The Rest Is History - 588. Mary, Queen of Scots: The Mystery of the Exploding Mansion (Part 5)
Episode Date: August 3, 2025How and why was Mary Queen of Scots’ traitorous husband, Lord Darnley, murdered, and by whom…? Was Mary complicit? Why was his death one of the greatest mysteries in all British history? And, with... Mary’s situation growing increasingly precarious, and allies few and far between, to whom would Mary turn next? Join Tom and Dominic as they unravel, tantalisingly, the build up to and enactment of Lord Darnley’s mysterious murder, in the next stage of the tumultuous life of Mary Queen of Scots. Were her hands red and dripping with the blood of her murdered husband? The Rest Is History Club: Become a member for exclusive bonus content, early access to full series and live show tickets, ad-free listening, our exclusive newsletter, discount book prices on titles mentioned on the pod, and our members’ chatroom on Discord. Just head to therestishistory.com to sign up, or start a free trial today on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/therestishistory. For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett + Aaliyah Akude Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Thank you for listening to The Rest is History. For weekly bonus episodes, ad-free listening,
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go to therestishistory.com and join the club. That is the restishistory.com.
Madame, my ears have been so deafened, and my understanding so grieved, and my heart so affrighted to hear the dreadful news of the abominable murder of your mad husband
and my slain cousin, that I scarcely have the wits to write about it. I cannot dissemble that I am more sorrowful for you than for him.
Oh, madam, I would not do the office of faithful cousin or affectionate friend if I studied
rather to please your ears than employed myself in preserving your honor.
I will not at all dissemble what most people are talking about, which is that you will
look through your fingers
at the revenging of this deed, and that you do not take measures that touch those who
have done as you wished, as if the thing had been entrusted in a way that the murderers
felt assurance in doing it.
I exhort you, I counsel you, and I beseech you to take this thing so much to heart that you will not fear to touch even
him whom you have nearest to you if the thing touches him, and that no persuasion will prevent
you from making an example out of this to the world, that you are both a noble princess
and a loyal wife.
Praying the Creator to give you the grace to recognize this traitor and
protect yourself from him as from the ministers of Satan with my very heartfelt recommendations
to you very dear sister.
So that is a letter Tom written by Elizabeth the first on the 24th of February 1567.
She's writing to Mary Queen of Scots. She is writing following the murder two weeks previously of Mary's
husband and Elizabeth's cousin.
Scotland's leading cock chick, I believe is the technical term, Lord Darnley.
So this is an amazing document making all kinds of slightly passive aggressive allegations
and it's a document that led Antonia Fraser in her wonderful book about Mary Queen of
Scots to describe the murder of Lord Darnley as the most debatable as well as surely the
most worked over murder in history.
Now we always love a murder and we love in particular a Scottish murder.
A murder? Yeah, just give us the outline of the crime before we get going.
So we've done JFK and I guess probably that would be the most celebrated murder in history,
but it hasn't been around for centuries and centuries like this one has. Antonio Fraser
is absolutely right. This is a murder people have been going over for
century after century after century. And I think that the barest outline of the crime
makes clear why. So at 2am on the 10th of February, 1567, the house on the edge of Edinburgh
where Lord Darnley, so Mary Queen of Scots husband, had been staying was blown
to smithereens, blown sky high. Strangely, however, Darnley had not perished in this
explosion. Instead, he and his valet were found without any marks of injury in a nearby garden.
They had been laid out very neatly and next to them was a chair, a rope and a thick fur
cloak.
So all the elements of an astonishing murder mystery.
Agatha Christie style.
Very.
So some obvious questions.
Who killed Darnley?
How did they kill him?
Where did they kill him?
And what is going on with the chair and the rope and fur cloak?
But of course, the most sensitive question of all is the one that Elizabeth I in that
letter you read has directly fixed on, which is, you know, is Mary complicit in the murder? Because Elizabeth says, this
is what people are saying and you have to take steps to ensure, you know, that this
mud doesn't stick. Another specific point that Elizabeth is making in that letter, she
is hinting at the gossip that Mary had not only planned the murder, but had done so in association with one particular
accomplice who Elizabeth doesn't name in her letter, but describes as being like a
minister of Satan. And who Elizabeth is alluding to, we will come to in due course, because
we're going to be doing a deep dive into the murder and then
trying to solve the riddle of what happened.
But just to emphasize, what Elizabeth is doing in that letter is echoing claims and counterclaims
that are already raging like a live fire in Scotland and within only a few months will
plunge the entire kingdom into civil war and massive
spoiler alert, it will ultimately result in the downfall of Mary, her imprisonment, her
forced abdication, her flight to England, and I suppose in the very long run, her execution
at Fothering A.
So that argument about did Mary do it has raged for well for centuries effectively hasn't it and you made
the point in your notes Tom that the two great books were two of the great books about Mary
Queen of Scots I mean there are multiple very good books but one of them Antonia Fraser's
Antonia Fraser thinks that Mary is absolutely a brilliant person who would never have done
it doesn't she that soft heart that horror of bloodshed, that inclination towards mercy.
I mean, blowing up her husband and then murdering him in a very
baroque way in a garden is the last thing that Mary would have done.
On the other hand, somebody you've mentioned a lot in this series, Jenny
Wormald, great historian of early modern Scotland, she absolutely despises
Mary Queen of Scots.
If there's a chance to stick the dagger in, she'll take it.
Yeah.
And she basically says if she didn't murder Darnley, she was, and I quote, almost the
only member of Edinburgh's political society who knew nothing about it.
So basically it reflects it even more badly on her.
If she didn't murder him, then if she did.
Yeah, essentially.
I mean, those two books kind of articulate the very polarized position.
