Nothing is more striking than the rapid degeneracy of
the Germanic races who settled amongst the Latinised peoples of Western
Europe. The descendants of the conquerors fell a prey in their turn to the
incursions of the Northmen who occupied various parts of England and
Scotland, and founded a powerful dukedom in the north of France. But
instead of sinking into sensuality and sloth, the Normans showed a spirit
of heroic adventure which lasted through many generations. It is a signal
proof of the superiority of the race that many of them found successful
careers beyond the countries which they conquered. Norman soldiers of
fortune sought foreign lands, gained power and wealth, and founded great
families and even royal dynasties. The pitiless spoliation of the Saxons
after the Norman Conquest of England might well have made the rulers of
neighbouring countries wary of allowing a footing to those encroaching
adventurers, yet we find the Gaelic kings of Scotland, who gave a refuge
to the fugitives from the cruelty of William the Conqueror, welcoming
Normans amongst the Saxon population of the Border counties. That the
nobility of England was Norman was the result of conquest, that so many of
the nobles of Scotland were of Norman origin was owing to the election of
the Scottish kings. This practice of favouring the stranger commenced with
Malcolm Canmore, and went on under David I. and Malcolm IV. During these
times there was much intercourse between the two countries; the Scottish
kings frequently visited England, and gradually introduced feudal law into
the lowlands of Scotland. In granting fiefs to Normans they probably
counted upon their fidelity as the creatures of the royal favour, and
hoped to avail themselves of their skill in organisation to bring a rude
people under order and law.
William the Lion, though
unfortunate in his war with England, continued the policy of his
predecessors in welcoming younger sons of
the noblemen of England and giving them lands in
Scotland which had fallen to the Crown through demise or forfeiture.
Amongst the families who thus found entry into the Northern Kingdom were
Baliol, Bruce, Cumin, Soulis, Mowbray, Saint Clair, Hay, Giffard, Ramesay,
Laundel, Somerville, Bysey, Berkeley or Barclay, Walenge, Boys,
Montgomery, Vaulx, Coleville, Fraser, Seton, Agnew, and Gurlay. Most of
these names are still common in our country, and many of them are
memorable in our history; but the family which forms the subject of this
paper passed away from Scotland without leaving a trace behind, so that
many educated persons not versed in our antiquities are unaware that the
de Quencys were once amongst the greatest of the Scottish nobility.
The Quencys came from Normandy with
Duke William. The name is on the roll of Battel Abbey. Saier de Quency had
a grant from Henry II. of the Manor of Bushby, in the county of
Northampton. Dugdale tells us that he had a son called Robert, who
accompanied Richard Coeur de Lion to Palestine.
It was either this Robert, or a
scion of the same family of the same name, who, coming to Scotland,
received from King Malcolm IV.
the grant of the Manor of Travernent or Tranent, in Haddingtonshire. This
seems to have reverted to the King, in 1154, by the death of Thor, the son
of Swan. The first mention of Robert de Quency occurs in a charter of
Robert Avenel of Eskdale, in which the said de Quency is quoted as a
witness to a previous grant made in the reign of King Malcolm. It does not
appear how de Quency obtained the lands of Fawside, which, in the times of
David I., were held by Edmund of Fawside, who was a witness in a grant of
that King. In addition to this, the old castle of Forfar was given to
Robert de Quency by King William, at a yearly rent of one pound of pepper,
to be paid at Easter.
Robert de Quency increased his
possessions by marrying Eva, the daughter and heiress of Ness, the son of
William, who had extensive estates in Fife. The site of the stronghold of
this old Celtic chieftain is still to be seen near the village of Leuchars,
a raised mound with a flattened surface looking over the plain around.
Here a castle was built, which was taken by the English, under the Earl of
Pembroke, in 1327. In 1336 it was retaken by Sir Andrew Moray. Only a few
scattered stones now remain to indicate that the ground was once occupied
by buildings, and there are traces of a moat which once inclosed about
three acres of ground.
