Margaret Drummond

How are you related to Margaret Drummond?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Related Projects

Margaret Drummond

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Drummonderinoch, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
Death: 1618 (56-58)
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland (by poison)
Place of Burial: Stewart of Ardvorlich Cemetery, Dundurn, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
Immediate Family:

Daughter of John Drummond of Drummond-Erinoch and Margaret McGruder
Wife of Alexander Stewart 1st in Ardvorlich
Mother of Isabel Stewart, of Ardvolich; Major James Beag Stewart 2nd of Ardvorlich; William Stewart 1st in Balimeanach; Alexander Stewart; Margaret Stewart of Ardvorlich and 3 others
Sister of David Drummond and Thomas Drummond, of Pitcairnes
Half sister of John Drummond, 4th Laird of Drummondernoch

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Margaret Drummond

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Drummond_%28mistress%29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Drummond_(mistress)] (see below)

From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Margaret Drummond:

http://thepeerage.com/p10832.htm#i108312

Margaret Drummond [1]

  • F, #108312,
  • d. 1502
  • Last Edited=12 Jan 2010
  • Consanguinity Index=0.01%

Margaret Drummond died in 1502, poisoned.[1],[2]

She was buried in 1502 at Dunblane Abbey, Scotland.[3]

She was the daughter of John Drummond, 1st Lord Drummond and Lady Elizabeth Lindsay.[1]

Child of Margaret Drummond and James IV Stewart, King of Scotland

  • 1. Margaret Stewart+[1] b. c 1497

Citations

  • 1. [S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 240. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Family.
  • 2. [S1224] Derek Hughes, "re: 1st Lord Drummond," e-mail message to Darryl Lundy, 22 December 2004, 13 February 2005 and 2 March 2005, says 1501. Hereinafter cited as "re: 1st Lord Drummond."
  • 3. [S1224] Derek Hughes, "re: 1st Lord Drummond," e-mail to Darryl Lundy, 22 December 2004, 13 February 2005 and 2 March 2005.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Drummond_(mistress)

Margaret Drummond (c. 1475 – 1501) was a daughter of John Drummond, 1st Lord Drummond. She was possibly "privately" married to, but most certainly a mistress of King James IV of Scotland. She was a great-great-great-great-niece of the Margaret Drummond who was King David II's second queen.

Her death has been the subject of a very persistent romantic legend.

Relationship with the king

She was definitely the mistress of James IV during 1496-97, and possibly as early as 1495. Records show her living in his castle at Stirling from 3 June 1496, and from 30 October to March 1497 at Linlithgow Palace. Her presence,and a previous similar arrangement for another mistress in the royal houses, was also noted by the Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala. Ayala later wrote of James IV;

"When I arrived, he was keeping a lady with great state in a castle. He visited her from time to time. Afterwards he sent her to the house of her father, who is a knight, and married her [to a third party]. He did the same with another lady, by whom he had had a son."

However, the king had a number of mistresses in his time, and this relationship seems to have been shorter than those he had with either Marion Boyd or Janet Kennedy.

Family

Margaret and James IV had a daughter, Margaret Stewart. She married firstly John Gordon, Lord Gordon and secondly Sir John Drummond of Innerpeffry.

Circumstances of death

It is definitely known that in 1501 she died of food poisoning, along with her sisters Eupheme and Sibylla, while staying at their parents' residence. As a general rule, claims of poisoning made in relation to a historical figure who died after a sudden illness should be treated with caution, but in this case, with three people who presumably died shortly after eating the same meal, the contemporary judgement should be accepted. The three sisters are buried together in Dunblane Cathedral, their graves can still be seen in front of the altar. This did not cause a great deal of suspicion at the time; standards of food hygiene are unlikely to have been very good then, and cases of accidental food poisoning have happened in any period.

After her death the king paid for masses to be said for her soul, and continued to support their daughter.

Murder theories

It has been widely suggested in more recent years that Margaret Drummond was murdered, either by English agents or by pro-English elements in the Scottish nobility. Many believe that James IV was planning to or had already secretly married Drummond, and her death was necessary in order to allow or force the King to marry the English princess Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York. The (comparatively recent) plaque on her grave in Dunblane Cathedral claims that she was commonly believed to be "privately married" to the king, and that she was murdered by Scottish nobles who supported the English marriage.

Furthermore, the "Marriage of the Rose and Thistle", as the poet William Dunbar described it, brought about the Union of the Crowns exactly 100 years later, as it enabled their great-grandson James VI of Scotland to claim the English throne upon the death of Elizabeth I through his descent from Henry VII.

Had James IV married Margaret Drummond instead of Margaret Tudor, the Union of the Crowns might never have taken place and Scotland might have remained an independent country. This idea has been the theme of numerous historical novels and popular histories.

Serious historians are skeptical of the theory. It is not supported by the contemporary evidence, and originates in a history of the Drummond family written by Viscount Strathallan in 1681. Her death was probably a case of accidental food poisoning, a common cause of death at that time. The idea that James had to be pressured to marry Margaret Tudor is dubious. As Scotland was the less important and poorer country, it is more likely that James IV pressured Henry VII to give him his daughter. It is also clear that negotiations for the marriage had been taking place before Margaret Drummond died.

view all 13

Margaret Drummond's Timeline

1476
1476
Perth, Scotland, United Kingdom
1560
1560
Drummonderinoch, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1580
1580
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1585
1585
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1589
October 1589
Lady's Loch on Ben Vorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1591
1591
Ardvorich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1592
1592
1593
1593
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1598
1598
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland
1600
1600
Ardvorlich, Comrie, Perthshire, Scotland