The new king, with Angus for his Governor, Argyll for his Chancellor,
and with the Kers and Hepburns in office, was crowned at Scone about
June 25, 1488. He was nearly seventeen, no child, but energetic
in business as in pleasure, though lifelong remorse for his rebellion
gnawed at his heart. He promptly put down a rebellion of the late
king's friends and of the late king's foe, Lennox, then
strong in the possession of Dumbarton Castle, which, as it commands
the sea-entrance by Clyde, is of great importance in the reign of Mary
and James VI. James III. must have paid attention to the navy,
which, under Sir Andrew Wood, already faced English pirates triumphantly.
James IV. spent much money on his fleet, buying timber from France,
for he was determined to make Scotland a power of weight in Europe.
But at the pinch his navy vanished like a mist.
Spanish envoys and envoys from the Duchess of Burgundy visited James
in 1488-1489; he was in close relations with France and Denmark, and
caused anxieties to the first Tudor king, Henry VII., who kept up the
Douglas alliance with Angus, and bought over Scottish politicians.
While James, as his account-books show, was playing cards with Angus,
that traitor was also negotiating the sale of Hermitage Castle, the
main hold of the Middle Border, to England. He was detected, and
the castle was intrusted to a Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell; it was still
held by Queen Mary's Bothwell in 1567. The Hepburns rose
to the earldom of Bothwell on the death of Ramsay, a favourite of James
III., who (1491) had arranged to kidnap James IV. with his brother,
and hand them over to Henry VII., for £277, 13s. 4d.! Nothing
came of this, and a truce with England was arranged in 1491. Through
four reigns, till James VI. came to the English throne, the Tudor policy
was to buy Scottish traitors, and attempt to secure the person of the
Scottish monarch.
Meanwhile, the Church was rent by jealousies between the holder of
the newly-created Archbishop of Glasgow (1491) and the Archbishop of
St Andrews, and disturbed by the Lollards, in the region which was later
the centre of the fiercest Covenanters,-Kyle in Ayrshire.
But James laughed away the charges against the heretics (1494), whose
views were, on many points, those of John Knox. In 1493-1495 James
dealt in the usual way with the Highlanders and “the wicked blood
of the Isles”: some were hanged, some imprisoned, some became
sureties for the peacefulness of their clans. In 1495, by way
of tit-for-tat against English schemes, James began to back the claims
of Perkin Warbeck, pretending to be Richard, Duke of York, escaped from
the assassins employed by Richard III. Perkin, whoever he was,
had probably been intriguing between Ireland and Burgundy since 1488.
He was welcomed by James at Stirling in November 1495, and was wedded
to the king's cousin, Catherine Gordon, daughter of the Earl of
Huntly, now supreme in the north. Rejecting a daughter of England,
and Spanish efforts at pacification, James prepared to invade England
in Perkin's cause; the scheme was sold by Ramsay, the would-be
kidnapper, and came to no more than a useless raid of September 1496,
followed by a futile attempt and a retreat in July 1497. The Spanish
envoy, de Ayala, negotiated a seven-years' truce in September,
after Perkin had failed and been taken at Taunton.
The Celts had again risen while James was busy in the Border; he
put them down, and made Argyll Lieutenant of the Isles. Between
the Campbells and the Huntly Gordons, as custodians of the peace, the
fighting clans were expected to be more orderly. On the other
hand, a son of Angus Og, himself usually reckoned a bastard of the Lord
of the Isles, gave much trouble. Angus had married a daughter
of the Argyll of his day; their son, Donald Dubh, was kidnapped (or,
rather, his mother was kidnapped before his birth) for Argyll; he now
escaped, and in 1503, found allies among the chiefs, did much scathe,
was taken in 1506, but was as active as ever forty years later.
The central source of these endless Highland feuds was the family
of the Macdonalds, Lords of the Isles, claiming the earldom of Ross,
resisting the Lowland influences and those of the Gordons and Campbells
(Huntly and Argyll), and seeking aid from England. With the capture
of Donald Dubh (1506) the Highlanders became for the while comparatively
quiescent; under Lennox and Argyll they suffered in the defeat of Flodden.