But since they were written, a third study of Darnley's murder has come out, which I
think provides a solution to the crime that if not exactly definitive because, you know,
at the distance of however long it is, it's hard to do that. But I think it is as definitive
a solution as we are likely to get. And this is an
account in John Guy's biography of Mary, My Heart is My Own, which was published in 2004
and was the inspiration for the Saoirse Ronan film. And what Guy did, he's a brilliant scholar
of the Tudors and 16th century more generally, And he has gone back and looked at all the original
documents in a way that hadn't been done before. I mean, amazing to think of it. And most of
these documents are English reports written chiefly to Cecil. In the Victorian period,
they were collected and kind of bunged into those, you know, the kind of enormous, vast
leather bound volumes that Victorian archivists absolutely loved lots of them were miscatalogged
Misinterpreted and the result of that has been that their provenance has often been obscured the dates in which they were written
certain key texts have been overlooked and so Guy has done the hard yards and
We reap the benefits right because essentially we will be drawing very heavily on the guy's work for our account of Darnley's murder.
So before we get into the murder, Tom, let's set the scene a little bit.
We ended last time, Mary has given birth to Lord Darnley's son.
So I'm guessing most people will have heard the previous episodes in this series.
So Mary, Queen of Scots, slightly beleaguered, Lord Darnley, an absolutely terrible man.
You described him as one of the worst men we've ever talked about, I think.
No, I didn't say that.
So he's not one of the worst men as in kind of Himmler.
Right.
He's not like that.
It's not in Himmler's league.
Oh my gosh.
That's high praise.
But he's kind of like the worst kind of person that you'd meet at a university disco at St
Andrews.
Yeah. Red trousers. You said, you know, cock St. Andrews. Yeah, red trousers.
You said, you know, cock chick.
Yeah.
That's what he is.
Probably the biggest cock chick in British history.
By the way, that's not us being rude.
That's Scottish.
That's a Scottish source, right?
Yeah.
That's authentic 16th century slang.
Yeah.
So anyway, Mary has given birth to his son, the future James the Sixth of Scotland, big
friend of the rest of his history, tongue too big for his mouth, loves a witch.
And she's done that.
She gave birth to him.
It was maximum security in Edinburgh Castle.
And the reason for that was that three months before the birth of James, her secretary,
David Rizzo, the Italian bloke, had been murdered in Holyrood in her private quarters in ludicrous circumstances.
And the conspirators had included her chancellor, who's this sinister and sort of conspiratorial
Machiavelle called the Earl of Morton.
There's her secretary of state, William Maitland, and then Lord Darnley, her own husband, has
been in on it.
And just to remind ourselves, she dealt with them in different ways.
She'd say Morton, all of those guys, she'd exiled effectively to England and she'd confiscated
their lands.
Maitland has been disgraced because he didn't take part in the actual murder.
So his punishment is not as harsh.
And Darnley, I mean, this is bonkers.
She basically used her feminine wiles
To persuade him to change sides. She promised him access to her bed chamber and her person anyway
So all sweetness and life for mary she's won the day or has she or has she?
I mean the key problem she faces is that
Darnley remains a complete nightmare. You know, he's a massive loose cannon.
And also in his personal behavior, he's terrible.
He is very, very disrespectful to her,
just a kind of awful person.
So an example of this is that in August,
so by now, Mary has recovered from childbirth,
she and Darnley, they want to go hunting
and they go to a place called Tracker House
in the Borders Center, of very famous hunting ground.
But it turns out to be a disaster because actually the deer are vanishing.
The woods are starting to be chopped down.
There isn't enough for Darnley to enjoy a good hunt.
And he gets very cross about this and one night he just gets spectacularly drunk.
I mean he's always drunk but this time he's really badly drunk.
And he leans over to Mary and says, we're
going to go bloody, you know, we're going to go hunt deer tomorrow and you're bloody
well going to come, right? And Mary doesn't want to do it. And she whispers in his ear
dramatic news. She says she thinks that she may be pregnant again. And Darnley doesn't
care. He reveals this to everyone in the hall. He says, nevermind, if we lose this one, we
shall make another one. And the Lord of Trekei, his host, if we lose this one, we shall make another.
And the Lord of Trakai, his host, is appalled by this and rebukes him and tells him that he doesn't talk like a Christian. And Darnley, he snaps his fingers in Lord Trakai's face.
What are we not to work a mare well when she is with foe? And this goes down like a lead balloon
with Lord Trakai, with Mary's attendance and with Mary herself.
And she seems to have been so offended by this that she breaks the holiday off and leaves
early.
She's quite right.
Yeah, I think she is.
Yeah.
I mean, to be honest, I thought he was a bad man, but now that I've heard him speak.
That's exactly how he spoke.
I think he's even worse than I had imagined.
Not quite as bad as Himmler still, but maybe nudging up there. Yeah, he's in the medals. He's on the podium. Anyway, so
Mary, understandably, she goes back to Edinburgh to Holyrood and to her baby, little James,
who is described by the English ambassador as being well proportioned and like to prove
a godly prince. I mean, hasn't looked at his tongue, obviously. And Mary
is so anxious about what Darnley might get up to that she moves him from Holyrood to
Stirling and en route James is guarded by 500 musketeers. And of course, Stirling is
the very castle where Mary's mother, Mary of Gies, had taken her to keep her for safekeeping.
What Mary is worried about, I think, is that Darnley might seize James and appoint himself
as regent, and that would then enable him essentially, perhaps even to imprison Mary,
certainly to kind of sideline her and effectively rule Scotland as regent until James comes
of age.
So if Mary has control of James, then essentially she's blocking that option off for Darnley.
Mary recognizes that the issue is what it's always been, which is that Darnley is not
content with his status as a kind of a consort, that he wants to be king. He wants to be the King of Scotland,
which Mary had promised him and then had kind of changed her mind. And because of this,
Darnley is endlessly plotting. He's endlessly coming up with schemes. So he's not just plotting
to make himself King of Scotland. Madly, he also wants to make himself King of England.
