ARCHBISHOP BEATON having, with
consent of his chapter, of new constituted the Duke of Chatelherault,
and his heirs, bailies of the barony and regality of Glasgow, for
the space of nineteen years, the Duke on 6th February, 1557-8,
granted to the archbishop a bond of maintenance in the same terms as
that given to Archbishop Dunbar in 1547. [Antea, pp. 373-4; Glasg.
Chart. i. pt. ii. pp. 1-6.] Reference is made to "this perillous and
dangerous tyme, quhair detestabil heresies ryses and increasis in
the diocy of Glasgow"; and the duke undertook to repress these to
the utmost of his power. Lands, servants and tenants were to be
protected; and in the military phraseology of "bands of manrent" he
became bound "to ryde, mantene supply and fortifie and tak afald
part" with the archbishop and the chapter, in all their good, honest
and lawful matters, actions and quarrels, "and speciallie sail
assist and concur with him and tham in expelling of heresies within
the diocy and punising of heretykis."
In the preceding December the
lords of the congregation had issued their manifesto of
Protestantism and the struggle between the adherents of the old
faith and the propagators of the new was approaching the final
stage. The Queen-Regent was petitioned for immediate reform in
ecclesiastical affairs, but no impression was made in that quarter,
and as for the spiritual authorities they committed the fatal
blunder of putting the venerable WalterMill to death by burning on a
charge of heresy. This was on 28th April, 1558, and thenceforth
Protestant preachers became more energetic and popular than ever.
The Roman Catholic clergy were defied and on account of the
increasing number of their opponents became powerless to punish
transgressors. On 1st January, 1558-9, a manifesto called the
"Beggars Summons," containing an incisive indictment of the Friars
and Clergy, and purporting to come from all cities, towns and
villages of Scotland, was found placarded on the gates of every
religious establishment in Scotland.
On 9th February, 1558-9, Letters
in name of the Queen-Regent were ordered to be proclaimed at the
market crosses of the burghs of Linlithgow, Glasgow, Irvine and Ayr,
charging the lieges therein that none of them should take upon hand
to commit, attempt or do any injury or violence to or disturb the
service used in the churches, strike, menace or " bost " priests, or
eat flesh in Lent, under the penalty of death. [L. H. Treas.
Accounts, X. p. 416.] This proclamation, similar to that sent to
other burghs, is highly significant of the state of feeling
prevalent at the time.
A Provincial Council of the clergy
was summoned to meet in the house of the Dominican Friars at
Edinburgh, on 1st March, 1558-9, to deal with the religious
difficulty, and at this council, for attendance at which Archbishop
Beaton had called his suffragans and diocesan clergy, admirable
resolutions and decrees were passed, but it was then too late to
avert the threatened change. [Statutes of the Scottish Church (S.H.S.
No. 54) PP. 149-91.]
John Knox finally returned to his
native country on 2nd May, 1559, about which time the protestant
preachers had been summoned to appear before the Regent and answer
for their persistency in spreading the new opinions. Postponement of
the proceedings had been negotiated by a large body of sympathisers
assembled at Perth, but unexpectedly, in consequence of the
non-appearance of the accused, sentences of outlawry were pronounced
against them. This brought on a climax. After a sermon on the
idolatries of Rome and the Christian duty of ending them, preached
by Knox in the parish church of Perth, on 11th May, the church was
stripped of its images and ornaments, not "a monument of idolatry"
being left in the building. The "rascal multitude" then took up the
work, attacking the places of the Dominicans and Franciscans and the
Charterhouse Abbey, and within a couple of days only the walls of
these buildings remained. Destruction of church buildings also took
place at St. Andrews in the beginning of June and similar excesses
were witnessed elsewhere, and notwithstanding negotiations and
temporary arrangements it was at last recognized that between the
Regent and her revolted subjects there could be no compromise. We
have no specific information as to what was happening in Glasgow
during the summer months of this year, but it may be assumed with
regard to the cathedral at least that so long as the Duke of
Chatelherault steadfastly observed his undertaking to the archbishop
and the chapter, both the building and its contents would be
efficiently protected from injury.
