So far, the
alienation of the temporal possessions of the archbishopric had not
proceeded to any great extent. A more determined effort was now,
however, made. Notwithstanding the acts of the General Assembly,
which probably expressed the feeling of a large number of the
burgess and the lower classes of the people, the king strongly
desired to continue the episcopal system of church government. In
this he was supported by a large proportion of the nobility, partly,
no doubt, from desire for the orderly conduct of religion and from
dislike of the republican temper of the presbyterian church courts,
but partly also, there is good reason to believe, from desire to
profit by the transference of church property which the episcopal
dignitaries had power to carry out. Foremost in supporting the young
king in this policy was the now all-powerful Lennox, and it has been
made quite clear that he proceeded of set purpose to exploit for his
personal profit to the fullest possible extent the appointment of a
new archbishop at Glasgow.
A suitable tool for
his purpose lay to his hand in the person of Robert Montgomerie,
minister at Stirling. Montgomerie must have been well known to the
king and court, who would be among his constant hearers in the noble
old kirk under the walls of Stirling Castle. So far he had been a
vehement supporter of the party which opposed episcopacy, [Spottiswoode,
ii. 281.] but he was evidently a poor creature, and Lennox had
recognised this. The duke made a pact with him by which, if
appointed archbishop, he was to receive an annual sum of £1000
Scots, with some horse corn and poultry, while all the remaining
revenues were to be made over to the duke and his heirs. [Richard
Hay's MS., quoted in Chalmers's Caledonia, iii. 626.]
The king himself went to Glasgow on 28th
August, and while he remained there, on 3rd October, sent a letter
to the town council, requiring it to acknowledge Montgomerie as
archbishop, and present the usual leets to him for nomination of
baiiies. This instruction the council promised " with thair hart "
to obey, and the time-honoured proceeding was forthwith carried out.
[Burgh Records, i. 89.] On 16th October the king left Glasgow, and
next day, at the meeting of the General Assembly, Montgomerie's
appointment was intimated to it. The fathers of the kirk refused,
however, to recognize the appointment, and an unseemly squabble
forthwith began. [Calderwood, iii. 577, and on.] Montgomerie, with
an armed escort, went to Glasgow, and entered the cathedral, but,
finding the pulpit occupied by a minister who refused to give way to
him, withdrew for the time. [Ibid. 595.] The presbytery of Stirling
then suspended him, and ordered him to attend the synod of Lothian
to hear himself excommunicated. [Ibid. iii. 619, 620.] The Privy
Council next took up the matter and summoned the recalcitrant kirk
session of Glasgow, along with the presbyteries of Glasgow and
Stirling, to appear before it. [Spottiswoode, ii. 285.] Montgomerie
himself also cited the synod of Lothian to appear. These bodies all
declined the jurisdiction of the Privy Council, and that high
authority thereupon, on 12th April, 1582, declared that, as the kirk
had refused to elect Montgomerie, the appointment to the
archbishopric had fallen into the hands of the king, who exercised
his right to fill the office, and forbade the kirk from taking any
action against the new archbishop. [Privy Council Register, iii.
474-7.] In defiance of this order, the ministers summoned
Montgomerie to appear before the General Assembly at St. Andrews on
24th April. Montgomerie, equally defiant, attended, and when the
Assembly, with Andrew Melville as moderator, proposed to proceed
against him, a letter was presented from the king, referring them to
the order of the Privy Council, and warning them not to interfere
with the royal jurisdiction. On their disregarding this, a
messenger-atarms appeared, and charged them to desist under pain of
being denounced as rebels and put to the horn. Still they persisted,
and deposed Montgomerie from the ministry. They were proceeding to
excommunicate him when he appeared in person and undertook neither
to meddle with nor attempt anything regarding the archbishopric
except by advice of the General Assembly. [Register of Assembly;
Chalmers's Caledonia, iii. 626-7.]
On returning to court, however,
Montgomerie was induced to resile from his promise, and was
furnished with letters from the king calling on persons in the west
country to support him. He then went to Glasgow to preach. The
presbytery met to deal with the matter, but, while they were in
session, the provost, Sir Mathew Stewart of Minto, with the bailies
and some citizens, entered, forbade the proceedings, and summoned
the ministers before the Privy Council. On the presbytery refusing
to disperse, the magistrates, it was said, laid hands on John
Howeson, the moderator, and in the struggle his beard was torn and
one of his teeth knocked out, and he was imprisoned in the Tolbooth.
