lords around her,
they all agreed that she'd been assaulted. But that was the way it went. She'd been assaulted,
it had happened, there we go. She had to marry him. And it's only since then that she's been
so condemned over and over again for marrying the man who raped her.
So this catastrophic forced marriage doesn't last that long either?
No, this marriage doesn't last that long. It starts to collapse very quickly.
What happens is that Bothwell, he made this agreement with all the guys saying,
yeah, yeah, I'll marry Mary Queen of Scots. You support it. I'll share power. He didn't share
power. And they were like, okay, we're coming for you. So what happens is you start to see real
hatred of Bothwell be whipped up by our old friend, James Murray, Mary's half-brother. We
start to see this happening over and over again. Mary thought that the other men supported it and
they start to come for her. She is pregnant. She is very heavily pregnant with twins, we later find
out. And what happens is Mary, they start to turn against them. We have very heavily pregnant with twins, we later find out. And what happens is
Mary, they start to turn against them. We have a massive battle in June, the Battle of Carberry
Hill. So Darnley only dies in February. This is June. There's a massive battle going to happen
at Carberry Hill. But actually, Mary's forces just gave up and in the negotiations, Botha was
taken away. And Mary was imprisoned by the lords and locked up in Edinburgh.
What happened was that in Edinburgh, there's still a lot of support for her, even though she's seen
as having married this bad man, there's still a lot of support for her. She's the right queen.
So they take her away to the middle of nowhere, to Loch Leven, Loch Leven Castle, on an island in
the middle of Loch Leven. And then, then not long afterwards she has a miscarriage
of her twins which is obviously very heartbreaking and the day after were they done these kids these
these were bothwell's children so these are the consequence of the assault and the marriage so
she was pregnant as she thought she was and that was why she had to marry and and then while she's
still suffering the terrible after effects of this miscarriage,
men come to her and they say, you've got to abdicate.
And they pretty much say to abdicate or die.
It's a forced abdication.
It's at the brink of a knife, one of these nobles say to her.
So she has to abdicate for James.
James Murray, her half-brother, her nemesis, is regent.
Bothwell's sent away.
He gets sent off to Denmark
and they put him chained to an upright post
so he can never sit down and he goes mad after that.
And Mary has lost everything.
She's imprisoned in Lough Leven Castle.
Her son is king at a baby.
And what's she going to do now?
You're listening to Dan Snow's History.
Talking about Mary, Queen of Scots.
More after this.
I'm Matt Lewis.
And I'm Dr. Alan Orjanaga.
And in Gone Medieval, we get into the greatest mysteries.
The gobsmacking details and latest groundbreaking research.
From the greatest millennium in human history.
We're talking Vikings.
Normans. Kings and Popes. Who were rarely the best of friends. Murder. Rebellions. Thank you. well she heads off to see her cousin eventually isn't she mary does manage to escape with some
cunning disguises while everyone else at the castle is having a party and what happens is that
james murray as a regent is not popular. People are saying, yes, well, Mary had her faults,
but she was the right queen, the rightful queen. You're not. The nobles are already fighting
against him because they haven't got enough power. So there is a lot of support for her.
She gets an army. She starts to work towards possibly getting her throne back. And she has
three choices at this point. She is in a stronghold. She could go to France and be looked
after in France. She could go to France and be looked after in France.
She could go to Scotland, try and get her throne back.
Now, I think she probably could have done get her throne back.
Probably not very long, but she could have got it back.
Or she could go to England and ask Elizabeth I to help her.
And that's what she does. She decides that Elizabeth I is going to help her. So she flees over into the Lake District and then expects, when she arrives,
to be escorted to Hampton Court or one of Elizabeth's marvellous palaces to have a lovely
meeting with Elizabeth. Instead, what happens is she's taken in prison at Carlisle Castle,
and this is the beginning of her house arrest. Elizabeth's pondering putting her back on her throne,
but Elizabeth's advisors are dead set against it.
They say, look, the Earl of Moray, James Moray,
he's Protestant, he's our friend, we prefer him.
I think Cecil was paying Mary's nemesis
a long time through this.
Let's just stick with the way things are.
And an inquiry is started into whether or not
Mary is guilty of Darnley's murder. This
rather ridiculous inquiry is started about this, in which the English say, can we find something
that says Mary's guilty? So a letter is sent saying Mary's guilty, and the English say, well,
I'm sorry, that's not really enough, we need more than that. And amazingly, they found some letters
under someone's bed in Edinburgh that say Mary's very guilty. But actually,
when we look at these letters, they're clearly a collection of poems and forgeries and the dates
that Mary's writing them saying, I'm going to kill Darnley. The dates don't even match up.
