REFERENCE has been
made to the negotiations with Duncan, Earl of Lennox, and his
daughter Isabella, the Countess of Lennox and Duchess of Albany,
regarding the Hospital of Polmadie, and benefactions bestowed by
them on the Friars Preachers of Glasgow. [Antea, pp. 196, 233.] The
earldom subsequently passed to Sir John Stewart of Dernely, grandson
of Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of Earl Duncan. His grandfather
and father had likewise taken an interest in the Friars, as in 1419
and 1433, respectively, the latter had obtained from these Dernely
lairds yearly pensions of victual and money. [Lib. Coll. etc. pp.
162, 165.] Sir John was created Lord Dernely about the year 146o,
and some years afterwards he got possession of the earldom of
Lennox. His son Matthew, second earl of the Stewart line, succeeded
in 1494, and it was during his time that the intimate relationship
existing between the Lennox family and the city and regality of
Glasgow is first referred to in a contemporary record. Earl Matthew
was provost of the burgh in the year 1509-10, and at that time he
acquired the Stablegreen property where the Lennox mansion stood
till near the end of the century. It is supposed that in 1509-10 the
earl must have held the office of bailie of the barony and regality
of Glasgow, as in the year 1578 it was stated that his grandson,
another Earl Matthew, who had been regent of the kingdom, his father
and grandfather, and their "foirbearis, wer kyndlie baillies" of the
lordship and regality "and broukit the office thairof past all
memory." [Privy Council Reg. ii. p. 697. ]
South of the property
acquired by Earl Matthew the Stablegreen ground, as already
mentioned, [Antea, pp. 228-9.] was apparently at one time vested in
the administrators of St. Nicholas Hospital. In the year 1507 Sir
William Silver, subchanter and master of the hospital, with the
approval of the archbishop and the magistrates of Glasgow, conveyed
to Mr. John Gibson, prebendary of Renfrew, and his successors, "a
tenement belonging to the said hospital, lying in the city of
Glasgow, near the palace of the archbishop, on the west side
thereof, between the manse of the prebendary of Govan on the south
and the lands of Patrick Colquhoun of Glen on the west and north."
It was declared that this tenement should be for ever annexed to the
prebend of Renfrew, and it thus became the parson's manse, a
designation which the property bears in title deeds at the present
day. As shown by the description of 1507 the manse of Govan had
already been planted to the south of that of Renfrew, but at what
date has not been ascertained. On 17th June, 1508, Gibson, as
prebendary of Renfrew, complained against Adam Colquhoun, prebendary
of Govan, for having appropriated part of his manse, and in presence
of the dean and chapter he protested against the encroachment. Both
manses paid feuduties to St. Nicholas Hospital, thus showing that
Govan manse as well as that of Renfrew had been erected on a site
derived from the hospital. [Dioc. Reg. Prot. Nos. 235-8, 323 ; Glasg.
Prof. No. 3531 ; Chiefs of Colquhoun, ii. p. 260; Maxwells of
Pollok, i. p. 179 ; Rottenrow (Regality Club, iii.) P. 57• In the
cited protocol, No. 237 (26th May, 1507), Patrick Colquhoun is
designated " prepositus Glasguensis pro tempore." See remarks as to
his relationship with the Earl of Lennox and as to the provosts and
provost-deputes, antea, p. 229, and postea, pp. 319-20.]
The acquisition of
the Lennox mansion or its site is narrated in a protocol dated loth
August, 1509. Adam Colquhoun, parson of Govan, a son of Patrick
Colquhoun of Glens, on that day resigned in favour of Matthew earl
of Lennox what is described as a tenement in the Stablegreen,
situated between the lands of George Colquhoun on the north and the
manses of the archdeacon of Teviotdale and of the prebendary of
Renfrew on the south, with the garden and pertinents, the price
payable by the earl being ten merks, yearly, for church services, on
the seller's foundation. [Dioc. Reg. Prot. No. 384. In this place
the earls of Lennox had for many years their town residence. In
consequence of the forfeiture of the second Earl Matthew in 1545 the
mansion reverted to the crown, and it was bestowed on John Hammylton
of Neilisland in 1550, and on John Stuart, commendator of Coldingham,
in 1556. With the rescinding of the forfeiture in 1564 it is
understood that the mansion was restored to the earl, whose son, the
ill-fated Darnley, probably occupied it in the month preceding his
murder at Kirk of Field in Edinburgh (Glasg. Chart. i. p. dxxxiv.).
