528:
509:
520:
699:
Judith
Plummer was the wife of the gardener, and she embroidered shadow work on a bedsheet which the Countess treasured. A letter from Dorothy Spence, the Canongate housekeeper, was intercepted in 1645 and printed in a Royalist pamphlet. The male servants and the gardeners mentioned in surviving papers were all paid less than these female housekeepers. Food was bought in Edinburgh by the butler James Simpson. A servant Adam Young had a room in Edinburgh but also witnessed contracts in London.
125:
812:. Mary wrote to Morton (who was in England) for help over dowry payments, wanting an installment of ÂŁ1000 Sterling cash sent to her in Scotland rather than allow the Earl of Westmorland to invest the money in a project in England and buy land. She hoped the rest of the curators would agree with her, deferring to their "wiser judgements" but insisting "I will bee the last consentor to such a bisnes". She wanted the cash for dowries for her daughters.
624:
148:
904:. The will appointed her granddaughter Lady Mary Stewart (d. 1668) as executor, but she was still a minor when the countess died in London in March 1644. Her body was shipped to Scotland and buried at Dunglass. Her daughters and their husbands instead acted as executors and "administratices". An account of the financial settlement to 31 March 1646 was made by the merchant financier
731:... my will is to have the tombe made with our pictures to the waist in white marble and three through stones to be laid upon us, I, my lord, my dear son Home and my selfe, & I would be laid betwixt them, & so my picture sett, Mr Stone the stone cutter that dwells in Long Acre showed me a tombe he had made for a knight & his wife in that maner ...
896:
problematic, writing "And I am not ignorant that my houses both in
Edinborough as Canongate and in Aldersgate Street being inheritance I cannot dispose so of them by this my late will neither by the laws of England nor Scotland". Amongst personal bequests to her family and servants, she left a purse of gold coins to her nephew,
835:, and Grace died soon afterwards at Apethorpe. The two countesses continued a bitter lawsuit over their children's properties. Westmorland was her daughter's executrix. She complained that the Countess of Home had the advantage in Scottish courts from her continual residence and acquaintance in Edinburgh. Charles I wrote to the
283:, with Bedford's usher John Stewart, Winifred Barnes, Captain Thomas Tyrie, and James Congleton. King James gave her an annual pension of ÂŁ300, which she resigned in 1617. The Countess of Home frequently travelled to London. In June 1616 Anne Clifford recorded meeting her at the house of her cousin Lucy, Countess of Bedford.
581:. She had two sets of chairs made in London in the latest Italianate fashion. There was a suite of three garden vault rooms with a black marble banqueting table. A gallery room was furnished with a couch bed and hung with at least 30 pictures. There was a balcony at the back of the house, overlooking the garden.
694:"has byn wildely tacken in & are no way to bee trusted tow for comparein them with my own little book. I find in some roomes that neather in theare notes of what they say wants nor in that they say restes will bothe make up togeather which is sayde to bee in my booke of maney sondre partikeulor thinges."
784:
convened a meeting of the six lairds of the Home surname to tell them about the marriage plans. They promised to help the earl, but had reservations, hoping that Lady Home would "make her intentions and courses known to them" and she would "hear and respect their faithful advice" concerning the earl,
698:
The housekeeper at Floors near Kelso, Jane
Descheil, was married to the coachman, she paid cleaners, fed the cat and the turkeys, brewed ale, made honey, bleached cloth, supervised a carpenter mending buffet stools, and sewed a featherbed, while Lady Home was away. At Twickenham Park, the housekeeper
584:
The garden included terraces, a mount, walks and wilderness, and two summerhouses. She had cherry, plum, apple, apricot, fig, and damson trees. Lady Home wrote an 8-point list of conditions for the employment of her gardeners, John
Simpson and Christopher, forbidding them to sell any garden produce.
