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Elizabeth Stewart, Countess of Arran

Elizabeth Stewart, Countess of Arran (c. 1554 - 1590) was a Scottish aristocrat and political intriguer.

Elizabeth Stewart was the daughter of John Stewart, 4th Earl of Atholl (d. 1579) and Elizabeth Gordon, a daughter of George Gordon, 4th Earl of Huntly.

Marriages and divorce

She married Hugh Fraser, 5th Lord Lovat (d. 1577) in 1564. She was said to have brought gold coins and jewellery with her to Lovat Castle. These treasures were stolen by her maid Kennedy, who was caught and drowned in a pool at the castle. In 1634 a hoard was discovered in the castle orchard, supposed to that buried by Elizabeth Stewart's maid.[1]

She married secondly, in 1579, Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of March. She was known for a time as "Dame Elizabeth Stewart, Countess of Lennox", her husband's other title. In August 1579, she was given £700 Scots as a gift from the royal exchequer.[2]

She divorced Robert Stewart on 19 May 1581 to marry thirdly James Stewart, Earl of Arran, then known as Captain James Stewart. The divorce was considered scandalous. An early historian David Calderwood wrote:

Captain James Stewart, after that he was made tutor to the Earl of Arran, he grew so familiar with the Countess of March that he begot upon her a child. To cover this adulterous fact, a process of divorcement was intended by her against her lawful husband, the Earl of March, which was easily obtained, and so, the made earl and she were joined together in marriage. She was delivered of a man child about this time.[3]

Arran supremacy

Arran's power over the young king James VI of Scotland, which he shared with Esmé Stewart, 1st Duke of Lennox, made him and his wife unpopular in Scotland.

James VI gave Esmé Stewart gifts of jewels that remained from the collection of Mary, Queen of Scots, including in October 1581 a gold cross with diamonds and rubies, the "Great Harry" or "Great H of Scotland", and other pieces. The gift was witnessed by Countess of Arran, the Master of Ogilvy and officials of the wardrobe.[4] After Esmé Stewart's death, some of the same jewels were obtained by the countess, and by another favourite Colonel William Stewart.

In February 1583 she was in Edinburgh, to beg for her husband's liberty from the Ruthven Raiders.[5]

Arran had obtained a quantity of jewels royal belonging to James VI, or to his mother, Mary, Queen of Scots. On 28 May 1583 Elizabeth Stewart returned sets of pearl, ruby, and diamond buttons to the Master of Gray, who was master of the king's wardrobe.[6]

She approached the English diplomat Robert Bowes declaring her husband's commitment to amity with England, but Bowes described this initiative to Francis Walsingham as a "slender motion" of no value unless it came from the Earl.[7] She wrote to Janet Scott, Lady Ferniehirst in October 1583 asking her to solicit the support of Mary Queen of Scots and the Hamiltons for her and her husband.[8]

Robert Bowes wrote that she had great rule in court in March 1584 and greater rule in the court of session, and was able to secure the acquittal of the Laird of Cessford and James Home of Coldenknowes, who had been threatened with imprisonment.[9] In August William Davison heard that she and Arran had made a list of 60 people to forfeit in parliament, so that she might collect the dowries of several noble ladies, and that she had sat in the meetings of the Privy Council.[10] Davison reported that the Countess of Arran had new keys made for the coffers containing the jewels and clothes of Mary, Queen of Scots. She was said to have tried on many of the old queen's garments to see if they fitted her, and chosen what she likes.[11]

In September 1584 the king gave Arran and the Countess property incomes taken from Dorothy Stewart, Countess of Gowrie.[12] In November 1584 Henry I, Duke of Guise wrote thanking her for the reception she had given to his envoy Seigneur Paul in Scotland, and gifts she had sent on Paul's return, hoping she will continue her good services for the king and queen of Scotland.[13] Paul, who brought horses for the young king, was unpopular in Protestant Scotland and said to have had a role in the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre in 1572.[14]

