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  1. However the reasons for the murder were murky even at the time and different theories have been put forward ever since. One of the many rumours was that Rizzio was Mary’s lover and that the child with which she was pregnant, who later became James VI of Scotland and I of England, was Rizzio’s rather than her husband, Darnley’s.

    • Denise Mina
  2. Some Conclusions. No problem exists with the murder of Rizzio. Eye-witness accounts tell of Lord Ruthven and the other lords slaughtering the little Italian before Mary's very eyes with the complicit Darnley looking on. The murder of Lord Darnley is a more difficult matter. Moray, Morton, Maitland, and another less important lord, Balfour, were ...

  3. Book digitized by Google from the library of Harvard University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.

  4. 29 de ago. de 2021 · Published Aug 29, 2021. The murder of David Rizzio was the defining event of the reign of Mary Queen of Scots. From it everything followed: the murder of Darnley, the involvement with Bothwell ...

  5. DAVID RIZZIO or RICCIO (1533?-1566), secretary of Mary, Queen of Scots, was the son of a musician at Pancalieri, near Turin, where he was born about 1533. He obtained a good musical education from his father, and began life in the service of the archbishop of Turin, whence he went to Nice to the court of the Duke of Savoy.

  6. She married her second husband, Lord Darnley, in the Palace chapel in 1565, and witnessed the murder of her Italian secretary, David Rizzio, in her private chambers the following year. In 1567, after Darnley's death under mysterious circumstances, Mary married her third husband, the Earl of Bothwell, in the Palace of Holyroodhouse.

  7. 28 de mar. de 2017 · Obviously the best way to win friends and influence people, if you are called Darnley, is to kill your pregnant wife’s Italian secretary. Rizzio – and this does sound like a game of Cleudo- was stabbed in Mary’s private dining room at Holyrood Palace more than fifty times on 9th March 1566 by Darnley and a cluster of protestant nobles.