But this actually quite suits Elizabeth. Well, Cecil, her advisor, this inquiry,
they don't want to find Mary innocent because then she's going to have to be let free in England, and they fear that she could raise rabble against Elizabeth,
these Catholic discontents. And they don't want to find her guilty, because then they'll have to
deal with her. So what they do find is that they can't say whether she's innocent or guilty.
So in this state of suspension, they can then keep her under house arrest. And the house arrests are
initially very, very marvellous. There's lots of visitors, there's lots of money, there's a huge amount of the household are there,
Mary has a wealthy life, but she is in prison. And this is the beginning of her imprisonment,
which lasts nearly 20 years. And as things get more tense in England, because it's clearer
to Cecil, to Elizabeth's advisors,
that Elizabeth ain't going to have that child.
As optimistic as Cecil is about babies in later life, she ain't going to have it.
And what we really see is after the breakdown of Elizabeth's negotiations for marriage with the Duke of Anjou,
who really is her last suitor, then feelings about Mary get very, very strong. And they become obsessed to
the fact that Mary's going to try and push Elizabeth off the throne, and that Mary will
outlive Elizabeth. Mary's, of course, younger than Elizabeth. And Mary is imprisoned in tighter,
tighter detail. And there starts to be plots that Mary is said to be involving herself as
these tighter, tighter imprisonment comes towards her.
In the end, Elizabeth famously has her cousin killed. Why does she decide in the end that Mary's got to go? Well, there are various plots that are clearly, when you look at the evidence,
made up around Mary. But then Mary actually does agree to a plot. And this is the Babington plot.
She agrees to some idealist saying they're going
to throw Elizabeth off the phone and put Mary on it. And unfortunately, she agrees to that plot
when there is a codebreaker reading all her messages. And the minute that codebreaker sees
that message in which Mary says, yes, okay, let's do it. He writes, he's like, yeah, I've got it.
And he did a hangman. He wrote a hangman on the letter. He was like, yeah, yeah, I've got her. And this is evidence for treason. And Mary was not guilty of
Darnley's death. I don't think she was guilty of any of the other plots that were around her.
This one she did agree to. So she is guilty of treason and she's put on trial. She's put on
trial. And Mary says, you can't put me on trial. I'm the queen. There's no counsel. I don't have
any defence. I haven't been out allowed to look at the papers and I'm not an English subject. You
can't put me on trial. You can't convict me of treason. But she is convicted and sentenced to
death. And Elizabeth then has a problem. She doesn't want to sign the death warrant. Elizabeth
does not want to execute Mary. She really doesn't. She knows it'll look bad. She thinks Spain will be angry with her. She thinks
France will be angry with her. And she doesn't want to execute a queen. She doesn't want to
execute an anointed queen. She thinks it could undermine the concept, the perception of monarchy.
I mean, she's right. So she really does hesitate and she doesn't really know. And as we know,
Elizabeth likes to shilly-shally and she shilly shilly shallies. And one day she's just basically sort of pushed to sign the execution
warrant. And she does it, but she thinks that, you know, she can keep Mary on death row and go back
and forth and eventually hopefully Mary will just die. But what happens is when she signs that death
warrant, the Privy Council get it and they do it without Elizabeth knowing they have a meeting without her
knowing they do it behind her back they say okay let's chop this woman's head off now before
Elizabeth changes her mind and they chop Mary's head off really swiftly really fast the Privy
Council meet on the 3rd Mary is told on the 7th that she's having her head chopped off I mean it's
very very fast Mary is told late at night in Fotheringhay Castle, she'll be executed next morning. She distributes her
belongings. She is so devastated. How can you sleep in a night like that? Her lady-in-waiting
reads from the Bible. She writes her last letter to the King of Spain saying, you know, I've been
treated like a criminal. And she doesn't try to write to Elizabeth anymore. She's tried to write
to Elizabeth over and over again. She doesn't do it now. She realises her chance is over.
Next morning, she's executed. And the idea is it's going to be a very undignified execution.
That's what they want. They don't execute her as a queen, certainly not. And they don't really
execute her as a woman. And actually one of the bystanders, one of the onlookers and aristocrats
said, you know, this isn't appropriate. They were going to have the executioner undress her,
but the onlooker said, you know, you can't do this.
