Lady Arbella Stuart (also Arabella , or Stewart ; 1575 – 25 September 1615) was an English noblewoman who was considered a possible successor to Queen Elizabeth I of England. During the reign of King James VI and I (her first cousin), she married William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset , another claimant to the English throne, in secret. King James imprisoned William Seymour and placed her under house arrest. When she and her husband tried to escape England, she was captured and imprisoned in the Tower of London , where she died at age 39.
33-428: She was the only child of Charles Stuart, 1st Earl of Lennox (of the third creation), by his marriage to Elizabeth Cavendish . She was a grandchild of Matthew Stewart, 4th Earl of Lennox (of the second creation) and Lady Margaret Douglas , the daughter and heiress of Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus , and of Margaret Tudor , daughter of King Henry VII of England and widow of King James IV of Scotland . Arbella
66-648: A stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Main Plot The Main Plot was an alleged conspiracy of July 1603 by English courtiers to remove King James I from the English throne and to replace him with his cousin Lady Arbella Stuart . The plot was supposedly led by Lord Cobham and funded by the Spanish government. In a state trial, the defendants accused of involvement in
99-466: A collection of embroideries made by Mary, Queen of Scots to her aunt for £850. Arbella, who was lodged at Highgate, dressed as a man to escape. This involved putting on French-fashioned hose over her petticoat, a man's doublet , a male wig over her hair, a black hat, black cloak, russet boats with red tops, and wearing a rapier. Imogen, the virtuous, cross-dressed heroine of William Shakespeare 's play Cymbeline (1610–1611), has sometimes been read as
132-599: A collection of them was published, edited by Sara Jayne Steen, providing details of her activities and ideas. Emilia Lanier 's 1611 poem Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum is dedicated to Arbella among other aristocratic women, though little read at the time. Lanier recalls a former personal friendship with Arbella that was unrequited; she addresses her as "Great learned Ladie ... whom long I have known but not known so much as I desired". Felicia Hemans ' poem " [REDACTED] Arabella Stuart .", published in Records of Women , 1828,
165-480: A possible heir to the throne, there were discussions of appropriate marriages for her throughout her childhood. In 1588, it was proposed to James VI of Scotland that Ludovic Stuart, 2nd Duke of Lennox , should be married to Arbella, but nothing seems to have come of this suggestion. James VI was interested in this match but the Countess of Lennox's servant Thomas Fowler discouraged him. Other potential matches were
198-643: A prisoner in the Tower of London , Arbella Seymour (her married name), refusing to eat, fell ill, and died on 25 September 1615. She was buried in Westminster Abbey on 29 September 1615. In the 19th century, during a search for the tomb of James VI and I, Arbella's lead coffin was found in the vault of Mary, Queen of Scots, (her aunt by marriage) placed directly on top of that of the Scots queen. Over one hundred letters written by Arbella have survived. In 1993,
231-561: A reference to Arbella, but the warrant for the couple's arrest is dated 3 June 1611 and Simon Forman recorded seeing a production of that play in April 1611. The black hat and riding safeguard worn by one woman reminded a witness, John Bright, of Moll Cutpurse . Beauchamp also disguised himself to escape from the Tower. Both told some of the servants they left behind that they were going in disguise to meet their partner. Arbella went by boat on
264-505: A year (equivalent to £14,000 in 2023) from Arbella based on the fact that he had "been so much damnified [i.e. that much out of pocket] by leaving the University". This has led to speculation that Morley was the poet Christopher Marlowe , whose name was sometimes spelt that way. For some time before 1592, Arbella was considered one of the natural candidates to succeed her first cousin twice removed, Queen Elizabeth I. However, between
297-781: A younger sister of Lady Jane Grey and a granddaughter of Mary Tudor , younger sister of King Henry VIII and Arbella's ancestor, Margaret Tudor. Under the circumstances, the King wondered whether the marriage was the prelude to an attempt to seize the Crown itself. Although the couple at first denied that any arrangement existed between them, they later married in secret on 22 June 1610 at Greenwich Palace . For marrying without his permission, King James imprisoned them: Arbella in Sir Thomas Perry's house in Lambeth and Lord Beauchamp in
330-550: Is about Arbella, imagining her thoughts as she died in prison. The English novelist and historical biographer Doris Leslie wrote the book Wreath for Arabella in 1948. In 2005, Sarah Gristwood published Arbella: England's Lost Queen . Charles Stuart, 1st Earl of Lennox Charles Stuart, 5th Earl of Lennox (April or May 1557 – April 1576), was the fourth son of Matthew Stewart, 4th Earl of Lennox and Lady Margaret Douglas , daughter of Margaret Tudor and granddaughter of King Henry VII of England . His brother
