Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots
This is the first biography of Jean Gordon, who is best known as the first wife of the notorious Earl of Bothwell. Bothwell divorced Jean in order to marry Mary, Queen of Scots, and Jean and her family were closely involved in all of the major events of Mary’s short and turbulent reign in Scotland. Jean was the youngest daughter of the powerful Earl of Huntly, the ‘King in the North’, and Daughters of the North reframes the history of Scotland during the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots by viewing events from Jean’s point of view and from the standpoint of the north of Scotland. The book reveals the intrigue at the royal court, and relates that Jean’s life was much more rich and complex than supposed. Jean married three times, and her second marriage was to the Earl of Sutherland, making her the Countess of Sutherland – the most powerful woman in the north of Scotland, negotiating between the Earls and the clans and exercising a huge influence over the area. She started a coal mine and salt pan in Brora in the 16th century, an astonishing example of early industrialisation and female agency at a time when the north of Scotland was considered to be wild and lawless; the preserve of violent clansmen. Jean’s daughter married the Chief of Mackay, and Jean became involved in the complicated life of the clans of the north of Scotland, particularly the Mackays, but also the Clan Gunn. Her Sutherland Gordon family had an ongoing feud with the Sinclair Earls of Caithness, while her wider Huntly Gordon family was involved in the famous Gordon-Moray feud – all events remembered in the songs, stories and sayings of the north and north-east. Meanwhile, Jean followed her heart and was reunited in old age with the love of her life. This painstakingly researched and detailed story gives the reader an eminently readable insight into Jean’s life.
1139965083
Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots
This is the first biography of Jean Gordon, who is best known as the first wife of the notorious Earl of Bothwell. Bothwell divorced Jean in order to marry Mary, Queen of Scots, and Jean and her family were closely involved in all of the major events of Mary’s short and turbulent reign in Scotland. Jean was the youngest daughter of the powerful Earl of Huntly, the ‘King in the North’, and Daughters of the North reframes the history of Scotland during the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots by viewing events from Jean’s point of view and from the standpoint of the north of Scotland. The book reveals the intrigue at the royal court, and relates that Jean’s life was much more rich and complex than supposed. Jean married three times, and her second marriage was to the Earl of Sutherland, making her the Countess of Sutherland – the most powerful woman in the north of Scotland, negotiating between the Earls and the clans and exercising a huge influence over the area. She started a coal mine and salt pan in Brora in the 16th century, an astonishing example of early industrialisation and female agency at a time when the north of Scotland was considered to be wild and lawless; the preserve of violent clansmen. Jean’s daughter married the Chief of Mackay, and Jean became involved in the complicated life of the clans of the north of Scotland, particularly the Mackays, but also the Clan Gunn. Her Sutherland Gordon family had an ongoing feud with the Sinclair Earls of Caithness, while her wider Huntly Gordon family was involved in the famous Gordon-Moray feud – all events remembered in the songs, stories and sayings of the north and north-east. Meanwhile, Jean followed her heart and was reunited in old age with the love of her life. This painstakingly researched and detailed story gives the reader an eminently readable insight into Jean’s life.
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Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots

Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots

by Jennifer Morag Henderson
Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots

Daughters of the North: Jean Gordon and Mary, Queen of Scots

by Jennifer Morag Henderson

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$22.95 
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Overview

This is the first biography of Jean Gordon, who is best known as the first wife of the notorious Earl of Bothwell. Bothwell divorced Jean in order to marry Mary, Queen of Scots, and Jean and her family were closely involved in all of the major events of Mary’s short and turbulent reign in Scotland. Jean was the youngest daughter of the powerful Earl of Huntly, the ‘King in the North’, and Daughters of the North reframes the history of Scotland during the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots by viewing events from Jean’s point of view and from the standpoint of the north of Scotland. The book reveals the intrigue at the royal court, and relates that Jean’s life was much more rich and complex than supposed. Jean married three times, and her second marriage was to the Earl of Sutherland, making her the Countess of Sutherland – the most powerful woman in the north of Scotland, negotiating between the Earls and the clans and exercising a huge influence over the area. She started a coal mine and salt pan in Brora in the 16th century, an astonishing example of early industrialisation and female agency at a time when the north of Scotland was considered to be wild and lawless; the preserve of violent clansmen. Jean’s daughter married the Chief of Mackay, and Jean became involved in the complicated life of the clans of the north of Scotland, particularly the Mackays, but also the Clan Gunn. Her Sutherland Gordon family had an ongoing feud with the Sinclair Earls of Caithness, while her wider Huntly Gordon family was involved in the famous Gordon-Moray feud – all events remembered in the songs, stories and sayings of the north and north-east. Meanwhile, Jean followed her heart and was reunited in old age with the love of her life. This painstakingly researched and detailed story gives the reader an eminently readable insight into Jean’s life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849956017
Publisher: Whittles Publishing
Publication date: 08/30/2025
Edition description: New
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Jennifer Morag Henderson is a writer from Inverness in the Scottish Highlands and is the author of the hardback edition of this title and Josephine Tey: a Life. She has been widely published in magazines and newspapers and been featured on BBC Radio and TV

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vii

List of Illustrations ix

Introduction Jean Gordon 1

Part 1 The Marian Years 9

Chapter 1 The King of the North's Daughter: 1545-1561 11

Chapter 2 They Would Go to Aberdeen: 1562 29

Chapter 3 The Downfall of the House of Huntly: 1562-1564 48

Chapter 4 The Royal Court: 1565-1566 61

Chapter 5 Jean and Bothwell: 1566 80

Chapter 6 The Death of Darnley: 1566-1567 96

Chapter 7 Divorce: 1567 111

Chapter 8 North: 1567-1572 125

Chapter 9 Further North and Further Back: 1567-1573 145

Chapter 10 The House of Gordon: 1573-1575 163

Interlude: The Living Tomb, Mummification and Transcendental Peace 183

Part 2 The Gordon Years 185

Chapter 11 Death and Land: 1576-1581 187

Chapter 12 Neighbours: Two Companies of Pretty Men: 1582-1585 204

Chapter 13 Creachlarn: The Great Spoil and the Three Weddings: 1585-1590 221

Chapter 14 Jean's Two Nephews: 1589/90-1594 242

Part 1 A Grandson and a Nephew 242

Part 2 Another Nephew and Glenlivet 252

Chapter 15 Salt: 1595-1598 267

Chapter 16 Alex Ogilvie: Family and Clan: 1599-1603 286

Chapter 17 The Regulation of Noble Retinues: 1604/05-1610 303

Chapter 18 Plots and Mercenaries: 1611-1616/17 318

Part 1 The False Coiner 318

Part 2 Kringen: Viking Metal 329

Chapter 19 Donald Duaghal and the Triumph of the House of Sutherland: 1616-1624 345

Chapter 20 The Practical Juliet: 1625-1629 and After 379

Endnotes 403

Selected Bibliography 475

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