King Of Scotland James V STEWART
- Born: 10 Apr 1512, Linlithgow Palace, Lothian Scotland
- Marriage: (1): Mary DE GUISE-LORRAINE
- Marriage: (2): Margaret ERSKINE
- Marriage: (3): Eupheme ELPHINSTONE
- Marriage: (4): Helen STEWART
- Marriage: (5): Christian BERCLAY
- Marriage: (6): Elizabeth STEWART
- Marriage: (7): Madeleine DE VALOIS Jan 1536-1537, Notre Dame, Paris,
France
- Died: 14 Dec 1542, Falkland Palace, Fife, Scotland at age 30
General
Notes:
James V, born 10th April 1512 and
died 14th December 1542, was the seventh Stuart king of Scotland (1513-42), the
son of James IV. In 1514 James V's mother, Margaret Tudor, daughter of England's
Henry VII, married Archibald Douglas, 6th earl of Angus. John Stuart, duke of
Albany, became regent and a power struggle ensued among factions controlled by
Albany, Angus and Margaret. For a time, Angus, a pro-English Protestant
supporter, held James prisoner (1526-28). When James reached his majority he
sided with Scotland's pro-French Catholic faction against the English. On 1st
January 1537 he married Madeleine, the daughter of Francis I of France, and
received a large dowry. She died the following July, and James married (1538)
Mary of Guise. His aggressive, vindictive policies lost him the support of the
nobility, weakening his army and contributing to his defeat by the English at
Solway Moss in 1542. Soon after this battle, he died at Falkland Palace leaving
a week-old daughter, Mary Queen of Scots to succeed him.
Far from
thinking about remarrying, Mary mourned her late husband and gave birth to her
second son, Louis on 4 August 1537. However, James V of Scotland having lost a
first bride was well intent on procuring himself another French spouse to
further the interests of the Franco-Scottish alliance against England.His uncle
Henry VIII of England, getting wind of his plans decided to prevent this
dangerous union by asking for Mary's hand for himself.Half-amused and
half-disconcerted, Francis I of France accepted James's proposals over Henry's
and conveyed his wishes to Mary's father Claud. Mary received the news with
shock and alarm. She did not rejoice at the prospect of leaving family and
country to be married off to a notoriously neurotic and unstable King.Especially
now that she had just lost little Louis aged only four months.Her father Claud
was caught in a diplomatic wrangle.He tried to delay matters as much as he could
until James, probably sensing her reluctance, wrote her a letter in which he
appealed to her for advice and support. Mary, finding once more a sense of
purpose, accepted the offer and hurried plans for departure. On 9 May 1538 she
was married to James in her castle of Châteaudun through Robert, Lord Maxwell
acting as proxy. On 10 June, forced to leave little Francis behind, she embarked
at Le Havres accompanied by her father, sister Louise and a household of French
servants. Just like her daughter, Mary Queen of Scots would later stare
mournfully at the disappearing French coast, so she did but also discovering
that, like her, she was a good sailor and remained unaffected by seasickness. On
Trinity Sunday Mary and her fleet touched Scottish soil at Balcomie near St
Andrews. Confirmation of her marriage to James and rejoicings followed. Mary was
pleasantly surprised by the welcome that she got and by what she saw. She had
been led to believe that Scotland was barbaric and uncultivated but visits to
her new domains such as Falkland Palace, Linlithgow Palace, Stirling Castle and
Edinburgh Castle convinced her of the contrary.
