Queen Elizabeth I of England paid a subsidy to King James VI of Scotland from 1586 to 1602.[1] This enabled her to influence James by delaying or deferring payments to his diplomats in London. Records survive of the yearly amounts, and details of the expenditure in some years.[2] A large proportion of the money was spent on the royal wardrobe of James and Anne of Denmark.[3] Some royal expenses were met by Anne of Denmark's dowry, which was known as the "tocher".[4] The regular incomes of the Scottish crown were feudal rents, customs, and "compositions" charged on grants of land.[5] Accounts for royal incomes and payments survive as the exchequer rolls and lord treasurer's accounts and have been published as historical sources.