About the year 1584-5 the grounds were broken up and disposed of in
building lots (Glasg. Prot. Nos. 2666-7, 2673-4)]
Earl Matthew, bailie
of the regality and presumably provost of the city of Glasgow, was
likewise sheriff of Dumbarton, and in 1513 he is understood to have
led the men of Lennox and the citizens of Glasgow to the field of
Flodden, where he was slain. Little information is procurable as to
the number of Glasgow people who accompanied the earl; but of one
citizen, Michael Flemyng, it is recorded that, three weeks before
the fateful day, he gave instructions that if he happened not to
return to Glasgow but should die in battle against the English, or
elsewhere, an obit should be founded for certain religious services
to be celebrated in the cathedral yearly. [Dioc. Reg. Prot. No.
651.] But Flemyng had better luck, as he lived to return to the
city, and, on 29th November, 1514, he and his mother founded an obit
in the church of the Friars Preachers. [Lib. Coll. etc. pp. 211-2.]
Glasgow people may
not have had a very prominent share in the active preparations for
the expedition to England, but there was one incident which brought
the military movements vividly under their notice. The Irish
chieftain O'Donnell was in Scotland in July, 1513, about which time
there was some idea of creating a diversion in Ireland which might
occupy the attention of the English King. A big cannon drawn by
thirty-six horses and accompanied by proportionate ammunition was
sent from Edinburgh to Glasgow, probably with the intention of being
shipped to Ireland, and the force included seven quarriers "for the
undermyning of walls." In addition to this cavalcade sixteen "tume"
or empty carts were sent for bringing home wine expected to be
landed on the west coast from France. But owing to a change of
plans, it being perhaps found that artillery could not be spared at
that time, the guns never got to Ireland. On 14th August more carts
were despatched to Glasgow to bring them home again, a journey which
it took ten days to accomplish. [Lord High Treasurer's Accounts, iv.
pp. lxxx-i. 527.]
After the battle,
which was fought on 9th September, we have two or three contemporary
notices incidentally connected with it. On 7th December Lady
Elizabeth Hamilton, relict of the Earl of Lennox, in presence of
notaries and witnesses, assembled in her Stablegreen residence, made
arrangements with her son and heir as to the disposal of revenues
from her deceased husband's estate; [Dioc. Reg. Prot. No. 659.] and
on 24th January a meeting of the magistrates, held in the
court-house of the burgh, was attended by John Schaw,
"provost-depute," the first occasion on which that designation has
been noticed on record. [Dioc. Reg. Prot. No. 255.] Unluckily
Cuthbert Symson's protocol book ends in 1513, and its only other
reference to affairs connected with Flodden is the statement that
"King James V., King of Scots, was crowned in the castle of Stirling
by James, archbishop of Glasgow, 21st September, 1513." [Ibid. No.
663.] The other Scottish archbishop had fallen with his father on
the field of battle.
During the year of
his tenure of the provostship, John Schaw, with consent of Marion
Crawfurd, his spouse, founded a chaplainry at the altar of St.
Christopher, on the south side of the nave of the cathedral, and for
its maintenance he assigned property acquired by him "by labor and
purchase, through the-divine favour." These endowments consisted of
several lands and buildings situated in various crofts and streets
throughout the city. The founder provided that after he had "
departed from this vale of tears " the magistrates and community
were, to be patrons of the chaplainry which was to be bestowed only
upon the son of a burgess of the city, "learned and meet for the
office." On the "day" of the founder's "obit," which, by an unusual
stipulation was conventionally fixed for 13th June, yearly, the
chaplain was to give twelve pennies each to twelve priests to
celebrate mass for his soul, at the altar, together with the
obsequies of the dead, on the night preceding, and the ringing of
St. Kentigern's bell. The foundation charter is dated 30th May,
1514, and on the following day, in, presence of the two bailies of
the city and the burgesses, assembled in the burgh court-house, "in
a great number and overflowing multitude," John Scot, Schaw's nephew
and apparent heir, appeared and solemnly ratified the endowment. The
first chaplain was John Schaw, a natural son of the founder, he
having been appointed by his father with concurrence of the bailies
and community as patrons. [Glasg. Chart. i. pt. ii. pp. 101; ii. p.
458. In the foundation charter Schaw is designated "provost" and in
the ratification "provost-depute." It is doubtful if any distinctive
meaning was attached to the alternative designation. It was only on
about half-a-dozen occasions, when the names of John Schaw and
George Colquhoune appear, between 1514 and 1520, that the term
depute occurs, and once it is omitted. Both Schaw and Colquhoune are
likely to have been bailies-depute of the regality and a similar
affix may have inadvertently crept into their civic designation. In
no year when a provost-depute is named is there mention of another
person holding the office of provost. Perhaps the expression
provost-depute was used in the same sense as sheriff-depute, the
designation of the principal sheriff of a shire.
