Scone, with its sacred stone, being so near Perth and the Highlands,
was perilous, and the coronation of James II. was therefore held at
Holyrood (March 25, 1437). The child, who was but seven years
of age, was bandied to and fro like a shuttlecock between rival adventurers.
The Earl of Douglas (Archibald, fifth Earl, died 1439) took no leading
part in the strife of factions: one of them led by Sir William Crichton,
who held the important post of Commander of Edinburgh Castle; the other
by Sir Alexander Livingstone of Callendar.
The great old Houses had been shaken by the severities of James I.,
at least for the time. In a Government of factions influenced
by private greed, there was no important difference in policy, and we
need not follow the transference of the royal person from Crichton in
Edinburgh to Livingstone in Stirling Castle; the coalitions between
these worthies, the battles between the Boyds of Kilmarnock and the
Stewarts, who had to avenge Stewart of Derneley, Constable of the Scottish
contingent in France, who was slain by Sir Thomas Boyd. The queen-mother
married Sir James Stewart,
the Black Knight of Lorne, and (August 3, 1439) she was captured by Livingstone, while her husband, in the mysterious
words of the chronicler, was “put in a pitt and bollit.”
In a month Jane Beaufort gave Livingstone an amnesty; he, not the Stewart
family, not the queen-mother, now held James.
To all this the new young Earl of Douglas, a boy of eighteen, tacitly
assented. He was the most powerful and wealthiest subject in Scotland;
in France he was Duc de Touraine; he was descended in lawful wedlock
from Robert II.; “he micht ha'e been the king,” as
the ballad says of the bonny Earl of Moray. But he held proudly
aloof from both Livingstone and Crichton, who were stealing the king
alternately: they then combined, invited Douglas to Edinburgh Castle,
with his brother David, and served up the ominous bull's head
at that “black dinner” recorded in a ballad fragment.
They decapitated the two Douglas boys; the earldom fell to their granduncle,
James the Fat, and presently, on his death (1443), to young William
Douglas, after which “bands,” or illegal covenants, between
the various leaders of factions, led to private wars of shifting fortune.
Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews, opposed the Douglas party, now strong
both in lands newly acquired, till (July 3, 1449) James married Mary
of Gueldres, imprisoned the Livingstones, and relied on the Bishop of
St Andrews and the clergy. While Douglas was visiting Rome in
1450, the Livingstones had been forfeited, and Crichton became Chancellor.
Fall of the black Douglases.
The Douglases, through a royal marriage of an ancestor to a daughter
of the more legitimate marriage of Robert II., had a kind of claim to
the throne which they never put forward. The country was thus
spared dynastic wars, like those of the White and Red Roses in England;
but, none the less, the Douglases were too rich and powerful for subjects.
The Earl at the moment held Galloway and Annandale, two of his brothers
were Earls of Moray and Ormond; in October 1448, Ormond had distinguished
himself by defeating and taking Percy, urging a raid into Scotland,
at a bloody battle on the Water of Sark, near Gretna.
During the Earl of Douglas's absence in Rome, James had put
down some of his unruly retainers, and even after his return (1451)
had persevered in this course. Later in the year Douglas resigned,
and received back his lands, a not uncommon formula showing submission
on the vassal's favour on the lord's part, as when Charles
VII., at the request of Jeanne d'Arc, made this resignation to
God!
Douglas, however, was suspected of intriguing with England and with
the Lord of the Isles, while he had a secret covenant or “band”
with the Earls of Crawford and Ross. If all this were true, he
was planning a most dangerous enterprise.
He was invited to Stirling to meet the king under a safe-conduct,
and there (February 22, 1452) was dirked by his king at the sacred table
of hospitality.
Whether this crime was premeditated or merely passionate is unknown,
as in the case of Bruce's murder of the Red Comyn before the high
altar. Parliament absolved James on slender grounds. James,
the brother of the slain earl, publicly defied his king, gave his allegiance
to Henry VI. of England, withdrew it, intrigued, and, after his brothers
had been routed at Arkinholm, near Langholm (May 18, 1455), fled to
England. His House was proclaimed traitorous; their wide lands
in southern and south-western Scotland were forfeited and redistributed,
the Scotts of Buccleuch profiting largely in the long-run. The
leader of the Royal forces at Arkinholm, near Langholm, was another
Douglas, one of “the Red Douglases,” the Earl of Angus;
and till the execution of the Earl of Morton, under James VI., the Red
Douglases were as powerful, turbulent, and treacherous as the Black
Douglases had been in their day. When attacked and defeated, these
Douglases, red or black, always allied themselves with England and with
the Lords of the Isles, the hereditary foes of the royal authority.
Meanwhile Edward IV. wrote of the Scots as “his rebels of Scotland,”
and in the alternations of fortune between the Houses of York and Lancaster,
James held with Henry VI. When Henry was defeated and taken at
Northampton (July 10, 1460), James besieged Roxburgh Castle, an English
hold on the Border, and (August 3, 1460) was slain by the explosion
of a great bombard.
James was but thirty years of age at his death. By the dagger,
by the law, and by the aid of the Red Douglases, he had ruined his most
powerful nobles-and his own reputation. His early training,
like that of James VI., was received while he was in the hands of the
most treacherous, bloody, and unscrupulous of mankind; later, he met
them with their own weapons. The foundation of the University
of Glasgow (1451), and the building and endowment of St Salvator's
College in St Andrews, by Bishop Kennedy, are the most permanent proofs
of advancing culture in the reign of James.
Many laws of excellent tendency, including sumptuary laws, which
suggest the existence of unexpected wealth and luxury, were passed;
but such laws were never firmly and regularly enforced. By one
rule, which does seem to have been carried out, no poisons were to be
imported: Scottish chemical science was incapable of manufacturing them.
Much later, under James VI., we find a parcel of arsenic, to be used
for political purposes, successfully stopped at Leith.