363-580: The Thames to Lee (in Kent ). She sailed to France before Lord Beauchamp arrived. Beauchamp caught the next ship to Flanders . Arbella's ship was overtaken by King James's men just before it reached Calais . She was returned to England and imprisoned in the Tower of London . She never saw her husband again. Later in the summer of 1610, Arbella embroidered a pair of gloves for Anne of Denmark and sent them to her lady-in-waiting Jane Drummond . She hoped to regain
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#1732775724599396-469: The Tower of London . The couple had some liberty within those buildings, and some of Arbella's letters to Beauchamp and to the King during this period survive. When the King learned of her letters to Lord Beauchamp, however, he ordered Arbella's transfer to the custody of William James , Bishop of Durham . Arbella claimed to be ill, so her departure for Durham was delayed. The couple used that delay to plan their escape. Arbella raised some money by selling
429-741: The lute , viol and virginals . In 1603 James became James I of England at the Union of the Crowns . Arbella came to court in August 1603. There was plague in London, and the court moved west to Basing House and Winchester in October. Arbella wrote letters to the Earl of Shrewsbury criticising a masque, Prince Henry's Welcome at Winchester produced by Anne of Denmark for her son, Prince Henry , and also
462-581: The ward of her grandmother Bess, rather than Lord Burghley , the Master of the Court of Wards , as might have been expected. During most of her childhood she lived in the protective isolation of Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire with her grandmother, who had married George Talbot, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury , in 1568. It seems she enjoyed periodic visits to the court and to London, including court visits during
495-596: The "sweet pleasing government" of England by a female ruler. In the closing months of Elizabeth's reign, Arbella fell into trouble through reports that she intended to marry Edward Seymour , a member of the prominent Seymour family. This was reported to the Queen by the supposed groom's father, Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford . Arbella denied having any intention of marrying without the Queen's permission. In 1604, Sigismund III Vasa , King of Poland , sent an ambassador to England to ask for Arbella to be his wife. This offer
528-595: The Main Plot were tried along with those of the Bye Plot . It is referred to as the "main" plot, because at the time it was presented as the principal ("main") plot of which the secondary (or "bye") plot was a minor component. In the version of the plot presented at trial, Cobham was negotiating with the Count of Aremberg to contact the Spanish court in order to obtain a very large sum of money (approximately £160,000). He
561-496: The childish singing and games in the queen's household. In November 1603 those involved in the Main Plot were said to have conspired to overthrow King James and put Arbella on the throne. Arbella had been invited to participate and agree in writing to Philip III of Spain , however, she immediately reported the invitation to the king. In March 1604 the royal family celebrated their Entry to London, which had been delayed because of
594-400: The death of the 5th Earl, King James, who was still a minor, acquired the earldom despite the intervention of Queen Elizabeth I of England on her behalf. Lady Arbella Stuart married William Seymour . She was later imprisoned in the Tower of London and died there in 1615. Charles Stuart died in early April 1576 from consumption. This biography of a Scottish peer or noble is
627-544: The end of 1592 and the spring of 1593, the influential Cecils – Elizabeth's Lord Treasurer, Lord Burghley, and his son, Secretary of State Sir Robert Cecil – turned their attention away from Arbella towards her cousin James VI of Scotland , regarding him as a preferable successor. Sometimes she was invited to Elizabeth's court, but much of her time she spent away living with her grandmother. Continuing her education into her twenties, she studied several languages and could play
660-523: The evidence gathered from suspects questioned in the far-fetched Bye Plot fell to William Waad . He teased out the "main" or serious plot, as he saw it and involving the highly placed Raleigh, from the rest of the "bye" plot; and presented his findings to Sir Robert Cecil and the Privy Council. Cobham and Raleigh were both imprisoned in the Tower of London as was Sir Griffin Markham . Raleigh
693-420: The father of Arbella's cousin James VI and I of Scotland, England and Ireland . Her maternal grandparents were Sir William Cavendish and his wife Elizabeth , better known as "Bess of Hardwick". Arbella's father died in 1576 when she was an infant. She was raised by her mother Elizabeth Cavendish, Countess of Lennox, until 1582. The death of her mother left seven-year-old Arbella an orphan, whereupon she became