After the Reformation
the town council, as patrons, devoted the revenues of St.
Christopher's chaplainry to educational or charitable purposes. On
the decease of Sir Andrew Walker, the last pre-Reformation chaplain,
St. Christopher's chaplainry was given to Sir James Fleming on
condition of his restoring St. 1Iungo's chaplainry then held by him.
Court proceedings were resorted to for enforcement of this
arrangement, but these ended with Fleming's resigning the former
chaplainry. St. Christopher's being thus again at their disposal,
the town council, in March, 1575-6, gave it to Michael Wilson, son
of James Wilson, mason, for the space of seven years " providing he
remane at the scholes in this toun." Eight months before the expiry
of the seventh year Michael Wilson resigned in favour of John
Wilson, his brother, "beand blinde," and to this brother the
chaplainry was bestowed for the space of other seven years. (Glasg.
Rec. i. pp. 19, 30, 48, 96.)]
Two years after the
date of Provost Schaw's foundation the skinners and furriers of the
city applied to the town council for confirmation of their rules as
a society, one of the declared purposes being augmentation of divine
service at the altar of St. Christopher, their patron. In 1450-1,
the skinners of Edinburgh undertook to give their support to the
chaplain and altar of St. Christopher in the church of St. Giles,
and their seal of cause, obtained in 1474, provided for
contributions to that altar. Edin. Rec. i. pp. 9, 28.]
Complying with this
desire the provost, magistrates and council, with consent of the
archbishop, granted to the Skinner and Furrier Crafts a seal of
cause on 28th May, 1516, this being, so far as can be ascertained,
the first example of such procedure in Glasgow. Though the skinners
and furriers, as well as most of the other craftsmen of the city,
must have been formed into separate societies, under various sorts
of voluntary arrangements, before this time, it is not improbable
that this was the first occasion on which the town council and the
archbishop had interposed their
authority in the
constitution of a craft incorporation; and if this be so it may
further be surmised that the prospect of augmenting the revenues of
the new chaplainry, of which the town council were to be the
patrons, acted as an inducement for adopting such a course at that
particular time.
Craft guilds or
fraternities are known to have flourished in many European countries
long before the date at which our limited knowledge enables us to
trace them in Scotland. From the tenth century onwards, associations
adapted to various social and political purposes are traced, and so
far as can be gleaned from the scant glimpses of their inner life
they seem to have existed almost entirely for secular purposes. But
from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, when knowledge on the
subject is fuller and more accessible the religious element becomes
conspicuous, though in this country at least the regulation of trade
and industry remained the leading object of these confederations.
As regards Scotland
an Act of Parliament passed in the reign of James I., on his return
from English captivity, seems to indicate that, bodies of craftsmen
had been organised by that time; and for their more effective
regulation it was enacted that in each town, and of each "sindry"
craft therein, a wise man should be chosen by the majority of that
craft, "and be the counsall of the officiaris of the toune," to be "dekyn,"
with power to try all made work, so that the King's lieges should
not be defrauded and injured in future, "as thai have been in tyme
bygane, through untrew men of crafts." [Ancient Laws, ii. p. 5 (12th
March, 1424).] Subsequent statutes likewise deal with the
appointment of deacons, and more than once the power to choose them
was temporarily withdrawn, but with such exceptions the practice, of
appointing deacons has been continuously observed.
Associations of
craftsmen could thus be organised and ruled by deacons under the
general law, though in course of time it came to be the invariable
practice in Scotland for each body to be constituted under special
regulations sanctioned by the town council of the burgh, and
expressed in a writing which was sometimes called a" Letter of
Dekynheid," but more commonly a "seal of cause," on account of its
being authenticated by the appending of the seal of cause of the
burgh. In this country seals of cause are believed not to have come
into use before the fifteenth century, so there is nothing
unreasonable in supposing that the practice had not been introduced
into Glasgow before 1516.
Neither the formation
nor the efficient working of an associated body of craftsmen could
be satisfactorily undertaken without the services of a qualified
clerk, especially as it seems to have been the practice of such
societies to keep records of their official proceedings. Such
clerical duties would naturally devolve on a priest and it may be
assumed that in most cases the craftsmen's choice would fall on the
chaplain serving at their altar. When confirmation of a craft's
rules became desirable the preliminary supplication to the town
council would usually be framed by the priest acting as clerk and
chaplain, a circumstance which was likely to ensure due prominence
being given to altarage claims. But by the beginning of the
sixteenth century there was not much latitude allowed in that
procedure, the seals of cause being very much of an established
formal type and, as expressed in the petition of the skinners and
furriers, "according to the lawis and consuetis of grete townis of
honour of uther realmes and provinces."