Mary's task was now to
prove to her new husband that she was worthy of the life he offered her.She
found that James had little time for her and kept his cards close to his chest,
being used to a bachelor life and to directing his own affairs.Homesickness was
worse than she had expected, and she was shocked by the lack of reverence with
which the nobility treated James. However, keen to integrate herself within her
new surroundings, she resolved to learn everything there was to know about
Scotland.She encouraged marriages between members of her own household and the
Scots, learned to speak Scot, and made herself indispensable to
James.Conversely, she also tried to introduce some Renaissance refinement into
the predominantly medieval Scottish way of life.Soon, French fashion and ideas
began to permeate the country. At every opportunity she sent messengers to
France for cloth, plant cuttings, masons and other things, while keeping an
affectionate correspondence with her mother Antoinette. But one thing worried
Mary; after a year of marriage, there was still no sign of an heir for James.Her
prayers were finally answered and overjoyed by the news of his wife's pregnancy,
James wasted no more time to crown her Queen of Scotland.The coronation took
place at Edinburgh Castle on 22 February 1540 and baby James was born at St
Andrews on 22 May of the same year. As befitted the heir to the throne, the
child would have to remain in St Andrews and his education taken out of the
Queen's hands.Unfortunately, his father remained prone to fits of depression and
by early autumn 1540, had an old friend arrested and executed for allegedly
plotting against him.The friend in question was Sir James Hamilton of Finnart
but not a shred of evidence existed against him.James later suffered terrible
nightmares in which Lord Hamilton returned to cut off both his arms and promised
to return to cut off his head.In the meantime, alarming reports that baby James
was ill reached Mary who was pregnant again.However, he soon recovered and Mary
prepared herself for the birth of her second child.On 24 April 1541 she gave
birth at Stirling Castle to another son, Robert. However, within days of the
christening, little James's health was once more in jeopardy.James rode to St
Andrews but arrived too late to see his son alive.Distraught, James had yet
another tragedy to face that day: his second son had also died while he was
away.Mary was in mourning once more.There were rumours that the children had
been poisoned, probably by the slighted Hamiltons who had lost their claim to
the throne with their births, but these were never substantiated.The two boys
were transferred to Edinburgh and buried at Holyrood Abbey.
If Mary and
James were at first united in their grief and tried to keep up appearances, all
was not well between them.The death of his only two legitimate sons had plunged
James into an even deeper depression and paranoia.He suspected every one of his
Lords of plotting to overthrow and assassinate him.The Lords, on their side, saw
James's condition with increasing disquiet.There is no doubt that James's fears
were not groundless: Lord Hamilton for one saw his chances of becoming the next
King of Scotland restored, now that the only heirs had died and that James's
health was clearly on the wane.On the other hand, King Henry VIII of England was
in constant dispute with James over his unwilligness to break his ties with the
Catholic Church.But now, this anxiety even turned itself against his own wife
Mary. John Knox, who was both a mysoginist and xenophobe seized the opportunity
to insinuate that she was having an affair with Cardinal Beaton, a married
family man old enough to be her father.James on his side, had begun to seek
refuge in physical pleasures and every one of his indiscretions were related to
Mary in an effort to widen the rift between them.Mary's distress was increased
by the fear that she might not get pregnant again but, being a highly
intelligent woman and harbouring a keen interest in public affairs, she turned
away from the domestic sphere to concentrate on the financial administration of
her household.Then, Mary discovered that she was carrying another child.Although
James welcomed the thought of a new heir, his mind was preoccupied by Henry
VIII.The King of England had lost his patience and rallied James's mortal
enemies, the Earl of Angus and his brother Sir George Douglas with a small
force.They were defeated at Kelso but when James rode to the Borders to
retaliate, the divided loyalties of his Lords caused him a bitter defeat at
Solway Moss.James's spirit was irretrievably broken; paying a last visit to his
wife at Linlithgow Palace, he then rode on to Falkland Palace where, on 14
December 1542, he died suddenly after hearing the news of his daughter's birth a
few days earlier.The question which now posed itself was that of the Regency.