The part of the old church of
Leuchars still standing is one of the finest relics of the early Norman
style in all Scotland. In its architecture it resembles the churches of
Dalmeny and Birnie, which date about the same time. It appears that it was
built by Ness, the son of William, and presented to the canons of the
Cathedral of St Andrews. Only the chancel now remains, the ruins of the
body of the old structure having been removed to give place to the modern
parish church. I have been told that there were many grave-stones and
inscriptions on the floor of the old church, and a few such monuments
still remain in the chancel, but none of them of a date very far back.
Most likely, Ness, Robert de Queney, and his lady were buried here, and
their tombs were swept away when the modern place of worship was erected.
Seyr de Quency, the son of Robert, granted three marks of silver in annual
gift from his mill at Leuchars to the canons of St Andrews. From a charter
in the muniments of the Abbey of Melrose, Eva, the wife of Robert de
Quency, survived her husband and one son named John. For the salvation of
their souls and her own, she bequeathed five acres of ground at Edmunston
to the monks of Melrose. Her sister was Countess of Marr.
Robert de Quency is supposed to have
founded the Castle of Fawside, now a desolate old skeleton of stone
crowning the hill looking down upon Midlothian, and memorable as the spot
occupied by the English under the Duke of Somerset before they descended
to attack the Scottish army in the disastrous battle of Pinkie. Fawside
presents the ruins of a large castle which has evidently received
additions at different times.
There are still extant four charters
by the de Quencys, which have been preserved by the interested care of the
monks of the Abbey of Newbottle. None of them are dated. The first of them
must have been made about 1189. Amongst the witnesses are :—Jocelin,
Bishop of Glasgow; Arnald, Abbot of Melrose; Eukerbald, Abbot of
Dunfermline; Earl Duncan (of Fife); Philip of Euermel, and Philip his son.
In this venerable piece of parchment, now in the Advocates’ Library,
Robert de Quency, lord of Fawside and Tranent, grants the land between a
burn called Wigtrig (sicut rivulus de Wytterigh ad mare desecdit) on
the east, and the burn of Pinkie on the west, and bounded on the south by
some ditches which he had caused to be dug, and on the north by the sea.
All this land is granted to the Cistercian Abbey of Newbottle. In addition
to this, he allows the right of grazing 600 sheep, and the oxen needed to
work their land, on his common near Tranent. He grants them six acres of
land in his,
meadow of Tranent (Trevernent). He also allows them to take away 20 carts
of peats (petys) annually from the lord’s peatry (doiainica
petera), and fuel (focalia) from the usual place where the
tenants took fuel. This charter is written in uncouth Latin, with
perplexing abbreviations, mixed with words of English origin. As the
estate granted is called the Grange of Preston of the land of Tranent (Grangiam
de Preston de tellure de Tavernet), it does not appear that the
name Preston or Priest’s town, which was said to have superseded Aldhammer
or Alhammer, was derived from the monks of Newbottle. The Wigtrig burn now
suns into a drain on the road between the railway station and Prestonpans
at Preston it emerges a little west of the Tower, though some of the water
has been diverted into a channel a little beyond Northfeld House. The
Pinkie burn flows into the sea near Westpans, forming the boundary of East
Lothian and Midlothian. The marsh mentioned in one of the charters was the
same which separated the army of General Cope from that of Charles Stuart
the day before the battle of Prestonpans. It was drained to make the
railway; but a bit of bog still remains near Seton Mill Farm.
In a second charter, which is
witnessed by Roger, Bishop-elect of St Andrews (he was elected in 1175,
and not consecrated until 1198); and by the same Jocelin, Bishop of
Glasgow, who is known to have died on the 26th April 1199 Ernold, Abbot of
Ryevall; and Hugh, Chancellor of Scotland. In this document, Seyr de
Quency confirmed the grant of his father, Robert de Quency. In a third
charter, Seyr de Quency enlarges
the grant by giving to the monks the half of the marsh, from the east of
Wigtrig burn, and also assigns to them the exclusive right of digging coal
(carbonariuin et quarrarium),
and quarrying between this said burn of
Wygtryg and the boundaries of Pinkie and Inveresk down to low-water mark,
witnessed by W., Bishop of St Andrews, Ingano de Ballia, Symon de Quency,
and Alexander de Seton.
