75:), whom she married on 24 January 1598. Initially, she continued to live with her parents and early attempts to join him at his Evandale estate were rebuffed. Her memoir describes him as "unkind, cruell and malicious": he failed to give her money for food, believed "misreports" against her, and turned her out of the house naked in the middle of the night, so that she and her maidservant were forced to take shelter in the
79:'s house. She states that she was sick and pregnant at the time. As a modern commentator has pointed out, her detailed account is of importance also as "evidence of the acute vulnerability of wives and the inability of law, custom, and even powerful kinsmen to guarantee protection from brutal husbands."
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However, after bearing
Hamilton five children, Lady Margaret refused to sleep with him any more because of his adultery and his "excommunication for slaughter". She had left him by the time she wrote up her memoirs in 1608, which were published in Edinburgh in 1827. The estrangement left her living
110:. Her letters show this to have been a happy marriage. The couple had two sons and four daughters. Her daughter Jean by her first marriage married James, a son of Maxwell by an earlier marriage of his.
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of the papists." The close of this letter declares an intention to add a "poor basket of stones to the strengthening of the walls of
Jerusalem". This follows almost verbatim a passage in
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Later, while reconciled with
Hamilton, Lady Margaret expressed her strong Protestantism and rejoiced in the possibility of her husband's salvation from "that most detestable
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After
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Lady
Margaret suffered great cruelty at the hands of her first husband, Sir James Hamilton of
165:, eds Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 255.
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After she had been widowed again, Lady
Margaret wrote in 1622 from Malsly to her sister,
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This erroneously refers to James
Cunningham as the 6th Earl.
43:(1552–1630) and his first wife Margaret, daughter of
35:(1580s – September 1623, in Malsly) was a Scottish
148:at the Orlando Project, Cambridge University Press
163:The Feminist Companion to Literature in English
90:'s 1590 dedication to the Countess of Warwick.
201:The Business of the College of Justice in 1600
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203:(Edinburgh: Stair Society, 2003), p. 155.
29:Scottish memoirist and strong Protestant
184:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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41:James Cunningham, 7th Earl of Glencairn
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18:Margaret Cunningham (autobiographer)
249:17th-century Scottish women writers
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244:17th-century Scottish memoirists
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214:National Library of Scotland
264:Daughters of Scottish earls
254:17th-century letter writers
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217:Retrieved 15 November 2015
128:Retrieved 15 November 2015
284:British women memoirists
146:Lady Margaret Cunningham
33:Lady Margaret Cunningham
274:Scottish letter writers
186:(Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004
279:Women letter writers
98:. near Crawfordjohn
115:Lady Ann Cunningham
57:Lady Ann Cunningham
269:Protestant writers
63:Account of cruelty
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88:Anne Locke
84:idollatrie
73:Libberton
49:Glenorchy
37:memoirist
77:minister
53:papists
47:of
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