After decades spent unseen, a group of documents believed to have been signed by Mary Queen of Scots have recently come to light at the Museum of Edinburgh. Although information about them was held on file having been gifted in 1920, they were lost in storage before being unearthed during recent inventory and conservation work by curators.
The beautifully handwritten documents, carefully dated, numbered and signed, relate to and provide a fascinating insight into the busy commercial life of Edinburgh during the 16th century. Papers covering markets and the selling of meat sit alongside permits for London salt sellers to operate in the City and for the building of a bulwark (defensive wall) at Leith.
The documents date from 1553 to 1567, and are signed variously by Mary, her then husband James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, and James, Duke of Chastlerault.
As part of the inventory and conservation process, the documents have been taken out of frames they were displayed in many years ago, causing new information to come to light: two of the documents include watermarks in the paper which can only be seen when they are held up to the light. One features a goat, the other a hand holding a flower.
Vicky Garrington, History Curator at Museum of Edinburgh said:
The documents provide us with an amazing bridge to the past. It’s incredible to think of Mary Queen of Scots reading through these documents before carefully applying her signature. We all know the story of Scotland’s Queen, her eventful life and eventual execution, but in these documents, we see a different side to Mary. Here, she can be seen carefully managing the everyday affairs of Edinburgh and Scotland. These documents help us to better understand her reign
Mary Queen of Scots reigned over Scotland from December 1542 to July 1567. After spending much of her early life in France, she returned to Scotland in August 1561. Following the death of her husband King Francis II, she married Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley in 1561. After Darnley’s murder in 1567, Mary married James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, whose signature appears on one of the documents in this collection. Following her forced abdication and imprisonment, Mary was eventually beheaded in 1587 at Fotheringay Castle.
For now, the documents will remain in safe storage at the Museum of Edinburgh given their fragile state. Future plans are to have the documents assessed by a conservator and for further research to be done on them by experts on Mary’s reign, after which the hope is to exhibit them for residents and visitors to enjoy.