In a fourth charter, Roger de Quency, the son of Seyr,
confirms the grants of land made by his grandfather and father, with the
right of digging coal and quarrying.
From this it may be inferred that
the valuable deposits of coal had become known to the monks, and were
thought sufficiently important to be objects of stipulation in two legal
parchments of no great length. There is also the confirmation of William,
King of Scotland, of the grants of Robert and Seyr de Queney, witnessed by
Jocelin, Bishop of Glasgow; Ern, Abbot of Melrose; Richard de Morewyll,
Constable of Scotland ; and Walter Olifard, at Haddington.
The canons of the church of Holyrood
considered that their vested rights had been infringed by these grants to
the monks of Newbottle, which led to a lengthened dispute between these
two religious corporations. In charters published in the muniments of
Holyrood, both Robert and Seyr de Quency confirmed to the canons the
possession of the church at Tranent, with its belongings, originally
granted in the days of Malcolm lV.; and Seyr de Quency proclaimed, in the
Royal Court held at Forfar, the grant in perpetuity of a carrucate and ten
acres of land (unarn
carrucatam terre et decem acras,
probably about 90 acres in all), in
the estate of Tranent near Fawside, and also some lands at Nodrif (Longniddry),
to maintain the chapel theme which his father Robert had bestowed. To this
charter King William was the first witness. It appears that the cession of
the carrucate of land was in exchange for what the canons had lost at
Preston. The disputes about the tithes between the canons of Holyrood and
the monks of Newbottle were put to arbitration in the ninth year of the
reign of Alexander II. Henceforth the tithes of Preston, east of the
Wigtrig burn, were paid to Holyrood. In the same collection, there are
charters granting the tithes of corn and hay at Tranent to the canons, and
also the right of getting corn ground at the baron’s mill. The last of
these charters by Roger de Queney, Earl of Winchester and Constable of
Scotland, is dated 1250.
Seyr, Sayer, Saher, or Saer
de Queney, the son of Robert first, comes into notice in English history
as witness to a concord drawn between Henry II. and his unruly sons,
Henry, Richard, and Geoffrey. This agreement was made at Falaise in 1174,
about the same time as the
dishonourable treaty in which the independence of Scotland was given as
the ransom of William the Lion. What the young de Quency was doing at the
Court of the Plantagenet is not clear. He may have been called to be left
as a hostage for his grandfather, Ness, who was one of the Scottish chiefs
who were taken at Alnwick with King William, or voluntarily shared his
captivity.
In the year 1200, Seyr de Quency is
the hearer of a safe-conduct from King John to William to visit and return
from the English Court. In the fourth year of John’s reign, 1203, he
obtained from the King a grant of the towns of Chennaye and Sydenham, and
was made governor of the Castle of Kuil, which, in 1205, he gave up to the
King of France with little resistance.
Seyr de Quency, who must have
succeeded his father, Robert, before 1199, held baronial courts at
Leuchars. Some of his charters are dated from that place; and in a dispute
with Duncan, the son of Hamelin, about the lands of Duglin, in the Ochills,
he brought Duncan to acknowledge a release of his claims in his court at
Leuchars, in plena curia mea apud Lochres.