[Calderwood, iii. 621; Spottiswoode, ii. 188.] During the fracas the
college students rushed to help the presbytery, and as blows were
exchanged, the provost, fearing a riot, caused the bells to be rung,
and by tuck of drum called the burgesses to help.
On the Saturday night the students took
possession of the cathedral, and next day excluded Montgomerie,
while Principal Smeaton preached from the text, "He that enters not
by the door, but by the window, the same is a thief and a robber."
[Privy Council Records, iii. 486.] Next the presbytery of Edinburgh
summoned Montgomerie, and the Privy Council proceeded to deal with
the ministers, both of Edinburgh and Glasgow. But on 10th June, in
the church of Liberton, sentence of excommunication was published
against the archbishop. [Calderwood, iii. 621; Spottiswoode, ii.
289.] On 16th
June a letter from the Duke of Lennox was presented to the town
council. Referring to "the truble maid laitle into your toun of
Glasgw be the colleigis mouit be the ministeris," it mentioned that
the king had given the college charge "not to do the lyke again,"
and it directed the bailies and town to resist " the violence and
bosting of the college." [Burgh Records, i. 94.]
Eleven days later Andrew Melville, as
moderator, opened the General Assembly with a vehement sermon
against the interference of the Privy Council, [Tytler, iv. ch. ii.]
and proceedings were instituted against the Duke of Lennox, the Lord
Advocate, the magistrates of Glasgow, and others, for abetting
Montgomerie while under excommunication. The provost and others were
declared worthy of excommunication, and sentence was only delayed at
the king's request. [Calderwood, iii. 626.] On 2nd July the Privy
Council had Montgomerie's appointment and the nullity of his
excommunication proclaimed at the cross of Edinburgh. [Privy Council
Records, iii. 489.] Four days later the commissioners of the kirk
presented a list of fourteen grievances before the king at Perth.
[Book of the Universal Kirk, ii. 582-3.] On the 11th of the month
the Privy Council ordered the Principal and students of Glasgow
College to appear before them on 10th September, to answer for their
action in opposing Montgomerie; [Privy Council Register, iii.
489-90, note.] and on the 20th it passed an act declaring that, as
Montgomerie had been lawfully appointed to the see, all feuars and
tenants must pay to him the entire fruits of the archbishopric.
[Ibid. iii. 496. ]
The whole miserable business assumes
larger interest as the earliest example of that clash between the
royal power and the will of the people in ecclesiastical affairs
which lasted throughout the reigns of James VI. and Charles I., and
cost the latter monarch his head, and which was revived in the
reigns of Charles II, and James VII. and II. only to end in the
Revolution of 1689, which cost the Stewarts their throne.
Not least to be pitied was the luckless
archbishop himself. As a person under the ban of the kirk he dared
not appear in the streets of Edinburgh, where he was stoned and
insulted, and forced to seek safety in flight. He was refused
admission to the courts when he sought redress. The magistrates,
instead of protecting him, sided with his persecutors. And even the
king seemed to be rather amused than otherwise by his discomfiture.
[Tytler, iv. ch. ii.]
Meanwhile Montgomerie's appointment to
the archbishopric of Glasgow, and the struggle between the court and
the kirk to which it led, played a highly important part in Scottish
affairs, for it may be held to have led directly to the famous
incident known as the Raid of Ruthven. From the first the appearance
in Scotland of Esme Stewart, and his rise to power as Duke of
Lennox, had been watched by Queen Elizabeth with jealousy and
dismay. When the Earl of Morton, head of the English party in
Scotland, was seized and thrown into prison, she had exerted herself
strenuously to save him, even going the length of organizing a plot,
through her envoy, Randolph, for the seizure of the king and the
murder of Lennox, Argyll, and Montrose. Lennox, however, discovered
the plot in the nick of time, and Randolph only saved himself by
fleeing to Berwick, while the Earl of Angus, his chief tool, was
banished beyond the Spey. [Tytler, iv. ch. ii.]