A considerable accession to the
Reformers' cause was gained when the Earl of Arran, eldest son of
the Duke of Chatelherault, forced to flee from France by reason of
his Protestant sympathies, joined the lords of the congregation when
assembled at Stirling in September, 159. Nor was this all. As the
result of interviews with the duke himself, at Hamilton Palace, the
lords secured his co-operation also: and being thus supported and
having raised a force of about 8,000 men the insurgents entered
Edinburgh with the intention of laying siege to Leith which the
Regent had fortified and garrisoned with 3,000 trained soldiers,
most of whom had been brought from France. But in their few
encounters with the Regent's forces the Reformers were not
successful, and about the end of November it was arranged that
Chatelherault, Argyle, Glencairn and the Lords Boyd and Ochiltree
were to make their headquarters in Glasgow, while Arran and others,
including John Knox, were to act from St. Andrews as their centre.
It has been stated that while this
contingent was in Glasgow the religious houses were sacked and
plundered, but no definite information on this subject is available.
The place of the Blackfriars is not heard of as their residence
subsequent to that period, though the church, needing and getting
repairs, seems to have been continuously used. Of the Greyfriars'
place or monastery, as it was sometimes called, nothing is known
between the outbreak of 1559 and the middle of the following year,
by which time the buildings, if not destroyed, were at least
deserted by their former occupants. Ina protocol dated 19th June,
1560, James Baxter, one of the Friars, is mentioned as having been
"ejected," and in another protocol, ten days later in date, the
place itself is referred to in the past tense, thus indicating that
the building had either been removed or deserted. [Glasg. Prot. Nos.
1370, 1374.] The churches of St. Tenew, Little St. Kentigern and St.
Roche are not traced as in use for religious services subsequent to
June, 1559, and the Collegiate Church of St. Mary and St. Anne, a
comparatively new structure, had to be renovated before being used
as a protestant place of worship about thirty years after the
Reformation.
In a judgment pronounced by the
lords of council and session on 7th June, 1578, it is stated that
before the month of August, 1559, " the haill places of Freris
within this realme wes demoliscit and cassin downe and the conventis
quhilkis maid residence within the samin wer dispersit." [Lib. Coll.
etc. p. lxvi. The Grey Friars got their usual gift of herrings from
the king subsequent to ist November, 1559 (Glasg. Prot. No. 2291),
but it does not necessarily follow that their Glasgow buildings were
occupied by the Friars at that time.] This deliverance need not be
accepted as literally accurate though perhaps correctly narrating
the early dispersion of the Glasgow friars. Some of the buildings
throughout the country must have remained in a more or less perfect
condition, because in an order by the Privy Council dated 15th
February, 1561-2, giving directions regarding "the places of freris,
as yet standand undemolissit," it was indicated that Glasgow was one
of the towns in which such buildings were still standing and the
magistrates were authorised to uphold the same for the benefit of
the town. [Privy Council Reg. i. p. 202.]
After the fierceness of the
earlier ravages was somewhat allayed the further demolition of
buildings was strongly discouraged. In August 1560, a sort of
circular was sent by the lords of the congregation to certain
persons in different districts, requiring them to pass to the kirks
within their bounds " and tak doun the haill images thereof and
bring them furth to the kirkyard and burn them openly, and siclyke
cast doun the altars, and purge the kirk of all kinds of monuments
of idolatry; and this ye fail not to do, as ye will do us singular
empleasure ; and so commits to the protection of God. Fail not but
ye tak good heed that neither the desks, windocks, nor doors be
onyways hurt or broken, either glassin work or iron work." [Hill
Burton's History of Scotland, iii. p. 354.] It is, therefore,
probable that the cathedral and all the other churches in the city
were cleared of their remaining altars, relics and ornaments, either
by the churchmen themselves, who removed them for safety, or by the
unsparing Reformers in their zeal for the suppression of idolatry.
