New Document Shows how Mary Queen of Scots Predated the Geneva Conventions

Documents released by an Edinburgh college show Mary Queen of Scots, subject of a new film and a woman much debated by history, in quite a new light.

The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (RSCEd), the world’s oldest surgical college, has revealed a letter showing the young Scottish queen protected and preserved the status of surgeons, making it law that they should not have to bear arms in battle.

By doing so, the college says the monarch laid the foundations for the Geneva Convention some 300 years before it came into force.

Mary, Queen of Scots

“This unique artifact is one of the College’s treasured possessions,” said Chris Henry, Director of Heritage at RCSEd. “It gives us a fantastic insight into the ethics and civilization of 16th Century Scotland as well as the standing of surgeons in the capital back then.”

Instead of fighting, Mary, Queen of Scots thought surgeons should focus on caring for the wounded. The letter of exemption not only protected surgeons from having to fight but asked them to be responsible and ready to take care of the sick.

The document says, in part, that surgeons should be “present with our armies ready to do their cure and duty to all sick persons.”

Drawing of the trial of Mary, Queen of Scots, October 14–15, 1586.

The letter is signed “Mary by the Grace of God, Queen of Scots.”

The document was released to the public shortly after the premiere of the film Mary Queen of Scots, starring Saoirse Ronan and Margot Robbie. The film revolves around the power struggles of Mary Stuart and Elizabeth I as young rival queens.

Mary Queen of Scots reigned over Scotland from December 14, 1542 to July 24, 1567. Mary, the only surviving legitimate child of King James V, was six days old when her father died.

Mary, Queen of Scots – portrait by François Clouet, c. 1558–1560.

To escape the warlike Henry VIII, who wanted Mary to wed his heir, Prince Edward, the young queen was sent to France, where she married the heir to French throne instead.

That husband died before he was 20, motivating Mary to travel to Scotland and attempt to rule her country. She wanted to remarry, and selected her cousin Henry Darnley, which turned out to be an unhappy choice.

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Copy of Mary’s effigy. The original, by Cornelius Cure, is in Westminster Abbey. Photo by Kim Traynor CC BY-SA 3.0

Mary signed the documents during a time of turmoil, just after her son, the future James VI, was born and her husband tried to take her throne. Darnley was then done away with, and Mary took as her third husband the Earl of Bothwell, the man commonly believed to have taken the life of his predecessor. Pregnant with Bothwell’s child, Mary took to the field of battle to try to hold on to her kingdom.

In the letter, she rules out surgeons as combatants “for the weale of the realme… fra bering of armoure or passing in battell… provyding… that thai be put with oure armyis reddie to do thair cure and dewitie to all sic personis as sall have mister tharof.”

Mary in captivity, by Nicholas Hilliard, c. 1578.

Chris Henry told Edinburgh Live, “It gives us a fantastic insight into the ethics and civilization of 16th century Scotland as well as the standing of surgeons in the capital back then.” The perception of medical staff as non-combatants in warfare is usually attributed to the first Geneva Convention from 1864.

But RCSEd says the document shows that, three centuries earlier, Mary Queen of Scots clearly set down the right of surgeons to be exempt from bearing arms.

Her breviary

Mary was forced to abdicate in favor of her infant son. After she was defeated in battle, Mary fled to England to seek the help of her cousin Elizabeth I. This was another error, as Elizabeth put her under house arrest.

In 1587, Mary was executed for treason, after years of imprisonment in England. The Scottish queen always maintained that the English had not the right to try her or condemn her.

An actress playing the role of Mary Queen of Scots at a Scottish fair. Photo by David Ball

A scaffold was built in the Great Hall of Fotheringhay Castle for her final day, before the leading noblemen of the English kingdom.

An eyewitness said she entered the room “full of grace and majesty.” Mary wore a red dress, to evoke the color of martyrdom.

Read another story from us: The Imprisonment of Mary, Queen of Scots Brought to Life With Virtual Model

When the axeman asked her forgiveness, as was the tradition, she said, “I forgive you with all my heart, for now, I hope, you shall make an end of all my troubles.”


Nancy Bilyeau, a former staff editor at Entertainment Weekly, Rolling Stone, and InStyle, has written a trilogy of historical thrillers for Touchstone Books. Her new book, The Blue, is a spy story set in the 18th-century porcelain world. For more information, go to www.nancybilyeau.com