Mary married Lord Darnley at Holyrood Palace with three rings, including a rich diamond. Soon after the marriage the couple faced a rebellion now known as the
Chaseabout Raid. In need of money, it was said they tried to pawn some of her jewels in Edinburgh for 2,000
English marks, but no-one would lend this sum. When Mary, Queen of Scots was pregnant in 1566, she made an inventory of her jewels, leaving some as permanent legacies to the crown of Scotland, and others to her relations, courtiers, and ladies-in-waiting. The inventory is regarded as a part of her will, and was rediscovered at
General Register House in Edinburgh in August 1854. Mary mentioned this will in October 1566, when she was ill at
Jedburgh, writing that it was signed, sealed, and in safekeeping at
Stirling Castle. Only the testamentary inventory of jewels is known to survive. Mary noted that the will made in Edinburgh Castle would take effect only if both she and her child died, otherwise the infant would inherit all the jewels, "''J'entands que c'estuisse soyt execute au cas que l'enfant ne me survive mays si il vit, je le foys heritier de tout''".
Mary Livingston and
Margaret Carwood helped her make the inventories and signed the documents. The jewellery is sorted in categories, seven pieces were described as recent purchases. The names of those who would have received jewels were used in studies of the members of the court and household of Mary by the historian
Rosalind K. Marshall. Mary wanted the
Earl of Bothwell to have a jewel for a hat with a mermaid set with diamonds and a ruby, which she kept close by her in her cabinet. An "ensign" or hat badge in the form of a turtle "en tortue" with ten rubies had been a gift from
David Rizzio and was bequeathed to his brother Joseph. The queen's four year old nephew
Francis Stewart, son of
Lord John Stewart, would have had several sets of gold buttons and aiglets, and a slice of
unicorn horn mounted on silver chain, used to test for poison.
Marten furs and zibellini with a gold head and jewelled gold feet, attrib.
William Segar,
Ferens Art Gallery If Mary had died in childbirth, one Scottish lady in waiting,
Annabell Murray, Countess of Mar, and her daughter Mary Erskine would have received jewels including a belt of amethysts and pearls, a belt of
chrysoliths with its pendant chain, bracelets with diamonds, rubies and pearls, pearl earrings, a
zibellino with a gold
marten's head, and yet another belt with a miniature portrait of
Henri II of France. An Edinburgh goldsmith,
John Mosman, had made a gold marten's head for her mother, Mary of Guise, in 1539. Mary had several, some described in French as "hermines" or as a "teste de marte" with matching gold feet to clip to the fur, two heads were made of rock crystal. Mary gave her mother's fur with a gold head and feet to
Mademoiselle Rallay to mend, described as an item to wear around her neck, in December 1561. In 1568, Mary left her sable and marten furs, and presumably the jewelled heads and feet, in Scotland with Mary Livingston and her husband
John Sempill. In June 1580, Mary wrote from Sheffield Castle to the Archbishop of Glasgow in Paris, asking him to send a "double marten" with gold head and feet, set with precious stones, to the value of 400 or 500
Écu. She wanted to bestow it as a gift at the christening of
Mary Talbot a daughter of the
Countess of Shrewsbury. If one could not be bought, Mary suggested an alternative gift of a jewelled night cap and collar. Mary kept some jewelled marten and stoat fur stoles with her in England. The accessory seems to have had allusions to pregnancy and fertility. The
Countess of Pembroke owned a diamond-studded sable head with a set of gold claws in 1562. An engraving for the use of jewellery makers was published by Erasmus Hornick in 1562, which depicts a muzzled animal head with similarities to a zibellino belonging to
Anna of Austria drawn by
Hans Muelich in 1552, and another held by
Frances Sidney, Countess of Sussex, in one of her portraits at
Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge.
Anne of Denmark may have inherited one of these, described in
her inventory of 1606 as, "a sable head of gold with a collar or muzzle attached, garnished with diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and sapphires, with 4 feet". The
Earl of Leicester gave Queen Elizabeth a similar gold sable head and feet in 1585. An example with a ruby tongue and feet set with turquoises was listed in the
1547 inventory of
Henry VIII, and was given to
Lady Jane Grey, and was among Elizabeth's remaining jewels in January 1604 valued at £19. A gold head, with a marten skin, was imported with other jewels to London by an Italian merchant and
milliner, Christopher Carcano, in 1544.
