MURE, a surname,
the same as More, Muir, and Moore. The chief of the name in Scotland was
Mure of Rowallan, in Ayrshire, whose family, terminating in an heiress,
is now represented by the noble family of Loundoun, the head of which is
marquis of Hastings in the peerage of Great Britain. In 1825 was
published at Glasgow a work entitled The Historie and Descent of the
House of Rowallane. By Sir William Mure, knight, of Rowallan, written
in, or prior to 1657.’ In which it is stated that it was a tradition of
their house that they came originally from “the ancient tribe of O’More
in Ireland.” In a note, the editor, William Muir, says, “The surname
‘More’ certainly occurs very early in all the three British kingdoms,
and is most probably of Celtic origin,” and adds, “in most early
writings in which the name is found, accordant with the idiomatic usage
of Celtic patronymics, the preposition de is omitted, which so
invariably accompanies all early Saxon designations.” This, however, is
a mistake, as David de More, of the house of Polkelly, Renfrewshire,
appears as a witness to a charter of Alexander II. Willielmi de Mora and
Laurentii de Mora also occur in two charters granted by Robert the
Bruce.
The first on record of
the family is stated to have been the above-named David de More. His
successor is supposed to have been Sir Gilchrist More, the first of the
name mentioned in the family ‘Historie.’ In the beginning of the reign
of Alexander III., Sir Walter Cumyn took forcible possession of the
house and living of Rowallan, “the owner thereof, Gilchrist More, being
redacted for his safety to keep close in his castle of Pokellie.” The
latter distinguished himself at the battle of Largs in 1263, and for his
bravery was knighted. “At which time,” says the ‘Historie,’ “Sir
Gilchrist was reponed to his whole inheritance, and gifted with the
lands belonging to Sir Walter Cuming before mentioned, a man not of the
meanest of that powerful tribe, which for might and number have
scarcelie to this day been equaled in this land.” He married Isobel,
daughter and heiress of the said Sir Walter Cumyn, and in the death of
his father-in-law, he found himself secured not only in the title and
full possession of his old inheritance, but also in the border lands
wherein he succeeded to Sir Walter Cuming, within the sheriffdom of
Roxburgh. Sir Gilchrist “disponed to his kinsman Ranald More, who had
come purposlie from Ireland for his assistance: in the time of his
troubles, and also at the battle of Largs, the lands of Polkellie, which
appear to have been the original inheritance of the family. He died
“about the year 1280, near the 80 year of his age,” and was buried “with
his forfathers in his own buriell place in the Mures Isle at
Kilmarnock.” He had a son, Archibald, and two daughters, Elizabeth, the
wife of Sir Godfrey Ross, and Anicia, married to Richard Boyle of
Kelburne, ancestor of the earls of Glasgow.
In the Ragman Roll, among
those barons who swore fealty to Edward I. in 1296, we find the names of
Gilchrist More of Craig and Reginald More de Craig, that is, the Craig
of Rowallan. The former is stated to have been the ancestor of the Mures
of Polkellie, who, Nisbet thinks, were “the stem of the Mures, and an
ancienter family than the Rowallan.” The latter was in 1329 chamberlain
of Scotland.
William More, the son and
successor of Archibald, married a daughter of the house of Craigie, then
Lindsay, and with two daughters, had a son, Adam, who succeeded him. Of
William honourable mention is made in an indenture of truce with England
in the nonage of King David, wherein he is designated Sir William. He
died about the time when King David was taken prisoner at the battle of
Durham, fought 17th October 1346. There is supposed to have been an
older son than Adam, named Reynold. The editor of the ‘Historie,’ on the
authority of Crawford’s Officers of State, (vol. i. p. 290), says in a
note: Reynold, son and heir of Sir William More, was one of the hostages
left in England at David’s redemption. This is certainly the same Sir
William mentioned above, but whether of Rowallan seems still doubtful;
If so, he must have lived long after 1348. There is a William More,
Miles, mentioned in M’Farlane’s MS., as living in 1363. Supposing this
Sir William More to have been of Rowallan, Reynold probably never
returned from England, and thus the estate may have fallen to Sir Adam,
a younger son. During the long protracted payment of the king’s ransom,
many of the hostages died in confinement.
