Elizabeth was born at
Dunfermline Palace,
Fife, on 19 August 1596 at 2:00 am. King James rode to the bedside from
Callendar, where he was attending the wedding of the
Earl of Orkney. At the time of her birth, her father was
King of Scotland, but not yet King of England. Named in honour of
Elizabeth I of England, her godmother, the young Elizabeth was christened on 28 November 1596 in the Chapel Royal at
Holyroodhouse, and was then proclaimed by the heralds as "Lady Elizabeth". During her early life in Scotland, Elizabeth was brought up at
Linlithgow Palace, where she was placed in the care of
Lord Livingstone and his wife,
Eleanor Hay. A couple of years later the king's second daughter,
Margaret, was placed in their care as well. Elizabeth "did not pay particular attention to this younger sister", as even at this young age her affections were with her brother,
Henry.
Move to England When Queen Elizabeth I of England died in 1603, Elizabeth Stuart's father,
James, succeeded as King of England and Ireland. The
Countess of Kildare was appointed the princess's governess. Along with her elder brother,
Henry, Elizabeth made the journey southward to England with her mother "in a triumphal progress of perpetual entertainment". On her father's birthday, 19 June, Elizabeth danced at
Worksop Manor with
Robert Cecil's son. Elizabeth remained at court for a few weeks, but "there is no evidence that she was present at her
parents' coronation" on 25 July 1603. It seems likely that by this time the royal children already had been removed to
Oatlands, an old Tudor hunting lodge near Weybridge. There was plague in London, and Prince Henry and Princess Elizabeth were moved to
Winchester. Her mother, Anne of Denmark, produced a
masque to welcome them. On 19 October 1603 "an order was issued under the privy seal announcing that the King had thought fit to commit the keeping and education of the Lady Elizabeth to the Lord Harrington and his wife". Under the care of
Lord and
Lady Harington at
Coombe Abbey, Elizabeth met
Anne Dudley, with whom she was to strike up a lifelong friendship. On 3 April 1604, Princess Elizabeth and her ladies rode from Coombe Abbey to
Coventry. The Mayor and Aldermen met her at "
Jabet's Ash on Stoke-green". She heard a sermon in
St Michael's Church and dined in
St Mary's Hall.
Gunpowder Plot painted in 1797 by Maria Johnson Part of the intent of the
Gunpowder Plot of 1605 was to assassinate Elizabeth's father King James and the Protestant aristocracy, kidnap the nine-year-old Elizabeth from
Coombe Abbey, and place her on the throne of England – and presumably the thrones of Ireland and Scotland – as a Catholic monarch. The conspirators chose Elizabeth after considering the other available options. Prince Henry, it was believed, would perish alongside his father. Charles was seen as too feeble (having only just learnt to walk) and
Mary too young. Elizabeth, on the other hand, had already attended formal functions, and the conspirators knew that "she could fulfil a ceremonial role despite her comparative youth". The conspirators aimed to cause an uprising in the Midlands to coincide with the explosion in London and at this point secure Elizabeth's accession as a
puppet queen. She would then be brought up as a Catholic and later married to a Catholic bridegroom. The plot failed when the conspirators were betrayed, and
Guy Fawkes was caught by the King's soldiers before he was able to ignite the powder.
Education Elizabeth was given a comprehensive education for a princess at that time. This education included instruction in natural history, geography, theology, languages, writing, music, and dancing. She was denied instruction in the classics as her father believed that "Latin had the unfortunate effect of making women more cunning". By the age of 12, Elizabeth was fluent in several languages, including French, "which she spoke with ease and grace" and would later use to converse with her husband. She was also an excellent rider, had a thorough understanding of the Protestant religion, and had an aptitude for writing letters that "sounded sincere and never stilted". She also was extremely literary, and "several mementoes of her early love of books exist". ==Courtship and marriage==