Mary Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley
by Alison Weir
My rating: 5out of 5 stars
Alison Weir surpassed herself penning this tome, the first
in my opinion to rival Antonia Fraser's 1969 Mary Queen of Scots.
Via Mary Stuart runs the continuous line of succession, from Plantagenets &
Tudors, down to England's current royals.
Mary has always polarised debate, first when alive and then,
through the centuries, from the grave. Regardless which account we accept, she
cannot be seen as entirely blameless for her unfortunate life. It's also beyond
question that too much blinkered blame has gone her way, backwards in time.
Her murdered second husband Henry, Lord Darnley, was a hideous character who
arguably deserved his comeuppance. If Mary was privy to his murder plot, we can
hardly blame her. It's an equally short-sighted assumption that anyone put in
Mary's position would not have conspired towards her liberty when so unjustly
imprisoned for so long by Queen Elizabeth I. She was viciously provoked, set up
and entrapped into her 'treason' against Elizabeth.
Mary Stuart, great-niece of England's King Henry VIII, was 6 days old when her
father, King James V of Scotland, died and she acceded to his throne. Uniting
France and Scotland against conflict with Henry VIII's England, France's King
Henry II negotiated little Mary's marriage to his three-year-old son, the
Dauphin Francis. Five-year-old Mary was shipped to France and spent thirteen
years at the French royal court.
Despite that regal upbringing largely moulding her character, Mary's detractors
criticise her limited grasp of her native Scottish subjects who were then,
largely, backwater bog and highland dwellers. Yet this eventually anointed
queen of France had not seen Scotland since being spirited away as an infant.
Widowed at eighteen, Mary was no longer wanted in the French court by her
mother-in-law, France's new regent, Catherine de Medici. Though she could have
retired there in splendour, remarrying any prince in Christendom, Mary instead
returned to her homeland to start anew.
In vain she reached out to her surly Scottish subjects who, after ceremonial
formalities, snubbed her as a high-flying foreigner. They eyed her with
suspicion from the minute she disembarked in her mourning garb, a grown woman
and stranger. They considered this newly arrived Catholic head of state, in
their Protestant land, anomalous. This sentiment was fuelled by Protestant
reformist preacher John Knox, who vehemently campaigned against Mary.
Worse still, she was female.
Across the border, her less beautiful but wilier cousin, Elizabeth, remained
contentiously unwed. Resentful of Mary's youth and fecundity, the childless
Elizabeth also felt threatened by Mary's strong claim to England's shaky
throne.
After two more short and unpopular marriages, Mary was overthrown and
imprisoned in Scotland. Eventually escaping, she shaved her head for disguise,
donned peasant's clothing and fled, by fishing boat, to England. Hoping for
Elizabeth's support, Mary was instead imprisoned and held captive for
eighteen-and-a-half years.
After despairingly plotting towards her liberty (making herself complicit in
linked plots for Elizabeth's assassination), Mary was entrapped and executed.
This unprecedented regicide officially triggered the Spanish Armada. Catholic
Philip of Spain had been waiting for an excuse to take England and curb the
spread of Protestantism in Europe. As was her final wish, Mary became a
Catholic martyr.
Mary's apologists argue she was a kind, intelligent woman, a romantic icon of
her day. She was indeed the subject of sonnet and pros, by Ronsard no less. Her
beauty and personal charm are legendary.
Neither her cruellest detractors nor most ardent apologists are fully right or
wrong. The truth, as always, lies somewhere in the middle. This is where Alison
Weir's insightful, brilliantly researched and presented account places it.
The reader is left with a balanced understanding of events while empathising
with, and recognising the obvious mistakes of, a desperate woman. I loved this
book and reread it to reabsorb the literary quality and exquisite detail.
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