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See also: queen of Scotland, eldest daughter of See also: Henry VII.,
See also: king of
See also: England, by his wife See also: Elizabeth, daughter of
See also: Edward IV., was See also: born at See also: Westminster on the 29th of See also: November 1489
.
Before she was six years old negotiations were opened, which dragged on for several years, for marrying the princess to See also: James IV. of Scotland, whose support of the pretender Perkin
See also: Warbeck it was hoped to avert by such an See also: alliance
.
Eventually the See also: marriage was celebrated in See also: Edinburgh on the 8th of See also: August 1503
.
The avaricious Henry VII. gave his daughter a scanty dowry and quarrels on this See also: head embittered the relations between the two kingdoms, which the marriage, although accompanied by a treaty of perpetual See also: peace, did nothing to heal
.
The whole of See also: Margaret's See also: life after her marriage with James IV. was an unending series of intrigues, first with one See also: political faction then with another; at one See also: time in favour of her native country, at another in hostility to it, her conduct being mainly influenced at all times by considerations affecting her See also: pocket
.
Margaret was crowned at Edinburgh in See also: March 1504
.
Until 1507 she had no
See also: children; between that date and 1510 two sons and a daughter were born, all of whom died in See also: infancy; in 1512 she gave See also: birth to a son who succeeded his See also: father as James V.; in 1514 she See also: bore a See also: posthumous son, See also: Alexander, created duke of
See also: Ross, who died in the following See also: year
.
A dispute with her See also: brother Henry VIII. over a See also: legacy claimed by Margaret was a contributory cause of the war which ended at See also: Flodden, where James IV. was killed on the 9th of See also: September 1513, having by his will appointed Margaret See also: sole See also: guardian of her infant son, now King James V
.
Scotland was divided mainly into two parties, one in favour of alliance with England, and the other with See also: France
.
The See also: leader of the latter was See also: John
See also: Stewart, duke of Albany, next heir to the
See also: crown of Scotland after Margaret's sons; Margaret herself for the most See also: part inclined to the See also: English faction; and when Albany returned to Scotland from France on the invitation of the Scottish parliament in the spring of 1514, the conflict See also: grew almost to See also: civil war
.
Various projects for Margaret's remarriage had already been started, See also: Louis XII. of France and the emperor
See also: Maximilian being proposed as suitable husbands for the See also: young widow, when the queen privately married Archibald See also: Douglas, See also: earl of See also: Angus, on the 6th of August 1514
.
The consequences of this marriage were to alienate many of the most powerful of the See also: nobility, especially the earls of See also: Arran and Home, and to make Margaret entirely dependent on the See also: house of Douglas; while it furnished the council with a pretext for removing her from the regency and guardianship of theking in favour of Albany in See also: July 1515
.
Albany had to blockade Margaret inSee also: Stirling See also: Castle before she would surrender her sons
.
After being obliged to capitulate
.
Margaret returned to Edinburgh, and being no longer responsible for the custody of the king she fled to England in September, where a See also: month later she bore to Angus a daughter, Margaret, who afterwards became countess of Lennox, See also: mother of See also: Lord See also: Darnley and grandmother of James I. of England
.
In the summer of 1516 Margaret went to her brother's See also: court in See also: London, while Angus, much to his wife's displeasure, returned to Scotland, where he made his peace with Albany and was restored to his estates
.
The rivalry between the French and English factions in Scotland was complicated by private feuds of the Hamiltons and Douglases, the respective heads of which houses, Arran and Angus, were contending for the supreme power in the See also: absence of Albany in France, where at the instance of Henry VIII. he was detained by See also: Francis I
.
Margaret, See also: quarrel-See also: ling with her See also: husband over See also: money matters, sided at first with Arran and began to agitate for a See also: divorce from Angus
.
In this she was probably aided by Albany, who had been in See also: Rome, and who found an unexpected ally in the queen-mother, Margaret being temporarily alienated from the English party by her brother Henry's opposition to her divorce
.
When Albany returned to Scotland in 1521 his association with Margaret gave rise to the accusation that it was with the intention of marrying her himself that he favoured her divorce from Angus, and it was even suggested that she was Albany's See also: mistress
..
As Albany was strongly supported by the Scottish parliament, Angus found it necessary to withdraw to France till 1524
.
During these years there was See also: constant warfare between the English and the Scots on the border, but in May 1524 Albany was obliged to retire to France
.
Henry VIII. continually aimed at securing the See also: person of his See also: nephew, the king of Scots; while Margaret veered from faction to faction without any settled policy, unless it were the " erection " of her son, i.e. his proclamation as a reigning See also: sovereign, which she successfully brought about in July 1524
.
The queen-mother had at this time fallen in love with Henry Stewart, second son of Lord Avondale, whom she married immediately after obtaining her divorce from Angus in 1527
.
Margaret and her new husband, who was created Lord See also: Methven, now became for a time the ruling influence in the counsels of James V
.
But when her See also: desire to arrange a meeting between James and Henry VIII. in 1534 was frustrated by the opposition .of the See also: clergy and the council, Margaret in her disappointment revealed certain secrets to Henry which led to her being accused by her son of betraying him for money and of acting as an English See also: spy
.
In 1537 she was anxious to obtain a divorce from Methven, and her desire was on the point of being realized when it was defeated by the intervention of James
.
Two years later she was reconciled to her husband, by whom she had no children; and, continuing to the end to intrigue both in Scotland and England, she died at Methven Castle on the 18th of See also: October 1541
.
See Andrew Lang, See also: History of Scotland, vol. i
.
(London, 190o) ; Mary A
.
E
.
See also: Green, Lives of the Princesses of England (6 vols., London, 1849–1855) ; The See also: Hamilton Papers, ed. by J
.
Bain (2 vols., Edinburgh, 189o) John
See also: Leslie, History of Scotland, ed. by T
.
See also: Thompson (4 vols., Edinburgh, 183o) ; See also: Sir H
.
See also: Ellis, See also: Original Letters Illustrative of English History (London, 1825–1846)
.
(R
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