From 1497 to 1503 Henry VII. was negotiating for the marriage of
James to his daughter Margaret Tudor; the marriage was celebrated on
August 8, 1503, and a century later the great grandson of Margaret,
James VI. came to the English throne. But marriage does not make
friendship. There had existed since 1491 a secret alliance by
which Scotland was bound to defend France if attacked by England.
Henry's negotiations for the kidnapping of James were of April
of the same year. Margaret, the young queen, after her marriage,
was soon involved in bitter quarrels over her dowry with her own family;
the slaying of a Sir Robert Ker, Warden of the Marches, by a Heron in
a Border fray (1508), left an unhealed sore, as England would not give
up Heron and his accomplice. Henry VII. had been pacific, but
his death, in 1509, left James to face his hostile brother-in-law, the
fiery young Henry VIII.
In 1511 the Holy League under the Pope, against France, imperilled
James's French ally. He began to build great ships of war;
his sea-captain, Barton, pirating about, was defeated and slain by ships
under two of the Howards, sons of the Earl of Surrey (August 1511).
James remonstrated, Henry was firm, and the Border feud of Ker and Heron
was festering; moreover, Henry was a party to the League against France,
and France was urging James to attack England. He saw, and wrote
to the King of Denmark, that, if France were down, the turn of Scotland
to fall would follow. In March 1513, an English diplomatist, West,
found James in a wild mood, distraught “like a fey man.”
Chivalry, and even national safety, called him to war; while his
old remorse drove him into a religious retreat, and he was on hostile
terms with the Pope. On May 24th, in a letter to Henry, he made
a last attempt to obtain a truce, but on June 30th Henry invaded France.
The French queen despatched to James, as to her true knight, a letter
and a ring. He sent his fleet to sea; it vanished like a dream.
He challenged Henry through a herald on July 26th, and, in face of strange
and evil omens, summoned the whole force of his kingdom, crossed the
Border on August 22nd, took Norham Castle on Tweed, with the holds of
Eital, Chillingham, and Ford, which he made his headquarters, and awaited
the approach of Surrey and the levies of the Stanleys. On September
5th he demolished Ford Castle, and took position on the crest of Flodden
Edge, with the deep and sluggish water of Till at its feet. Surrey,
commanding an army all but destitute of supplies, outmanœuvred
James, led his men unseen behind a range of hills to a position where,
if he could maintain himself, he was upon James's line of communications,
and thence marched against him to Branxton Ridge, under Flodden Edge.
James was ignorant of Surrey's movement till he saw the approach
of his standards. In place of retaining his position, he hurled
his force down to Branxton, his gunners could not manage their new French
ordnance, and though Home with the Border spears and Huntly had a success
on the right, the Borderers made no more efforts, and, on the left,
the Celts fled swiftly after the fall of Lennox and Argyll. In
the centre Crawford and Rothes were slain, and James, with the steady
spearmen of his command, drove straight at Surrey. James, as the
Spaniard Ayala said, “was no general: he was a fighting man.”
He was outflanked by the Admiral (Howard) and Dacre; his force was surrounded
by charging horse and foot, and rained on by arrows. But
“The stubborn spearmen still made good
Their dark impenetrable wood,”
when James rushed from the ranks, hewed his way to within a lance's
length of Surrey (so Surrey writes), and died, riddled with arrows,
his neck gashed by a bill-stroke, his left hand almost sundered from
his body. Night fell on the unbroken Scottish phalanx, but when
dawn arrived only a force of Border prickers was hovering on the fringes
of the field. Thirteen dead earls lay in a ring about their master;
there too lay his natural son, the young Archbishop of St Andrews, and
the Bishops of Caithness and the Isles. Scarce a noble or gentle
house of the Lowlands but reckons an ancestor slain at Flodden.