It was said that Elizabeth Stewart was made "lady comptroller", and held courts and had people hanged who could not pay their compositions or fines, saying "What had they been doing all their days that had not so much as five pounds to buy them from the gallows?"[15] In 1584 she extracted £3000 from the Laird of Haggs and restored the living of Robert Crichton, Bishop of Dunkeld a professed Catholic, held by the Earl of Argyll.[16] Someone wrote to Mary, Queen of Scots, of the rumour that James VI was governed by Arran's lies and "bewitched by the diabelerie of his wicked and audacious wife".[17]

In June 1585 she sent a message to Edward Wotton an English ambassador who had met the king, that he ought to speak to Arran first. Wotton told the Master of Gray, who told the king, and he criticised Arran for sending such messages to an ambassador.[18]

An English border warden John Selby reported that on 23 June 1585 that she had built a barrier in front of Edinburgh Castle but the townspeople had promptly demolished it. She and her husband were then sent to Dirleton Castle. Selby sent a retraction to Francis Walsingham, saying this news was doubtful, but he had several reports that the fall of Arran was imminent.[19] She had closed up a way to the Castle Bank, and the town sent Henry Nisbet and others to ask her to re-open the path.[20]

In September 1585 the countess and her husband received a royal grant of properties in Ayr and Ayrshire, including the baronies of Colvill, Barnweill, and Symontoun, some of which had belonged to William Cunningham of Caprinton.[21] Francis Walsingham heard that she "guided" her husband and sought their reconciliation with Mary, Queen of Scots.[22]

After Arran fell from power in 1585, she was again called "Lady Lovat". In November Stewart made his way from house arrest at Kinneil House, with jewels that his wife obtained from Edinburgh Castle, trying to get a ship at Ayr (where he had a house). The English ambassador William Knollys said she was imprisoned at this time for giving him these jewels.[23] They returned the royal jewels, including the "Great H of Scotland", by January 1586.[24]</ref>

In April 1586 she was staying in various houses near Edinburgh and in Leith[25]

John Wallace of Craigie complained about "James Stewart, late Chancellor, and Dame Elizabeth Stewart, Countess of Lovat" to the Privy Council in October 1587. They had occupied his Castle of Sanquhar and had obtained from James VI letters exempting them from "horning", a legal process where debtors lost their credit. The Council declared the letters null and void.[26]

The date of her death is uncertain. A letter of April 1590 gave a report of her death.[27] Thomas Kennedy of Culzean heard that she had died in childbirth in April 1590.[28]

Family

The children of Elizabeth Stewart and Hugh Fraser, 5th Lord Lovat included:

Her son with Arran, James Stewart, was born in Edinburgh Castle,[30] and baptised 14 March 1583 with the king and the Duke of Lennox as godparents.[31] He bought the title Lord Ochiltree from Andrew Stewart, Lord Ochiltree.