336:
Either I'm a liar, or we think that an
Englishwoman is not terrible in any respect, as you judge: just consider her countenance or her mind. Nor shall we join battles in cruel war, but rather we are observing the sacred laws of a chaste marriage. Hence a castle, built for me, which an English hand
928:
and obtained property in
Hackney and Stepney, and ÂŁ1000 to Elizabeth Ashfield, a neighbour in Aldersgate, gaining her lands at North Barsteed in Suffolk. A challenge to the administration of the will by a third-party William Dudley, demonstrating that goods belonged not to Lauderdale but to his
895:
Mary made a will in 1638 reflecting her
English and Scottish properties and identity. She hoped her granddaughters would inherit her furnishings and collection, dividing house contents in London and Scotland between them, according to the inventories of each house. She was aware that this was
162:
Little is known about her childhood, and there were problems in the family because her father had abandoned her mother for
Elizabeth Tomlinson. In 1597 her younger brother Ferdinando and her sister Anne were lodged in Clerkenwell, as wards of their aunt Elizabeth Harington and uncle
706:
portraits of servants, family members, and children, now called "dummy boards". Lady Home had some of these made and painted for her in London. These included a shepherdess, a chamber maid, a man playing a viol, and a drawing chamber at the
Canongate near her daughter
350:. Anne Clifford and the Countess of Bedford visited Lady Home there on 19 April. Lady Home was left wealthy, and it was rumoured the king gave her ÂŁ1200 in June, but she had to defend her young son's rights as Earl of Home as owner of large estates in
818:
wrote letters to her daughter Grace in
Scotland solicitous of her health, including passages in cipher, one referring to loss of her hair through illness. She hoped Grace would come to London to take her sisters to see the masques at court in 1631,
933:. It is due to the complexities of dividing her goods and this legal battle that her inventories survive to give a unique insight into the material culture of Anglo-Scottish aristocrat in the 1630s. The inventories include a set of portraits after
365:, was her chaplain around the year 1630, and he is said to have composed "remarks" objecting to London life and public affairs based on his experience of the Caroline court with his patron. Hume was subsequently chaplain to her son-in-law,
846:(1615â1666). Mary wrote to Sir David Home of Wedderburn from Aldersgate after her son's death about the future of the Home family, name, and "ancient raice", asking him to "express your love both to the living and to the dead".
221:, both appointed to the royal household because of their Harington family connection. It is likely that the Countess of Home would later be an advocate for the cause of the Elizabeth of Bohemia in England and Scotland.
183:
452:
of the Hirsel estate during her son's minority. Ker described their interaction as collusion. He hoped that Sir Robert Ker could agree with the young Earl of Home about details of the Hirsel estate.
785:
and if she neglected to consult them, they could have "no contentment in the business." In December, Lady Home wrote to Leonard Welstead, an agent of Lord Falkland (and formerly, with
527:
311:
wrote a Latin verse to be said on this occasion which contrasted Mary's rebuilding of the earl's houses with the destruction wrought by her grandfather during the war of the
1065:, vol. 27, pp. 325-8: âDUDLEY, alias SUTTON, Edward (1567-1643), of Dudley Castle, Staffs.' The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981.
643:
She kept detailed inventories of her houses which record purchases made in London, listing beds, tapestries, and her books including volumes of sermons and a work penned by
690:
These inventories include notes she wrote for her housekeepers and their written replies which form short dialogues. Lady Home wrote of an unsatisfactory inventory that it;
337:
had once demolished, a better English hand is now rebuilding. Hence this union will go prosperously for you and your entire island, if you grow wise after my example.
1542:
Marie-Louise Coolahan & Mark Empey, 'Women's Book Ownership and the Reception of Early Modern Women's Texts', in Leah Knight, Micheline White, Elizabeth Sauer,
472:
yearly, allowing her servants to use the barn to stack her teinds. Lady Home paid the minister's stipend at Cockburnspath, in 1638 the minister was George Sydserf.
205:. Anne Dudley bequeathed to Lady Home, "a little ring made in the fashion of a heart enameled black with a little diamond". Anne Dudley was a lady in waiting to
210:
735:
Dunglass Castle was destroyed by an explosion in August 1640 and among the fifty two dead was John White, an English plasterer who also worked for her at
917:
815:
711:
nursery overlooking the garden was inhabited by three "standing picktours" representing her two grandchildren and their attendant, the dwarf Meg Candie.