The seal of cause of
1516 was granted on the supplication of the "kirkmaisters and the
laif of the maisteris of skynner craft and furrier craft," being "tua
craftis and unyte ourself in cherite togidder," which supplication
was presented to the provost, bailies, council and community of the
burgh "sittand in jugement, counsalie gaderit." The kirkmaster, a
name primarily applied to the official having charge of altarage
arrangements, sometimes acted as deacon, and the reference here to "kirkmaisters"
shows that previous to 1516 the skinners and furriers had each an
official bearing that designation.
Besides the
kirkmasters, who are not named, eleven masters of craft, all named,
joined in the desire that, for loving of Almighty God, the honour of
the realm, the worship and profit of this good town, the profit of
the King's lieges, and for augmentation of divine service at the
altar of St. Christopher, within the metropolitan kirk, the statutes
and rules set down by them should be authorised and put in force.
Briefly stated these were to the following effect: (1) No member of
the crafts to set up booth unless found qualified and admitted by
the town council and sworn masters of the crafts, and each to pay,
if a freeman's son 5s., and if an unfreeman's son 10s., towards the
repair and upholding of divine service at the altar. (2) No master
of craft to hire or reset any other master's prentice or freeman,
under penalty of a pound of wax candles to the altar and punishment
at the discretion of the town council. (3) Each master holding booth
within burgh to pay a weekly penny towards the repair and adornment
of the altar and sustenance of the priest. (4) No false stuff to be
sold, under the penalty of half a pound of wax to the altar, and the
false stuff to be forfeited. (5) Provision made for collection of
the dues and upholding of divine service. As craved by the
supplicants, the magistrates and community, with the approbation of
the archbishop, ratified the rules, and the common seal of the burgh
and round seal of the archbishop were appended to the writing. [6
Annals of the Skinners Craft (1875), pp. 114-8; facsimile of seal of
cause, the original of which is in the possession of the
Incorporation of Skinners.]
Before marching to
England James IV. had named Queen Margaret as regent, associating
with her the archbishop of Glasgow and several noblemen. Following
out these instructions the Scottish estates met and appointed Queen
Margaret guardian of her son and regent of the kingdom, while the
archbishop of Glasgow, holding the office of chancellor, and the
earls of Huntly, Angus and Arran were associated with her as
councillors. But in the absence of central control, and with not a
few members of the nobility more concerned about their own
aggrandizement than the common weal, rivalry and strife soon
manifested themselves, and the marriage of Margaret to the Earl of
Angus, in the first year of her widowhood, brought on a crisis. A
new regent became a necessity, and the choice lay between two
noblemen, the Duke of Albany and the Earl of Arran. John, fourth
duke of Albany, was son of the younger brother of James III., and,
after the young King, next heir to the crown. James, second lord
Hamilton and first earl of Arran, was the son of that Lord Hamilton
whose donations to Glasgow college and benefactions for religious
purposes in the city have already been noticed. The earl's mother
was Princess Mary, eldest daughter of King James II., and be and
Albany were thus in the same degree of kin to the King, though the
earl's descent being through a daughter, his claim ranked second to
that of the duke, whose descent was through a son of James II.
Albany had been brought up in France, where his chief estates lay,
and he was unacquainted with the Scottish customs and people; but,
through the influence of Bishop Elphinstone and others, he was
chosen regent. Before Albany's arrival in this country the Earl of
Arran, with his nephew, John, Earl of Lennox (who had succeeded his
father in 1513), and the Earl of Glencairn, had taken up arms
against the Earl of Angus and his party. On a tempestuous night in
December, 1514, Lennox seized the castle of Dumbarton, which was
then regarded as the key of the west, and Erskine, the governor, who
held it for the Queen, was expelled.
On 18th May, 1515,
the Duke of Albany arrived at Dumbarton with a squadron of eight
ships laden with ammunition and warlike stores. He was eagerly
welcomed by a concourse of the nobles and gentry of the western
shires, received a like cordial reception in the capital, and at a
parliament held in July was installed in the office of regent and
proclaimed Governor and Protector of the kingdom. Part of the
imported artillery and stores seems to have been brought by water
from Dumbarton to Glasgow, whence it was removed to Edinburgh and
other places. In July payments were made by the King's treasurer for
bringing the guns and other pieces of artillery out of the water at
the "brig" and storing them at "Blakfreris." Between August and
October, men, horses and carts, in considerable numbers, were from
time to time employed in the transfer of the material, and even so
far on as 4th February, 1515-6, there was a payment of £72 18s. for
carts and carriage of artillery out of Glasgow and Dumbarton to
Edinburgh.
