David Seton of Parbroath

[5] Seton audited an account of money spent during James VI's voyage to Norway and Denmark by the Chancellor, John Maitland.

[8] In May 1590 Seton drew up a rental of the income and expenditure of the lands of Dunfermline Abbey for the benefit of two Danish ambassadors, Steen Bille and Niels Krag, who came to Scotland to assess Anna of Denmark's marriage settlement.

[9] On 6 May 1593 the Duke of Lennox and 15 friends including Seton subscribed to a frivolous legal document swearing to abstain from wearing gold and silver trimmings on their clothes for a year, and defaulters were to pay for a banquet for all of them at John Killoch's house in Edinburgh.

Alexander Forrester of Garden assembled a company of armed men to intimidate commissioners intemding to walk the boundary.

[13][14] The queen's hair is "Titian gold", the background is dark blue, with the inscription, "Maria Regina Scotorum".

Another example of this portrait belonged to William Maule of Panmure and was engraved for the frontispiece of State Papers of Ralph Sadler, 2 (1809).