He's come up with, I mean, just such a mad scheme.
He wants to capture Scarborough.
Like Harold Hardrada.
Yeah.
So Scarborough is a rather, I mean, it's very picturesque, very attractive.
It has a wonderful cricket festival, but it's not one of the great strongholds of England,
I think it's fair to say.
It's a kind of fishing village on the Yorkshire coast.
And the other stronghold he wants to get is the Silly Isles, which are an archipelago off the southwest corner
of Cornwall. And his plan is that he's going to capture these places and then he's going
to import Catholic armies from Europe. And he will then launch an invasion of England
with these armies from Scarborough and the Silly Isles. And it's completely mad. We should
actually remind listeners that Adarnley is Catholic.
So this is part of the mix as well.
So this plot falls through, you know, it's absolutely stillborn.
He's humiliated by this and so he then has a massive strop and announces that he is going
to leave Mary, he's had enough of her and he's going to go and settle abroad.
And people might think, well, that's quite a good solution, isn't it?
Well, it isn't firstly, because it would be very humiliating for Mary and by extension,
Scotland.
But also it would be a nightmare for the Protestant Lords, because the last thing that they want
is a Catholic with a claim to the throne of Scotland, making a message for them with the
Catholic powers of France and Spain or whatever on the continent.
And so they are irate about it.
Mary is appalled. She spends a whole night trying to make him see sense, saying, you
know, this is mad. Please don't do this. He refuses. And so she summons the Privy Council
and she orders Darnley to appear before the Privy Council and the Privy Council asks Darnley
to explain, you know, what are you up to? What are you doing here? He can't really give a credible answer because basically his answer
is, oh, you know, I'm cross, you know, you're not treating me right. Yeah, I'm going off
on a gap. Yeah. I mean, that's basically his pitch. And the privy council are so kind of
stunned and appalled by what they've heard from him. They write officially to Catherine de Medici in France and say, look, this guy is a lunatic, have nothing to do with him. And if he does come
to France and tries to set up a royal court in exile or to create mischief or whatever,
just do not touch him. And this, I think, is where the notion that he is a lunatic starts
to come because Elizabeth, in that letter that that you quoted refers to him as being mad.
And I think that this is becoming part of the diplomatic chatter.
He's such an international embarrassment that saying that he's mad is less of a humiliation
than saying, well, we just can't control him.
So we're darnly moving towards the sort of margins.
Does that mean that Mary now has to rely on a lot of people that she's previously fallen
out with?
So for example, if she's talking to the French, her foreign policy expert is this bloke Maitland,
who was her secretary of state, who had been disgraced after the Ritzio murder.
Yeah, he had, but I think he'd always basically been Team Mary.
And I think Mary knows that.
And as you say, I mean, she needs his advice.
So he's brought out of his disgrace, he's effectively pardoned and he's restored to
his post as secretary of state. But there is one condition and that is that Maitland
is reconciled with the one Scottish Lord on whom Mary is now relying more than any other
because he has proved himself consistently loyal and this is the Earl of Bothwell.
And Bothwell is this swaggering, muscle bound, got a tremendous ginger mustache.
Very fond of a punch up, I think it's fair to say.
But he's been at Mary's back for a decade and more because he stood behind Mary of Geys,
her mother, when she'd been in trouble.
Bothwell had rallied to her cause in the wake of Ritio's murder and Bothwell had helped
to drive Morton and his fellow conspirators into exile.
Bothwell, though a very formidable man, is on the receiving end, isn't he, that autumn?
I mean the most Scottish thing that's ever happened, he's been attacked, left with life threatening injuries by a man who's called
Come on, what's, what's he called?
He's called little jock Elliott. Yeah, so he played for Dumferlin in the 1980s. Yeah, so he is little Jock Elliott is a notorious reaver.
Of course he is.
The Reavers are the bandits who infest the border regions between England and Scotland,
and particularly this region called the debatable lands, which is a stretch of the border.
And the Hermitage, which is Bothwell's ancestral
pile is absolutely at the centre of the debatable lands.
I love the fact that after 700 episodes and people have been like, when are you going
to do Scottish history? Do some Scottish history. We could have done the Scottish enlightenment.
We could have chosen any element, but instead we chose like people headbutting each other
in debatable lands called Little Jock, because
we absolutely wanted to lean into their sense of what Scotland is.
I mean, just to reassure Scottish listeners, the debatable lands are the most lawless and
bandit-ridden corner, not just in Scotland, but in all of Britain.
So we are emphasizing that.
And this clearly is why Bothwell is so given to violence is that you have to be violent to hold
your own in this kind of landscape. So yeah, so he's attacked and left for dead, covered with all
kinds of wounds. The news is brought to Mary, who at the time is in Jedborough, which is about 25
miles away to the east. And she's on a sizes. So she's going around hearing complaints from
her subjects, basically kind of showing herself doing her royal duties.
The gossip will be that is reported later is that the moment she hears the news that
Bothwell has been attacked, she leaves Jedborough and gallops off alone to the Hermitage.
This is not true.
She waits for a week because she still has the assizes to hear and nor does she ride
there alone.
So, Morrie, her half-brother, he goes with her,
Maitland is there, a large retinue. But even so, I mean, it is a startling feat of horsemanship
because it's 25 miles there, I have a really very rough terrain. I mean, I've been there
and seen it and I respect Mary very highly for having traveled that far. She spends two
hours by Bothwell's bedside and it becomes clear that Bothwell isn't going to die, that
he's on the road to recovery. And then they ride back. So that is a full and active day.
