"This
lady and princess is a notable woman...The thing that most she thirsteth
after is victory, and it seemeth to be indifferent to her to have
her enemies diminished either by the sword of her friends, or by the
liberal promises and rewards of her purse, or by division and quarrels
raised among themselves...now what is to be done with such a lady
and princess?" Francis Knollys
to William Cecil, on the arrival in England of Mary, Queen of Scots.
June 11, 1568.
"There is only one Christ Jesus and
one faith: the rest is dispute about trifles."
Elizabeth I.
For almost 20 years, two Queens lived in England,
each viewed by various European countries and religions as the only
legitimate ruler, the other as a usurper. On May 16, 1568, Mary
Queen of Scots sought refuge across the border in Elizabeth's realm
from her rebellious Scottish subjects. From then, until Elizabeth
had Mary's head cut off 19 years later, the Queen of England contended
with the twin dangers of Mary's descent and religion. As the only
child of Elizabeth's first cousin, James V of Scotland, Mary was
not only Elizabeth's closest heir, but a Catholic in a world where
the Pope encouraged the faithful to remove Elizabeth by any means
from her heretic throne.
The Dangerous Compromise
It is impossible to sum up or exaggerate the
shadow thrown over Elizabeth's reign by her father's actions in
breaking with Catholic Europe. When Henry VIII created the renegade
Church of England in 1532, not even Martin Luther so impacted European
politics. Luther defined the spiritual rebellion of individuals;
Henry symbolized the political rebellion of entire kingdoms from
Rome's authority. The Pope announced Henry's excommunication in
1533, the year of Elizabeth's birth. The 180-degree swings between
the severely Protestant reign of his son, Edward VI, and the violently
Catholic reign of Mary 1, meant Elizabeth inherited a kingdom cross-eyed
from attempting to resolve impossible contradictions of faith. Either
the Pope was the sole arbiter of Christian faith for English subjects
or their Queen was that authority. Whichever one was correct, the
other was damned, as were all subjects following their antithetical
directions.
Add this argument to the traditional English
political enmities with France and Spain (both still Catholic) and
politics and religion merged, not to be untangled for centuries.
During the long course of Elizabeth's reign, being Catholic came
to be seen as supporting England's traditional enemies. To be Protestant
meant being loyal to the Elizabethan peace between Catholic and
Puritan dogmatic extremes: eventually, it became a symbol of loyalty
to England itself. This was the beginning of Catholics being portrayed
for political motives as spies, anarchists, murderers, and enemies
of England; the concept endured in England for over 300 years.
Elizabeth's genius for compromise between her
disunited subjects had led to the Religious Settlement of 1559,
in which she displeased fanatics on both sides by steering a middle
course between the increasing severity of Protestantism (in which
almost every element of Catholic ritual had been stripped) and the
full Catholic rite. Henry VIII (and likely Elizabeth herself) preferred
the nearly-Catholic rite, but the Protestant reformers - of which
there were increasing numbers, becoming Puritan at the fringes -
protested volubly. Her compromise was anathema to the Pope, while
the Catholics imperiled their souls even to attend Church of England
services. Yet the settlement endured; after a shaky start, it appeared
to find increasing acceptance in the English realm during the 1560's.
The wary Pope did not excommunicate Elizabeth, perhaps hoping against
hope she would be forced to see reason. Around Europe, interested
politicians (including the Holy Roman Emperor and king of Spain,
Philip II) waited and watched, hoping for opportunity to take the
heretic kingdom by force while religious turmoil increasingly raged
in their own lands. The arrival of the refugee Mary of Scotland
renewed fuel for the religious and political fires in England.
Portrait of Mary as Queen of France (wearing
pearls that
later came to Elizabeth). Musee Conde, Chantilly
The Daughter of Debate
Mary was already a legend when she died in 1587. Queen of Scotland
one week after her birth, following her father's premature death
in 1542, she was sent to France at the age of five to be brought
up as the wife of Francis, heir to the French throne. When his father,
Henry II, died in 1558, Mary (aged 16) and Francis were crowned
rulers of the most powerful kingdom in Europe. That same year, immediately
after Elizabeth assumed the throne, Mary and her husband had been
persuaded to assume use of the royal English coat of arms, claiming
to be the legitimate rulers of England. The French argument was
that Mary was the true queen of England because she had been born
in Catholic wedlock. Elizabeth's status on this point had always
been ambiguous due to her birth while her father's first wife was
still alive. It is a spectacular understatement to say the English
saw this move as politically provocative. As Elizabeth later said
of Mary, she was "the daughter of debate,
that discord eke [always] doth sow."
