The marriage was completed by
proxy on 25 January 1502 at
Richmond Palace. Henry pledged a £10,000 dowry, while James promised his bride £1,000 Scots per annum, together with lands and castles yielding a further yearly income of £6,000. The
Earl of Bothwell was proxy for the Scottish king and wore a gown of cloth-of-gold at the ceremony in the Queen's great chamber. He was accompanied by
Robert Blackadder, archbishop of Glasgow, and
Andrew Forman, postulate of Moray. The
herald, John Young, reported that "right notable jousts" followed the ceremony; prizes were awarded the next morning, and the tournament continued another day. The new queen was provided with a large wardrobe of clothes, and her crimson state
bed curtains made of Italian
sarcenet were embroidered with red Lancastrian roses. Clothes were also made for her companion,
Lady Catherine Gordon, the widow of
Perkin Warbeck. The clothes were embroidered by John Flee. In May 1503, James IV confirmed her possession of lands and houses in Scotland, including
Methven Castle,
Stirling Castle,
Doune Castle,
Linlithgow Palace and
Newark Castle in
Ettrick Forest, with the incomes from the corresponding earldom and lordship lands. Later in 1503, months after the death of her mother, Margaret left England for Scotland; her progress was a grand journey northward. She brought with her a large retinue, including, among others,
Elizabeth Denton and
Eleanor Verney. She left Richmond Palace on 27 June 1503 with her father Henry VII, and they travelled first to
Collyweston in
Northamptonshire. At
York a plaque commemorates the exact spot where the Queen of Scots entered its gates. After crossing the border at
Berwick upon Tweed on 1 August 1503, Margaret was met by the Scottish court at
Lamberton. At
Dalkeith Palace, James came to kiss her goodnight. He came again to console her on 4 August after a stable fire had killed some of her favourite horses. Her riding gear, including a new
sumpter cloth or pallion of cloth-of-gold worth £127 was destroyed in the fire. At a
meadow a mile from Edinburgh, there was a pavilion where Sir
Patrick Hamilton and Patrick Sinclair played and fought in the guise of knights defending their ladies. On 8 August 1503, the marriage was celebrated in person in
Holyrood Abbey. The rites were performed by the Archbishop of Glasgow and
Thomas Savage, Archbishop of York; Margaret was anointed during the ceremony. Two days later, on
St Lawrence's day, Margaret went to mass at
St Giles', the town's
Kirk, as her first public appointment. The details of the proxy marriage, progress, arrival, and reception in Edinburgh were recorded by the Somerset Herald, John Young. One English guest recorded the menu of the banquet in a copy of the
Great Chronicle of London. Dishes included solan geese with sauce, baked apples and pears, and jelly moulded with the arms of England and Scotland. In the English parliament,
Thomas More opposed Henry VII's plan for a tax to recover expenses for the wedding. Margaret's crown was made by an Edinburgh goldsmith,
John Currour; in the days following the wedding, Currour also provided her with rings, a heart of gold, an image of the Virgin Mary, and a gold cross. == Reign of James IV ==