Seyr de Quency married Margaret, the
second daughter of Robert de Beaumont, the third Earl of Leicester. The
eldest daughter, Amicia, was married to a Norman lord, Simon de Montfort;
her son, also named Simon, was the leader of the Crusade against the
Albigenses, and quenched in blood the first religious reformation. The
fourth Earl of Leicester died childless in 1204, and the honour fell to
his sister, Amicia; her husband and son being dead, the English title and
a moiety of the estate finally devolved upon her grandson, the fifth Simon
de Montfort the fatuous lender in the Barons’ War. Through his wife as
co-heiress, Seyr de Quency got the manor and barony of Groby and other
estates in Leicestershire. In 1212, he obtained a special discharge from
the scutage of Scotland then required for the same. We are told, in the
"History of Winchester," "Saer
de Quency, lord of Groby, in Leicestershire, was made the first Earl of
Winchester, by King John, A.D. 1215, and had a salary granted him by
patent, issuing out of the fines levied in this country." The date here is
clearly wrong, as in the second charter to the monks of Newbottle, which
must have been written before 1199, Seyr de Quency styles himself Comes
Wintonie, and is so named in a letter of King John in 1212. It does not
appear that any manor in Hampshire was attached, and the new Earl could
have no jurisdiction in the city from which he took his title. Winchester
at that time was an important. place, possessing a special charter, in
which it is expressly stated that the fines went to the mayor and
burgesses. In 1212 Seyr de Queney, Earl of Winchester, along with the Lord
Chancellor and two others, goes as ambassador from King John to Otho IV.,
the Emperor of Germany. Otho was the third son of Henry the Lion of
Brunswick, and Matthilda, the sister of the English King. This embassy led
to prolonged negotiations. The German Emperor, with the Count of Flanders
and the Count of Boulogne, was induced to invade France to help John to
recover his lost possessions. It ended in the rout of Bouvines. Seyr
appears as envoy on other important missions. In 1209 a convention was
made between John and William, by which the English King engaged to
provide suitable matches for the two Scottish princesses; and William,
their father, promised to pay 15,000 marks, in security for which payment
he gave two hostages. In 1213, King John writes to S., Earl of Winchester,
enjoining him to send to him, John, at Portsmouth, the hostages of the
King of Scotland, whom he had in his keeping, namely, his, de Quency’s,
son, Reginald, and the son of William de Vipont. This demand to give up
the hostages was made soon after the submission of King John to Pope
Innocent, to which the Earl of Winchester was a witness. John may have
taken the hostages out of the Earl’s keeping, because he had begun to
suspect him of disaffection. The name of Seyr de Quency is conspicuous
amongst the barons who took part against John in 1215, and obliged him to
sign the Great Charter. Seyr, Earl of Winchester, and his son, R., are
especially named amongst those excommunicated in 1216 by Pope Innocent,
who wished to assist his unworthy vassal, King John, to regain his
tyrannical power. The same energetic Pope had already issued four bulls
against Seyr de Quency, who claimed the patronage of the church of
Leuchars in favour of one Symon de Quency against the canons of St
Andrews. In this dispute de Quency had the King of Scotland on his side;
but the Prior protested that he
had been overawed by the threats of the King, and that the decision was
illegal and injurious to the Church. The Pope appointed commissioners to
investigate and decide according to the canon.
Provoked by the cruelties which John
with his foreign mercenaries perpetrated upon all who fell into his power,
the barons in 1216 sent Seyr, the Earl of Winchester, and Robert
Fitzwalter to France, with letters confirmed by the seals of all the
barons, imploring Philip Augustus to send his son to reign over them. The
Earl of Winchester was one
of those who continued to support the cause of Prince
Louis, even after the death of King John. When the Castle of Mountsorel in
Leicestershire was besieged by the adherents of the young King Henry III.,
the garrison sent for aid to Seyr de Quency, who was at that time in
London. The Earl collected an army of six hundred knights, and above
twenty thousand soldiers, and raised the siege. They then marched to
Lincoln and besieged the castle; when the Regent, Earl Marshall,
approached to relieve it, the Earl of Winchester advised the Count du
Perche, the French commander, to go out to meet him. The Count preferred
to await his attack, and a battle was fought in the streets of Lincoln on
the 19th May 1217. The adherents of the French party were totally
defeated, the Count du Perche was killed, and Seyr de Quency with other
commanders and three hundred knights were made prisoners. In terms of the
treaty by which Louis renounced his claim to the English crown, the Earl
of Winchester was set free, without ransom, along with the other prisoners
engaged in the Civil War. In the spring of the following year the Earl was
employed, along with other noblemen, in arranging a treaty with Llewellen,
Prince of North Wales.
Whether to make atonement for the
papal excommunication which he had borne for nearly two years, or carried
away by the spirit of the time, Seyr de Quency set out for the crusade,
along with Ralph, Earl of Chester, the Earl of Arundel, and other English
nobles, who were followed by large retinues (cum sequela multa).