202:
925:
781:
445:
664:
2004:
1999:
1666:
1382:
1023:
995:
880:
876:
797:
441:
426:
390:
389:
and he recorded some details of her business in his diary. On Tuesday 1 April 1634 she came to his lodging in Edinburgh with her family, the
366:
178:
described Mary as her childhood companion, "my old companion" and "my old acquaintance", and said their mothers had been friends. After the
985:
969:
was to be her representative. The child was probably Anne, the queen's namesake. The Earl of Home was a Catholic, and in December 1615 the
773:
821:
2014:
2009:
1807:
47:1 (2019), p. 46, citing 'Will of Maria Soton, Countess of Home', TNA Prob/11/272/611 ff. 403-6: NLS MS. 14547: NRAS 217 box 5 no. 278
1027:
929:
daughter, and that the executors had not been lawfully appointed, failed in 1658. Lauderdale was enabled to recover his property at the
831:. Grace was treated by an Edinburgh physician, David Arnot. James Home died in London in February 1633, attended by the court physician
613:
605:
780:
noted that the marriage had been arranged by the king. In Scotland, before the wedding, following the king's instructions, the lawyer
206:
1019:
981:
801:
769:
679:
heraldry from the sale of the effects of her cousin the Countess of Bedford, and a set of silver candleholders that had belonged to
280:
85:
1308:
A Diary of the Public Correspondence of Sir Thomas Hope of Craighall, 1633â1645: From the Original, in the Library at Pinkie House
182:
in 1603, her mother Theodosia Harington seems to have been an important member of Princess Elizabeth's household and before their
1005:
865:
777:
744:
708:
256:
81:
67:
508:
1009:
924:, were disregarded. Some goods at Aldersgate were sold in October 1648. It also came to light that Mary had lent ÂŁ2,000 to the
805:
513:
394:
292:
133:
95:
519:
861:
A happy husband or, Directions for a Maide to choose her Mate, As also, a Wives behaviour towards her Husband after Marriage
198:
304:
187:
1994:
1989:
1820:
1742:
977:
966:
843:
765:
604:
of fruit and vegetables, and a network of women connected with the court who were enthusiastic fruit growers, including
386:
77:
809:
401:
as an inducement in a legal process. Hope noted that she spoke to him first apart from the others, but offered ÂŁ2,000
958:
786:
481:
225:
164:
920:
and sold. Claims that the furnishings belonged to his daughter or had been sold to a Scottish merchant in London,
2024:
1738:
1274:
597:
586:
562:
recycled from her Scottish houses. At Highgate she extended an existing house, obtained from the queen's silkman
532:
430:
233:
1374:
921:
905:
489:
362:
168:
141:
268:
267:
was counted in 1605 as a title in the English peerage. The wedding was celebrated by Peter Alibond, vicar of
1928:
1366:
574:
308:
218:
1875:
1626:(Oxford 1645), p. 8: NLS Tweeddale Papers, Home executry: NRAS 217, box 5 nos. 5, 8: NRAS 859, bundle 17/2.
1425:
1984:
1979:
1905:
832:
497:
272:
214:
1890:
1824:
1290:
990:
930:
578:
444:
about the Priory lands in July 1632. According to Ker, Coldstream had been obtained by the crown lawyer
573:
In Edinburgh she rebuilt the house in the Canongate now called Moray House, employing the master mason
2029:
2019:
1974:
1969:
953:. Three reached adulthood; James, Margaret and Anne. One child was born in Scotland in October 1612.
949:
Lady Home had seven children, all of whom were born in Scotland attended by Mrs Cuthbert, an English
901:
620:
during his visit and coronation in Scotland, but the plan was cancelled due to the death of her son.
617:
194:
1891:'A Pair of Early Seventeenth-Century Gauntlet Gloves given by King Charles I to Sir Henry Wardlaw',
1570:
1671:
A briefe and summarie discourse upon that lamentable and dreadfull disaster at Dunglasse. Anno 1640
897:
719:
In 1638 she discussed the design of a tomb in white and black marble for her family to be built at
680:
485:
300:
179:
137:
105:
1164:
433:
in 1620 and the issue continued in following years with interventions from James I and Charles I.
1306:
884:
440:. William Ker, a younger brother of John Ker of Littledean, wrote to Francis Stewart, son of the
229:
175:
480:
In May 1644, the Countess of Home was able to lend ÂŁ7,300 sterling towards the expenses of the
124:
1954:
1937:
1047:
970:
656:
563:
559:
414:
249:
859:
263:
and intended to effect the Anglicization of Scottish aristocracy. The newly created title of
1595:
962:
836:
761:
632:
567:
355:
241:
916:
In 1648 Lauderdale's share of her possessions and furniture in London was forfeited by his
550:, which was later known as Lauderdale House. This house was used by the Spanish ambassador
468:
barn and barnyard of Cockburnspath and keep it in good order and have the use of it for 20
1587:
954:
938:
869:
684:
676:
623:
593:
555:
232:, London. He was a son of Thomas Hobart of Plumstead and Willoughby Hopton, a daughter of
1237:
592:, an influential work by an apothecary and botanist who supplied plants to Charles I and
1865:
Will of Maria Soton, Countess of Home, TNA Prob/11/272/611 ff. 403-6, and NLS MS. 14547.
1827:
archive, including the Lauderdale's marriage contract, and the executry papers MS 14547.
1657:
Will of Maria Soton, Countess of Home, TNA Prob/11/272/611 ff. 403-6, and NLS MS. 14547.
1212:
Roger Green, 'The King Returns: The Muses Welcome', Steven J. Reid & David McOmish,
1328:
864:(Edinburgh, 1618/1619?) to Mary's eldest daughter Margaret Home (d. 1683), who married
855:
660:
539:
358:, with the help of his guardians and curators, and leading members of the Home family.
276:
260:
245:
147:
1941:, vol. 2 (Philadelphia, 1939), 437, noting her name as 'Anne' rather than 'Catherine'.
1963:
1467:
Displaying Art in the Early Modern Period: Exhibiting Practices and Exhibition Spaces
796:
After Catherine's death in childbirth in 1625, James married Grace Fane, daughter of
644:
551:
543:
493:
461:
370:
1637:
A Day at Home in Early Modern England: Material Culture and Domestic Life, 1500-1700
17:
1610:
Old Floors or "Freres" was on a different site to the present castle, Daniel Kemp,
999:
740:
596:. With her cousin Lucy, Countess of Bedford, she can be associated with the artist
402:
351:
312:
299:
in the Scottish borders which had been captured from Alexander Home's grandmother,
264:
1906:
Letter of Anne of Denmark to Henry Wardlaw, St Andrews University Library MS 38590
1151:
Keith Brown, 'The Scottish Aristocracy, Anglicisation and the Court, 1603-1638',
116:, Countess of Home (1586â1644), was a landowner, living in England and Scotland.
1849:
1836:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1803:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1794:(London, 1902), p. 98 no. 219, the letter was written by her Scottish secretary.
1780:
Earl of Stirling's Register of Royal Letters Relative to the Affairs of Scotland
1754:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1529:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1517:
1491:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1478:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1452:
Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh',
1013:
793:), about dowry payments, and the toothache suffered by Lord Home and Catherine.
790:
469:
422:
398:
296:
1572:
Vanished comforts: locating roles of domestic furnishings in Scotland 1500-1650
800:(1583/4â1629). James still had legal guardians called "curators" including the
736:
601:
547:
437:
418:
374:
248:. In later years Theodosia Dudley moved to Norfolk to be near her daughter at
237:
980:(d. 1633) who married firstly, Catherine Cary (1609â1626) eldest daughter of
1817:
Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Advance of Money, 1642-1656
827:
724:
652:
648:
609:
347:
1599:
1544:
Women's Bookscapes in Early Modern Britain: Reading, Ownership, Circulation
1441:
Building Knowledge, An Architectural History of the University of Edinburgh
1074:
Lamar M. Hill, 'The Privy Council and Private Morality', Charles Carlton,
1713:
The Lady Falkland, Her Life. From a MS. in the Imperial Archives at Lille
934:
720:
637:
523:
Handwriting of Mary, Countess of Home, in an inventory of household goods
224:
Her youngest sister, Margaret Dudley (1597-1674) married Miles Hobart of
950:
659:. She listed paintings by subject and noted that some were bought from
397:
and his wife, her daughter Margaret Lady Doune. They offered him 2,000
1443:(Edinburgh, 2017), pp. 236-9, 237-8: Moray papers NRAS 217, 5:8 p. 15.