And it turns out to be too much for Mary. She gets back to Jed Barone, she falls very,
very dangerously ill. So whether it's over exertion, if she had been pregnant, she mentioned
this to Darnley, I think by this point she's lost the baby, so it may be the after effects of a miscarriage, I'm not sure.
But certainly her life is feared for.
At one point she lies in bed for half an hour and I quote, eyes closed, mouth fast and feet
and arms stiff and cold.
The Earl of Moray, her half brother, who I think is consumed with resentment that she
is the queen and he's not the king, you know, an accident of his illegitimacy. He starts laying hands on all her silver plate and rings. So it's
like Henry V making off with the crown before his father is dead. And Mary doesn't die because
she has a very skillful French doctor and he is able to kind of bring her back from
the brink of death. And two weeks on from when it seemed like she was going to die, she's ready to continue on her way. And the impact of this near-death experience is very profound, I think for
Mary. I think that she really starts to think, you know, what kind of kingdom am I going to leave
behind? It generates a massive anxiety spike among the Scottish nobility. They don't want a change
of regime. They don't want Darnley on the loose. They are worried that it will result in anarchy. And so they are very committed
to keeping Mary on the throne and ensuring that Darnley doesn't cause her too much trouble.
And the question then is, well, how are we going to deal with Darnley? I mean, how are
we going to make sure that Mary isn't kind of
embroiled in endless trouble from him? What on earth could they possibly do?
What could we do? And it is Maitland, the Secretary of State, who was the guy who had first
suggested the murder of Ritio in very kind of subtle insinuating terms, who again now starts to broach the possibility, maybe,
of another murder.
So he even goes so far as to kind of put this into writing.
So he writes to the Scottish ambassador in Paris shortly after Mary has had this brush
with death.
It is a heartbreak for her to think that he should be her husband and how to be
free of him she sees no way out. But obviously, you know, he is suggesting that he might.
He is traveling with Mary from Jeddah and they go to a place called Craig Miller Castle
and they arrive there on the 20th of November, it's just south of Edinburgh, and it's layered as Catholic, which means that he is absolutely reliable. I mean, he's completely Team Mary.
And Mary gets there and she then falls ill again. And so all the lords in her retinue,
which include Maitland, Moray, and by this time, Bothwell, because he's risen up from
his sick bed, he's covered in scars, but he's kind of rough and tough. They all have time while she's lying in her sick bed
to discuss what might be done with Darnley. And when Mary recovers, they go to see her,
all except for Moray, who by this point is worried at the way in which the conversation
is turning and doesn't really want to be a part of it. But Maitland and Bothwell and all the other lads, they go to Mary and they say, look,
you have got to divorce Darnley.
Mare does not think that she should divorce Darnley because that would just leave him
on the loose, but all the others think, yeah, let's go for it.
Mary listens to them and she kind of agrees in principle, but her anxiety
obviously is that it wouldn't be damaging to James.
She says, I will have it provided it is not prejudicial to my son.
Yeah.
And then she asks, well, is Moray, does he agree to this?
Because I noticed he's not here and Maitland answers, I am assured he
will look through his fingers there too, and will behold our doings
saying nothing
to the same.
In other words, he's just going to let us kind of get on with it.
Yeah.
And obviously if it was just a divorce, it wouldn't be such a big deal.
But that implies that this may be more than a divorce.
That it may be a slightly more permanent separation, shall we say.
That is a hint that Maitland then drops to Mary, which Mary becomes very agitated and
she presses Maitland, well, you know, what exactly do you mean? And she goes on to say,
I will that ye do nothing where to any spot may be laid to my honor or conscience. And
therefore I pray you rather let the matter be in the state as it is, i.e. don't murder
him. And for now, let's leave the whole question
of divorce to one side.
But the clock is ticking a little bit isn't it because they're going to christen James
their son and I suppose if Darnley had turned up to that and sort of asserted himself as
James's father that might have slightly changed the game but very foolishly it happens at
sterling doesn't it?
17th of December.
Yeah.
And Darnley has a massive tantrum and refuses to come because he's crossed that he's not King.
Such poor behavior to miss the christen of your own son, because you
know, you can't wear a crown.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he's not there.
There is a man on hand who Mary can turn to, to take down his place.
And this is the much scarred and mustachioed Earl of Bothwell.
He's got to look smart for the occasion.
And so Mary makes sure to provide him with a very fine outfit of kind of gorgeous blue
clothes.
And so Bothwell is strutting around looking tremendous.
And of course, this is much noted.
Right.
Yeah.
People observe that Darnley isn't there, but Bothwell's looking great in his suit.
But even Bothwell refuses to attend the christening.
And so does Moray, Bothwell's old rival, Mary's half-sister, because they're Protestants and
the ceremony, the baptism is a Catholic one.
Right.
So it might look as though the whole thing has been a disaster.
Darnley's not there.
Bothwell is creating
gossip, Bothwell and Moray aren't attending the baptism, but actually it's been a triumph
behind the scenes because what has been happening while the Lords have been plotting what to
do about Darnley is that Mary, I said that her mind has really been concentrated, she's
really thinking, well, what do I want from the future? And so she has written to Elizabeth in England, queen to queen, not going through Maitland,
not going through Cecil.
And she says to Elizabeth, look, I've very nearly died and I've been worrying about my
son.
So what I request is that if I die, would you become James's protector, which in effect means becoming
James's foster mother. And Elizabeth is very touched by this and she accepts and as a token
of this, she agrees to be James's godmother, even though the baptism ceremony is a Catholic
one. And she sends Mary this magnificent bejeweled font of solid gold. And the detente between the two queens, you know,
relations between them had been quite tense. It's now sufficient that they can continue
to discuss policy without recourse to their respective ministers and begin privately negotiating
over what had always been Mary's ultimate dream, namely to be acknowledged by Elizabeth
as heir apparent to the throne of England.
Wow, that's looking good for Mary.
