大象传媒


Explore the 大象传媒
3 Oct 2014

大象传媒 Homepage
大象传媒 Radio

Radio 4
Radio 4 History
大象传媒 History

This Sceptred Isle

Dynasties

55 BC - 1087

1087 - 1327

1327 - 1547

1547 - 1660

1660 - 1702

1702 - 1760

1760 - 1792

1792 - 1837

1837 - 1861

1861 - 1901

1901 - 1919

1920 - 1939

1940 - 1959

1960 - 1979

1980 - 1999


 

Contact Us

Help


Like this page?
Send it to a friend!


This Sceptred Isle

The Spinster, the Hapsburg and the Scottish Widow
The House of Parliament called upon Elizabeth I to marry - they said it was her duty. Elizabeth did not want to choose a husband from her Court - her authority might be weakened and here would be fighting amongs the suitors. She also feared marriage with one of the great houses of Europe - this would mean entanglement in European policy.

A queen whose head did not rule her heart in this way was Mary Queen of Scots. She had grown up in France, was more French than Scottish and spoke no English. However many saw her as the rightful Queen of England and she was the centre of many Catholic plots to overthrow Elizabeth who finally ordered her execution in 1587.

Meanwhile the English and the Spanish had fallen out over the Netherlands - a Catholic-dominated state undergoing a Protestant revolution. English support of this revolution led to Elizabeth I's excommunication. The Spanish and English were also battling at sea. In 1568 Cecil ordered the seizure of Spanish treasure ships on their way to the Netherlands and relations with Philip of Spain were strained to the point of war.

Mary, Queen of Scotland
Mary, Queen of Scotland
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS (1542-1587)

  • Queen of Scotland 1542-1567
  • Became Queen at six days old
  • Sent to France while her mother Mary of Guise ruled Scotland
  • Queen of France (1559-1560) until her husband Francis II's early death
  • Returned to Scotland in 1561, the unhappy Catholic monarch of a country undergoing a Protestant revolution
  • Married her cousin Henry Stewart Earl of Darnley in 1566
  • Had a son James VI of Scotland and I of England
  • On Darnley's murder, Mary married James Hepburn Earl of Bothwell
  • Deposed from the Scottish throne in 1567
  • Fled to England in 1568.
  • Imprisoned in England after being tried and found guilty of Darnley's murder
  • Two decades later and under much pressure, Elizabeth I ordered Mary's execution
  • Died at Fotheringhay Castle, Northants, in 1587

did you know?
Elizabeth I nearly died of smallpox in 1562.

Select historical period
previousnext

/home/system/data/timb/kwikquiz.dat does not exist

/home/system/data/timb/kwikquiz.html does not exist

Chronology
1558England loses Calais to France
Mary I dies
Elizabeth I becomes Queen of England
1565Mary Queen of Scots marries Lord Darnley
1567Darnley is murdered and Mary marries Bothwell
Mary abdicates and James becomes VI of Scotland
(later I of England)
1568Mary flees to England and is imprisoned
1570The Pope excommunicates Elizabeth I
1587Execution of Mary Queen of Scots
1588The Spanish Armada is defeated
1603Elizabeth I dies
James I becomes King of England

SUITORS OF ELIZABETH I
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester
Philip II of Spain
Archduke Charles of Austria
Henry Duke of Anjou
Francis of Valois, Duke of Alencon
Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex
HUSBANDS OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Francis II of France
Henry Stewart, Earl of Darnley
James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell


About the 大象传媒 | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy