Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER I 1533 TO 1536
- CHAPTER II 1536 TO 1542
- CHAPTER III 1542 TO 1547
- CHAPTER IV 1547 TO 1549
- CHAPTER V 1549 TO 1553
- CHAPTER VI 1553 AND 1554
- CHAPTER VII 1554 AND 1555
- CHAPTER VIII 1555 TO 1558
- CHAPTER IX 1558 AND 1559
- CHAPTER X 1559
- CHAPTER XI 1560
- CHAPTER XII 1560
- CHAPTER XIII 1561
- CHAPTER XIII 1561 TO 1565
- CHAPTER XIV 1565 AND 1566
- CHAPTER XV 1567 AND 1568
- CHAPTER XVI 1568 TO 1570
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER I 1533 TO 1536
- CHAPTER II 1536 TO 1542
- CHAPTER III 1542 TO 1547
- CHAPTER IV 1547 TO 1549
- CHAPTER V 1549 TO 1553
- CHAPTER VI 1553 AND 1554
- CHAPTER VII 1554 AND 1555
- CHAPTER VIII 1555 TO 1558
- CHAPTER IX 1558 AND 1559
- CHAPTER X 1559
- CHAPTER XI 1560
- CHAPTER XII 1560
- CHAPTER XIII 1561
- CHAPTER XIII 1561 TO 1565
- CHAPTER XIV 1565 AND 1566
- CHAPTER XV 1567 AND 1568
- CHAPTER XVI 1568 TO 1570
Summary
The accession of Francis II., husband to the queen of Scots, to the French throne had renewed the dangers of Elizabeth from the hostility of France and of Scotland; and in the politic resolution of removing from her own territory to that of her enemies the seat of a war which she saw to be inevitable, she levied a strong army and sent it under the command of the duke of Norfolk and lord Grey de Wilton to the frontiers of Scotland. She also entered into a close connexion with the protestant party in that country, who were already in arms against the queen-regent and her French auxiliaries. Success attended this well-planned expedition, and at the end of a single campaign Elizabeth was able to terminate the war by the treaty of Edinburgh; a convention the terms of which were such as effectually to secure her from all fear of future molestation in this quarter.
During the period of these hostilities, however, her situation was an anxious one. It was greatly to be feared that the emperor and the king of Spain, forgetting in their zeal for the catholic church the habitual enmity of the house of Austria against that of Bourbon, would make common cause with France against a sovereign who now stood forth the avowed protectress of protestantism; and such a combination of the great powers of Europe, seconded by a large catholic party at home, England was by no means in a condition to withstand.
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- Information
- Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth , pp. 285 - 301Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1818