It is looking good for Mary and it was her illness that precipitated this kind of diplomatic
breakthrough, you know, that this private conversation.
And I think also as part of this, Mary is thinking, I'm reconciled with Elizabeth, why
don't I get everybody else to be reconciled with Elizabeth, why don't I get everybody else to be reconciled?
So on Christmas Eve, she formally pardons the Ritzio plotters.
So that's Morton and all that gang.
On the 6th of January, she allows Maitland to marry Posh Mary, the one of the four Marys
who Maitland had been desperately in love with despite the 20 year age gap.
And on the 9th of January, Morton crosses from Berwick into Scotland.
He is home.
And on the 14th of January, Morton and Maitland meet at a place called Whittingham Castle,
which is again a few miles ride from Edinburgh, all these castles dotted around the capital.
And present for their meeting is their old adversary from the Ritio plot, the man who
Mary had turned to when Ritio got murdered, the Earl of Bothwell.
So amazing.
Two different groups of people meeting up to discuss things.
I mean, what could they be discussing, these three men?
While all that's happening, what's happened to Darnley?
He refused to come to the baptism of his own son.
Has he just been off hunting or has he been plotting something more sinister?
Well, he's returned to his plotting. His plot is exactly what Mary's been worried he might
do, which is to abduct James and to imprison her. And so she laments this and writes to
Maitland, for the king, our husband, always we perceive him occupied and busy enough to
have inquisition of our doings. So in other words, he's trying to map out what her movements are so that
he can abduct her. And this is despite the fact that Darnley hasn't been very well and actually
he gets really seriously ill with syphilis, obviously. But of course. What else would he
have? And ominously from Mary's point of view, his sick room is in Glasgow, which is the great power base of his father, the Earl of Lennox. And this is alarming.
I mean, Mary doesn't want trouble from Lennox as well as from Darnley. And so she thinks,
I've got to get him back. I can't allow him to be there with his father. So I think very bravely,
she rides to Glasgow, she tends to him in his sick bed and she urges him to come
back with her and specifically she says, come back with me to Craig Miller Castle. You'll
be much better there. You'll be near Edinburgh. We can look after you properly. Darnley initially
refuses. He feels safe and secure in Glasgow. But finally he agrees. Yes. Why does he agree
to do this? So John Guy's theory is, and I quote, to win over Darnley, Mary had to prove her affection for him
in the only way his carnal and degenerate nature understood. This meant offering to have sex with
him again as soon as he was cured. He's very into the notion that Mary is endlessly promising
Darnley sex as a way of kind of trying to reign him in. I think there is another possible reason
why Darnley agrees to come back with Mary and basically try and be reconciled with her, which is of course that Morton is now back on the scene.
Morton was the co-conspirator in the Rizzio plot who Darnley spectacularly double-crossed.
Morton is not the kind of guy who takes being double-crossed lying down.
He is a very, very menacing and dangerous opponent. I think that Darnley
probably is thinking, you know, Mary, now I need her, if I'm going to be kept safe from
Morton. He says, I'm not going to go to Craigmillar Castle because it's layered, as we mentioned,
is two team Mary, it's two kind of pro-Stewart. So he's probably worried that Mary might lock
him up in Craigmillar Castle, you know, it's a place full of dungeons. He also says, I'm not going to go to Holyrood because he's covered in weeping pustules and
he's far too vain.
He doesn't want to be seen, you know, covered in spots.
He's not a very appetizing prospect for her to sleep with.
I mean, so if she has made that offer, that's a big offer from her.
Yes, absolutely.
So Dunlea probably is going back with Mary and feeling slightly fonder towards her than
he had previously done.
And Mary is obviously trying to be as nice to him as she possibly can because she's essentially
trying to wrangle him.
And so she agrees to Darnley's proposal, which is that rather than stay in Holyrood or in
Craigmiller, he will stay in relative isolation on the edge of Edinburgh
and he suggests a house right next to the city wall. The house is barely furnished and
it stands beside the Kirker Field, a ruined medieval church. It's simultaneously isolated
so no one can see his spots, but it's near enough to Holyrood that Mary can come out
and visit him, So it seems perfect. So on the 1st of February, Mary arrives
in Edinburgh. He's got Darnley in a horse litter. Darnley is installed in the house at Kirkerfield
and there he is to wait while his treatment for syphilis is completed and his weeping pustules
dry up. The course goes very well. A week and a half pass, Darnley is almost
ready to come out of the house at the Kirker Field. And then in the early hours of the
10th of February, around two o'clock in the morning, Mary and the most of Edinburgh are awakened by a massive flash of light and then an enormous explosion.
And we're told that the sound of the explosion was equivalent to the firing of 30 cannons.
And the next day, Mary writes to her ambassador in France with news of what had happened.
The matter is horrible, she wrote. And so strange as we
believe the like was never heard of in any country. Darnley, her husband, the man with more enemies
probably than any man has ever had in Scotland, is dead. By whom it has been done, Mary writes to the ambassador in France, or in what matter, it
appears not as yet.
Crikey.
Well, on that bombshell, Tom, I'm so excited.
I think we should take a break.
And when we return after the break, we will investigate, we will don a true crime podcasting kilts.
And we will investigate what happened in the 24 hours
leading up to Lord Darnley's murder.
Tom, I think we should name the key conspirators.
We should unmask the plotters.
And we will answer the crucial question.
Who did it and was it Mary Queen of Scots?
So we'll see you after the break.
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Welcome back to The Rest Is History, exciting true crime podcasting with a Scottish twist.
So Tom, let's kick off in a place very close to your heart, which is Berwick on the
Anglo-Scottish border. There's a bloke there called Sir William Drury and he is England's eyes and
ears. He's the marshal of the town. He's basically an intelligence officer and he thinks he knows
what's been going on, doesn't he? Because he sends a report within a day of Darnley's murder to
Elizabeth the First Chief
Minister William Cecil.