132:
Mary (Dudley) Sutton, born 2 October 1586, was the eldest daughter of
460:
On 14 August 1634, she contracted with John Arnot, the postmaster of
346:
Alexander, Earl of Home died on 5 April 1619 in London in a house in
887:. Anne inherited her mother's properties and furnishings in London.
1917:
Original Letters Relating To The Ecclesiastical Affairs of Scotland
1214:
Neo-Latin Literature and Literary Culture in Early Modern Scotland
702:
In the 1630s and 1640s it became fashionable to own free-standing
622:
526:
518:
507:
465:
449:
244:. According to Lady Home's lawyer, they lived 7 miles inland from
123:
1624:
Letters from the Marquess of Argyle .. & friends at Edinburgh
957:
sent instructions to the chamberlain of her Dunfermline estates,
1648:
Moray Papers, Countess of Home inventories NRAS 217 box 5 no. 5.
1048:
Henry Sydney Grazebrook, 'An Account of the Barons of Dudley',
616:
obtained her permission for the house to be at the disposal of
144:. The title "Dudley" and surname "Sutton" were interchangeable.
1238:
Text translated for The Philological Museum by Dana F. Sutton
538:
Mary maintained houses in London and in Edinburgh, employing
303:
in 1548. This link was celebrated at King James's arrival at
1371:
Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding
1279:
An Abridgement Of Mr. Baxter's History Of His Life And Times
436:
The house and estate at the Hirsel was part of the lands of
1373:, 1 (London, 1889), pp. 4â5, 10: TNA SP 46/106 ff. 99-104:
1189:
Ann Clifford: The Memoir of 1603 and the Diary of 1616-1619
1823:
holds related papers and charters from the archive of the
1465:
Antonia Laurence Allen, 'Trading Spaces', Pamela Bianchi,
965:, to distribute presents of money at the christening, and
464:
near Dunglass castle that he would repair and rebuild the
255:
On 11 July 1605 Mary married the wealthy Scottish widower
1520:, Food in Early Modern England (London, 2007), pp. 296-7.
994:. In 1626 James married Grace Fane (d. 1633) daughter of
492:
accepted the loan and its equivalent in gold was sent to
1559:, 26 (Edinburgh, 2015), pp. 76-77: NRAS 217 box 5 no. 5.
291:
The couple had a historical connection; her grandfather
1124:
The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia
167:. Lord Dudley was ordered to pay her ÂŁ20 yearly by the
1226:
The Muses Welcome to the High and Mightie Prince James
1076:
State Sovereigns & Society in Early Modern England
315:. He refers to the improving work of her English hand;
1506:
St James's Palace: From Leper Hospital to Royal Court
1919:, vol. 2 (Edinburgh: Bannatyne Club, 1851), p. 461.
1250:
Anne Clifford's Autobiographical Writing, 1590-1676
1089:
Anne Clifford's Autobiographical Writing, 1590-1676
101:
91:
73:
63:
51:
43:
31:
1728:(Cambridge, Mass, 1993), pp. 184-5: Meikle (2008).
973:objected to his choice of tutor for his children.
1935:(Cambridge MA, 1993), 184-5, 189: N. E. McClure,
1155:, 36:3 (September 1993), pp. 543-576, 546, 551-2.
448:. He worked to Lady Home's benefit regarding the
281:Lucy Russell (née Harington), Countess of Bedford
1325:The Earl of Stirling's register of royal letters
723:with Nicolas Stone in person at his workshop in
1768:Calendar State Papers Domestic, Charles I: 1635
1555:Michael Pearce, 'Approaches to Inventories' in
1327:, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1885), pp. 123, 329, 392:
1201:Grafton's Chronicle: A Chronicle at Large, 1569
1191:(Broadview, Toronto, 2007), pp. 91-3, 165, 167.
405:as if she were unfamiliar with Scottish money.
