Margaret DOUGLAS
(C. Lennox)
Born: 6 Oct 1515, Harbottle
Died: 9 Mar 1577/8, Hackney
Buried: 3 Apr 1577/8, Westminster Abbey, London, England
Notes: The Complete Peerage vol.I,p.158,note b. See The Complete Peerage vol.XIV,p.432 for corrected birth date.
Father: Archibald DOUGLAS (6° E. Angus)
Mother: Margaret TUDOR (Queen of Scotland)
Married 1: Thomas HOWARD
Associated with: Charles HOWARD (Sir Knight)
Married 2: Matthew STUART (4° E. Lennox) 6 Jul 1544
Children:
1. Henry STUART
3. Son STUART 4. Dau. STUART 5. Dau. STUART |
6. Son STUART 7. Charles STUART (5° E. Lennox) 8. Son STUART 9. Son STUART
|
Margaret, Countess of Lennox
in the 1570´s
by an unknown artist (detail)
Royal Collection © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
Daughter of Archibald Douglas,
6º Earl of Angus, and
Margaret Tudor.
Her mother was fleeing from
Scotland, seeking shelter with her brother,
Henry VIII, when Margaret was
born at Harbottle, on the English side of the border. Margaret of Scotland visited England
the summer of 1516, bringing her
six-month-old daughter, Margaret. Widely reputed to be one of the most beautiful women of her generation,
she lived at English Court since 1530, and
Henry VIII treated her
almost as if she was his own daughter. She was one of
Anne Boleyn's ladies. Young
Lady Margaret was thrown
into the Tower of London on 8 Jun 1536, when
Henry VIII came to know that she was engaged to
Sir Thomas Howard, half-brother
of the Duke of Norfolk,
since Easter 1536. There had been an exchange of
gifts; she had given him her miniature and ha had given her a cramp ring.
Mary Howard, the wife of
Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond, and
Norfolk daughter, was suspected of having known
about the match and it emerged that "divers times" she had been her
only chaperone. It is entirely probable that
Norfolk was self-serving enough to betray his
half brother to the
King.
Not only would Margaret's arrest and imprisionment make
Fitzroy's
position stronger, but also it was the only way to ensure that neither
Norfolk,
nor indeed his daughter
Mary, were implicated in the couple's guilt.
The Duchess of Richmond in particular was fortunate that her role
was not more strictly examined. Both Thomas
and Margaret maintained that she had not
been told of their marriage, but she was clearly a close friend and
confidante. Their
"circle" had a literary bent and they all wrote poetry, although
only the sonnets of Mary's brother, the Earl
of Surrey, achieved renown.
From Nov 1536 until Oct or Nov 1537, Margaret
was confined
at
Syon. In a letter written to
Thomas Cromwell,
Abbess Agnes Jordan complained about the number of manservants Margaret had with
her and the possibility that she might use them to send messages to Lord
Thomas in the Tower of London. Margaret apparently had both her own servants
and Howard's with her until Cromwell intervened.
Lady Margaret was not one to cry over spilt
milk; knowing that she was in mortal danger, she made it clear to the Council in
a letter to Cromwell in
1537 that s
Margaret,
Countess of Lennox
Henry
Stuart, Baron Darnley, at age 17,
and his younger brother Charles, after
Earl of Lennox, at age 6
by Hans
Eworth
Royal
Collection © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
In 1544 Margaret Douglas married
Mathew Stuart, 4º Earl of Lennox,
was a Scottish nobleman. Lennox and his wife,
had several sons, but only two survived,
Henry and Charles. They were in great favor in England
until the accession of Elizabeth I, who did not trust them.
During Mary's
reign, after
Wyatt Rebellion, when
Princess Elizabeth was summoned to Court in
order to answer about her invovement in the conspiracy, the room above her
bedchamber in Whitehall belonged to her Scots cousin, Lady Lennox,
who deliberately turned it into a kitchen, so that the
princess would be continually disturbed by the
noisy "casting down of logs, pots and vessels". There were rumours
that Mary
would set aside
Henry VIII's
will and name the Countess her successor, and
- with her eye on the crown - Margaret Douglas seized every
opportunity to denigrate
Elizabeth to
Mary and report every
snippet of gossip that tended to confirm her guilt.