So take us into that bit of the story.
Yeah, so he has agents everywhere in Edinburgh and this initial report establishes the kind
of parameters of the mystery, but he will continue to send increasingly detailed, increasingly
forensic accounts of what he thinks happened. And I think
that these reports combined with, we get confessions from participants in the conspiracy, testimonials
from witnesses, and you put them all together. And I think that it does enable a fairly accurate
account of the events that culminated in the death of Darnley to be drawn up.
So when you look at these, what do they tell us?
So let's look at Mary and Darnley first.
Just to recap, Darnley had arrived at the place of his murder on the 1st of February
1567.
And this is Kirkfield, which is a complex of houses built beside an old ruined church
on the southern fringes of Edinburgh and the
wall that had been built in the wake of the Battle of Flodden to keep the English out
runs right past it.
It's a very well chosen location for an invalid to recuperate.
It's on a hill so it's above the kind of smoke and filth of Edinburgh.
It's surrounded by gardens so there's fresh air there, very much more salubrious than Holyrood. And as we said, by the 9th of February, Darnley has been convalescing there
for a week and a half and he's pretty much ready to go. The evening before Darnley is
due to come back to Holyrood, Mary arrives in the evening with a whole train of lords
and ladies, Bothwell very prominent among them, and they're celebrating this. They're
celebrating the fact that Darnley will be coming back to join Mary the following day.
And Mary is in an excellent mood.
She feels that she's got Darnley back under her influence.
He seems much more amenable than he had been.
And that evening, Darnley is off his face on whiskey.
He's developed a real taste for it.
He starts groping her very publicly in front of everyone.
And rather than giving him a slap or telling him to leave her alone, she gives him a ring as a token of her affection.
So things seem to be looking up for the happy couple. But I think the real reason that she's
happy has nothing to do with Darnley and everything to do with these ongoing private negotiations
with Elizabeth in England. It really looks now as though Mary's great dream of being publicly
acknowledged as Elizabeth's heir might be on the verge of fulfillment. I mean, very hard to know
with Elizabeth because she's always kind of playing hard to get, but Mary, I think, genuinely
believes that her great dream might be close to fulfillment. So, Darnley wants Mary to stay with
him the night, but Mary doesn't because
one of her favorite servants has got married that afternoon and is holding a great celebration,
a kind of wedding mask, and Mary has promised to go. Mary always keeps her promises to her
servants and of course, also, she likes to dance. She doesn't want to miss out on that.
So she leaves Darnley. She arrives back at Holyrood about 11 o'clock,
she attends her servant's mask, but she doesn't stay too long. She's in bed by half past midnight
and then at two o'clock, so an hour and a half later, she is woken by the destruction of Darnley's
house at Kirk of Fields. And having heard the explosion, she summons Bothwell, who of course
is the sheriff of Edinburgh, so it's his responsibility to investigate and Bothwell goes off.
And when he comes back and he says that the house has been blown up and that Darnley has
been found dead, witnesses are pretty much agreed that she is appalled by the news.
And in a way that one might think is perhaps typical of Mary, she's appalled less for Darnley
than by the thought that it might have been targeted at her.
She says, this crime was dressed as well for us as for the king, for we lay the most part
of all the last week in that same lodging and was there accompanied with the most part
of the lords that are in this town that same night.
So it's all about her basically.
But also, and I think the extra reason why she's devastated is that she knows how Darnley's
murder is going to land across Europe.
This is going to be seen by the crowned heads of Christendom as regicide, which they obviously
view as being a terrible crime.
They rank him as a king even though he isn't one.
He's married to a queen.
I mean, he's not officially a king, but they will see it as effectively being regicide.
And she knows that one person who will be absolutely appalled is her royal cousin, Elizabeth
of England, with whom she has been in negotiations.
So that I think is the key point.
The timing of Darnley's murder for Mary could not have been worse.
So if Mary didn't authorize or prove the murder, then who did?
Well, by early May, you remember, we've got this
Englishman in Berwick. Yeah, this guy, Sir William Drury, he
thinks he has cracked the case. And so he writes to Cecil and he names the two leading culprits. And probably the name of these
two leading culprits will not come as a surprise to listeners.
Morton, Drury writes, is noted to have assured friendship to Bothwell, which to be the thankfuller
now for his favor showed him in his absence
and trouble, he intended to continue.
And this is a brilliant piece of detective work.
Most people think that Bothwell and Morton are deadly enemies.
They'd been on opposed sides in the the embroilio around the murder of Ritcio.
But actually, what Drury has found out is that it was Bothwell who had pushed Mary to
pardon Morton.
And the reason that he had done that was because Bothwell knew that even though he'd been opposed
to Morton over the Ritzio plot, any resentment that Morton might feel towards Bothwell is
as nothing compared to the utter loathing that Morton has for Darnley, who had double
crossed him over the Ritzio plot.
And so Bothwell and Morton and Maitland as well had met up on the 14th of January and
they had had discussions.
And we left it hanging in the previous half, what were these discussions about?
Well, Drury has found out what these discussions were about.
They were committing themselves to the
murder of Darnley. Very rapidly, they had succeeded in signing up large numbers of other prominent
Scottish nobles. What had motivated all of them, so Morton is obviously motivated by personal
resentment, but the number of people who were prepared to sign up to the murder of Darnley
reflects the fact that he is seen as a massive, massive problem to be eliminated.
And it's very telling, for instance, that one of the conspirators seems to have been
the lead of Trakair, who was the man who had witnessed Darnley's terrible behavior at his
house.
Yeah.
Darnley's residence in Kirk of Fields provide the conspirators with the perfect opportunity.