327:Hinc surgunt mihi structa palatia, diruit Angla
1398:W. G Spiers, 'Account Book of Nicolas Stone',
323:Nec fera miscemus, truculento, proelia, Marte:
209:(known as Mistress Dudley), as was her cousin
667:, many with religious subjects including the
331:Hinc quam fausta tibi procederet UNIO, si sic
319:Mentiar; aut nullis horrendam ducimus Anglam,
8:
1323:vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1837), pp. 370-2, 550-1:
554:in October 1635. She built a summerhouse at
329:Quae quondam, melior iam struit Angla manus:
259:(died 1619), a marriage perhaps arranged by
1737:The Home/Fane marriage contract is held at
1504:Rufus Bird, Simon Thurley, Michael Turner,
1357:Hirsel Documents, NRAS 859 box 17 bundle 2.
1178:, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1894), p. 530, 712-3.
1955:Closet and Cabinet: Mary, Countess of Home
1050:Collections for a History of Staffordshire
898:Frederick Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg
816:Mary Mildmay Fane, Countess of Westmorland
325:Sed colimus, casti, foedera sancta, thori.
190:gave her a valuable gift of silver plate.
28:
1819:, part 2 (London, 1888), p. 948-952, the
1635:Tara Hamling & Catherine Richardson,
1310:(Bannatyne Club: Edinburgh, 1843), p. 10.
1176:Register of the Privy Council of Scotland
531:Still life with vegetables and fruit, by
425:, with Francis and John Stewart, sons of
385:The Countess of Home employed the lawyer
1261:Thomas Birch & Folkestone Williams,
146:
1138:, vol. 2 (Norwich, 1895), pp. 74, 111:
1040:
1026:. Their daughter Mary Maitland married
842:The earldom passed to a distant cousin
839:in Westmorland's favour on 5 May 1634.
413:She disputed the ownership of lands of
321:Judice te; vultum respice, sive animum.
1702:, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1837), pp. 403-4.
1690:, vol. 2 (Philadelphia, 1939), p. 437.
1113:Will of Maria Soton, Countess of Home.
868:in 1628. Hannay's title refers to Sir
747:. She sold Twickenham Park that year.
287:Celebrating an Anglo-Scottish marriage
1770:, vol. 8, p. 610: TNA SP14/305 f.210.
1413:Calendar State Papers, Domestic, 1635
1333:Letters and Papers of James the Sixth
1024:John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale
996:Francis Fane, 1st Earl of Westmorland
798:Francis Fane, 1st Earl of Westmorland
768:, married Catherine Cary daughter of
427:Francis Stewart, 5th Earl of Bothwell
417:, and particularly the Northfield of
367:John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale
7:
1877:A History of the Town of Dunfermline
1741:and letters from Mary Sutton at the
1612:Tours in Scotland by Richard Pococke
1792:HMC Milne Home of Wedderburn Castle
1782:, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1885), p. 737.
1575:(PhD thesis). University of Dundee.
1439:Nick Haynes & Clive B. Fenton,
1281:, vol. 2 (London, 1713), pp. 511-2.
1165:British Library, Stowe MS 574 f.66v
1091:(Manchester, 2018), pp. 39, 80, 86.
1028:John Hay, 2nd Marquess of Tweeddale
606:Alethea Howard, Countess of Arundel
446:Thomas Hamilton, Earl of Haddington
361:Abraham Hume, a recent graduate of
128:Harington Dudley family connections
1263:Court and Times of James the First
1216:(Brill, 2017), pp. 129-130, 134-5.
810:gentleman in the king's bedchamber
655:, a weather glass, and bronzes by
512:Lady Home had two summerhouses at
500:was involved in this transaction.
333:Exemplo, saperes Insula tota, meo.
25:
1933:Writing Women in Jacobean England
1726:Writing Women in Jacobean England
1675:HMC 2nd Report: Forbes-Whitehaugh
1400:7th Volume of the Walpole Society
1126:, vol. 2 (Oxford, 2011), p. 1119.
1102:Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts
1020:Anne Home, Countess of Lauderdale
822:Love's Triumph Through Callipolis
770:Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland
566:, which survives and is known as
421:and the teinds of Auldcambus and
86:Anne Home, Countess of Lauderdale
1265:, vol. 2 (London, 1849), p. 172.
1203:, vol. 2 (London, 1809), p. 503.