Surrey did not pursue his victory, which was won, despite sore lack
of supplies, by his clever tactics, by the superior discipline of his
men, by their marching powers, and by the glorious rashness of the Scottish
king. It is easy, and it is customary, to blame James's
adherence to the French alliance as if it were born of a foolish chivalry.
But he had passed through long stress of mind concerning this matter.
If he rejected the allurements of France, if France were overwhelmed,
he knew well that the turn of Scotland would come soon. The ambitions
and the claims of Henry VIII. were those of the first Edwards.
England was bent on the conquest of Scotland at the earliest opportunity,
and through the entire Tudor period England was the home and her monarch
the ally of every domestic foe and traitor to the Scottish Crown.
Scotland, under James, had much prospered in wealth and even in comfort.
Ayala might flatter in some degree, but he attests the great increase
in comfort and in wealth.
In 1495 Bishop Elphinstone founded the University of Aberdeen, while
(1496) Parliament decreed a course of school and college for the sons
of barons and freeholders of competent estate. Prior Hepburn founded
the College of St Leonard's in the University of St Andrews; and
in 1507 Chepman received a royal patent as a printer. Meanwhile
Dunbar, reckoned by some the chief poet of Scotland before Burns, was
already denouncing the luxury and vice of the clergy, though his own
life set them a bad example. But with Dunbar, Henryson, and others,
Scotland had a school of poets much superior to any that England had
reared since the death of Chaucer. Scotland now enjoyed her brief
glimpse of the Revival of Learning; and James, like Charles II., fostered
the early movements of chemistry and physical science. But Flodden
ruined all, and the country, under the long minority of James V., was
robbed and distracted by English intrigues; by the follies and loves
of Margaret Tudor; by actual warfare between rival candidates for ecclesiastical
place; by the ambitions and treasons of the Douglases and other nobles;
and by the arrival from France of the son of Albany, that rebel brother
of James III.
The truth of the saying, “Woe to the kingdom whose king is
a child,” was never more bitterly proved than in Scotland between
the day of Flodden and the day of the return of Mary Stuart from France
(1513-1561). James V. was not only a child and fatherless; he
had a mother whose passions and passionate changes in love resembled
those of her brother Henry VIII. Consequently, when the inevitable
problem arose, was Scotland during the minority to side with England
or with France? the queen-mother wavered ceaselessly between the party
of her brother, the English king, and the party of France; while Henry
VIII. could not be trusted, and the policy of France in regard to England
did not permit her to offer any stable support to the cause of Scottish
independence. The great nobles changed sides constantly, each
“fighting for his own hand,” and for the spoils of a Church
in which benefices were struggled for and sold like stocks in the Exchange.
The question, Was Scotland to ally herself with England or with France?
later came to mean, Was Scotland to break with Rome or to cling to Rome?
Owing mainly to the selfish and unscrupulous perfidy of Henry VIII.,
James V. was condemned, as the least of two evils, to adopt the Catholic
side in the great religious revolution; while the statesmanship of the
Beatons, Archbishops of St Andrews, preserved Scotland from English
domination, thereby preventing the country from adopting Henry's
Church, the Anglican, and giving Calvinism and Presbyterianism the opportunity
which was resolutely taken and held.
The real issue of the complex faction fight during James's
minority was thus of the most essential importance; but the constant
shiftings of parties and persons cannot be dealt with fully in our space.
James's mother had a natural claim to the guardianship of her
son, and was left Regent by the will of James IV., but she was the sister
of Scotland's enemy, Henry VIII. Beaton, Archbishop of Glasgow
(later of St Andrews), with the Earl of Arran (now the title of the
Hamiltons), Huntly, and Angus were to advise the queen till the arrival
of Albany (son of the brother of James III.), who was summoned from
France. Albany, of course, stood for the French alliance, but
when the queen-mother (August 6, 1514) married the new young Earl of
Angus, the grandson and successor of the aged traitor, “Bell the
Cat,” the earl began to carry on the usual unpatriotic policy
of his house. The appointment to the see of St Andrews was competed
for by the Poet Gawain Douglas, uncle of the new Earl of Angus; and
himself of the English party; by Hepburn, Prior of St Andrews, who fortified
the Abbey; and by Forman, Bishop of Moray, a partisan of France, and
a man accused of having induced James IV. to declare war against England.