In the month before this circular
was issued Glasgow cathedral was probably in a deserted and
dismantled condition. On 19th July, when the archbishop was on his
way to France, a chaplain acting as procurator for the newly
appointed rector of Govan, appeared in presence of the subdean, at
the outside of the cathedral, produced letters from the archbishop
and asked institution to his prebend. The subdean received the
letters and came to the door of the choir and chapter-house but
could not gain admittance. Neither could he get the surplice, cape,
and other usual ornaments for such a ceremony, but symbolic
possession was given by the subdean delivering a book to the
procurator who thereupon protested that the rector had thus obtained
lawful institution to his benefice. [Glasg. Prot. No. 1382,]
Meanwhile national events of
momentous importance had occurred. The Queen-Regent had taken
possession of Edinburgh two days after the lords of the congregation
quitted the city, though the castle remained in the hands of Lord
Erskine, the governor. Reinforcements arrived from France, enabling
her army to take the field against the Reformers, who were by that
time almost abandoning hope of a successful issue to their cause.
But the negotiations they had been carrying on with Queen Elizabeth
resulted in a compact which completely turned the scale in their
favour. By this Treaty, concluded on 27th February, 1559-60, it was
agreed that an English army should enter Scotland to assist in
driving the French soldiery out of the kingdom.
On the approach of the united
forces the Queen-Regent, then in an infirm state of health, retired
to Edinburgh Castle, where she died on 10th June. By this time all
parties were eager for peace, and on 6th July it was arranged that
the Leith fortifications should be demolished, that the French
soldiers should leave the country, that till the return of Queen
Mary the government should be entrusted to a council of twelve
persons, of whom the Queen was to appoint seven and the estates
five, and that the estates of the realm should convene and hold a
parliament in the ensuing month of August. In the second or third
week of July the French army, accompanied by the archbishop of
Glasgow, embarked at Leith, on the return to their own country and
the English army departed towards Berwick. Authorities differ as to
the precise date of the French army's departure from Leith, but some
day between 13th and 19th July is usually given.
It must have been during the
period that Archbishop Beaton was with the army in Leith fort that
the muniments, images, jewels and ornaments, taken by him to France,
were removed from the cathedral. From the time when the destruction
of church property was commenced, and specially after the Duke of
Chatelherault joined the lords of the congregation, he would
naturally be apprehensive for the safety of these treasures and no
doubt the strong fort at Leith was regarded as the securest place of
custody within reach. Transmission was easy as the well-known old
thoroughfare from Glasgow to Linlithgow's port of Blackness was
open, and thence the communication by water to Leith port was well
within the regent's command. It is not likely that there was at
first any intention of taking the muniments farther than Leith, but
as events turned out there was no alternative to their removal to
France if the archbishop's control over them was to be continued.
There are no contemporary accounts
containing a connected narrative of the archbishop's movements
during the last year of his residence in this country, but some
statements have obtained currency in the pages of various
chroniclers which may be accepted as at least approximately
accurate. Thus at the time when the western members of the
"congregation" took up their quarters in Glasgow, in November, 1559,
it is said that the Duke of Chatelherault caused the images and
altars in the churches there to be removed and that he, with the
earls of Argyle and Arran, occupied the archbishop's castle and
began to fortify it. Archbishop Beaton along with Archbishop
Hamilton of St. Andrews, had by that time " declared themselves
openly with the French " and obtained the shelter afforded by the
garrison at Leith fort. When the news from Glasgow of the occupation
of the castle reached the Queen-Regent she sent French troops, along
with the archbishop, and they soon recovered possession of the
buildings which had been seized and then returned to Leith. It may
have been on this if not on an earlier occasion that Beaton removed
his valuables to Leith, including that mass of registers and
charters without the use of which the history of Glasgow from the
twelfth to the fifteenth centuries would, in many parts now clearly
expiscated, have been as vague as that of the years leading back to
the time of St. Kentigern.
The leaders of the congregation
having resumed possession of the castle, it was again in their hands
in March when the Queen-Regent sent a large force of foot soldiers
and horsemen to attack the garrison. As related in a letter from the
duke, dated 21st March, 1559-6o, the soldiers left in the Bishop's
castle and " stepill," being outnumbered, surrendered to the French,
and on their entry a barrel of gunpowder exploded, killing thirteen
men and injuring others. An encounter took place at Glasgow bridge
when eight Frenchmen were slain. The attacking forces then left the
town, pursued by the earl of Arran and a body of horsemen.