So they have their lady-in-waiting undress her.
And then when she's undressed,
she reveals this red underdress and petticoat,
the colour of Catholic martyrdom.
And so even though she's being preached at to convert,
she reveals this red colour dress.
And that is this big moment where she says,
I'm not giving in.
I'm not giving in, I'm not giving in,
even though you're going to execute me. And her execution is awful. It takes three goes and the executioner holds her head up to show everyone and then it falls because she was wearing a wig.
And it's just awful. And it's also, the English are terrified. They close the ports,
they burn all of Mary's belongings. They don't want it to turn into martyrdom. They take her heart and they put it under a mound and
in a glass jar. They don't want anything to be taken to be used as a martyr because they're
terrified of her power. They don't want anyone to know about it. They don't want kings to know
about it. Her servants are locked away so they can't tell the story. They are terrified that
it's going to cause massive ructions across the country
and across Europe. And when Elizabeth hears she is devastated, she's furious, but Cecil tells her,
he begs her forgiveness and she has no choice. She has to write to James, Mary's son and say
she's so sorry. Mary's execution is heartbreaking, but there's one little shard of hope. And that's
when her body is stripped, that they find her dog is clinging to her body
under her skirts and her dog had gone up to the block with her. And I just love that, that she
was totally alone. No one with her. She was a queen. She started with everything, riches, power,
monarchy and ended, executed really in a very undignified fashion in front of everybody. But
the dog was there holding tight to her feet. Now you've got animals. I know you're an animal lover. Your animals would go to the block with you,
wouldn't they? Probably not with me, because I'm the grumpy dad that occasionally feeds them in
the rain when my kids refuse to do so. But I, yes, I understand the sentiment. I mean, I have a cat.
I really don't think it would go to the block with me. I just really don't think. I think it
would just automatically go see whether Cecil would feed it. But the dog I see, I love my cat, but I know that
if I was being executed that I'm not sure it would be there. But Mary's dog was under her skirts and
it did accompany her. She was buried in Peterborough Cathedral, not far from Catherine of Aragon, who
was sent off there in exile and died there. And Mary remained there. And she seemed to have lost everything.
But then she did triumph because when Elizabeth I died, Mary's son became James I. He became
king of England and Scotland. He became the man with all the power. And then it was his blood
that courses through the veins of all the monarchs, including those of the current
day. And as you pointed out at the beginning, Mary was buried in pride of place in Westminster
Abbey by her son, King James VI and I of England. James I never really talked about his mother.
What he did do is he took her out of Peterborough, where she'd been buried, not as a royal, and he buried her in the
most elaborate tomb in Westminster Abbey. And when you go into Westminster Abbey, it's the most
bling, the most glamorous tomb, and she is right next to Elizabeth I. The Queen,
she had wanted to meet her whole life. Mary wanted to meet Elizabeth I and they met in death. And James also
basically wrote this post on the tomb, which said, you bad people executed my mother. He says
that she was sprung from royal and ancient stock, endowed with excellent gifts. And then he said,
she'd been detained in custody for more or less 20 years, had courageously fought against the obloquies of her foes.
She was struck down by the axe and unheard of precedent, outrageous to royalty. And so he makes
it clear that it was outrageous to royalty. She was the wife, the daughter, the mother of kings.
wife, the daughter, the mother of kings. And he really says very clearly, he talks about the violent murder, that she should be vindicated. James really makes it pretty clear that he doesn't
like the fact that his mother was treated this way. And that is a very significant statement.
So as we know, Henry VIII wanted this massive, massive tomb in St. George's Chapel, Windsor, didn't he?
All this bling and angels and people crying over him all the time.
Didn't get it. His children said no.
And he has this very modest little tombstone that William IV put up.
Loads of monarchs don't get a good tomb.
But Mary might have had a miserable life, but she got a great tomb.
She got the best tomb.
And in the end, she was the one who mothered the line,
who created the line of descendants. So her marriages may have been a disaster. They may
have been marriages that gave her great distress and that lost her the power of the throne,
but they did continue the line. She had a bad life, but she had the best biographer.
Kate Williams, that was fantastic. I just love it. I love talking to you on the podcast.
What an absolute pro.
Your book is called Rival Queens,
The Betrayal of Mary, Queen of Scots.
So make sure you go and buy that, everybody.
And talk to you soon.
It's been such a pleasure.
Thank you for having me. you