They landed in 1218 at the mouth of the Nile to assist at the siege of
Damietta. The expedition was disastrous, the struggle lasted for eighteen
months, and many of the Crusaders perished from the sword of the enemy and
from the plague and other sicknesses. Amongst them died Seyr de Quency,
aged at least sixty-five years. It appears that he had taken with him his
son Robert, for in the fifth year of Henry Ill., the elder brother being
in the Holy Land, Roger de Queney had livery of his father’s lands. On his
return, the date of which seems uncertain, Robert de Quency claimed the
earldom; and the cause was argued before the King at Winchester. "After a
full hearing of the cause, the king gave judgment against Robert;
observing that as Roger had been peacefully invested with the title, and
sworn into that office, and had a considerable time had a voice in
Parliament and other national assemblies, it would be unjust to degrade
him; but that upon his decease, Robert, in case he survived, or if not,
his issue, should ever after be vested with that dignity."
The Scottish records make no mention
of this elder brother. Roger de Queney succeeded to the Scottish estates.
He married Helen, the daughter of Alan, the Lord of Galloway, Constable of
Scotland. This was a daughter by his first wife. Alan married for his
second wife, at Dundee, in 1209, Margaret, eldest daughter of David, Earl
of Huntington, brother of William, King of Scots. By this lady he had two
daughters.— Dervorguil, who married John Baliol, Lord of Barnard Castle,
the ancestor of John Baliol, afterwards King of Scotland. It was this lady
who built Sweetheart Abbey. The other daughter, Christian, became the wife
of William des Forts, son of the Earl of Albemarle.
At this time Galloway was but
loosely connected to the kingdom of Scotland. Its Gaelic population clung
to their own customs, and resisted the introduction of new laws. In time
of war it added to the Scottish army bands of wild marauders whose
ferocity excited the horror of their southern neighbours. Alan died in
1234. As he left no legitimate son, the natives of Galloway requested King
Alexander to assume the lordship to himself. Not wishing to deprive Alan’s
three daughters of their inheritance, the King rejected this request. They
next asked that Thomas, the bastard son of Alan, might be appointed their
lord, and, on this also being denied, they broke out into open rebellion
and called in auxiliaries from Ireland and the Isle of Man.
After much fighting the Galwegians were
defeated; many fell in battle, others were put to death. Those who
submitted were deprived of their possessions (1236). Thomas was taken
prisoner and confined in Edinburgh Castle for twenty years. The estate was
divided betwixt the three daughters. Roger de Quency, as the husband of
the eldest daughter, became Constable of Scotland.
We
are told that in 1247 Roger de Quency, being
in his estate in Galloway, which he held through his wife the daughter of
Alan, treated some men of good birth in that country with unusual tyranny.
While unprepared for a siege, he was beleaguered in his castle by a sudden
rising, and threatened with an ignominious death. The Earl, preferring to
die fighting than to perish through hunger, armed at all points, mounted a
swift horse, and with a few who had the courage to follow him, throwing
open the gates of the castle, he clove his way with the sword through the
host of the besiegers. Having thus escaped, he rode away to make his
complaint to the King of Scotland (Alexander II.), who punished the
rebels, and reinstated the Earl in his possessions. In the following year
Roger de Quency sat in the Parliament held at London.
In 1257 Roger de Quency was
sent to Scotland by Henry III., along with the Archbishop of York, the
Bishop of Durham, and other personages, to try to restore concord between
the King and his magnates. At that time Alexander III. was no older than
sixteen, though already married to Margaret, daughter of the English King.
He was kept a prisoner in the hands of the powerful nobles of the
Cumin name. Next year it was agreed to
have a new regency of ten persons. There are other indications that Roger
de Quency was present at the English Court, and helped to promote
friendship between the two countries. After the death of Helen of
Galloway, he married Maud, daughter of Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford,
widow of Anselm Mareshall, Earl of Pembroke; she dying (1252) while still
young, he took for his third wife, Eleanor, daughter of William de Ferrers,
Earl of Derby, and widow of William de Vaux.