[Calendar of Scottish Papers, i.
No. 694 ; Medieval Glasgow, pp. 222-7, and authorities there cited.
A somewhat different account of
this raid is given in the Diurnal of Occur-rents (p. 56):—"Upoun the
xv day of March, 1559, the Frenchemen past to Glasgow and chaisit
the congregatioun furth of the samyne, and remaynit thair twa
nychtis, and than come to Linlithgow, quhairin thaj lay quhill the
xxvij day of the samyne moneth ; and in thair passing to Glasgow,
and returnyng fra the samyne, thai spoulzeit all the cuntrie quhair
thair passage lay. And thairefter when thai come to Linlithgw, the
Frenchemen was purposit to have past to Hamiltoun for destructioun
of the samyne ; but thair come word that the Inglismen was cuming
in, quhilk stayit that purpoise."]
After this unsuccessful attack the
French troops seem to have been discouraged from further attempts in
that direction, and the result of the skirmish may to some extent
have hastened their ultimate surrender about three months
thereafter.
In accordance with the July
arrangement parliament assembled in August. Among a large number of
temporal and spiritual lords the duke of Chatelherault, the earl of
Arran and the archbishop of St. Andrews were present, but, contrary
to the original intention, royalty was not represented. [10 By the
9th article of the Agreement it was provided " that the estates of
the realme should convene and hold a Parliament in the month of
August next, for which a commission should be sent from the French
King and the Queen of Scotland, and that the said convention should
be as lawful in all respects as if the same had been ordained by the
express commandment of their majesties " (Spottiswoode, i. p. 323).
Mary was married to Francis on 24th April, 1558. After the death of
Queen Mary of England Francis and Mary styled themselves King and
Queen of Scotland, England, and Ireland. Mary became Queen of France
on the accession of her husband to the throne, on loth July, 1559.
Francis died on 5th December, 1560.]
Glasgow appears in the list of "Commissaris
of Burrois," but the name of its representative is not given.
Probably Robert Lindsay of Dunrod, who was provost at that time, was
the "commissar."
After prolonged discussions
parliament passed a series of epoch making resolutions some of which
may here be briefly cited. On 17th August the Confession of Faith "
profest and believed be the protestants within the realme " was
ratified. Seven days thereafter it was ordained that the "Bischope
of Rome, called the Paip, half na jurisdiction nor authoritie within
this realme" in future; all acts of parliament contrary to the
Confession of Faith were annulled; and the saying or hearing of mass
was prohibited under penalties involving fines, banishment or death.
Though these statutes as they
stand on record were passed with ostensible unanimity, it is said
that the acquiescence of the clergy was merely implied by their
silence, and that three of the peers declared that they would
continue to believe as their fathers before them had believed. For
complete formality the consent or ratification of King Francis and
Queen Mary was required but was not obtained; and yet with all their
defects of irregularity the acts expressed the will of the ruling
classes of the nation, and on that account, and specially as they
embodied the preponderating opinion and desire of intelligent
people, they were thenceforth accepted as the law of the land.
In Glasgow more than in most
towns, a city which had grown up under the influence of
ecclesiastical rule and with a prominent section of its population
belonging to the clerical class, the substitution of the
presbyterian system for the spacious observances of the old
hierarchy must have been specially trying. On the religious aspect
there may have been divergent opinion, but, in the peculiar
circumstances of the community, the dislocation of business and of
established routine could scarcely have been regarded as otherwise
than disastrous. That this was the prevailing view may readily be
conceived, and though our knowledge of the common everyday
occurrences in the Glasgow of that period is extremely meagre, it is
learned from later records that many years elapsed before the
inhabitants of the cathedral quarter of the city ceased to lament
the interruption to material prosperity directly attributable to the
changes introduced at the time of the Reformation.
END OF VOLUME I. |