Mary's mother, Mary of Guise, died in 1560.
She had ruled Scotland as a strong regent and managed to find accommodation
with her turbulent, increasingly Protestant nobles. In December
of that year, Mary's husband, Francis, also died. His younger brother
became king, and Mary - queen no longer - was an 18-year-old widow.
Retaining extensive properties in France, her main asset was now
her throne in Scotland. In 1561 she returned to her kingdom. She
was in in all essentials a Frenchwoman who had forgotten most of
her Scots, a beautiful, willful, charming woman taller than most
men of her day, to whom nothing in her life had ever been refused
and who had absorbed into her very fibers the authoritarianism of
Catholic France. Scotland at the time was not only officially and
radically Protestant, but ruled by ambitious nobles known as the
Lords of the Congregation. First among the Lords was her illegitimate
half-brother, James (later Earl of Moray). Although Mary promised
to respect her subjects' religion and only celebrate Mass in private,
an explosion was bound to occur.
Elizabeth's relationship with Mary was problematic
from the first. After she had assumed the arms of England, a treaty
negotiated between her nobles and the English in the Treaty of Edinburgh
compelled Mary to renounce the English throne for herself and her
heirs. Mary refused to ratify the treaty. Elizabeth retaliated by
refusing Mary the routine courtesy of a safe-conduct to Scotland.
Mary's claims struck at the heart of Elizabeth's personal security
and Mary would not let the matter drop, sending her ambassador,
Maitland of Lethington, to press Elizabeth in late 1561 to declare
Mary her successor. Elizabeth appeared to agree that Mary had a
claim to the throne while diplomatically refusing to formally name
her, noting drily, "Think you I should
love my winding sheet?" Elizabeth appears to have proceeded
from the beginning without any trust for Mary's protestations of
affection, probably based on conviction (proved true, in the event)
that she would never give up her claims to England. Elizabeth's
spies reported that Mary had the tactless habit of making negative
remarks to her court about Elizabeth's looks and behavior. This
did not help the trust quotient.
MARIE LA REINE

Elizabeth in late 1563, early in her contest
with Mary.
Elizabeth tried to manipulate Mary to her own political advantage.
Events soon proved her efforts unnecessary; Mary turned out to be
adept at self-destruction. After a hopeful start in which Mary showed
tolerance in religion and appeared to be taking good advice about
a second royal marriage with a foreign king, she proceeded with
spectacular bad judgment to fall passionately in love with Henry
Stewart, Lord Darnley. Darnley was her second cousin, grandson of
Henry VIII's sister, Margaret. Born and educated in England, his
mother, Lady Margaret Douglas, had raised him as a pawn for her
own frustrated claims on England's throne and had sent him hopefully
north to catch the Queen's eye. The family was strongly Catholic.
After only a few months, Mary surprised her Court and astounded
her advisers by marrying Darnley in July, 1565. Darnley was 19 years
old, good looking, taller than the Queen (who stood 5'10")
and was full of surface charm. Underneath, he was apparently a man
in whom no one but his mother found any redeeming qualities, being
vain, shallow, dissolute, drunken,and completely without force of
character.
The marriage fell apart with spectacular speed.
Darnley and several important Scottish lords became jealous of Mary's
favorite musician, the Italian David Rizzio: he was murdered in
her presence by a conspiracy of nobles and Darnley in March, 1566.
Thereafter, the heavily pregnant Queen was threatened and held captive.
Mary courageously escaped with the weathervane Darnley, who betrayed
his fellow-conspirators. These scampered south of the border and
lurked, awaiting better times but full of vengeance for the "long
lad" who had betrayed them.
Mary gave birth to a son, James, in June, 1566.
In December, she fully pardoned the murderous nobles in England,
who returned to Scotland with vengeance on their minds. On February
9, 1567, Darnley was himself murdered under catastrophically dubious
circumstances which implicated the Earl of Bothwell, among many
others.