In 1258 Roger de Queney was summoned
to attend the king at Chester, to serve against the Welsh. He was one of
the peers who, in a letter to the Pope in 1242, complained of the
exactions of Henry III.; but what part he took in the hostilities between
his cousin Simon de Montfort and King Henry is not known to me. Most of
the English barons who had estates in Scotland took the King’s side.
Perhaps bad health kept Roger de Queney inactive. He died on the 28th
April 1264, more than a year before Simon de Montfort ended his ambitious
career at the battle of Evesham.
In the scanty chronicles of our
early history we see the first of the de Quencys appearing as a soldier of
fortune, rising by the favour of the King, and gaining the hand of an
heiress. The second of the line, the son of a Norman father and a Gaelic
mother, marries the daughter of a great English nobleman, is made Earl of
Winchester, is employed by John on important embassies, takes part with
the barons against the King to obtain for England the Magna Charta, and
goes as their envoy to France to offer the crown of England to Louis, the
son of Philip Augustus. Seyr is a prominent figure amongst the barons in
the civil wars of the reign of Henry IlI., and dies in Egypt amongst the
Crusaders. What we learn of the third de Quency does not entirely
prepossess us in his favour. At any rate, he increases the power and
estates of his family by a marriage with the daughter of a great Gaelic
chieftain, and becomes High Constable of Scotland. Though history has left
no record of the distinctive character of these three lords, we may infer
that they were gifted with courage and ability, to make themselves valued
as leaders of men, as well as with prudence and tact, to insinuate
themselves into the favour of princes and the grace of ladies, till they
rose to the highest position amongst the nobility of Scotland and of
England. Indeed, there was no family before the Union of the two kingdoms
which attained such distinction and rank in both countries at once. But
what had been in great part gathered by three marriages of heiresses was
lost in the same way. Though thrice married, Roger de Quency left no male
heir, and his great estates fell to be divided amongst the three daughters
by his first wife, Helen of Galloway. The eldest of these three ladies,
Margaret, was married to William de Ferrariis, or de Ferrers, son of the
Earl of Derby; and as her father, Roger de Quency, had taken for his third
wife the daughter of William de Ferrers by a former wife, these two Earls
stood as father-in-law to each other. After the death of the Earl of
Winchester, his Countess followed his example, and made a third marriage
to Roger de Leybourne. Margaret de Ferrers being left a widow, her face or
her fortune tempted Sir William Douglas. In 1290 he seized upon the lady,
who had gone to Tranent to claim her dowry of the lands thereabout. For
this, William Douglas got into trouble with Edward I., who had occupied
the southern counties; but in consideration of a fine of £100, Douglas was
allowed the benefit of the marriage. This nobleman, the father of the good
Lord James by his first wife, died a prisoner in York Castle in 1302.
Elizabeth, the second daughter of Roger de Quency, became wife to
Alexander Cumin, Earl of Buchan, who in her right became Constable of
Scotland. The third daughter, Ela, was married to Alan la Zouche, Lord of
Ashby, Governor of the Tower of London. The great estates of the de
Quencys were shared by these three noblemen. Alan la Zouche claimed lands
in England—some say, in right of his wife—which was contested by John,
Earl Warenne (1268). Discerning that he must submit to the law, the Earl,
having first passionately vented himself in foul language, assaulted Sir
Alan and his son Roger in Westminster hall so violently that he almost
killed the one and much wounded the other. Having done so, he fled to his
Castle of Reigate, where he was pursued by Prince Edward, who compelled
him to implore mercy and submit to a heavy fine. This was the same Earl
Warenne who, in the sixth of King Edward’s reign, being asked by what
warrant he held his lands, showed the justices an old sword, saying:
"Behold, my lords, here is my warranty. My ancestors coming into this land
with William the Bastard, did obtain their lands with the sword, and I am
resolved with the sword to defend them." This was the same Earl who, six
hundred years ago, was defeated by Wallace at the battle of Stirling, and
rode to Berwick so fast. Alexander Cumin died about 1288. He was succeeded
by his son John, who thus became third Earl of Buchan and Constable of
Scotland. He was also Sheriff of Wigtown, and was curator of two of the
shares of the estate in Galloway left by Roger de Quency. A district in
Galloway, in the parishes of Carsphairn, Minnigaff, and Dalry, still bears
the name of the Buchan Forest. This Earl of Buchan was infeoffed in the
manor of Wightwiche, in Leicestershire, and sat in the Parliament at
Brigham in 1290, and in July of the same year swore fealty to Edward I. at
Norham. He served the English King against France. In the summer of 1303
we find the Earl of Buchan one of the seven Scottish Commissioners in
Paris who sought the help of Philippe le Bel against the English King.