Scented pomander beads and the rosary Mary had two complete suites of head-dresses, necklaces and belts comprising openwork gold perfume beads to hold scented
musk. Mary bequeathed one set, with pearl settings in between the scented beads, to her half-sister
Jean Stewart, Countess of Argyll, the other to her sister-in-law Agnes Keith, Countess of Moray. These items are not listed in later Scottish inventories and Mary may have given them away. The beads are known as
pomander beads from the name of the scented compound or "sweet paste". In 1576 a London goldsmith,
John Mabbe, had 224 "pomanders of gold filled with pomander". Mary also had a pair of scented bracelets, described by the goldsmith, James Mosman, "ane pair of braslatis of gold of musk contenand everilk braslat four pieces and in every piece viij dyamonds and vij rubis and xj pearls in thaim both", which she bequeathed to the Countess of Mar. In England, on 31 August 1568, Mary sent a chain of pomander beads strung on gold wire to
Catherine, Lady Knollys, the wife of her keeper at
Bolton Castle,
Francis Knollys. Knollys was at
Seaton Delaval, and Mary sent the gift to him with a letter written in English and the
Scots Language, mentioning she had not yet met Lady Knollys. Lady Knollys was a courtier and close to Elizabeth.
Rosary beads were known as "pairs of beads" and larger beads separating "decades" of beads were called "gawds" in Scotland and England. Smaller spacing beads were called "jerbes" or "gerbes", a French term. Mary gave
Anne Percy, Countess of Northumberland, a "pair of beads of gold of perfume" which had been her gift from the
Pope. Mary gave other pieces with scented beads to her servants in England including a chain to Elizabeth Curle and bracelets to Mary, the daughter of
Bastian Pagez. The Penicuik necklace (see below), in the National Museums of Scotland, comprises this type of pomander beads, and was Mary's gift to Gillis Mowbray.
James V had owned perfumed beads, and in 1587, Jane Stewart, Countess of Argyll, Mary's half-sister, bequeathed her perfumed beads, described as "ane pair of muist beidis of gold", to Marie Stewart,
Mistress of Gray. New jewellery commissioned in Edinburgh in 1578 for
Margaret Kennedy, Countess of Cassilis, included a locket or tablet filled with "fyne muist". In 1674,
Lady Anne Clifford wrote that she habitually wore a string of vintage pomander beads under her
stomacher. The
Royal Collection Trust has a larger silver gilt segmented pomander for scent traditionally identified as Mary's. Pomander beads occur in the inventories of several royal women and aristocrats. A chain of small pomander beads with pearl "true-loves" was noted in the inventory of
Anne Seymour, Duchess of Somerset.
Philip II of Spain gave
Mary I of England a bracelet of 57 little pomander beads. Later
Lady Anne Clifford owned this scented bracelet and wore it under her
stomacher.
Lady Catherine Gordon, the widow of
Perkin Warbeck, owned a "great pomander of gold" which she would have worn suspended by a chain from her belt or girdle. Accounts of Mary disrobing for
her execution mention a chain of pomander beads, or her wearing a pomander necklace with an "Agnus Dei". The inventories mention a rock crystal "Agnus Dei". Contemporary accounts of the execution mention that Mary wore a "chaplet or beads, fastened to her girdle, with a gold cross" or "a pair of beads at her girdle with a golden cross". Her two women,
Jane Kennedy and
Elizabeth Curle, disrobed her of her "chayne of pomander beades and all other her apparell". Mary had written to the Bishop of Glasgow in November 1577 that she had been sent "chaplets" and an "Agnus Dei" from Rome. These may be the items mentioned in the narrative of her execution. The gold rosary beads and a crucifix worn by Mary at her execution are said to have been bequeathed to
Anne Dacre, Countess of Arundel, kept by the Howards of
Corby Castle, and displayed at
Arundel Castle. The various manuscript accounts of Mary's death do not all agree on costume details, but it was noted in August 1586 that Mary usually wore a particular gold cross. In Scotland, it was rumoured that Queen Elizabeth wore a crucifix hanging from a pair of beads, in the same manner, for three days in March 1565.