On Wednesday 25 Jul 1554, Lady Margaret borne the
Queen's train, with the
Marchioness
of Winchester, at her wedding with
Felipe II of Spain. On 14 Dec 1558, she was Chief
Mourner of the Queen's
funeral at Westminster Abbey, a full Roman Catholic ceremonial. After
Elizabeth's accesion, the
Lennox
became leaders among the Catholic nobility. During the
summer of 1561, the secret wedding of Catherine Grey with
Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, the
privy Council difficulties were enhanced by the sustained claims of the
Scotish Queen
and the intrigues of her cousin, Lady Lennox. Margaret
considered she had a better claim to the english throne than
Mary Stuart,
Catherine
or Mary Grey, or any other
Plantagenet descendant. She was now plotting against
Elizabeth,
with the result that plans were made to arrest her and her husband as soon
as the necessary evidence could be collected. Lady Lennox
was put in the tower for a year. Then,
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester,
who was no longer in favour of
Catherine Grey claim, suggests that lady
Lennox was set free in order to lower
Catherine's chances
by providing a competitor. The Lennox's succeeded in 1565 marrying their son,
Lord Darnley,
to Mary Stuart. After
Darnley's murder,
Lennox formally
accused the Earl of Bothwell
of the deed but failed to appear at his farcical trial. When Mary
was imprisoned, Lennox
again became prominent and, through
Elizabeth's intervention, was chosen regent to succeed (1570) the
1st Earl of Murray.
Mary's party, led
by the
Hamiltons and William Maitland, at once declared war against him.
Lennox was stabbed to
death in a raid during this war. His surviving son, Charles, was created
Earl of Lennox. Physically a weakling and given to outbursts of petulant
temper, Charles Stuart infuriated his mother by slouching about,
constantly unsettled and fidgety. With his self-centred arrogance he strongly
resembled his elder brother,
Lord Darnley.
And, as had his celebrated brother, he possessed great superficial charm; a
quality inherent in most of the Stuarts. Lady Lennox had almost despaired of Charles
and lamented, to anyone who cared to listen, that he lacked the control of a
father. By the time Charles was fifteen years old, he was well on the way
to becoming a delinquent. In desperation, Lady Lennox had earlier
appealed to
Lord Burghley to take the boy
into his household and exercise a measure of discipline upon the headstrong
youth. She claimed he was her 'greatest dolour', and in her letter to
Burghley, she went on to say:
'At these years he is somewhat unfurnished of
qualities needful and I being a lone woman am less like to have him well
reformed at home than before'
Lord Burghley, servant of a
Tudor, shied at having a Stuart under his roof but did promise to provide a
Swiss tutor for the boy. Unfortunately, Peter Malliet, the appointed
tutor, albeit a good teacher, failed to furnish the boy with the 'qualities
needful'. Charles remained a trial to his mother. The movements of the Countess of Lennox had been watched the more carefully for
the past six years; since, in fact, her dangerous daughter-in-law, Mary Stuart
had arrived, uninvited, in England. In the Autumm of 1574 Margaret asked the Council if
she might be allowed to go to Chatsworth to visit the
Queen of Scots who was being held there in the charge of Lord Shrewsbury
and his wife, Bess.
Mary had recently been removed from Wingfield because security measures
proved difficult to maintain at the manor. The request was refused point-blank.
The Enlish Council were suspicious of anything or
anybody connected with Mary and they feared that some plot was afoot between
Lady Lennox and the Queen of Scots. The Council were
increasingly nervous of this lady's motives for it appeared that Lady Lennox had
undergone a complete change of heart. Hitherto, she had been loud and vehement
in her denunciation of her royal daughter-in-law, swearing that Mary had
connived at the murder of her son, Henry Darnley. Suddenly, here she was,
prepared to face the rigours of a northern winter in order to make a courtesy
visit to the one person whose head, she declared, she would like to see struck
from her shoulders. The Council concluded, wrongly, that the Queen of Scots
sought to appease her mother-in-law by offering some advantageous marriage for
her remaining son, Charles. Permission, however, was given for the
Countess to travel north on the condition that she stayed away from
Chatsworth and made no attempt to communicate with
Mary. When Fenelon, the
French ambassador, learned that the Countess was leaving London, he wrote at
once to his master, observing: 'I greatly suspect that she has no other purpose
than to transfer the little Prince into England'. Lady Lennox had
decided on the wholly ill-conceived idea to continue her journey
beyond Yorkshire and into Scotland, gain possession of the infant James, and
bring him back to England with her. Just how she would have wrested the child
from the protection of the Regent Moray is difficult to understand. It was
probably the dream of an ageing lady, with no thought of the danger she courted. Lady Lennox broke her journey at Huntingdon, where she was invited to stay with
Catherine, Dowager Duchess of Suffolk.
