Nageir the Moor

[1][2][3] In February 1568, James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray, the half-brother of Mary, Queen of Scots, and ruler of Scotland as Regent, ordered clothes for Nagier.

The tailor John Murdoch made cloaks called "mandells" and breiks from yellow stemming cloth for four lackeys and for the "moir", meaning Nageir.

In December 1569, John Murdoch made a coat and hose for "Nageir the More" from fine violet stemming, with a canvas doublet and a hat.

[10] In Dieppe, waiting for his ship and a favourable wind, Moray lodged with William Aikman alias Guillaume Acquemen, a prominent Scottish merchant.

One man, known as "Poix blanc", an expert swordsman involved in a Huguenot rebellion, was hanged by the Catholic authorities.