Gifts at the baptism of Prince James Mary safely gave birth to
Prince James at
Edinburgh Castle. According to
Anthony Standen a diamond cross was fixed to James's
swaddling clothes in the cradle. His
christening was held at Stirling Castle on 17 December 1566. Mary gave presents of her jewels as diplomatic gifts. The
Earl of Bedford represented
Queen Elizabeth at the baptism and was guest of honour at the
banquet and masque. She gave him a gold chain set with pearls, diamonds, and rubies. According to
James Melville of Halhill she also gave
Christopher Hatton a chain of pearls and a diamond ring, a ring and a chain with her miniature picture to
George Carey, and gold chains to five English gentlemen of "quality". She received a necklace of pearl and rubies and earrings from the French ambassador, the
Count de Brienne. In January 1567,
Obertino Solaro, Sieur de Moretta, an ambassador of the
Duke of Savoy, who was late for the baptism, gave Mary a fan with jewelled feathers. Bedford refused to go in the chapel at the baptism, and so
Jean Stewart, Countess of Argyll, went in his place, as godmother, and he gave her a ring with a ruby, from Elizabeth.
Imagery of a mourning ring in the Casket Letters describes the gift of a ring to
James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell It was said (in November 1573), that Mary gave
James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell jewels worth 20 or 30,000 crowns. The valet
Nicolas Hubert alias French Paris said that Mary told him to give Bothwell a coffer of jewels and silverware. He also took a casket of jewels to the
Laird of Skirling, an ally of Bothwell, at Edinburgh Castle. Bothwell was said to have left jewels given to him by Mary worth 20,000 crowns in Edinburgh Castle when he fled to Orkney. suggests that Mary may have composed the letter with the imagery of mourning jewellery for
Lord Darnley. After Mary was deposed, her enemies produced the
Casket Letters, which she was said to have written to Bothwell and which demonstrated her involvement in the
murder of Lord Darnley. One of these letters, usually known as the third casket letter, which was claimed to prove Mary's affection for Bothwell, powerfully invokes the imagery of the gift of a
memento mori ring in the context of Bothwell's absence and her regret. She sends the ring with her servant, French Paris, as a token not of mourning, but of her love, steadfastness, and their marriage. A French version of the letter describes the object as a jewel containing his name and memory joined with a lock of her hair,
comme mes chevaulx en la bague. The Scottish text of the letter was published by
George Buchanan in his
Detectioun, and, as printed by Robert Lekprevik at St Andrews in 1572, includes:I have send yow ... the ornament of the heid [a skull, or a lock of her hair], quhilk is the chief gude of the uther memberis, ... the remnant cannot be bot subject to yow, and with consenting of the hart, ... I send unto yow a sepulture of hard stane, colourrit with black, sawin with teiris and banes. The stane I compare with my hart, ... your name and memorie that ar thairin inclosit, as is my hear[t] in this ring, never to cum forth quhill [till] deith grant unto yow to ane trophee of victorie of my banes, in signe that yow haif maid ane full conqueist of me, of myne hart, ... The ameling [enamel] that is about is blak, quhilk [which] signifyis the steidfastnes of hir that sendis the same. The teiris ar without number The phrases and metaphors in this letter, and the equation of the precious stone and Mary's heart, can be compared with the verses associated with Mary's previous gift of a ring to Elizabeth I. The word "sawin" means sown or strewn, the equivalent of French
semée, the heraldic sprinkling of teardrops and bones that decorate a tomb. When Mary was pregnant in 1566, she made a will bequeathing to Bothwell a diamond-set mermaid hat badge and a table diamond enamelled black, and to his countess
Jean Gordon, a headdress, collar, and sleeves set with rubies, garnets, and pearls. Some writers have identified the diamond in the letter as the jewel in the bequest. Mary owned at least other two black-enamelled diamond rings. A literary parallel, noted by
George Saintsbury, occurs in the
Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles, in a tale (no. 26) where a woman gives her lover a gold ring decorated with tears,
esmaillée de larmes noires, as a sign of fidelity, and such rings are found in French inventories, described as
verges, the name for a ring given to a spouse. It has been suggested that Jean Gordon or
Anna Throndsen might have written such a letter to Bothwell.
John Guy concludes the original letter may have been from Mary to Darnley. ==The lion and the mouse==