References

  1. ^ William Mackay, Fraser Chronicles (Edinburgh, 1905), pp. 268-71.
  2. ^ Accounts of the Treasurer, vol. 13 (Edinburgh, 1978), p. 281.
  3. ^ Roderick J. Lyall, Alexander Montgomerie: Poetry, Politics, and Cultural Change in Jacobean Scotland (Arizona, 2005), p. 89 modernised here.
  4. ^ Thomas Thomson, Collection of Inventories (Edinburgh, 1815), pp. 306-8.
  5. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1581-1583, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1914), p. 289.
  6. ^ Thomas Thomson, Collection of Inventories (Edinburgh, 1815), pp. 316-320.
  7. ^ Bowes Correspondence, p. 579.
  8. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1581-1583, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1910), p. 638.
  9. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1584-1585, vol. 7 (London, 1913), p. 43 no. 40.
  10. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1913), p. 277 no. 248.
  11. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1913), pp. 292-3 no. 266.
  12. ^ Gordon Donaldson, Register of the Privy Seal: 1581-1584, vol. 8 (Edinburgh, 1982), p. 419 no. 2399.
  13. ^ Annie I. Cameron, Warrender Papers, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1931), pp. 169-170.
  14. ^ David Calderwood, History of Church of Scotland, vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1843), pp. 400, 413.
  15. ^ David Calderwood, History of Church of Scotland, vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1843), pp. 410-11: Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1913), p. 555 no. 529.
  16. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1913), p. 291 no. 266.
  17. ^ Agnes Strickland, Letters of Mary, Queen of Scots, vol. 3 (London, 1843), p. 168.
  18. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1913), pp. 681-2 no. 662.
  19. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar of Border Papers, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1894), pp. 185-6
  20. ^ James David Marwick, Extracts from the records of the Burgh of Edinburgh: 1573-1589 (Edinburgh, 1882), p. 427.
  21. ^ John Shedden-Dobie, 'Mason's Protocol Book', Archaeological Collections Ayrshire & Galloway (Edinburgh, 1889), pp. 184-6.
  22. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar of Border Papers, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1894), p. 165.
  23. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1585-1586, vol. 8 (Edinburgh, 1914), p. 157 no. 205.
  24. ^ Thomas Thomson, Collection of Inventories (Edinburgh, 1815), pp. 316-320: William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1585-1586, vol. 8 (Edinburgh, 1914), p. 188 no. 241.
  25. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1585-1586, vol. 8 (Edinburgh, 1914), pp. 157, 188, 337.
  26. ^ David Masson, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland: 1585-1592, vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1881), pp. 220-1, 214-5.
  27. ^ HMC Salisbury Hatfield, vol. 4 (London, 1892), p. 30.
  28. ^ Robert Vans-Agnew, Correspondence of Sir Robert Waus of Barnbarroch, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1887), p. 457.
  29. ^ Michael Pearce, 'Anna of Denmark: Fashioning a Danish Court in Scotland', The Court Historian, 24:2 (2019), p. 148.
  30. ^ John Mackenzie, A chronicle of the kings of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 137
  31. ^ William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1581-1583, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1914), p. 330.