The Duke's proceedings in the matter of
the Glasgow archbishopric gave Elizabeth another chance. Her new
envoy, Sir Robert Bowes, exerted himself to excite the fears of the
Earls of Gowrie, Mar, Glencairn, and others, regarding a supposed
counterplot of Lennox to seize them, banish the leading ministers of
the kirk, establish episcopacy, and recall the imprisoned Queen Mary
to take part with her son in the government. These " revelations,"
added to the alarm which had already been excited by the action of
Lennox in enforcing the appointment of Montgomerie, immediately
brought about the coup d'etat. Lennox was at Dalkeith, his chief
ally, Captain Stewart, who had been made Earl of Arran, was at
Kinneil, and the king was at Gowrie's house, Ruthven Castle, near
Perth. On the evening of 22nd August, 1582, Gowrie, Mar, Lindsay,
and the other conspirators, surrounded the castle with a thousand
men, and the Earls of Mar and Gowrie, entering the royal chamber,
removed the guards, and took charge of the king. Arran, galloping to
retrieve the event, was seized as he entered the castle courtyard,
and thrown into confinement, while Lennox was forced to retire,
first to Dunbarton and afterwards to France, [Privy Council
Register, iii. 506-11. On his way the Duke passed through Glasgow,
and it gives some idea of the troubled state of the country to know
that his train consisted of 300 men. He arrived from Edinburgh on
6th September at six in the afternoon and left at six next morning.
It was the last occasion on which a member of his house occupied the
Lennox mansion at the Stablegreen, for while in Dunbarton Castle the
Duke conveyed it to William Stewart of Bultreis, and soon afterwards
the site was broken up into building lots (Glasgow Protocols, 2456,
2666-7, 2673-4).] where he died in the following year.
Meanwhile Montgomerie, harassed beyond
endurance, submitted to the kirk, as also did Sir Mathew Stewart the
provost, and other Glasgow supporters, and the General Assembly
remitted their case to be dealt with by the Glasgow presbytery. [Calderwood,
iii. 690.] Before this could be done, however, another revolution
took place. On 25th June, 1583, King James escaped from Falkland
Palace to the castle of St. Andrews, called his own friends about
him, and overthrew the power of Gowrie and the English faction. [Tytler,
iv. ch. iii.] At a parliament held in Edinburgh in May, 1584,
Montgomerie petitioned and secured a declaration commanding the
censure of the kirk upon him to be stayed and the excommunication of
no effect, as also that he should continue to possess all his
honours, dignities, and benefices. [Act. Part. iii. 292-311.] The
archbishop, however, continued most unpopular. When he appeared in
the streets of Ayr, where he lived, he was mobbed by crowds of women
and boys, who denounced him as an atheist, a dog, and an
excommunicated beast. [Tytler, iv. ch. iv.] Nevertheless on 1st June
the king sent a letter to Glasgow town council desiring that
Montgomerie should be assisted and fortified by the magistrates.
This they promised to do, [Burgh Records, i. 108-9.] and on 18th
August, at the archbishop's request, sent a guard of six persons to
accompany him to the sitting of parliament." On 7th October,
exercising his powers, Montgomerie chose three persons to be
bailies, and appointed Sir William Livingstone of Kilsyth to be
provost.
This was the last intromission of
Montgomerie, for two years, with the election of magistrates. On 2nd
October, 1582, and on 30th September, 1583, in the absence of the
archbishop and of his hereditary bailie, the Duke of Lennox, the
nomination of a provost was made by King James himself. In the
former case Sir Mathew Stewart of Minto was requested by his
brother, the Prior of Blantyre, "direct from the King's majesty,"
and "conform to his credit and commission of the King's majesty" to
accept the provostship; and in the latter year John, Earl of
Montrose, appeared before Sir Mathew Stewart and the bailies and
council of the previous year, and presented a letter from the king
nominating him as provost. Both nominations were accepted. [Burgh
Records, i. 98, 105.] Montrose was a supporter of the Lennox party.
A month after the second of these
transactions, in November, 1583, Ludovic, heir of the late Duke of
Lennox, having been sent for by the king from France, landed at
Leith, and was warmly welcomed by James, who confirmed him in all
his father's honours and estates. [Calderwood, iii. 749 ; Privy
Council Records, iii. 609, 614, 615.] He succeeded also, under the
arrangement made by his father, to the revenues of the Glasgow
archbishopric.
In the following May, 1584, parliament
annulled the kirk's excommunication of Montgomerie, and on 7th
October of that year he exercised his right by nominating Sir
William Livingston of Kilsyth to be provost, and George Elphinstone,
William Conyngham, and Robert Rowat to be bailies. [Burgh Records, i.
ii.] Also, on 5th October, 1585, he appeared personally in the
council, and again nominated Sir William and selected three bailies.
[Council Records, i. 117.]
Not long afterwards, however, another
revolution in the government took place, and Montgomerie, in his
distress and uncertainty, resigned his rights in the archbishopric
in favour of William Erskine, parson of Campsie and late commendator
of Paisley. [Spottiswoode, ii. 375. ] Ultimately the General
Assembly allowed the luckless ex-prelate to settle as minister of
Stewarton in Ayrshire. [Ibid.] |