Among the contenders were of course Lord Hamilton, Earl of Arran being second in
line but how could Mary be sure that he would resist the temptation of
eliminating the only obstacle which lay between himself and the throne: her
new-born daughter?On the other hand, there was Cardinal Beaton with his
pro-French policies, accused of forging James's will as he lay confused and
dying at Falkland.In terms of her marriage contract, Mary was entitled to return
to France but also to be Queen Regent.Although the idea must have been tempting
to her, she had no desire to leave her daughter behind.Furthermore, she had
always endeavoured to play an active role in Scottish public affairs and she
would continue to do so, so that she could hand over a stable country to her
daughter when she came to rule.On 3 January 1543 the Earl of Arran was
proclaimed Lord Governor of Scotland, by the Privy Council and Cardinal Beaton
was made Chancellor of Scotland a week later to the dismay of the former. As
James V's funeral was being carried out in Edinburgh, Mary stayed guarding her
child within the safety of the walls of Linlithgow Palace.
Mary soon
found herself embroiled in a cat and mouse game between Henry VIII's party and
the Earl of Arran.Henry had started pressing Arran on the question of the royal
marriage between his son Edward and little Mary.Mary, having no intention of
agreeing to this alliance was nevertheless obliged to act tactfully for fear of
provoking an English invasion.The sudden reappearance of Sir George Douglas did
nothing to reassure her.Former enemy of her late husband and working for Henry
VIII, his influence over Arran could only be detrimental to her own
interests.Indeed, Henry's plan was to turn Arran's sympathies in favour of
England and to get rid of Cardinal Beaton.For Mary, lacking authority in her
present position as James's widow, losing Beaton was a disaster.Her fears were
confirmed when Beaton was suddenly kidnapped at the Palace of Holyroodhouse
during a meeting of the Privy Council.With Beaton safely imprisoned at the
Castle of Dalkeith, Arran now proceeded to impose his own servants on Mary's
household at Linlightgow.Forbidding her to leave for the safety of Stirling
Castle, her own property, he ensured that Mary was unable to escape and seek
French support. Mary, no stranger to the art of intrigue, now resorted to a more
subtle and skillfull game.Pretending to agree to the marriage of her daughter to
the English heir, she discredited Arran in the eyes of Henry's envoy, Sir Ralph
Sadler, and demanded that Beaton be released.Playing one against the other, she
obtained from Arran that Beaton be released into the custody of one of her
supporters, Lord Seton.Beaton soon escaped to his own Castle of St Andrews,
causing Henry's wrath to descend on Arran.But Arran's loyalties were changing
once more. His half-brother John Hamilton, Abbot of Paisley had returned from
France and was urging him to cut ties with England. In the meantime though,
Arran's major rival, the Earl of Lennox, had also been dragged back from the
French court by Mary.Mary had enticed him over to Scotland with the promise of
making him Governor of Scotland in place of Arran, and falsely, to make him her
spouse.Arran and Lennox, eternal rivals, would always sit on opposite sides of
the fence. On 1st July 1543 the Treaties of Greenwich were ratified whereby it
was agreed that baby Mary would marry Edward at the age of eleven, and peace
between England and Scotland was to be assured during their lifetime.There
followed a flurried confrontation between Arran's men and Mary's supporters at
Linlithgow. The outcome was that it was agreed that Mary would be allowed to
leave for Stirling and that her daughter would be put in the care of two Lords
chosen by Arran, Lords Livingston and Lindsay, and two others chosen by Lennox,
Lords Graham and Erskine.Arran suddenly decided to switch sides again and was
reconciled with Beaton.