elizabeth, stewart, countess, arran, 1554, 1590, scottish, aristocrat, political, intriguer, elizabeth, stewart, daughter, john, stewart, earl, atholl, 1579, elizabeth, gordon, daughter, george, gordon, earl, huntly, contents, marriages, divorce, arran, suprem. Elizabeth Stewart Countess of Arran c 1554 1590 was a Scottish aristocrat and political intriguer Elizabeth Stewart was the daughter of John Stewart 4th Earl of Atholl d 1579 and Elizabeth Gordon a daughter of George Gordon 4th Earl of Huntly Contents 1 Marriages and divorce 2 Arran supremacy 3 Family 4 ReferencesMarriages and divorce EditShe married Hugh Fraser 5th Lord Lovat d 1577 in 1564 She was said to have brought gold coins and jewellery with her to Lovat Castle These treasures were stolen by her maid Kennedy who was caught and drowned in a pool at the castle In 1634 a hoard was discovered in the castle orchard supposed to that buried by Elizabeth Stewart s maid 1 She married secondly in 1579 Robert Stewart 1st Earl of March She was known for a time as Dame Elizabeth Stewart Countess of Lennox her husband s other title In August 1579 she was given 700 Scots as a gift from the royal exchequer 2 She divorced Robert Stewart on 19 May 1581 to marry thirdly James Stewart Earl of Arran then known as Captain James Stewart The divorce was considered scandalous An early historian David Calderwood wrote Captain James Stewart after that he was made tutor to the Earl of Arran he grew so familiar with the Countess of March that he begot upon her a child To cover this adulterous fact a process of divorcement was intended by her against her lawful husband the Earl of March which was easily obtained and so the made earl and she were joined together in marriage She was delivered of a man child about this time 3 Arran supremacy EditArran s power over the young king James VI of Scotland which he shared with Esme Stewart 1st Duke of Lennox made him and his wife unpopular in Scotland James VI gave Esme Stewart gifts of jewels that remained from the collection of Mary Queen of Scots including in October 1581 a gold cross with diamonds and rubies the Great Harry or Great H of Scotland and other pieces The gift was witnessed by Countess of Arran the Master of Ogilvy and officials of the wardrobe 4 After Esme Stewart s death some of the same jewels were obtained by the countess and by another favourite Colonel William Stewart In February 1583 she was in Edinburgh to beg for her husband s liberty from the Ruthven Raiders 5 Arran had obtained a quantity of jewels royal belonging to James VI or to his mother Mary Queen of Scots On 28 May 1583 Elizabeth Stewart returned sets of pearl ruby and diamond buttons to the Master of Gray who was master of the king s wardrobe 6 She approached the English diplomat Robert Bowes declaring her husband s commitment to amity with England but Bowes described this initiative to Francis Walsingham as a slender motion of no value unless it came from the Earl 7 She wrote to Janet Scott Lady Ferniehirst in October 1583 asking her to solicit the support of Mary Queen of Scots and the Hamiltons for her and her husband 8 Robert Bowes wrote that she had great rule in court in March 1584 and greater rule in the court of session and was able to secure the acquittal of the Laird of Cessford and James Home of Coldenknowes who had been threatened with imprisonment 9 In August William Davison heard that she and Arran had made a list of 60 people to forfeit in parliament so that she might collect the dowries of several noble ladies and that she had sat in the meetings of the Privy Council 10 Davison reported that the Countess of Arran had new keys made for the coffers containing the jewels and clothes of Mary Queen of Scots She was said to have tried on many of the old queen s garments to see if they fitted her and chosen what she likes 11 In September 1584 the king gave Arran and the Countess property incomes taken from Dorothy Stewart Countess of Gowrie 12 In November 1584 Henry I Duke of Guise wrote thanking her for the reception she had given to his envoy Seigneur Paul in Scotland and gifts she had sent on Paul s return hoping she will continue her good services for the king and queen of Scotland 13 Paul who brought horses for the young king was unpopular in Protestant Scotland and said to have had a role in the St Bartholomew s Day massacre in 1572 14 It was said that Elizabeth Stewart was made lady comptroller and held courts and had people hanged who could not pay their compositions or fines saying What had they been doing all their days that had not so much as five pounds to buy them from the gallows 15 In 1584 she extracted 3000 from the Laird of Haggs and restored the living of Robert Crichton Bishop of Dunkeld a professed Catholic held by the Earl of Argyll 16 Someone wrote to Mary Queen of Scots of the rumour that James VI was governed by Arran s lies and bewitched by the diabelerie of his wicked and audacious wife 17 In June 1585 she sent a message to Edward Wotton an English ambassador who had met the king that he ought to speak to Arran first Wotton told the Master of Gray who told the king and he criticised Arran for sending such messages to an ambassador 18 An English