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  1. Margaret Drummond was a mistress of James IV of Scotland. The duration of her relationship with the king has much discussed. [1] She was definitely the mistress of James IV during 1496–97, and possibly as early as 1495. Records show her living at Stirling Castle from 3 June 1496, and from 30 October to March 1497 at Linlithgow Palace.

  2. Margaret Drummond. Margaret Drummond (h. 1475–1501) fue hija de John Drummond, I lord Drummond, y amante del rey Jacobo IV de Escocia, con el que tuvo a lady Margaret. La muerte de Margaret Drummond ha sido el objeto de una leyenda que todavía persiste.

  3. Margarita Drummond (en inglés, Margaret Drummond, h. 1340- tras el 31 de enero de 1375), fue la segunda esposa del rey David II de Escocia y una hija de Sir Malcolm Drummond, Knt. (m. h. 1346) por su esposa Margaret, de soltera Graham. Margarita se casó primero con Sir John Logie, sin ningún hijo conocido. Más tarde sirvió como amante del ...

  4. 16 de oct. de 2020 · Margaret and her daughter were moved out of Linlithgow Palace and back to Drummond Castle, albeit with a generous stipend from the king. Whether the move was the result of pressure from James’s nobles, or the affair running its course, or perhaps James thinking she might be safer back with her family, no one knows.

  5. Margaret Drummond (c. 1340 – after 31 January 1375), known also by her first married name as Margaret Logie, was the second queen of David II of Scotland and a daughter of Sir Malcolm de Drummond, 10th Thane of Lennox (b. after 1295 – d. 17 October 1346 at the Battle of Neville's Cross, Durham, England) by his wife Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith.

  6. Such authority is comparable to the independent actions of Margaret Drummond. Robert II’s long-awaited death in 1390 saw Annabella Drummond become Queen Consort to Robert III of Scotland. Born c.1350, Annabella achieved a royal marriage thanks to the political orchestrating of her kinswoman, Margaret Drummond.

  7. 24 de may. de 2024 · After the death of his mistress Margaret Drummond, who was poisoned along with her sisters, presumably to prevent her from marrying the king, James accepted Henry VII's offer of his daughter Princess Margaret Tudor as a bride. 'The Marriage of the Thistle and the Rose' took place at Holyrood on 8 August 1503.