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Mary, Queen of Scots
In Our Time
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the history of Mary, Queen of Scots, who had potential to be one of the most powerful rulers in Europe, yet she was also one of the most vulnerable. In France, when she was the teenage bride to their future king, she was seen as rightful heir to the thrones of England and Ireland, as well as Queen of Scotland and one day of France, which would have been an extraordinary union. She was widowed too young, though and, a Catholic returning to Protestant Scotland, she struggled to overcome rivalries in her own country. She fled to Protestant England, where she was implicated in plots to overthrow Elizabeth, and it was Elizabeth herself who signed Mary’s death warrant.
With
David Forsyth
Principal Curator, Scottish Medieval-Early Modern Collections at National Museums Scotland
Anna Groundwater
Teaching Fellow in Historical Skills and Methods at the University of Edinburgh
And
John Guy
Fellow of Clare College, University of Cambridge
Producer: Simon Tillotson.
Recommended Reading from In Our Time
Ian B. Cowan, The Enigma of Mary Stuart (Sphere, 1972)
Jane E. A. Dawson, Scotland Re-formed: 1488-1587 (Edinburgh University Press, 2007)
Susan Doran, Mary Queen of Scots: An Illustrated Life (British Library Publishing Division, 2007)
Antonia Fraser, Mary, Queen of Scots (first published 1969; Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2009)
John Guy, My Heart is My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots (Harper Perennial, 2004)
Rosalind K. Marshall, Queen of Scots (Mercat Press, 2000)
Alison Weir, Mary Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley (Vintage, 2008)
Jenny Wormald, Mary Queen of Scots: A Study in Failure with a new foreword and afterward by Anna Groundwater (Birlinn, forthcoming June 2017)