1006:Margaret Home, Countess of Moray
875:In 1632 Mary's younger daughter
866:James Stewart, 4th Earl of Moray
756:Marriages of her son, James Home
745:George Seton, 3rd Earl of Winton
647:. She had distilling equipment,
409:Coldingham Priory and the Hirsel
257:Alexander Home, 1st Earl of Home
140:(d. 1649), youngest daughter of
82:Margaret Home, Countess of Moray
68:Alexander Home, 1st Earl of Home
1688:The Letters of John Chamberlain
1614:(SHS: Edinburgh, 1887), p. 329.
1588:'Approaches to Inventories' in
1546:(Michigan, 2018), pp. 234, 238.
1429:, vol. 2 (London, 1885), p. 203
1010:James Stuart, 4th Earl of Moray
293:Edward Sutton, 4th Baron Dudley
203:Friedrich Hermann von Schönberg
134:Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley
96:Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley
1381:, 2 (Edinburgh, 1848), p. 74:
850:Lady Moray and Lady Lauderdale
673:Christ and the Samaritan Woman
279:in the presence of her cousin
1:
2005:17th-century English nobility
2000:16th-century English nobility
1856:(Tate: London, 2009), p. 178.
1252:(Manchester, 2018), pp. 80-1.
1136:Visitation of Norfolk in 1563
912:The will and the Commonwealth
504:Many sundry particular things
188:Frederick V of the Palatinate
1821:National Library of Scotland
1743:National Library of Scotland
1348:(Edinburgh, 1837), pp. 66-9.
1078:(Stroud: Sutton, 1998), 212.
978:James Home, 2nd Earl of Home
967:Anna Hay, Countess of Winton
844:James Home, 3rd Earl of Home
476:A loan for the Scottish army
387:Sir Thomas Hope of Craighall
78:James Home, 2nd Earl of Home
1938:Letters of John Chamberlain
1879:(Dunfermline, 1815), p. 105
774:Elizabeth Cary née Tanfield
558:and decorated it with blue
373:, and accompanied him on a
199:Hans Meinhard von Schönberg
2046:
2015:17th-century English women
2010:16th-century English women
1389:(Edinburgh, 1869), p. 327.
1142:(Edinburgh, 1843), p. 195.
858:(fl. 1616â1630) dedicated
804:, the Earl of Morton, and
675:. She acquired items with
165:Edward Montagu of Boughton
1739:Northampton Record Office
1724:Barbara Kiefer Lewalksi,
1063:Acts of the Privy Council
806:Sir Robert Kerr of Ancram
727:, which was not executed.
488:. The merchant financier
431:Privy Council of Scotland
307:on 13 May 1617. The poet
158:in Edinburgh in the 1620s
38:
1895:, 49:1 (2015), pp. 9, 13
1745:, Morton Papers MS 80/2.
1639:(Yale, 2017), pp. 227-8.
1569:Pearce, Michael (2016).
1508:(Yale, 2022), pp. 47â48.
1295:Scotland under Charles I
971:Archbishop of St Andrews
900:, the son of her sister
612:. In February 1633, the
546:to work on her house in
381:Thomas Hope of Craighall
217:, daughter of her uncle
120:Early years and marriage
1929:Barbara Kiefer Lewalski
1715:(London, 1861), p. 129.
1686:Norman Egbert McClure,
1677:(London, 1871), p. 199.
1415:(London, 1865), no. 29.
1402:(Oxford, 1919), p. 117.
1387:Traditions of Edinburgh
1367:Mary Anne Everett Green
1140:Sir Thomas Hope's Diary
1052:, vol. 9 (1880), p. 113
1022:(d. 1671), who married
986:Elizabeth Tanfield Cary
393:, John, Lord Maitland,
309:David Hume of Godscroft
295:had been the keeper of
228:(born 1602) in 1627 at
136:(d. 1643) and his wife
1854:Van Dyck & Britain
1600:10.3366/arch.2015.0068
1592:, 26 (Edinburgh, 2015)
1590:Architectural Heritage
1557:Architectural Heritage
1533:47:1 (2019), pp. 1-17.
1379:Memorials of Edinburgh
1297:(London, 1955), p. 73.
1153:The Historical Journal
1104:(Oxford, 2022), p. 72.
