Mary had suffered a serious illness in …
Years: 1566 - 1566
December
Mary had suffered a serious illness in October, which has left her low-spirited and in precarious health.
She has by year's end befriended Bothwell, who had helped her in suppressing the rebellion raised the previous year by the outlawed Moray, who had fled to England but is in this year pardoned and allowed to return to Scotland.
Now possessed of the heir she had craved, Mary seeks some means of dissolving her intolerable marriage. (According to Mary's detractors, she develops an adulterous liaison with Bothwell, and plans with him the death of Darnley and their own following marriage. No contemporary evidence of this love affair exists other than the highly dubious so-called Casket Letters, poems and letters supposedly written by Mary to Bothwell but now generally regarded by historians as inadmissible evidence.)
Mary’s loyalists allegedly concoct various schemes to eliminate her husband, but Mary is probably unaware of the actual plot to kill Darnley.
Locations
People
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Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Elizabethan Period