But the road to the Regency would be a twisted
and treacherous one for Mary. Having regained a position of power by becoming
the principal member of the Council of Regency, Mary was now able to keep the
rebellious Arran under control.However, Lennox realised that Mary's promise of
marriage was but an empty one, and decided to approach Henry VIII with a view to
marrying his niece Lady Margaret Douglas. In the meantime, the French help which
Mary had requested from Francis arrived in the form of money and the French
ambassador, Jacques de la Brosse.Lennox, took this opportunity to compensate
himself for his trouble and seized the money at Dumbarton Castle where he was in
attendance.In Jacques de la Brosse Mary found a valuable ally, as she felt
renewed irritation towards Arran's mismanagement of public funds and
attitude.She had been advised to draw Lennox back into her party as he was her
most likely tool against Arran.She therefore summoned Lennox at Stirling and
promised him her daughter's hand to gain time.Lennox was not fooled however and
while declaring his allegiance to Mary, continued his secret correspondence with
Henry.The danger from England was by now very real and Mary acted by arresting
the pro-English Lords in her midst.By December 1543, Parliament declared that
because Henry had broken the peace by seizing Scottish ships, the Treaties of
Greenwich were invalidated.Angus and his followers rose up against the repeal of
the Treaties but were defeated by Beaton and Arran.And, like so many others
forced and bribed to Mary's cause, they too played a double game.At the
beginning of May 1544, English ships arrived and the Earl of Hertford and his
men disembarked near Leith under instruction to destroy everything in his
path.Meeting with unexpectedly robust resistance, the English nevertheless
managed to ransack Edinburgh and Leith, Haddington, Dunbar and the Stirling
area, desecrating sacred places and killing men, women and children alike.Mary
blamed Arran for his inertia during those raids.Now well intent on removing him
from power she enlisted the help of George Douglas, who although untrustworthy,
possessed the expertise that she needed.At a General Council, Arran was accused
of destroying the realm and breaking the truce with England but Arran made yet
another disappearing act.This was the last straw and it was agreed that Mary
should now become Regent.The war was not won yet as Mary was faced with the
problem of persuading her people that she could obtain French assistance, while
dealing with her disloyal and divided Lords and the rebellious Arran.Mary had to
admit that she was not strong enough to depose Arran and a reconciliation was
her only way out for the time being.Arran thus remained Lord Governor but guided
by a special Council led by Mary.
Scotland was at war for the next five
years in what has come to be known as the "Rough Wooing".The usual squabbles
between Beaton and Arran continued, while the latter launched a punitive raid in
Jedburgh against the "assured Scots", those who had defected to the English
enemy.This led to a Scottish victory in February 1545 at Ancrum Moor.The French
fleet led by Jacques de Montgomery, Seigneur de Lorges, disembarked at Dumbarton
in June but by the autumn, the Earl of Hertford was back burning down the abbeys
of Kelso, Melrose, Dryburgh and Jedburgh amongst others. To console themselves,
the Scots prepared to forfeit Lennox who was by now in England and married to
Lady Margaret Douglas as promised by Henry VIII.A skirmish issued between
Lorges, who knew and liked Lennox and Beaton. In the meantime, the unreliable
Arran was again plotting to marry off his son to Mary's daughter.Beaton was
still out of favour with Mary and with a large number of the Protestants who
resented his wealth, way of life and enthusiasm for burning heretics.In March
1546, he had sent a George Wishart to the stake.But it was a quarrel over land
with a Norman Leslie which was to be the last nail in his coffin.On 29 May 1546,
Leslie accompanied by Peter Carmichael of Balmedie and James Melville broke into
Beaton's Castle of St Andrews, murdered him and besieged the castle.They were
joined by John Knox.The Earl of Huntly succeeded Beaton and Mary sent Arran to
re-capture the castle and avenge Beaton's death.However, Beaton having
previously kept Arran's son as hostage in the castle, Arran did not dare do
anything too drastic which might put his life in jeopardy.The siege therefore
continued well into the following spring.France and England had just signed a
peace treaty in which Scotland was trying to be included, when Henry VIII died
in January 1547, leaving the Earl of Hertford in power.On the French side
Francis I also died four months later, but his successor Henry II assured Mary
of his support. This materialised in July when the French fleet headed by Leon
Strozzi landed and finally re-captured St Andrews Castle.Unfortunately, Hertford
was not about to abandon Henry's policies with regards to the marriage of the
little Scottish Queen to English royal heir.On 10 September 1547, known as
"Black Saturday", the Scots suffered a bitter defeat at Pinkie Cleugh near
Musselburgh.Arran, as per usual, escaped unscathed to tell Mary the bad
news.Mary, fearful for her daughter, sent her temporarily to Inchmahome Priory,
and turned to the French ambassador Monsieur D'Oysel.The new French King was now
proposing to unite France and Scotland by marrying the little Queen to his
newborn son.This seemed to Mary to be the only sensible solution to her
troubles.In February 1548, hearing that the English were on their way back, Mary
moved her daughter to Dumbarton.The English left a trail of devastation behind
once more and seized the strategically located town of Haddington.By June, the
much awaited French help had arrived and Mary, aged 33, decided that the time
had come for her to play an active military role.Shaming the deserting soldiers
she found relaxing at home, rewarding and spurring on those on the battlefield,
she behaved like her father's true daughter. On 7 July, the French Marriage
Treaty was signed at a nunnery near Haddington and by 7 August, the French fleet
was sailing back to France carrying the future Queen of Scots on board.
