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Mary of Guise

Marie de Guise (in English, Mary of Guise) (November 22, 1515 – June 1560) was the Queen Consort of James V of Scotland and the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots. She was Regent, or Governor, of Scotland 15541560.

James V, King of Scots and his second wife Marie de Guise



The eldest daughter of Claude, Duke of Guise, head of the French House of Guise, and his wife Antoinette of Bourbon, Marie was born at Bar-le-Duc, Lorraine. On August 4 1534, at the age of 18, she was married to Louis of Orleans, Duke of Longueville, at the Louvre. Their union was a happy one and on October 30 1535 her first son Francis was born. In the winter of 1536, she attended the wedding of her future husband, James V of Scotland, and the French King's eldest daughter, Madeleine de Valois, known as Princess Madeleine at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris.

On June 9 1537, Louis died at Rouen and left her a widow at the age of 21. On August 4, Marie gave birth to her second son, Louis. Later that year, James V, having lost his first bride Madeleine de Valois in July to tuberculosis, was intent on procuring himself another French bride to further the interests of the Franco-Scottish alliance against England. Marie now became the focus of his marriage negotiations. His uncle Henry VIII of England tried to prevent this dangerous union by asking for Marie's hand for himself. Francis I of France accepted James's proposals over Henry's and conveyed his wishes to Marie's father. Marie received the news with shock and alarm. She did not rejoice at the prospect of leaving family and country, especially at a time when she had just lost her son, Louis, aged only four months. Her father was caught in a diplomatic wrangle. He tried to delay matters as much as he could until James, perhaps sensing her reluctance, wrote her a letter in which he appealed to her for advice and support. Marie accepted the offer and hurried plans for departure.

On May 18 1538, at Notre-Dame de Paris, James V and Marie de Guise were married through Robert, Lord Maxwell acting as proxy. Accompanied by a fleet of ships sent by James, Marie departed from France in June, forced to leave little Francis behind. She landed in Fife on June 10 and was formally received by James. They were married in person a few days later at St Andrews. She was crowned as Queen Consort at Holyrood Abbey on February 22 1540. James and Marie had two sons: James and Robert. Their son James lived less than a year, and Robert only two days. A daughter, Mary, was born on December 8, 1542. King James died six days later, making Mary queen regnant.

From 1554, in succession to James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran, Marie ruled Scotland as Regent for Queen Mary, who had been sent to France some years before to be raised with her husband-to-be, the son of the French king Henry II. Marie always consulted with her two powerful brothers in France - Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine, and Francis, Duke of Guise, both of whom held government positions - so that Scotland and France worked as allies in dealing with other nations.

Marie's regency was threatened, however, by the growing influence of the Scottish Protestants, supported secretly by Elizabeth I of England. When Marie died in June 10 or 11, 1560 at Edinburgh Castle, her body was taken back to France and interred at the church in the Convent of Saint-Pierre in Reims, where Marie's sister Renée was the abbess.

In modern times — both in the movie Elizabeth and in Philippa Gregory's novel The Virgin's Lover — it has been suggested that Queen Elizabeth I of England ordered Mary's assassination by poisoning her. There is no evidence for this and Mary of Guise's death was one of the few royal deaths in the 16th century which wasn't attributed by her paranoid contemporaries to poison.



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