Their letter to John Cumin of Badenoch, the Guardian of Scotland, is still
preserved. About a year after, Buchan seems to have submitted to Edward.
He married Isabel, the sister of the Earl of Fife, the high-spirited lady
who installed Robert Bruce on the throne at Scone in lieu of her brother,
who at that time took the side of the English usurper. She was taken in
1306, and imprisoned in a cage on a turret of Berwick Castle, by "the
greatest of the Plantagenets," as the English historiographers of to-day
delight to call Edward I. In this cage she was kept for four years, till
she was removed to a milder imprisonment in the monastery of Mount Carmel,
in Berwick, where she remained until the 28th of April 1313, when Edward
II. issued an order to the Governor of Berwick that Isabella, who was wife
to John, late Earl of Buchan, should be delivered to Henry de Beaumont, or
his attorney, "to be by him kept in such custody as are more fully
enjoined by us." What these orders were is not known; but, as this Henry
de Beaumont had married Alice, the daughter of Alexander, the brother of
the Earl of Buchan, and by her inherited the English possessions of the
Buchan family, it may be hoped that this other was a mitigation, perhaps
virtually a release from imprisonment.
It is noteworthy that this lady
remained in durance at Berwick during the life of her husband, John, Earl
of Buchan. Moreover, the Scottish King was making his presence felt in
Northumberland, and had nearly surprised Berwick, which he took about two
years after, so that Edward II. found it prudent to remove his prisoners,
the wife, sister, and daughter of the Bruce, to quarters farther south.
Notwithstanding the vile treatment of his wife, Buchan kept on the English
side, and twice led a body of his Scottish vassals and English soldiers
against King Robert, who gave him a severe defeat at Inverurie, 22nd May
1308, and harried his lands so that he judged it prudent to seek refuge in
England. In 1312 he infeoffed his brother William in his English estates,
and died shortly after.
The conquering Bruce swept the land
of the heirs of the de Quencys. Amongst the grants of their estates we
find lands in Dumfries, Bellachys in Fife, Elphingstone, and the
commonalty of Tranent and Mylyis, all forfeited by the Earl of Buchan;
also the estates of Alan Ia Zouehe, comprising the lands of Fawside, in
the tenement of Tranent (Travernent), along with the lands of the
husbandmen in the tenement and village of Longniddry, with the coal-pits
and serfs (cum carbonariis et nativis
horninibus), on condition of the half-fee or
scutage of one knight; also the barony of Tranent, forfeited by William
Ferraris. These extensive possessions fell into the hands of a house much
better known in Scottish history.
Secher de Say, also a Norman, had
come to Scotland in the days of David I., and had obtained an estate in
Haddington. We have seen the name of Alexander de Seton as witness to a
charter of Seyr de Quency. A member of this family, Sir Chrystal Seton,
married Lady Christina Bruce, third daughter of the Earl of Carrick, and
sister of Robert the Bruce. He rescued the King at Methven, when he was
unhorsed. Sir Chrystal was taken prisoner at Loch Doon Castle, and was
hanged by the English near Dumfries. Bruce erected a chapel on the spot to
the memory of his brother-in-law, and enriched the Setons with the
forfeited lands of the de Quencys. Their estates in Fife were granted to
the Lady Christina Bruce. It seems that Alexander Seton, who came into the
possession of the estates in East Lothian, was a brother of Sir Chrystal.
He was a brave soldier, who did and suffered much for his country. The
head of the house of Seton took the title of Earls of Winton from a
village in East Lothian. The name had, no doubt, been transplanted from
Winton or Winchester in England. Edward II. gave the title of Earl of
Winchester to his favourite, the elder of the Spencers, who was taken and
hanged by the Queen Isabella and the discontented barons.