Her daughter may be safe in France but the French treaty was to prove yet
another source of worry for Mary.Firstly, there was the problem of her financial
resources seriously depleted by years of war and Arran's extravagance.Secondly,
the French presence in Scotland was causing a lot of ill-feeling amongst her
people. On the bright side, Huntly, who had been held prisoner in England since
the battle of Pinkie, managed to escape and celebrated his return by leading an
expedition to the Borders in February 1549.In June of the same year, an English
fleet captured the small island of Inchkeith, occupying a strategic position
opposite Leith.French reinforcements arrived once more, headed by Monsieur De
Thermes and easily re-captured Inchkeith.At Haddington, it was an outbreak of
the plague which finally convinced the English to abandon ship. In April 1550,
the French and the English signed a peace treaty in which Scotland was
included.Mary was now free to travel to France to persuade the King to help her
financially and to remove Arran (who had been created Duke of Châtelherault by
Henry II for agreeing to the marriage of the little Queen to the French
Prince).Mary was also eager to be re-united with her family after an absence of
12 years, especially since her father Claud and his brother, Cardinal John had
both recently died.Mary took great care with the preparations, ensuring that she
would make the best possible impression on the French King, but also carefully
choosing the Lords who would accompany her. She had had first-hand experience of
their treachery and was not prepared to give them the opportunity to plot
against her during her absence.Having left Châtelherault with D'Oysel, the
French Ambassador, Mary landed at Dieppe on 19 September.Mary could have easily
remained in France and left Scotland to become a French satellite state.
However, she did genuinely care for the welfare of her people and enjoyed the
political game. It is in that spirit that she conducted negotiations with Henry
II, encouraging him to bribe her Lords and thereby easing the tension between
both nationalities. Henry having also agreed to her desire for the Regency, Mary
began to plan her journey back in the spring of 1551.However, horrified by an
attempt to poison her young daughter, she stayed on. She visited her childhood
home of Joinville, proudly showing her Lords where she grew up and spending time
with her mother and her son Francis.Tragedy struck again when Francis suddenly
passed away. Bearing his loss with fortitude, she embarked on 18 October
1551.Mary decided to pay England a royal visit and meet the young English King,
Edward VI. Crossing the country from Portsmouth, she returned to Scotland in
triumph.Turning her attention to the enforcement of law and order, she travelled
throughout the country with Châtelherault to hold justice ayres.In the summer of
1553, Edward VI of England died, succeeded briefly by Lady Jane Grey and then by
his half-sister, the catholic Mary Tudor.This was good news for Mary who now
found herself on the same side of the religious fence as her old enemy,
England.However, there were rumours that the Earl of Lennox was once more
active, and Mary decided that it was time to claim the Regency for herself.With
the promise of heavy financial incentives, Châtelherault reluctantly capitulated
in favour of Mary on 19 February 1554.The ceremony took place on 12 April in
Edinburgh: Mary of Guise was Regent at last.