733:
696:
640:
535:
524:
516:
339:
201:and was the mother of
171:, but refused to pay.
159:
129:
1427:The Lauderdale papers
991:The Tragedy of Mariam
729:
692:
626:
530:
522:
511:
363:St Andrews University
317:
269:St Michael's, Chenies
150:
127:
902:Anne (Dudley) Sutton
890:
791:Countess of Pembroke
772:(c.1575 â 1633) and
630:bought and extended
585:She owned a copy of
114:Mary (Dudley) Sutton
18:Mary (Dudley) Sutton
1995:Scottish countesses
1990:Daughters of barons
1673:(Edinburgh, 1640):
1482:47:1 (2019), p. 48.
984:and the playwright
833:Théodore de Mayerne
789:, a trustee of the
766:James, Earl of Home
301:Mariotta Haliburton
180:Union of the Crowns
142:Sir James Harington
138:Theodosia Harington
106:Theodosia Harington
1840:47:1 (2019), p. 5.
1758:47:1 (2019), p. 6.
1495:47:1 (2019), p. 5.
1469:(Routledge, 2023).
1456:47:1 (2019), p. 7.
1248:Jessica L. Malay,
1228:(Edinburgh, 1618).
1087:Jessica L. Malay,
885:Duke of Lauderdale
854:A Scottish author
663:, others from the
641:
536:
525:
517:
391:Earl of Lauderdale
230:St Ann Blackfriars
207:Princess Elizabeth
197:(d. 1615) married
184:marriage in London
176:Lady Anne Clifford
160:
130:
1889:Claire Robinson,
1711:Richard Simpson,
1700:The Melros Papers
1321:The Melros Papers
1122:Nadine Akkerman,
1100:Nadine Akkerman,
982:Viscount Falkland
926:Earl of Cleveland
782:Thomas Haddington
751:Family and legacy
657:Francesco Fanelli
482:Scottish Covenant
438:Coldstream Priory
415:Coldingham Priory
395:James, Lord Doune
111:
110:
59:(aged 57â58)
16:(Redirected from
2037:
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1942:
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681:Marie de' Medici
633:Lauderdale House
587:John Parkinson's
577:and the painter
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442:Earl of Bothwell
356:Scottish Borders
211:Elizabeth Dudley
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758:
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598:Nathaniel Bacon
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575:William Wallace
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57:(1644-00-00)
26:
2030:Home family
2020:Anglo-Scots
1975:1644 deaths
1970:1586 births
1850:Karen Hearn
1577:, Appendix.
1518:Joan Thirsk
1014:Donibristle
931:Restoration
918:delinquency
602:still lifes
579:John Sawers
514:Moray House
429:before the
423:Fast Castle
348:Channel Row
297:Hume Castle
219:John Dudley
195:Anne Dudley
193:Her sister
156:Moray House
33:Mary Sutton
1964:Categories
1035:References
988:author of
737:The Hirsel
653:telescopes
649:loadstones
548:Aldersgate
419:Coldingham
375:Grand Tour
238:Blythburgh
215:Löwenstein
1825:Tweeddale
963:Pitreavie
828:Chloridia
739:, and at
725:Long Acre
628:Lady Home
618:Charles I
610:Tart Hall
226:Plumstead
152:Lady Home
64:Spouse(s)
945:Children
935:Van Dyck
879:married
764:her son
721:Dunglass
669:Nativity
638:Highgate
484:army in
354:and the
246:Yarmouth
154:rebuilt
1893:Costume
951:midwife
937:now at
486:Ireland
275:in the
250:Beeston
174:Later,
883:later
590:Herbal
450:teinds
277:Strand
242:Witham
102:Mother
92:Father
470:merks
466:teind
403:Scots
399:merks
271:, at
74:Issue
998:and
825:and
808:, a
743:for
671:and
542:and
240:and
55:1644
52:Died
44:Born
1596:doi
961:of
636:at
608:at
252:.
236:of
1966::
1931:,
1852:,
1669:,
1385:,
1377:,
1369:,
1331:,
1293:,
1277:,
941:.
908:.
872:.
776:.
687:.
651:,
570:.
377:.
186:,
1598::
1030:.
1016:.
1002:.
20:)
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