But of course, the moment he leaves Kierkefield and goes back to Mary, it then becomes much
harder to eliminate him without also killing Mary, which they don't want to do.
And Bothwell, who has been in close attendance on Mary throughout, I mean, he's absolutely
keeping abreast of Darnley's potential movements.
And so that's why it's the night before he's due to leave
that they realize, well, we've got to go for it. It is also Bothwell who supplies the gun powder
for the explosion, and he can do that because he is the sheriff of Edinburgh, and so people would
expect to see him in charge of men who were kind of, you know, rumbling through the streets of
Edinburgh with wagons or whatever. So on the evening of the 9th of February, as Mary and Darnley are partying in the rooms
above them, Morton's men are mining the cellars of the house.
And in fact, Mary runs into one of these people.
He'd been a page of Bothwell.
He's now become a valet to Mary and he has the nickname of French Paris.
And Mary sees him and says, Jesus Paris, how
begrimed you are.
Oh, what a thing to say to somebody.
I mean, mad.
His face is streaked, but Mary can see through the dirt that he is blushing.
But he says nothing, just twists his cap.
How begrimed you are.
I'd like to use that.
I'm going to use that line.
You can use it to Arthur, surely.
If he's...
I will. Well, he's always begrimed, to be fair.
What I don't understand, right, I get the explosion, begrimed people have mined this
building and it's blown up. What I don't get is why Darnley didn't die in the explosion.
Why is he lying in the garden next to a chair, a rope and a cloak? Are the Freemasons involved
in some peculiar way before being founded?
Yeah, this is the whole Agatha Christie dimension to it, which is always so intrigued and fascinated
people and I think complicated attempts to solve the murder. Guy's explanation, which is
essentially a refinement of the reports that Drury has been sending to Cecil. So I think
Drury is the guy who really nails it. Drury reports to Cecil that
on the night of Darnley's murder, he suspects nothing of what is to come. He makes his farewells
to Mary and then he goes to bed. And shortly afterwards, he's woken by the sounds of muffled
footsteps from below. He looks out of a side window and he sees kind of shadowy cloaked figures stealthily
moving around.
He is a guy who knows he has lots of enemies.
He assumes the worst and he reaches for a thick fur cloak.
He then wakes his valet and other servants and he goes to a window that looks directly
out over the city wall, which kind of adjoins the house in which he's in. The servants get a chair and they tie a rope to this chair and they then lower Darnley
and his valet into the street below, so outside the city wall. However, disaster.
Drury's greatest investigative achievement has been to identify what happens next and in particular
to identify the man who had been on patrol in the street in case of just such an eventuality.
And this is a guy we've already met. He's a bloke called Andrew Kerr of Falden side
and he was the man who in the course of the Rizzio murder had pointed a loaded gun at
Mary's pregnant belly.
He as one of the Rizio conspirators is as consumed with hatred for Darnley as Morton
and like Morton is absolutely set on getting his revenge and this is despite the fact that
Darnley is actually a kinsman of Andrew Kerr. And to this end, Kerr, like Morton,
has teamed up with Bothwell. Andrew writes to Cecil in details what happened next.
The King was long of dying and to his strengths made debate for his life, which essentially means
that he had tried to reason with Kerr and his men. And this report is substantiated in a remarkable way by the testimony of old women who lived
in cottages on the side of this road and who were interrogated by agents of the Scottish
Privy Council.
And one of these women reported hearing Darnley cry out, Oh, my kinsman, have mercy on me
for the love of him who had mercy on all the world.
But it's no good. Darnley and his valet are both strangled, so that's why there are no marks on their
bodies. And then they are taken and laid out in a neighbouring garden and the chair, the
rope and the cloak are dumped beside them. Now, the issue obviously is Darnley is dead,
so do they need to blow up the house? the problem is that there might be all kinds of evidence they don't really want the gun powder to be found because then the lead might go back to both well so they think i will let's blow it up anyway so that's what they do.
The fact that you have this kind of, you know, the chair and the rope and everything in the garden and the explosion is what has made it such an enduring and tantalising mystery
and why it's been so hard for people to solve.
But I think that that solution that Guy gives in his book, I mean, it seems to me the likeliest
explanation for what actually happened.
So it's not a ritualistic killing and it's not been designed that way.
No, it's just the result of him having tried to escape and this bloke Kerr kind of finding
him.
So they strangled him.
Why didn't they just stab him?
That worked with Ritio.
Why the strangulation?
That's my question.
I suppose to make his death seem as mysterious as possible to kind of throw people off the
scent.
And also you just want to mix things up a bit.
You don't want to just use the same method every time.
Yeah, exactly. They've already done the whole stabbing stuff.
Right.
Yeah.
Try something different.
I mean, what would it be brilliant if they'd had kind of 56 stab wounds like
with Rizzio, but yeah, yeah, but no.
All right.
So a couple of questions that are still hanging.
Number one, is it plausible that as Elizabeth sort of suggested in that letter, that
Mary had been
looking through her fingers at the deed that she, okay, maybe she didn't officially authorise
it formally, but maybe she kind of knew that it was in the air and she just gave them a
little wink or she just, or she did nothing.
She knew it was coming, but she did nothing to stop it.
Well, it's a very good question.
And we know of someone who did exactly that and this is the Earl of Moray, whom Maitland, in a very suggestive prefiguring of Elizabeth's use of the same
phrase in her letter to Mary, had correctly predicted that although he wouldn't participate
in the plot against Darnley, he would look through his fingers at preparations for the
murder. So in other words, he would give it a nod and a wink.
Basically, Moray knew what was going to happen and he didn't inform Mary.
And instead, aware that things were coming to a head, he had absented
himself from Edinburgh and retreated to his estate in Fife so that he could
say, look, nothing to do with me, mate.