The problems of war with
England, the safety of little Mary and Châtelherault dealt with, Mary now
concentrated on helping Scotland's battered economy to recover, and to restore
law and order once more. However, as usual, the Scottish nobles were a force to
be reckoned with.Although she showed more clemency than was customary of a ruler
of the 16th century, there were many who disliked her authority and the union
with France.Rumours that the little queen was ill opened up the floodgates to
speculation about Scotland's future. Would Scotland come to be ruled entirely by
a French King?People thus began to favour an alliance with England, especially
since the Protestant movement was gaining strength in Scotland.Mary recognised
the golden opportunity which presented itself to her adversaries: under the
pretext of religion, they would stir up the population against her and seize
land and power.The first thing she did as Regent was to surround herself with
her supporters, including the Earl of Cassilis, James Makgill and the Abbot of
Cupar.Others were rewarded and bribed with generous gifts.Nevertheless, the
nobility demanded that the marriage of the little queen to the French Dauphin be
finalised. Mary was loath to rush Henry II who was after all the more
influential party in this arrangement.On the other hand, she did not want the
explosive situation in Scotland to deteriorate even further.The difficulty lay
in that France was at war with Spain, whose King Philip of Spain had married the
English Mary Tudor.Henry II was now asking Scotland to divert England's
attention away from this conflict by re-opening the hostilities.This was a very
ill-timed campaign for Mary but she remained bound to obey given how dependent
she was on France's help.However, the Scottish Lords openly flouted her
authority and refused to proceed.Something had to be done quickly to restore the
balance of power.Mary's eldest brother had just captured Calais from the English
in January 1558 and Henry II was keen to reward the family.He ordered the royal
marriage to go ahead.On 24 April 1558, the little Queen of Scots was married to
the French Dauphin. Mary was to remain Regent while she was out of the country
and the crown of Scotland would revert to Châtelherault if no children were born
to the marriage.However, a secret agreement had been signed by the Scottish
Queen, to the effect that the French King would inherit Scotland instead if she
died childless.But political unrest prevailed in Scotland under the cloak of
religious reform.Disturbances and pillages were taking place to the outrage of
the helpless Mary.To make matters worse, on 17 November 1558, Mary Tudor died
making way for her Protestant half-sister, Elizabeth I.Luckily, in the spring of
1559, the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis was signed, a truce between France and
Spain, and an end to the English threat for Scotland.But on 2 May 1559, the
troublesome John Knox returned from his exile after the siege of St Andrews and
his spell in the French galleys.Pouring out all of his venom in his incendiary
sermons (as he later would continue to do to Mary, Queen of Scots), he roused
the congregation to violent action.Mary summoned Châtelherault and sweet-talked
him into crushing the rebels but the Congregation kept the upper hand.After much
to-ing and fro-ing, an agreement was reached on 23 July 1559 on Leith Links with
the Lords of the Congregation (as they now called themselves).
But this
momentary respite was not to last.The Lords of the Congregation now signed a
bond agreeing that none of their number should go to see or speak to the Queen
Regent without the consent of the others. Elizabeth I dispatched Sir Ralph
Sadler under secret instructions to nourish faction against the French, urge
Châtelherault to abandon Mary and coerce her into signing a treaty of perpetual
peace with England. With the death of Henry II in August 1559, Mary lost a
powerful ally. The Lords who were already complaining of changes to Scottish
laws, French-style taxation and the appointment of Frenchmen to important
offices of state were overjoyed by the arrival of Châtelherault's son, who had
inherited his father's title of Earl of Arran. Châtelherault had once again
switched sides and was preparing to take up arms when Mary decided to fortify
Leith. Mary's attempts to win over Châtelherault and her step-son, Lord James
were of no avail and her circle of supporters diminished daily. On 15 October,
the Protestants marched to Edinburgh but Mary had already escaped to Leith. On
21 of October, the Lords announced that her Regency was suspended. But Mary knew
that they were not the powerful, united force that they would have had her
believe. On 7 November, Mary entered the capital once more after D'Oysel
successfully drove them off. Although Mary set about restoring order, she fell
gravely ill a fortnight later from chronic heart disease. By December she had
recovered and the French had driven back the Protestant forces to St Andrews.
