The next Wednesday, Queen Mary rode to the
Estates of Parliament, with Lord Bothwell carrying the
Sceptre, where the proceedings of Bothwell's trial were officially declared to be just according to the law of the land. On Saturday 19 April 1567, eight bishops, nine earls, and seven Lords of Parliament put their signatures to what became known as the
Ainslie Tavern Bond, a manifesto declaring that Mary should marry a native-born subject, and handed it to Bothwell. Bothwell started divorce proceedings citing his
adultery with Jane Gordon's servant Bessie Crawford as a cause. On 24 April, while Mary was on the road from
Linlithgow Palace to Edinburgh, Bothwell suddenly appeared with 800 men. He assured her that danger awaited her in Edinburgh, and told her that he proposed to take her to
Dunbar Castle, out of harm's way. She agreed to accompany him and arrived at Dunbar at midnight. There, Mary was taken prisoner by Bothwell and allegedly raped by him to secure marriage to her and the crown (though whether she was his accomplice or his unwilling victim remains a controversial issue). On 12 May the Queen created him
Duke of Orkney and
Marquess of Fife at Holyrood. On 15 May they were married in the Great Hall at
Holyrood, according to Protestant rites officiated by
Adam Bothwell,
Bishop of Orkney and
John Craig. Mary was married in mourning clothes, described as "dule weed". According to
William Drury, an English commander at
Berwick, there were only a few witnesses who heard a sermon the palace's chamber of presence. The French ambassador,
Philibert du Croc did not attend the Duke's creation or the wedding. On the day of the wedding, Mary ordered a gown of black figured velvet embroidered with silver and gold. Mary gave her new husband a fur lined night-gown. There were few festivities until two weeks after the wedding, when there was a triumph and tilt and Bothwell "
ran at the ring" at
Leith. The marriage divided the country into two camps, and on 16 June, the Lords opposed to Mary and the Duke of Orkney (as Bothwell had newly become) signed a Bond denouncing them. A showdown between the two opposing sides followed at
Carberry Hill on 15 June, from which Orkney (as Lord Bothwell was now known) fled, after one final embrace, never to be seen again by Mary. In December that year, Bothwell's titles and estates were forfeited by Act of Parliament. ==Escape to Scandinavia and imprisonment==