There were other de Quencys in
Scotland. A charter of Robert, the first holder of Fawside, is attested by
his brother (Sabero fratre meo);
we should read Sahero, the Latin form of Seyr, a
family name. Then we have Symon de Queney of Leuchars, perhaps the same as
Symon, chaplain to the King, attesting the grant of the first Earl of
Winchester already quoted, and the name of John de Quency to a charter in
the reign of Alexander II. As the dates go, these might be father, son,
and grandson of a related but less fortunate branch. After Robert the
Bruce, we hear no more of the name in Scotland. None of the English de
Quincys seemed to have gained rank in after days; but there was Dr Quincy,
eminent in the profession of medicine, besides the well-known author,
Thomas de Quincey. There are still representatives of the name in France.
Simon de Quingy was a well-known character at the Court of Charles the
Bold of Burgundy, to whom he was successively page, cup-bearer, and
ambassador.
There is much information in Dugdale
about the English estates of the heirs of the de Quencys. As we have seen,
the manor of Wightwicke went by marriage with the daughter of William
Cumin to Henry de Beaumont, who was employed by Edward II. in the defence
of the English Borders. In 1310 he was governor of Roxburgh Castle, and
was ordered to exchange Mary de Bruce for Walter Cumin, a prisoner in the
hands of the Scots. To Henry de Beaumont was granted the title of King of
Man by the English King. This island, after the battle of Largs, had
yielded to a Scottish expedition commanded by the Earl of Buchan. It was
subdued by Bruce in 1213. Henry de Beaumont was at Bannockburn, and in
1317 this Baron and his brother Lewis, Bishop of Durham, accompanied two
Cardinals, nuncios from the Pope, with letters to Robert the Bruce. They
were seized and rifled by the lawless English borderers. The Cardinals
were suffered to go on to Scotland stripped of their finery, but the
Bishop and Henry de Beaumont were held in Mitford Castle till ransorned.
Several years afterwards Henry de Beaumont was asked in Council his
opinion about a proposed truce with King Robert, and on his refusing, in a
disrespectful manner, to give advice, he was imprisoned by order of the
King (1323). He was soon afterwards released, and seems to have regained
the royal favour, for we find him two years afterwards one of the
plenipotentiaries to treat of peace with France, and he also gained the
benefit of the wardship of David de Strabolgi or Hastings, son of the Earl
of Athol, put to death by Edward I. This David he married to his daughter,
Catherine Beaumont. Deserting his royal master he sided with Queen
Isabella, and was instrumental in delivering up the unhappy monarch to his
enemies upon the failure of his attempt to fly beyond sea. Among those
active in this arrest we find the name of Eudo de la Zouche, grandson of
Alan. As a reward for this transaction Lord Beaumont got a grant of the
manor of Loughborough, part of the possessions of Hugh le Despencer,
attainted. With the disinherited lords he accompanied Edward Baliol to
Scotland in 1332, and contributed much to the victory of Duplin. During
that disturbed time he got back some of the former estates of the Cumins,
his wife’s inheritance, and styled himself Earl of Buchan. David, Earl of
Athol, taking part with the Baliol faction, and besieging Kildrummy
Castle, was defeated and slain, along with Walter Cumin, by Sir Andrew
Moray at Kilblain Wood. Buchanan tells us that Henry de Beaumont, to
avenge the death of his son-in-law, seized and put cruelly to death all he
could find who had been engaged in this battle. Andrew Moray therefore
besieged him in the Castle of Dundarg, and compelled him to surrender, on
condition that he might return safely to England. He had, however, to pay
a ransom, and to swear that he would never come back as an enemy to
Scotland (1334). He died in 1340, leaving a son John, Lord Beaumont,
ancestor of Sir George Beaumont of Stoughton Grange, in the county of
Leicester. The barony of Beaumont fell into abeyance in 1507. It was
unsuccessfully claimed in 1798 by Thomas Stapleton of Carlton. |