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#1732775724599726-425: The festivities at the investiture of Prince Henry as Prince of Wales . She followed, in order of precedence, Anne of Denmark and Princess Elizabeth . Arbella, who was fourth in line to the English throne, was in trouble again in 1610 for planning to marry William Seymour , then known as Lord Beauchamp, who later succeeded as 2nd Duke of Somerset . Lord Beauchamp was sixth-in-line, grandson of Lady Katherine Grey ,
759-430: The plague. There was a procession, and Arbella followed Anne of Denmark in a carriage with some of the queen's maids of honour. This was a public acknowledgement of her royal status. The Venetian ambassador Nicolò Molin described her in 1607, writing that she was 28 ( sic ) years old, not very beautiful, but highly accomplished in several languages, with refined manners, and always studying. Owing to Arbella's status as
792-532: The queen's brother Christian IV of Denmark . Arbella reluctantly agreed. Cutting soon returned to England but joined Prince Henry's household. At the end of 1609, Arbella was in trouble for her involvement with an imposter, the "Prince of Moldavia" and other actions deemed suspicious, but she was forgiven, and the King gave her silver plate worth £200 as a New Year's Day gift. On 5 June 1610 Arbella danced in Samuel Daniel 's masque Tethys' Festival , one of
825-491: The queen's favour and kiss her hands again. Arbella expected to be released to attend the marriage of Princess Elizabeth in February 1613 and she bought pearls and a gown embroidered with pearls to wear from the jeweller Abraham der Kinderen . She was not invited and pawned and sold most of the pearls for funds a few months later. Abraham der Kinderen petitioned for the return of the gown after her death. In her final days as
858-434: The resistance of Queen Elizabeth I to such a marriage stopped the plan probably even before Arbella could be approached. In 1599, an English Catholic, Edmund Ashfield , wrote to James VI on the subject of the succession to the throne of England . He considered the possibility that Elizabeth might allow Arbella Stuart to marry an English husband, and thus "assisted by some domestical match", she might become queen and continue
891-540: The sons of Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma , who could claim the English throne as descendants of John of Gaunt . The idea was to secure toleration for English Catholics or even win Arbella for the Catholic faith. However, the eldest son, Ranuccio , was already married, and the younger son, Odoardo , was a Cardinal sworn to priestly celibacy. The Pope was reportedly prepared to absolve Odoardo from his obligations but
924-401: The summers of 1587 and 1588 and one that lasted from November 1591 to July 1592. Starting in early 1589 or thereabouts "one Morley ... attended on Arbell and read to her", as reported in a dispatch from Bess of Hardwick to Lord Burghley, dated 21 September 1592. Bess recounts Morley's service to Arbella over "the space of three years and a half". She also notes he had hoped for an annuity of £40
957-459: The title merged with the Crown. However, shortly after his father's death, the title was bestowed on Charles, amounting to a new creation of the title albeit in a cadet (younger) branch of the same family. Charles proceeded to incur the displeasure of Queen Elizabeth I of England by a hasty marriage to Elizabeth Cavendish , daughter of Bess of Hardwick , apparently at his mother's instigation. The couple had one child, Lady Arbella Stuart . After
990-474: Was Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley , husband of Mary, Queen of Scots . He was the uncle of King James VI and I . The 4th Earl of Lennox until his death in 1571 was regent for his young grandson, King James VI of Scotland . Charles's elder brother and James's father was Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley who had died in 1567. As a result, the Earldom of Lennox on the death of the 4th Earl was inherited by James VI and
1023-498: Was rejected. Arbella came to the court of James VI and I in August 1603. She was given precedence as a Princess of the Blood. A Venetian diplomat Scaramelli noted that she carried the train of the dress of the queen, Anne of Denmark , when she went to chapel. In March 1608 Anne of Denmark, Prince Henry, and Arbella's friend the courtier John Elphinstone wrote to her at Sheffield to request that her lutenist Thomas Cutting be sent to
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1056-443: Was therefore a great-great-granddaughter of King Henry VII of England and was in line of succession to the English throne, although she did not herself aspire to it. Her paternal grandparents, the 4th Earl of Lennox and Margaret Douglas, had, of their eight children, two sons who survived childhood: Arbella's father Charles and his older brother Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley , who became the second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots , and
1089-477: Was to travel to Brussels , then to Spain , collect the money, and go back to England via Jersey , where Sir Walter Raleigh was governor. Raleigh and Cobham were then to divide up the money and decide how best to spend it in furtherance of sedition. The plot was discovered during an investigation of the Bye Plot in which Sir George Brooke , the brother of Lord Cobham, was implicated. The effort of examining
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