Elizabeth was in a unique position to be horrified
at these events, having survived the scandal following the suspicious
death of Dudley's wife. The mask was off as she wrote Mary on February
24:
"My ears have been so astounded and my heart
so frightened to hear of the horrible and abominable murder of your
former husband, our mutual cousin, that I have scarecely spirit
to write; yet I cannot conceal that I grieve more for you than for
him. I should not do the office of a faithful cousin and friend,
if I did not urge you to preserve your honor, rather than look through
your fingers at revenge on those who have done you that pleasure
as most people say. I advise you to so take this matter to heart,
that you may show the world what a noble Princess and loyal woman
you are. I write thus vehemently not that I doubt, but for affection."
Elizabeth I, p. 191.
Two months later, Mary married Bothwell in a
Protestant ceremony. She was almost certainly pregnant with twins,
later miscarried.
The nobility and people of Scotland rose against
Mary, who was imprisoned at Lochleven and forced to abdicate in
favor of her infant son, who was in the hands of the nobles. Bothwell
fled abroad. Seducing a guard with her charm, Mary escaped from
Lochleven and raised an army. It was promptly routed by her half-brother,
James, now de facto ruler of Scotland. Fleeing her kingdom,
Mary crossed the border into England with a handful of followers
and only the borrowed clothes she stood up in:
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" There can be no doubt
of Mary's courage, her resourcefulness, her invincibly
optimistic outlook, her personal charm and her ruthless
egotism - all qualities which were to make her infinitely
more dangerous as a homeless fugitive in her cousin's
realm than she had ever been as a neighboring sovereign."
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Plowden, Danger
to Elizabeth,79. |
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"MY SWEET SISTER"
Mary and Elizabeth had corresponded with diplomatic
sweetness during the seven years Mary ruled in Scotland. The game
required frequent protestations of kinship and mutual monarchical
support, even when the two kingdoms were in warlike stance. Mary
apparently felt she could assume that Elizabeth, as a fellow royal,
would immediately put her resources at Mary's disposal. Days after
her arrival in England, Mary sent her ambassador to Elizabeth asking
to borrow an army.
Elizabeth had no mercy for rebellious subjects.
She also had a lifelong, parsimonious loathing for war - let alone
war to set a disgraced Catholic queen back on top of a Protestant
kingdom. She was now unwilling hostess to a woman who had trumpeted
for more than a decade that she, not Elizabeth, was rightful Queen
of England. Mary presented an insoluble problem to the English queen
and council. If permitted to leave England, Mary would simply ally
herself and her kingdom with Catholic Europe. Support from either
France or Spain with which to invade Scotland might also be used
to invade England. At the same time, it became obvious it was unthinkable
to allow Mary free range and sanctuary in England: she would be
a lightning rod to all dissatisfied Catholic subjects throughout
Britain. Elizabeth in every sense had a wolf by the ears. To let
go seemed more dangerous than to hang on.
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" I have always abhorred
to draw in question the title of the crown…so many
disputes have been already touching it in the mouths
of men. Some say that this marriage was unlawful,
some that someone was a bastard, some other, to and
fro, as they favour it or mislike it…howsoever it
be, so long as I live I shall be Queen of England.
When I am dead, they shall succeed that have most
right."
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Elizabeth
I, 1561. |
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Mary was given no army but placed under what
was essentially polite house arrest. The English Queen announced
she would help her "dear sister" if and when certain charges
concerning the murder of her husband had been addressed. Mary's
letters to Elizabeth became increasingly defiant and demanding,
as did her letters to the continent. Elizabeth temporized, blaming
her Council for the demand that the Queen be cleared of any taint
in her husband's death before aid could be rendered.
Considering that the Darnley-Bothwell-Mary scandal
was reverberating throughout Europe, and that even the Pope condemned
Mary, this was no lie. The council demanded that Mary be brought
to trial for Darnley's murder, as certain incriminating evidence
had been placed in their possession that condemned her. In fact,
a fertile correspondence existed between the triumphant Lords of
the Congregation (headed by the Earl of Moray) and the English council.
