) Mary was
forced to abdicate at
Lochleven Castle on 24 July 1567. He was appointed
regent on 22 August for the infant King
James VI. There was a public ceremony or inauguration in Edinburgh, Moray took an oath before the Justice Clerk
John Bellenden at the
Tolbooth and was proclaimed by heralds at the
Mercat Cross. The appointment was confirmed by
Parliament in December. To raise money, Moray sent his agent
Nicolas Elphinstone to London to sell
Mary's jewels and pearls. Moray bought clothes for his lackeys and an African servant called
Nageir the Moor in February 1568. Mary escaped from Loch Leven on 2 May 1568, and the
Duke of Châtellerault and other nobles rallied to her standard. Moray gathered his allies and defeated her forces at the
Battle of Langside, near
Glasgow, on 13 May 1568. In August 1568, it was reported that Moray refused a letter from Mary's supporter
Lord Herries that was addressed simply to the "Earl of Moray" without his new title of Regent of Scotland.
York conference In September 1568, Moray chose commissioners and travelled to
York to discuss a treaty with England. Moray had a list of allegations against Mary compiled, known as the
Book of Articles, which he sent to Cecil. During this conference, he produced the
Casket letters, which were supposed to incriminate Queen Mary and justify his rule in Scotland. It was later said that a plan by a group of English supporters of Mary to assassinate him at
Northallerton,
Yorkshire, on his way back had been called off.
Military activities Scotland was now in a state of
civil war. Moray moved against the supporters of Queen Mary in their south-west homelands with a military expedition in June 1568 called the 'Raid of Dumfries' or 'Raid of Hoddom'. The Regent's army and the royal artillery were taken to
Biggar, where his allies were commanded to muster on 10 June and proceed on to
Dumfries. The army was protected by a scouting party led by Alexander
Hume of
Manderston, and the vanguard was commanded by the
Earl of Morton and
Lord Home. Behind was the 'carriage' (the artillery train), followed by Moray himself. The Laird of
Cessford followed behind, and the army was flanked by the scouting parties of the Lairds of Merse and
Buccleuch. Along the way, Moray captured houses belonging to supporters of Queen Mary, including
Lord Fleming's Boghall,
Skirling,
Crawford,
Sanquhar,
Kenmure and
Hoddom, where the cannon were deployed, and
Annan, where he rendezvoused with the English nobleman
Lord Scrope (the Captain of
Carlisle Castle), to discuss border matters. Scrope estimated the army to number 6,000 men and returned to Carlisle, where he saw Queen Mary's servants play football on 14 June. Moray then took
Lochmaben Castle, which the
Laird of Drumlanrig was left to hold, and then captured Lochwood and Lochhouse before returning to Edinburgh via
Peebles. At Dumfries, a number of
Lord Maxwell's supporters surrendered. Moray was responsible for the destruction of
Rutherglen castle, which he burned to the ground in 1569 in retribution against the Hamiltons for having supported Mary at the Battle of Langside. In June 1569, Moray went north to
Brechin, where he accepted hostages sent by
George Gordon, 5th Earl of Huntly. At
Dunnotar Castle, he proclaimed that he had "reparit (arrived) in proper person (as Regent) to thir north partis of firm purpose and deliberation to reduce sic as hes neglectit their duty in time bypast ... intending to use lenitie (leniency) and moderation." At
Aberdeen, Moray held talks with Huntly himself. At
Inverness, on 4 June 1569, Moray met the
Highland and Island chiefs with the Earls of Caithness and Sutherland and
Lord Lovat. His secretary, John Wood, said "such a power had seldom been seen there," Moray wrote that "the journey is to put down troubles in the north." In March 1569 Moray came from
Kelso to
Liddesdale and spoke to the English border warden, Sir John Forster. He was accompanied by Lord Home, Ker of
Cessford, Ker of
Ferniehirst, Scot of Buccleuch and 4,000 men. After holding unsatisfactory talks with the local leaders, "the best of the surname men", Moray burned the farmsteads in Liddesdale. He stayed at
Mangerton, then had the house blown up with gunpowder and returned to Jedburgh. == Marriages and issue ==