border warden John Selby reported that on 23 June 1585 that she had built a barrier in front of Edinburgh Castle but the townspeople had promptly demolished it She and her husband were then sent to Dirleton Castle Selby sent a retraction to Francis Walsingham saying this news was doubtful but he had several reports that the fall of Arran was imminent 19 She had closed up a way to the Castle Bank and the town sent Henry Nisbet and others to ask her to re open the path 20 In September 1585 the countess and her husband received a royal grant of properties in Ayr and Ayrshire including the baronies of Colvill Barnweill and Symontoun some of which had belonged to William Cunningham of Caprinton 21 Francis Walsingham heard that she guided her husband and sought their reconciliation with Mary Queen of Scots 22 After Arran fell from power in 1585 she was again called Lady Lovat In November Stewart made his way from house arrest at Kinneil House with jewels that his wife obtained from Edinburgh Castle trying to get a ship at Ayr where he had a house The English ambassador William Knollys said she was imprisoned at this time for giving him these jewels 23 They returned the royal jewels including the Great H of Scotland by January 1586 24 lt ref gt In April 1586 she was staying in various houses near Edinburgh and in Leith 25 John Wallace of Craigie complained about James Stewart late Chancellor and Dame Elizabeth Stewart Countess of Lovat to the Privy Council in October 1587 They had occupied his Castle of Sanquhar and had obtained from James VI letters exempting them from horning a legal process where debtors lost their credit The Council declared the letters null and void 26 The date of her death is uncertain A letter of April 1590 gave a report of her death 27 Thomas Kennedy of Culzean heard that she had died in childbirth in April 1590 28 Family EditThe children of Elizabeth Stewart and Hugh Fraser 5th Lord Lovat included Simon Fraser 1570 1633 who married Jean Stewart d 1622 daughter of James Stewart 1st Lord Doune a lady in waiting to Anne of Denmark in 1596 29 Margaret Fraser who married James Cumming of Altyre Anne Fraser who married Hector Munro of Foulis Her son with Arran James Stewart was born in Edinburgh Castle 30 and baptised 14 March 1583 with the king and the Duke of Lennox as godparents 31 He bought the title Lord Ochiltree from Andrew Stewart Lord Ochiltree References Edit William Mackay Fraser Chronicles Edinburgh 1905 pp 268 71 Accounts of the Treasurer vol 13 Edinburgh 1978 p 281 Roderick J Lyall Alexander Montgomerie Poetry Politics and Cultural Change in Jacobean Scotland Arizona 2005 p 89 modernised here Thomas Thomson Collection of Inventories Edinburgh 1815 pp 306 8 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland 1581 1583 vol 6 Edinburgh 1914 p 289 Thomas Thomson Collection of Inventories Edinburgh 1815 pp 316 320 Bowes Correspondence p 579 Calendar State Papers Scotland 1581 1583 vol 6 Edinburgh 1910 p 638 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland 1584 1585 vol 7 London 1913 p 43 no 40 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1913 p 277 no 248 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1913 pp 292 3 no 266 Gordon Donaldson Register of the Privy Seal 1581 1584 vol 8 Edinburgh 1982 p 419 no 2399 Annie I Cameron Warrender Papers vol 1 Edinburgh 1931 pp 169 170 David Calderwood History of Church of Scotland vol 4 Edinburgh 1843 pp 400 413 David Calderwood History of Church of Scotland vol 4 Edinburgh 1843 pp 410 11 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1913 p 555 no 529 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1913 p 291 no 266 Agnes Strickland Letters of Mary Queen of Scots vol 3 London 1843 p 168 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1913 pp 681 2 no 662 Joseph Bain Calendar of Border Papers vol 1 Edinburgh 1894 pp 185 6 James David Marwick Extracts from the records of the Burgh of Edinburgh 1573 1589 Edinburgh 1882 p 427 John Shedden Dobie Mason s Protocol Book Archaeological Collections Ayrshire amp Galloway Edinburgh 1889 pp 184 6 Joseph Bain Calendar of Border Papers vol 1 Edinburgh 1894 p 165 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland 1585 1586 vol 8 Edinburgh 1914 p 157 no 205 Thomas Thomson Collection of Inventories Edinburgh 1815 pp 316 320 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland 1585 1586 vol 8 Edinburgh 1914 p 188 no 241 Calendar State Papers Scotland 1585 1586 vol 8 Edinburgh 1914 pp 157 188 337 David Masson Register of the Privy Council of Scotland 1585 1592 vol 4 Edinburgh 1881 pp 220 1 214 5 HMC Salisbury Hatfield vol 4 London 1892 p 30 Robert Vans Agnew Correspondence of Sir Robert Waus of Barnbarroch vol 2 Edinburgh 1887 p 457 Michael Pearce Anna of Denmark Fashioning a Danish Court in Scotland The Court Historian 24 2 2019 p 148 John Mackenzie A chronicle of the kings of Scotland Edinburgh 1830 p 137 William Boyd Calendar State Papers Scotland 1581 1583 vol 6 Edinburgh 1914 p 330 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth Stewart Countess of Arran amp oldid 1144398259, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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