It was alleged that secret letters from Mary to Bothwell showed
she had prior knowledge of the murder plot. Mary denied all charges
and fought vigorously against being judged by commoners. She sought
help from every Catholic ruler in Europe, providing the genesis
of the spy network and intrigues that would enmesh Mary and Elizabeth
until Mary was dead. As one of Philip II's ambassadors wrote him,
Mary said to "Tell the ambassador that
if his master will help me, I shall be queen of England in three
months and mass shall be said all over the country."
Guerau de Spes, January, 1569.

Bothwell's casket in which
Mary's letters were allegedly found.
Five months after Mary arrived in England, a
conference at York - a hybrid between a public trial and a Star
Chamber interrogation - addressed the "evidence" against her. Mary
was not permitted to attend. The Earl of Moray produced the soon-infamous
"Casket Letters" as proof that Mary was an accessory before
the fact of her husband's murder. At the same time, the inquiry
addressed whether her Scots subjects had unjustly rebelled against
her. If the inquiry found her guiltless and her subjects in unjustified
rebellion, Elizabeth could support her. However, the inquiries found
"not proven" for both inquiries. This ambiguous verdict
gave Elizabeth shaky justification to continue Mary's "security"
confinement. The Scots and English councils were satisfied. Mary
remained in custody, as she would do, in increasing desperation,
for the rest of her life.
WOLF BY THE EARS
Throughout the 1570's, opinions on Mary began
to change. In spite of her lapses, her imprisonment was now viewed
as unjust by her European supporters. The wave of sympathy eventually
surmounted the horrific scandals of her last years as Queen. As
Mary became the very inspiration for rebellion Elizabeth had dreaded,
her government faced one plot after another from Mary's champions.
There was genuine danger to Elizabeth. Any one of these plots could
have succeeded in unseating the Protestant for the Catholic queen.
The repetition of domestic and foreign threats forced Elizabeth's
government to develop spymasters and defensive intrigues to an unparalleled
extent. Paranoid, the government increasingly clamped down on Catholics,
felt to be aiding England's enemies by way of Jesuit priests. It
is a distasteful, if realpolitik, aspect to the Elizabethan
Age and a contradiction of the Queen's oft-stated desire that she
had no wish to make window's into men's souls.
Mary's proponents tend to denigrate the reality
of her threat to English peace, implying that Elizabeth's government
created the device solely to keep Mary in custody. The irony is
that Mary's imprisonment occurred just as the Catholic counter-Reformation
was beginning to impact England. Mary, captive, was irresistible
to anyone wanting a change of dynasty and religion, and the threats
to Elizabeth were constant. In late 1569, Catholic lords in northern
England rose in an abortive attempt to crown Mary as queen of England.
A failed attempt to free her by force by local Catholics failed
in 1570. Also in 1570, Pope Pius V formally issued a bull of excommunication
against Elizabeth, which forbade her Catholic subjects to obey or
support her and acted as a standing invitation to European Catholic
powers to depose her. In 1571, Mary's ambassador in England plotted
with an Italian banker in the so-called "Ridolfi plot,"
in which a Spanish invasion of England was timed with a Catholic
uprising to unseat Elizabeth and make Mary queen. In 1572, the Duke
of Norfolk - England's greatest peer - was executed for intriguing
to marry Mary, install her as Queen, and return England to Catholicism.
Three months later, the notorious St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre
in Paris , in which the mob murdered thousands of Huguenots throughout
France, signaled France's deepening commitment to religious persecution.
Mary's involvement in the plots was often tacit,
sometimes unproved, but it is extremely unlikely (since she figured
in all of them as the next Queen of England) that she was unaware
of them, especially in view of her own prolific correspondence and
spy system. At each new threat, each new discovered plot, Mary's
imprisonment was made slightly more severe, although it was never
truly onerous.
Efforts continued abroad to reclaim England
for Catholicism. The English college at Douai in France was instrumental
in training English priests to return undercover to England, while
in Rome the Jesuits took on the task of reclamation. The first wave
of activist undercover priests arrived in England in the 1570's
and the government dealt with them with increasing harshness: with
torture in 1577-78 and the execution of priests such as the Jesuit,
Father Campion, in 1581. Acts were passed in that year making it
high treason to revert to Catholicism, so deeply had the identification
been made between foreign and religious threat. English Catholic
Nicholas Throckmorton, in league with the DeGuises of France and
the Spanish ambassador, was behind the 1583 plot to invade with
Spanish forces, remove Elizabeth, and crown Mary. In fact, the Guise
family boasted to the papal Nuncio, Castelli, that they had a plan
to kill Elizabeth through a Catholic placed in court who was angry
at the execution of his relatives. Arrested with Mary's letters
in his possession, Throckmorton incriminated Mary during interrogation
and was executed.
