On 24 April 1567, Bothwell waylaid Mary on the road from Stirling (whether with or without her connivance) and conducted her to
Dunbar Castle, where he allegedly ravished her. There remained significant obstacles to performance of the bond, not the least of which was the fact that Bothwell had married
Lady Jean Gordon on 24 February 1566. Their marriage was formally annulled on 7 May 1567. A week later, on 15 May 1567,
Bothwell and Mary were married at Holyrood, to the general scandal of Europe. The marriage divided Scotland into two camps, Mary's opposition being known as the
Confederate Lords. At the
Battle of Carberry Hill on 15 June 1567, Mary was defeated and captured and Bothwell escaped to Shetland and then Norway. The bond of 19 April 1567 was discussed in at the
York Conference in October 1568, and mentioned in the document called "
Hay's
Book of Articles", which narrates events from Darnley's murder to Moray's regency from the Confederate Lords' viewpoint. The articles say that the Lords were trapped at the supper into signing the bond. The Earl of Morton became
Regent of Scotland, and in 1581 he was put on trial and executed. Before he was beheaded, he told some kirk ministers that he had signed the bond on the queen's orders, "therefore I subscryvit to the quenis marriage with the erle Bothwell, as sindrie utheris of the nobilitie did, being chargit therunto be the quenis writ and command". ==References==