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Arbella Stuart (or "Arabella" and/or "Stewart") (1575 - 27 September 1615) was an English
Renaissance noblewoman who was for some time considered a possible successor to Queen
Elizabeth I on the English throne.
She was the only child of Charles Stuart, Earl of Lennox and
Elizabeth Cavendish. Her paternal grandparents were
Matthew Stewart, 4th Earl of Lennox and Margaret Douglas. Her father was a younger brother of Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, second King Consort of
Mary I of Scotland. Her maternal grandparents were Sir William Cavendish and Bess of Hardwick.
Childhood
Arbella's father died in 1576 when she was still an infant. She was raised by her mother until
1581. The death of her mother left six-year-old Arbella an orphan, whereupon she became the ward of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley.
During most of her childhood she lived with Bess of Hardwick, her maternal grandmother in the relative isolation of
Hardwick Hall, although though there were periodic visits to the court of Elizabeth I of England and London including one that
lasted for several years (from September 1589 to July 1592); historian David Durant has suggested that "In effect Bess was moving
the operational centre of her business empire from Derbyshire to London".[1]
An extant note in French language, in Arbella's Italian hand, to Lord Burghley, was
addressed on the eve of the Spanish Armada battles. It was dated 13 July 1588, and "postmarked" from the Talbot's Coleman Street Residence in
London, is certain proof of these earlier visits.[2]
About 1589, one "Morley" became her "attendant" and "reader," as reported in a dispatch from
Bess of Hardwick to Lord Burghley, dated 21 September, 1592.[3] Bess recounts "Morley's" service to
Arbella over "the space of three years and a half." She also notes he requested a lifetime stipend from Arbella based on the fact
he had "been much damnified by leaving the University"; this has led to speculation that 'Morley' was the poet Christopher Marlowe.[4]
Heiress to the English throne
However, between the end of 1592 and the spring of 1593, the Cecils (Lord Burghley and his son Sir Robert Cecil) turned their attention away from Lady Arbella towards James VI of Scotland as a better successor.[5] Burghley wrote "If my hand were free from pain I would not commit this much to any other man's
hand".[citation needed]
In 1603, after James's accession to the English throne, there was a plot (in which Sir
Walter Raleigh was involved) to overthrow him and put Arbella on the throne, but when she
was invited to participate by agreeing in writing to Philip III of Spain, she
reported it to James instead.[citation needed]
Marriage negotiations
Due to her status as possible heir to the throne, there was talk of an appropriate marriage through Arbella's childhood. It
would have suited the Roman Catholic Church for her to marry a member of the
House of Savoy and then take the English throne, leaving James only the Kingdom of Scotland (which would make the
King of France happy). [citation needed] A marriage was mooted with Rainutio, eldest son of Alexander
Farnese, Duke of Parma and Maria of Portugal. According to the
Curiosities of Literature by Isaac D'Israeli, this scheme originated from the
Pope who ("in his infallibility," says D'Israeli) eventually settled on his own brother, a
Catholic Cardinal, as a suitable husband for Arbella; the Pope defrocked his brother, freeing him to marry "Arbelle" (as the Italians spelled her name) and thus claim the
Kingdom of England. Nothing came of this plan, and in fact nobody was ever sure if
Arbella was a Catholic or a Protestant — it appears that
everyone who talked with her thought her to be of the same religion as they were.[citation needed]
In the closing months of Elizabeth's reign, Arbella fell into trouble through reports that she planned to marry Edward
Seymour, a member of the prominent Seymour family.[citation needed] This was reported to the queen by the supposed groom's grandfather,
Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford. Arbella denied having
attempted to marry without the queen's permission.
In 1588, Esme Stewart, 1st Duke of
Lennox proposed to James VI of Scotland that he marry Arbella, but nothing seems to have come of this.[6] In 1604, Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland sent an
ambassador to England to ask for Arbella to be his queen. This offer was also rejected.[citation needed]
There are some indications that Arbella tried to elope in about 1604 and fell out of favour with King James because of it; she
was certainly out of sight until 1608, when she was restored to his good graces.[citation needed]
Marriage to William Seymour
In 1610, Arbella was in trouble again for planning to marry William Seymour, grandson of Lady Catherine
Grey, who was a younger sister of Lady Jane Grey and a granddaughter of
Mary Tudor, sister of King Henry VIII. 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 the marriage, King James
imprisoned them: Arbella in Sir Thomas Perry's house in Lambeth and Seymour in the
Tower of London; they had some liberty within those buildings, and some of her letters
to him and to the king during this period survive. When the king found out about her letters to Seymour, however, he transferred
Arbella to the custody of William James, Bishop of Durham, but Arbella claimed to be
sick, so her departure for Durham was delayed.
The couple used that time to plan their escape. She dressed as a man and escaped to Lee (in Kent), but Seymour did not meet her there before their getaway ship had to sail
for France. Sara Jayne Steen records that Imogen, the virtuous, cross-dressed heroine of William Shakespeare's play Cymbeline (1610-1611) has
sometimes been read as a reference to Arbella.[7] Seymour
did escape from the Tower, but by the time he got to Lee, Arbella was gone, so he caught the next ship he could and sailed to
Flanders. The ship Arbella was on was overtaken by King James's men just before it reached
Calais, France, and she was taken back and imprisoned in the Tower of London. She never saw her husband again, and died in the Tower in 1615.
Literary legacy
Over a hundred letters written by Arbella have survived. In 1993, a collection of them was
published, edited by Sara Jayne Steen, providing details of her activities and ideas.
Aemilia Lanier's poem Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum is dedicated to Arbella. 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".
Notes
- ^ David N. Durant, Bess of Hardwick Portrait of an Elizabethan Dynast,
Atheneum, 1978, p. 166.
- ^ BL Lansdowne MS 34, ff. 145-46.
- ^ (BL Landdowne MS 71,f.3.)
- ^ John Baker, letter to Notes and Queries 44.3 (1997), pp. 367-8
- ^ Handover, The Second Cecil, 55-6; 297; Read, Lord Burghley,
484
- ^ Durant, 161
- ^ Steen, 96
References
- Marshall, Rosalind. "Arabella Stuart." Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.
External links
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