About this time the
Earl of Arran had entered into a league with Lennox, Glencairn, and
other barons, for the purpose of depriving Albany of the regency.
[Treas. Accounts, v. pp. 16-i8, 30, 38, 68, 71.] It was perhaps in
apprehension of these disturbing times that Archbishop Beaton
fortified his episcopal palace by enclosing it with a strong wall
about fifteen feet high towards the east, south and west, with a
bastion on the one corner and a tower on the other, fronting Castle
Street. The tower must have been of considerable strength so long as
it was maintained in good condition, for even after it had stood for
nearly three centuries, and had latterly fallen into decay through
neglect, it still showed an imposing exterior at the time of its
removal to make way for the erection of the Royal Infirmary about
the year 1792. [Trans. Arch. Soc. (Macgregor), 2nd series, i. p. 232
; Medieval Glasgow, p. 242.]
In course of the
insurrectionary movements of the western lords, the castle of
Glasgow was besieged and taken from the archbishop by John Mure of
Caldwell, who had joined the league of the Earls of Lennox, Arran
and Glencairn. The assailants obtained access to the castle on 20th
February, 1515-6, but the regent marched to the city with a strong
body of troops and recovered possession for the archbishop. Letters
were sent to the sheriffs and bailies of shires and burghs,
summoning the lieges to convene at Glasgow, artillery drawn by oxen
was brought from Falkirk, and the Regent himself was in Glasgow on
list February. [L. H. T. Accounts, v. p. 73.] Through the
archbishop's mediation a settlement was adjusted at this time and
Arran made his peace with the Governor on 7th March. To judge from a
series of " respites," or letters of remission, granted by the King
and his council between 1st July, 1526, and 29th May, 1527, and
which seem to refer either to this rising or to that which was
suppressed in the end of 1515, the proceedings of these months must
have been of a somewhat formidable character. By the first of the
letters of remission the Earl of Arran, and others to the number of
five or six thousand, conform to a list to be verified by him, were
respited "for the treasonable arraying of batell, insurrection and
feilding, aganis Johne, duke of Albany, etc., tutour to the Kingis
grace, protectour and governour of his realme, cumand with the
kingis autoritie and his banner being displayit for the tome at
Kittycrocehill, besyde Glasgw." All the letters of remission
referred to mention the array at Kittycrocehill, [Reg. Sec. Sig. i.
Nos. 3409, 3440, 3728, 3765, 3787.] but though there are several
places in the vicinity of Glasgow called Crosshill none of these has
the prefix " Kitty," and consequently the precise locality of the
military display has not been identified. There is a place called
Kittymuir in the parish of Stonehouse and situated a few miles from
Hamilton Castle, which castle Albany besieged and took in his
military operations against the Earl of Arran in 1515. Perhaps it
was this locality, though incorrectly described as "besyde" Glasgow,
which was the scene of the rebellious array referred to in the
letters of remission.
The facts connected
with the occupation of the archbishop's castle by the insurgents are
narrated in a decree by the lords of council, dated 4th March,
1517-8. The archbishop had raised an action against Mure "for the
wranguis and violent ejection and furthputting of his servands out
of his castell and palace of Glasgow and taking of the samyn fra
them; and for the wranguis spoliation, intrometting, away taking and
withhalding fra the said maist reverend fader "of certain goods,
such as beds, clothing, jewels, utensils, provisions, ammunition and
arms, all specified in detail; "and for the wranguis destruction of
his said castell and place, breking down of the samyn with artalzary
and utherwais." The lords ordained Mure to restore to the archbishop
what had been taken away or to pay the value. [Caldwell Papers, i.
pp. 54-58 ; Trans. Arch. Soc. (Macgregor), pp. 232-6; Glasg. Chart.
i. pt. i. p. dxxxv. There was also an action at the instance of the
governor of the kingdom and the porter of the castle resulting in an
order by the lords of council for the restoration of goods and money
abstracted from the porter's lodge at the castle. Glasg. Chart. i.
pt. i. P. 12, No. 307 [45b]. Through the misreading of a passage in
Buchanan's History of Scotland Macgregor supposed that there was
another attack on the Bishop's castle in 1517, but the siege
referred to by Buchanan was that of February 1515-16.] |