WALSINGHAM'S ARMY
In 1584, the assassination by an
agent of Catholic Spain of William of Orange - Protestant champion
in the Netherlands - showed that religious murder was a workable
concept in statecraft. By now, Sir Francis Walsingham - Elizabeth's
version of Director of Homeland Security - had infiltrated the circles
supporting Mary and almost certainly began active counterintelligence
actions. In 1585, the "Parry plot" caught a would-be assassin
of the Queen carrying a plenary indulgence and remission of sins
from the Pope.
The government grew Increasingly
paranoid. The Act for the Queen's Safety of 1585 now explicitly
held Mary responsible for plots instituted in her name, with
or without her knowledge. Certainly, by the time of the Babington
Plot of 1586, there is no question that Walsingham was setting Mary
up to remove her as the primary threat to his queen's survival.
The fact that Walsingham was known as strongly Protestant, even
Puritan, in his personal views added spice to his determination
to nail the Queen of Scots. He now had a small army of intelligence
gatherers to help him.

Mary of Scotland towards the end of
her captivity. Similar portraits were made and
presented to Catholics throughout Europe, especially after her
death.
The Babington Plot
The Babington Plot was yet another intrigue between Philip II of
Spain, Mary, and English Catholics to invade England, only in this
case it included specifically the assassination of Elizabeth. Six
men were committed to do the deed. Walsingham baited the trap with
his own people. He initiated an infinitely careful ring of spies,
who intercepted all Mary's secret correspondence before she received
it (in a waterproof packet hidden in a beer barrel) and read and
decoded her replies before sending them on. Finally, Walsingham
had what he most desired - clear and indisputable letters in Mary's
handwriting to French and Spanish agents with her active approval
of the overthrow of Elizabeth and enthusiastic concurrence in her
assassination. Babington and his fellows were captured, imprisoned,
tortured and executed.
Walsingham's "smoking gun" was Mary's letter of July
14, 1586, which replied to Babington's earlier, detailed description
of the plot and the proposed murder of Elizabeth. Mary wrote with
a cool and sophisticated appreciation of the necessary steps for
the coup d'état (reminding Babington of the need for
laying false cover-stories). The letter noted that she had, for
many years, been encouraging the European Catholic powers to redouble
their efforts to forcibly retake England for the faith. In the damning
conclusion, Mary wrote:
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" The affairs being thus
prepared and forces in readiness both without and
within the realm, then shall it be time to set the
six gentlemen to work; taking order, upon the accomplishing
of their designing, I may be suddenly transported
out of this place, and that all your forces in the
same time be on the field to meet me in tarrying for
the arrival of the foreign aid, which then must be
hastened with all diligence. Now, for that there can
be no certain day appointed for the accomplishing
of the said gentlemen's designing, to the end that
others may be in readiness to take me from hence,
I would that the said gentlemen had always about them
(or at least at Court) four stout men, furnished with
good and speedy horses, for-so soon as the said design
[the death of Elizabeth] shall be executed
- to come with all diligence to advertise thereof
those that shall be appointed for my transporting;
to the end that immediately after they may be at the
place of my abode, before that my keeper can have
advice of the execution of the said design, or at
least before he can fortify himself within the house
or carry me out of the same. "
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Queen
Mary to Antony Babington, July 17, 1586. |
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Walsingham moved quickly. A few days before
Babington's arrest on August 14, 1586, Mary was taken riding and
removed from her household supporters. She would steadfastly deny
her actions and justify her efforts until her death. In October
1586, under statutes passed earlier holding Mary responsible for
plots instituted in her name, proceedings are held in England that
eventually lead to the decision by Parliament to condemn Mary for
treason in November, 1586.
