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  1. J. A. Cannon. The Oxford Companion to British History. Bothwell, James Hepburn, 4th earl of (c.1535–78). Bothwell's grandfather perished at Flodden. The family influence was in Liddisdale and the south of Scotland. He succeeded as earl in 1556. Though a protestant, he was at first a supporter of Mary of Guise and strongly anti-English.

  2. 13 de jun. de 2017 · A month or so later, Mary made James Hepburn Earl of Orkney and Marquis of Fife to add to his existing Bothwell title, and she then promptly married him. Her Protestant opponents in the aristocracy, some of whom had previously supported her, were outraged and seized their chance to get rid of the Queen and her unlikeable husband.

  3. James Hepburn (født cirka 1536, død 14. april 1578) var en skotsk adelsmann, kjent som jarlen av Bothwell. Han endte sitt liv som statsfange i Danmark . Han er den antatte gjerningsmannen for mordet på Maria Stuarts mann lord Darnley i 1567. [6]

  4. 17 de jun. de 2008 · Fils de Patrick Hepburn, comte de Bothwell, James Hepburn Bothwell reprend le titre de son père en 1556. Bien que protestant, il soutient la catholique Marie de Lorraine, régente pour la jeune reine Marie Stuart, dans sa lutte contre les nobles protestants écossais. À la mort de Marie de Guise en 1560, Marie Stuart prend les rênes du gouvernement et, en 1561, Bothwell devient membre de ...

  5. 13 de mar. de 2014 · James Hepburn spent five long years in confinement in Malmö, years spent trying to get someone to take an interest in his plight and help him regain his freedom. His wife was not in a position to aid him – she was imprisoned in England. The last five years of his life, James Hepburn spent in horrible conditions in Dragsholms Castle in Denmark.

  6. 17 de fev. de 2011 · She was already Queen of Scotland because her father, James V, had died when she was just six days old, leaving her French Catholic mother, Mary of Guise, acting as Regent. She eventually married ...

  7. e. Hepburn romanization (ヘボン式ローマ字, Hebon-shiki rōmaji, lit. 'Hepburn-style Roman letters ') is the main system of romanization for the Japanese language. The system was originally published in 1867 by American Christian missionary and physician James Curtis Hepburn as the standard in the first edition of his Japanese–English ...