It was while Lady Lennox and her supercilious son were house guests at
Huntingdon that a third lady arrived, seemingly on a casual visit to her old
friend the Duchess. It was Bess
of Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury, who was staying at
Rufford Abbey, one of the Shrewsbury estates, but a few miles from Huntingdon.
Of the three aristocratic ladies assembled, the Countess of Shrewsbury was
undoubtedly the wealthiest, the most ambitious, and the only one who, at
present, stood well in the Queen's favour. Cordially,
Bess proposed that the
other two ladies should come and stay with her at Rufford Abbey, in repayment of
the hospitality shown her by the Duchess. The Abbey was not far distant and the
elderly Duchess could manage the journey quite well. The return visit was
arranged for mid-October. Bess went to Rufford with her daughter, Elizabeth Cavendish,
nine-teen years old and of gentle disposition.
They had invited the Countess of Lennox and her son, Charles, to stay at Rufford
Abbey, which Bess had renovated to her taste. Charles's mother
admitted that she indeed felt ill, and promptly took to her bed for five
days.
Bess
nursed her to health and Elizabeth and Charles were left to entertain each
other. The young couple fell madly in love. The Countess Lennox wished her son
happiness and Bess wanted her family wedded into the Royal Family with or
without Queen Elizabeth's consent.
Queen Mary advised them to be
married and face the consequences after, which is exactly what happened. As the
Queen of England was furious, she sent for both women.
The Countess of Lennox was sent
to the Tower, Bess was seriously warned of her actions and Mary Stuart
stayed at Sheffield Castle. The atmosphere changed as soon as she entered it,
"it was as though a sharp wind blows through the house".
Bess was not
happy about her experience and ridicule of being in the Tower, the only revenge
she could muster was to spread gossip and slander she had heard regarding the Queen. The Countess of Lennox showered
Burghley with letters indignantly
stating that, as a woman alone, she had merely looked to the interests of her
son. Subtly she pointed out that had
Burghley done more for Charles,
the reprehensible affair need never have come about. She did not hesitate either
to name Lady Shrewsbury as the
chief mischief-maker. Carefully she wrote: '... Touching my going to Rufford to my Lady of Shrewsbury, both being thereunto
very earnestly requested and the place not one mile distant out of my way, yea
and a much fairer way as it well proved to be, and my Lady meeting me herself
upon the way, I could not refuse, it being near thirty miles from Sheffield. Now
my Lord, for the hasty marriage of my son after he had entangled himself so that
he could have none other, I refer the same to your Lordship's good
consideration, whether it was not most fitting for me to marry them, he being
mine only son and comfort that is left to me. [And here Lady Lennox could not
refrain from a sly
dig at
Burghley] Your Lordship can bear me witness how desirous I have been to
have had a match for him other than this...' As the
Queen of England was furious, she sent for both women, together with
the young bride and groom. After a dreadful journey in the worst of the
winter weather, shivering in sleeting gales and held up by floods in the
Midlands, the disconsolate party limped into London in Dec 1574. The Countesses
were told to go to their respective houses and given strict instructions to stay
there. Bess probably went to
Shrewsbury House in Chelsea; Margaret Lennox to her house in Hackney. The two offending ladies were summoned to the
presence of the
Queen Elizabeth, and when the interview ended, as Bess had expected and
Lady Lennox feared, with
both ladies being consigned to the Tower. Charles and Elizabeth Lennox were
placed under house arrest at their house at Hackney and ordered, on pain of
close imprisonment, neither to communicate by letter nor to converse with any
persons unless authorized by the Council.
A commission of enquiry was set up under Francis Walsingham to elicit where, when and by whom the marriage negotiations
were started in the first place. Both the Shrewsbury and Lennox households were
examined minutely. The Earl of Huntingdon was instructed to question both
ladies as well as every servant in their employ. Even the humblest kitchenmaids
did not escape the probing examination of the commission. Lady Lennox's steward,
Thomas Fowler, came in for special attention. There is no extant record of
Fowler's statements but it is apparent that, if he had known anything about it,
he managed to keep it from the commission, for by Jan 1575, the Countess of
Shrewsbury was back at her home in Sheffield. Having been for many years regarded by the Council with a
jaundiced eye, and lacking any influential friends, the Countess of Lennox
was kept under lock and key until the
Queen was pleased to free her. It was not until Oct 1575 that
Lady Lennox was grudgingly allowed to return to her home at Hackney. Her
homecoming was brightened with the discovery that she had become a grandmother.