Mary, disappointed by Elizabeth's deviousness demanded the reason for the
appearance of English ships in the Forth Estuary.The French aid that she was so
intently asking for was not forthcoming either. On 27 February, Lords James,
Ruthven and others met with the Duke of Norfolk and signed the Treaty of
Berwick, agreeing that Elizabeth should accept the realm of Scotland with
Châtelherault being declared heir apparent to the crown. In return, the Scottish
Protestants promised to support the English forces and to resist any annexation
by France. This was a serious blow to Mary who, no longer safe in Leith,
convinced Lord Erskine, Keeper of Edinburgh Castle, to let her stay there and
deny entrance to anyone else. There, a series of negotiations between English
envoys, Scottish lords and Mary were entered into. The lords demanded that
French troops be sent home, but in Leith, the English siege had begun.
Negotiations finally broke down over the question of the league with England.
Mary's health was rapidly deteriorating. Her heart disease had resulted in
dropsy and negotiations with the Protestants had ceased. All her letters were
intercepted and her last supporters were deserting her, and yet, no help came
from France. On the morning of 7 June 1560, Mary sent for the lords and asked
for their forgiveness for having inadvertently offended them and forgave them
for their disloyalty. She dictated her will and made arrangements for her
funeral. Her mother and brother, the Duke of Guise were to be her executors,
with the Earl Marischal (who later repudiated the task) and Sir John acting in
the same capacity in Scotland. Finally, on 11 June 1560 in the evening, she
passed away. She was embalmed and doctors performed the post-mortem. She was
then placed in a lead coffin which remained in the little Chapel of St Margaret
within Edinburgh Castle until 16 March 1561, because the Lords of the
Congregation could not agree on what to do with her body. On 6 July 1560, the
French, Scots and English had signed a peace treaty and both French and English
troops evacuated Scotland. Mary's body was taken to Fécamp in Normandy and
buried in Rheims at the Convent of St Peter where her sister was the Abbess. The
monument erected survived until the French Revolution. "Her life is best summed
up in the emblem which she chose for herself. It is a crown, set above a rock
which is beaten by winds and by waves but which remains unshaken. Above it are
written the words, 'And yet it stand'." (From Mary of Guise, by Rosalind K.
Marshall)
James married Mary DE
GUISE-LORRAINE, daughter of Duc De Guise Claude I DE LORRAINE and Antoinette DE
BOURBON. (Mary DE GUISE-LORRAINE was born on 22 Nov 1515 in Bar-Le-Duc,
Lorraine, France, died on 11 Jun 1560 in Edinburgh Castle, Scotland and was
buried in Rheims, Champagne, France.)
James next married Margaret
ERSKINE, daughter of Baron Erskine John ERSKINE and Baroness Erskine Margaret
CAMPBELL. (Margaret ERSKINE was born about 1513 in Edinburgh, Midlothian,
Scotland and died on 5 May 1572 in Scotland.)
James next married Eupheme
ELPHINSTONE. (Eupheme ELPHINSTONE was born about 1515 in Scotland.)
James next married Helen STEWART,
daughter of 3rd Earl Of Lennox John II STEWART and Elizabeth STEWART. (Helen
STEWART was born about 1520 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland and died before
25 Nov 1564 in Scotland.)
James next married Christian
BERCLAY, daughter of James BERCLAY and Christian STEWART. (Christian BERCLAY was
born about 1510.)
James next married Elizabeth
STEWART, daughter of 3rd Earl Of Lennox John II STEWART and Elizabeth STEWART.
(Elizabeth STEWART was born about 1520 in Scotland.)
James next married Madeleine DE
VALOIS, daughter of King Of France Francis I DE VALOIS and Claude DE VALOIS, in
Jan 1536-1537 in Notre Dame, Paris, France. (Madeleine DE VALOIS was born on 10
Aug 1520 in St. Germain-En-Laye, Near Paris, France and died on 7 Jul 1537 in
Holyrood, Edinburgh, Scotland.)
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