Answer Answerless
For three months Elizabeth debated the political
cost of executing Mary. Like every decision involving politics and
religion, all her options were dangerous. Under pressure from Parliament
and her council, the Queen announced Mary's death sentence in early
December, 1586, but refused to sign the execution warrant until
February 1. In the long two months between, Elizabeth must have
stared into the future, knowing her action - the judicial murder
of one anointed Queen by another - would have profound effects on
her own position and that of her successors. She was right to be
concerned - her precedent helped lead to the execution of Mary Stuart's
grandson, King Charles I, only 60 years later. What overt retaliation
would Philip II and Charles IX, king of France, take for Mary's
death? What action would be urged on Catholic subjects? How would
the Pope respond, or history judge Elizabeth? Would the benefit
of removing the focus of Catholic plotting from her kingdom outweigh
the detriment of acquiring a reputation for spilling the royal blood
sanctified by God? For, as she asked her parliament as it pressured
her to execute Mary, "What will they
not now say when it shall be spread that for the safety of her life
a maiden Queen could be content to spill the blood even of her own
kinswoman?" Elizabeth became cryptic in her efforts to justify
her decision; she told delegates from both Houses, in response to
their petition that she execute Mary forthwith, that they would
have to accept her "thankfulness, excuse
my doubtfulness, and take in good part my answer answerless."
The Virgin Queen, 213.

Contemporary sketch by eyewitness of
Mary's execution, February 8, 1587.
Execution at Fotheringay
There is a farcical quality to the final weeks
prior to Mary's death. Once Elizabeth signed the warrant, Cecil
had the temerity to rush the warrant off to northern England and
chop off Mary's head. Mary, superbly, died in a blaze of Catholic
martyrdom on February 8, 1587. Elizabeth then acted the part of
the horrorstruck woman whose servants had taken the warrant without
her authority. Utilizing every weapon in the political and feminine
arsenal, Elizabeth raged, wept, and explained over and over to any
foreign ambassador within hearing that she hadn't really meant the
warrant to be used and that her ministers forced her hand. Cecil,
Walsingham, and others of the council lurked in corners in a despair
of frustration while the rest of the diplomatic world smiled behind
its hands at Elizabeth's pageant of plausible deniability. But her
actions had their intended effect - barely, just barely, she gained
time arguing that Mary's death was a terrible accident, time to
arm against the retaliation that would come because Mary died. Elizabeth's
execution of Mary Stuart finally set in motion the long-deferred
voyage of Philip II's Armada, to drive the English heretics into
the sea.
There had been many reasons a Catholic power
should desire to remove Elizabeth Tudor from the throne. Her judicial
murder of an anointed Queen made Mary a martyr to Catholic faith
and provided enough powder to ensure a conflagration. Her action
was denounced throughout the Catholic world. In 1588, Pope Sixtus
V issued a Bull in which he concluded his blast against the monstrous
Queen of England by stating the the Queen was "unworthy to live."
He of\officially extended a full Plenary Indulgence from sin from
any Catholic who removed or killed the Queen. It was the year of
the Armada, 1588.
The life and death issues between the two Queens
was always as much about the religious turmoil of their age as political
or personal rivalry. Mary of Scotland had gone to her death as a
Catholic martyr. Due to the collision between two larger-than-life
rulers, Mary's life had been wasted and Elizabeth's endangered.
One, but not both, could live. The greatest attempt to wrest England
by force from heretical damnation - the Spanish Armada - was in
preparation. As Mary said of her own life, "in my end is my beginning"
: she might have said the same to Elizabeth. By 1587, Elizabeth
had finally become the undisputed queen of a staunchly Protestant
England. In Scotland the Protestant son of Mary and Darnley waited,
the undisputed heir to the English throne.

Idealized portrait of Mary and James
VI of Scotland.
NEXT:
THE LAST YEARS
Sources:
Rare portrait of Mary as queen
of France as cited in Elizabeth 1: Word of a Prince (p. 160).
The full text of the papal Bull of 1588 may be found at
Montpellier Early English Documents. Quotations from Elizabeth
I taken from Alison Plowden's "Danger to Elizabeth."
Portrait of Elizabeth I with fan, c. 1580, Marcus Gheeraerts.
Portrait of young Mary Stuart by Clouet, while Dauphine of France.
The melancholy "Deuil Blanc" portrait courtesy of Tudor
and Elizabethan Portraits.
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