Her son's wife had given birth to a daughter,
Arabella. As soon as the christening of the semi-royal baby was over
Margaret Lennox took both parents and child back to London with her.
Amicable relations had been established with
Mary, Queen of Scots, as evidenced by a letter the Countess
wrote to Mary: '... And
now I must yield your Majesty humble thanks for your good remembrance
and bounty to our little daughter here, who [will] someday serve your
Highness. Almighty God grant unto your Majesty an happy life. Your
Majesty's most humble mother and aunt. Hackney,
this l0th November.' This surge of apparent good will from the Countess of
Lennox convinced Mary that,
though she was locked up, a prisoner, there were still people who wished her
well and who might prove useful to her. Obstinately, she clung to the notion
that she was a ruling sovereign. To show the world that it was so, she published
her will, defending her right to the Scottish throne and her prerogative to
dispose of how she wished. In her will she left the right of succession to
Queen Elizabeth, to Charles
Lennox, 'or Claude Hamilton whichever shall serve us faithfully and be
most constant in religion, should our son, James, persist in his heresy'. In
addition she insisted that the Countess of Lennox should be reinstated in
the earldom of Angus. The will, of course, was not worth the paper upon which it
was written. Unfortunately, the health of Charles Lennox was a
source of worry. The young man spat blood and his cheeks, at times, carried the
high flush of the consumptive. When Charles Stuart, Earl of Lennox,
succumbed to the destruction of his lungs in Apr 1576, he was twenty-one years
old and eighteen months married. His death started a wrangle, involving the
child
Arabella, which was to last for some
time. The Lennox inheritance represented quite a considerable
income, and the two Countesses, the Dowager Margaret, and Charles's
widow, both needed the money.
Arabella was the concern legally, of
Margaret Lennox and her daughter-in-law. When Margaret's husband,
Matthew, the fourth
Earl, had died, the title of Lennox reverted to James VI, as heir to
Matthew's elder son,
Darnley. Earlier, in Apr 1572, James had re-conferred the
honour and the income upon Charles, his younger uncle, and his heirs.
Arabella was the only child of
Charles therefore the earldom should by right have come to her, making her
the Countess of Lennox in her own right. But James, or the Regent Morton, at Charles's
death, disregarded the rightful heir,
Arabella, and pronounced the title
extinct. To the Dowager's demand, the Regent Morton tartly replied
that, as James had been a minor when the title was granted to the child's
father, it could be revoked at any time. And because the claimant was a female,
this was as good a time to do it as any. The Dowager, who had no
influence at all, except her renewed friendship with
Mary, Queen of Scots, turned to that unhappy lady to enlist her aid
in getting her son to disgorge the title. Mary,
who supported the child, drafted a codicil to her will, dated Feb 1577, in which
she commanded James to relinquish the title in favour of
Arabella. The following year
Mary repeated her wishes to the Bishop of Glasgow. This, in
turn, had not the slightest effect, and in May 1578 conferred the Earldom of
Lennox upon Robert Stuart, Bishop of Caithness,
Matthew's brother. On 9 Mar 1578, the Dowager Countess of Lennox died
unexpectedly and, many thought, mysteriously. That same evening
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, had been her guest at dinner and
within a few hours of his departure she was dead. Tongues wagged and many were
of the opinion that the poor lady's death was no mystery at all; the
Earl, with whom she
had dined, had simply poisoned her. Of course, not a shred of proof of this was
forthcoming. At fifty-two, the Dowager had been in the best of health and
actively pursuing
Arabella's interests, but no possible
motive for such a deed can be connected with the
Queen's Favourite. It is more than probable that the eider
Countess succumbed to an ailment that Elizabethan doctors knew nothing
about; a burst appendix perhaps, followed by peritonitis. Whatever the cause,
her grandmother's demise drew
Arabella one step nearer the throne and
accordingly increased her importance. Lady Lennox died a poor woman. Her treasurer disclosed the dismal fact that
there was not enough money to cover the cost of her funeral. However, for the
Queen's cousin, a State funeral was ordered for which
Elizabeth, to her chagrin,
was obliged to pay. Spending money was not one of the
Queen's favourite pastimes
so, to recoup the expense of the heralds, the trappings and the elaborate tomb
in Westminster Abbey,
Elizabeth seized the English estates of the departed Countess.
Tomb
of Margaret, Countess of Lennox
at Westminster Abbey
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