Margaret Knox (née Stewart; 1547 – after 1612) was a Scottish noblewoman and the second wife of Scottish reformer John Knox, whom she married when she was 17 years old and he 54. The marriage caused consternation from Mary, Queen of Scots, as the couple had married without having obtained royal consent.Jane Dawson, 'Regent Moray and John Knox', Steven J. Reid Rethinking the Renaissance and Reformation in Scotland (Boydell, 2024), 163.
The couple made their home on Edinburgh's Royal Mile, and together they had three daughters:Charles Rogers, Genealogical Memoirs of John Knox and Family of Knox, pp. 140–142, accessed 27-11-09
Margaret served as Knox's secretary, and later, when he became ill, his nurse. Following Knox's death in November 1572, the General Assembly, at the suggestion of the Regent, Morton, allowed Margaret to receive, for the year succeeding her husband's death, his pension of 500 merks.Rogers, p. 139
In January 1574, she married her second husband, Sir Andrew Ker of Faldonside. He had been part of the conspiracy of Protestant nobles, led in March 1566 by Patrick Ruthven, 3rd Lord Ruthven, who had stabbed to death Queen Mary's Italian secretary, David Rizzio in the presence of the Queen, who was almost six months pregnant at the time.Antonia Fraser, Mary, Queen of Scots, p. 290, Dell Publishing Co., Inc., New York, 1969 It was Ker who had held his pistol at Mary's side, while she was constrained to watch Rizzio's killing.Fraser, p. 291
Together they had a number of children, one of which was named John Ker, minister of Salt Preston. Genealogical Memoirs of John Knox and of the Family of Knox
On 8 April 1574, a Charter of Alienation confirmed Ker's provision for Margaret, in her widowhood, of the liferent of a third of ancestral lands in Haddingtonshire. Kerr died on 19 December 1599, and she did not remarry.
Margaret died sometime after 1612.
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