Mary, of course, by contrast, I mean, she spends the evening before Darnley's murder, you know, partying in a house that is absolutely packed
with gunpowder, which seems to me a very strong circumstantial piece of evidence that she knew
nothing whatsoever of the crime. And also there was a slight hint of amusement when
you read Antonia Fraser's account of Mary's tender heart.
Such a kind person.
You know, I think that's right.
And in fact, I mean, you know, from your perspective, I would imagine.
Yeah.
That's part of the problem with Mary.
She is too tender hearted.
Don't play the game unless you're going to play it properly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
That's my take on history generally.
I think the conspirators feel like you do.
That's why they don't tell her.
That's why they don't even hint at it because they're worried that she might step in and say, no,
you're not allowed to do this. And I think also another key piece of evidence that Mary
didn't do it is her evident panic when she is told that Darnley had been killed because
she does genuinely, it seems to me, she's very, very worried that she had been the target.
So as Guy puts it, Mary was a good actress, but not this good.
So all of that, I think, kind of adds up to absolve Mary of the crime.
But just to reiterate, the key piece of evidence, I think, is that the timing for her is terrible
in relation to her negotiations with Elizabeth, because she has everything to lose and actually
in the event she does, because that letter from Elizabeth, which we began this episode with, I mean, it's a warning
shot across Mary's bow as it's saying essentially, you know, solve the crime, arraign those who
are responsible for it or else there's no way that you are going to be my heir.
Does Mary solve the crime? The answer, I guess, is no. And this is disastrous for Mary.
Yeah. And her failure to do that results, I mean, in her total ruin.
And that, of course, leads to the second puzzle, which is why doesn't she manage to solve the
crime?
Because as we know, there are very detailed and effective investigations.
There are people from the Privy Council who are interviewing the old women and taking
down their records.
There's a jury's report that's gone to Cecil. Why aren't these
being collated and publicized rather than, as actually happens, being suppressed and in lots
of cases completely forgotten? And the answer again, I think, is pretty obvious. It's because
those who commissioned these reports had every interest in suppressing them because the Privy
Council, I mean, is absolutely full of people who had actually been responsible for Darnley's murder.
So Bothwell, Morton, Maitland, and of those three, Bothwell, Morton, Maitland, two in
particular have a real reason to lie low and allow the rumour to do its work because one
of those three is being fingered for the crime.
And so the other two can say, well,
let's lie low and let him take the blame.
And the person who is being fingered for it is Bothwell.
And accusations against Bothwell are starting to be laid within a week of Darnley's murder
by his father, the Earl of Lennox.
Placards and graffiti and cartoons start to appear across the streets of Edinburgh
charging Bothwell directly with the murder kind of caricatures of Bothwell start appearing on buildings and
They have the label here is the murder of the king
And this of course is very bad news for Bothwell
but it is also very very bad news for Mary because
also very, very bad news for Mary because rumors have been swirling throughout Scotland long before Darnley's murder that Mary has got a real crush on Bothwell.
And some of the evidence for this is bogus.
So for instance, the story that she had ridden alone to the Hermitage when Bothwell had been
stabbed, that wasn't true.
But the fact the story was told is suggestive of how the trend of gossip
is going. And some of the stories are true. So for instance, Mary had given Bothwell a
spectacular blue suit at the christening and she had kind of basically employed Bothwell
to take the place of Darnley, her husband, who had refused to attend. So you can kind
of see how these rumors, they have legs. And because of that, it doesn't take long for graffiti to start appearing on the walls
of Edinburgh charging that not only is Bothwell guilty of Darnley's murder, but Mary is as
well.
And what about the English dimension to this, Tom?
Because we started the whole episode with Elizabeth the First letter.
What about Elizabeth and her Chief Minister Cecil?
What do they make of all this? Are they preparing to use this against Mary effectively, sort
of cynically?
Cecil definitely. We've been talking throughout this series how Cecil is Mary's great hidden
enemy. He's actively working to stop Mary succeeding to the English throne, but also
he's pretty keen on toppling Mary from her own throne. And so he sees a huge opportunity here. Why on earth would he publish anything
that might help to absolve Mary? And I think definitely he is kind of pouring poison into
Elizabeth's ear. So remember that phrase, looking through fingers, that Maitland had
applied to Moray and that Elizabeth writes in her letter to Mary. I
think it's very easy to imagine Cecil having dropped precisely that phrase into conversation
with Elizabeth and Elizabeth then using it herself in her letter. And then there is that
anonymous traitor whom Elizabeth referred to in her letter comparing him to the minister
of Satan. She doesn't need to name him because it's so self-evidently Bothwell. Now you ask, does Elizabeth, like
Cecil, want to see Mary ruined? No, she absolutely doesn't. Quite the opposite. So just to quote
that letter again, I exhort you, I counsel you, and I beseech you to take this thing
so much to heart that you will not fear to touch even him whom you have nearest to you if the thing touches him."
What Elizabeth's trying to do is to help Mary safeguard her throne and not allow her reputation
to be torched by this devastating accumulation of hostile rumor of which two rumors in particular
are the most lethal.
One that she had joined with Bothwell in the plot to
murder Darnley. And secondly, that she had done this out of an adulterous passion for
Bothwell. And so Elizabeth is saying, for God's sake, you know, have nothing to do with
Bothwell, arraign him, convict him, execute him. But the big question is, of course, will Mary listen to this self-evidently
excellent advice?
Well, Mary has a history in this series of making very poor decisions.
So next time we will discover whether she redeems herself and makes the right choice
or whether things get even darker for her.
Now the only way to listen to that episode right now, because I imagine most people are gagging to find out the answer, the only way to do it is to join our own murderous
conspiracy, The Rest Is History Club, at therestishistory.com. If you do that, you can hear right away what
happened next in this extraordinary story. Goodbye.
Bye bye.