After long and scandalous intrigues, Forman obtained the see.
Albany was Regent for a while, and at intervals he repaired to France;
he was in the favour of the queen-mother when later she quarrelled with
her husband, Angus. At one moment, Margaret and Angus fled to
England where was born her daughter Margaret, later Lady Lennox and
mother of Henry Darnley.
Angus, with Home, now recrossed the Border (1516), and was reconciled
to Albany; against all unity in Scotland Henry intrigued, bribing with
a free hand, his main object being to get Albany sent out of the country.
In early autumn, 1516, Home, the leader of the Borderers at Flodden,
and his brother were executed for treason; in June, 1517, Albany went
to seek aid and counsel in France; when the queen-mother returned from
England to Scotland, where, if she retained any influence, she might
be useful to her brother's schemes. But, contrary to Henry's
interests, in this year Albany renewed the old alliance with France;
while, in 1518, the queen-mother desired to divorce Angus. But
Angus was a serviceable tool of Henry, who prevented his sister from
having her way; and now the heads of the parties in the distracted country
were Arran, chief of the Hamiltons, and Beaton, Archbishop of Glasgow,
standing for France; and Angus representing the English party.
Their forces met at Edinburgh in the street battle of “Cleanse
the Causeway,” wherein the Archbishop of Glasgow wore armour,
and the Douglases beat the Hamiltons out of the town (April 30, 1520).
Albany returned (1521), but the nobles would not join with him in an
English war (1522). Again he went to France, while Surrey devastated
the Scottish Border (1523). Albany returned while Surrey was burning
Jedburgh, was once more deserted by the Scottish forces on the Tweed,
and left the country for ever in 1524. Angus now returned from
England; but the queen-mother cast her affections on young Henry Stewart
(Lord Methven), while Angus got possession of the boy king (June 1526)
and held him, a reluctant ward, in the English interest.
Lennox was now the chief foe of Arran, and Angus, with whom Arran
had coalesced; and Lennox desired to deliver James out of Angus's
hands. On July 26, 1526, not far from Melrose, Walter Scott of
Buccleuch attacked the forces guarding the prince; among them was Ker
of Cessford, who was slain by an Elliot when Buccleuch's men rallied
at the rock called “Turn Again.” Hence sprang a long-enduring
blood-feud of Scotts and Kers; but Angus retained the prince, and in
a later fight in the cause of James's delivery, Lennox was slain
by the Hamiltons, near Linlithgow. The spring of 1528 was marked
by the burning of a Hamilton, Patrick, Abbot of Ferne, at St Andrews,
for his Lutheran opinions. Angus had been making futile attacks
on the Border thieves, mainly the Armstrongs, who now became very prominent
and picturesque robbers. He meant to carry James with him on one
of these expeditions; but in June 1528 the young king escaped from Edinburgh
Castle, and rode to Stirling, where he was welcomed by his mother and
her partisans. Among them were Arran, Argyll, Moray, Bothwell,
and other nobles, with Maxwell and the Laird of Buccleuch, Sir Walter
Scott. Angus and his kin were forfeited; he was driven across
the Border in November, to work what mischief he might against his country;
he did not return till the death of James V. Meanwhile James was
at peace with his uncle, Henry VIII. He (1529-1530) attempted
to bring the Border into his peace, and hanged Johnnie Armstrong of
Gilnockie, with circumstances of treachery, says the ballad,-as
a ballad-maker was certain to say.
Campbells, Macleans, and Macdonalds had all this while been burning
each other's lands, and cutting each other's throats.
James visited them, and partly quieted them, incarcerating the Earl
of Argyll.
Bothwell and Angus now conspired together to crown Henry VIII. in
Edinburgh; but, in May 1534, a treaty of peace was made, to last till
the death of either monarch and a year longer.