Sir Adam More, who, “in
his father’s auld age,” had the management of all his affairs, both
private and public, considerably enlarged and improved the estate. He
married, in his younger years, Janet Mure, heiress of Polkellie,
granddaughter of Ranald More, and thus restored that estate to the
family. By this marriage he had two sons, Sir Adam, his successor, and
Andrew, and a daughter, Elizabeth, married in 1348, to Robert, the high
steward, afterwards King Robert II. She was a lady of great beauty and
rare virtues, and attracted the high steward’s regard in his younger
years when living in concealment about Dundonald castle during Edward
Baliol’s usurpation. There was long considerable doubt as to this
marriage, and Buchanan and earlier historians were of opinion that none
had ever taken place. The fact of her marriage, however, is now set
beyond all question, and the author of the ‘Historie’ says, “Mr. John
Learmonth, chaplain to Alexander, archbishop of St. Andrews, hath left
upon record, in a deduction of the descent of the house of Rowallan,
collected by him at command of the said archbishop, that Robert, great
steward of Scotland, having taken away the said Elizabeth, drew to Sir
Adam her father ane instrument that he should take her to his lawful
wife, which myself have seen, saith the collector, as also ane
testimonie, written in Latin by Roger M’Adam, priest of our Ladie
Marie’s chapel, (‘Our Lady’s Kirk of Kyle,’ in the parish of Monktown,)
that the said Roger married Robert and Elizabeth foresaids.” The editor
of the ‘Historie’ remarks in a note: “Mr. Lewis Innes, principal of the
Scots college at Paris, first completely proved the fallacy of
Buchanan’s account of King Robert’s marriages, by publishing in 1694, a
charter granted by him in 1364, which charter showed that Elizabeth More
was the first wife of Robert, and made reference to a dispensation
granted by the pope for the marriage. That dispensation was long sought
for in vain, but was at length discovered in 1789, at which time a
dispensation for the marriage with Euphemia Ross was also found. These
discoveries have decided the question. The dispensation for the marriage
with Elizabeth More is dated in December, in the sixth year of the
pontificate of Clement VI. He was elected pope in 1342; this
dispensation must therefore have been granted in December 1347. The
dispensation for the marriage with Euphemia Ross is dated in the third
year of the pontificate of Innocent VI. He was elected pope in 1352;
this dispensation must therefore have been given in 1355.”
Sir Adam, the eldest son,
had on his own resignation, a new charger from Robert III., of the
barony of Rowallan and whole lands holden of the crown, as also of the
barony of Polkellie, &c., with very ample privileg4es, the designation
given him by the king being ‘consanguineus.’ He married Joan, daughter
of Danielston of that ilk, and by her had three sons. “Caried away,”
says the ‘Historie,’ “as appears with emptie surmises and hopes founded
on court favors, he made unawares a new rent in his estate and provided
his second son, Alexander, to the barronie of Pokellie, together with
the lands of Limflare and Lowdonehill, wherein his lady was infeft in
liferent, and wer given out by him, now the second time, to the great
damage and prejudice of his house and posteritie, However, at that time
the court seemed to smile upon him, his proper estate considerable, his
friendship strong, and of the greatest of these times. He gave a
quartered coat of the arms of Mure and cumin. The hoarseness and
asperitie of the Irish pronunciation of his title and lands is forgot,
and Rigallane is now Rowallane, Pothkellath is now Pokellie, &c., and
More is now Mure by the court dialect.” (Page 59). He died in 1399. His
two younger sons, Alexander and Rankine, were steady adherents of the
Douglases. From the earl of Douglas, who married Margaret, daughter of
Robert III., he had the lands of Hareschaw and Drumbowy, Lanarkshire, by
a precept of infeftment dated in 1417. The family of Polkellie, sprung
from him, continued for nearly 150 years, when Margaret, daughter and
heiress of William Mure, the last of that house, marrying Robert
Cunningham of Cunninghamhead, her whole inheritance came into possession
of that family. Rankine, the youngest son, was “commonlie called of
Abercorn,” says the ‘Historie,’ “not that he had these lands in
heritage, for that doth never appear by historie nor evident that ever
come to my hands, notwithstanding of the common tradition thairanent,
being established thair as bailiffe and a chief officer under his lord,
the earle of Duglass, having charge of his men thair in all his noble
atchiefements.” He “rose to no mean respect, place, and power, and is
said to have attained to large possessions in Stirlingshire within
Abercorn, the Carses Calder and other places adjacent where he also
settled divers of his surname and friends.” He was an active and
stirring adversary of Sir Alexander Livingstone of Calender, guardian of
the young king, James II., one of the principal enemies of the earl of
Douglas. Rankine’s grandson long held out the castle of Abercorn for the
Douglases, and was slain when it was stormed, and the power of that
great family overthrown.
Archibald, eldest son of
Sir Adam, succeeded. He married Euphame Kennedy, daughter of the knight
of Dunure, ancestor of the marquis of Ailsa, and had a son, named
Robert. He is said by the author of the ‘Historie’ to have “died in
battell against Ingland, 1426.” The date is evidently wrong, for, as the
editor remarks in a note, “Nothing in history of this nature corresponds
to the date 1426. The action alluded to should possibly be referred to
the battle of Sark, 1448; and if so, we must place Archibald, who fell,
after a Robert, probably his brother, and both sons of an Archibald.” In
a charter of “George Fullertoun, lord of Corsbie,” in 1430, Robert More
of Rowallan is designated sheriff depute, it is understood of Ayrshire.
He is supposed to have been succeeded by a son or brother named
Archibald, father of another Robert “who frequented the court in the
minoritie of King James the Third. He was ane man black hared and of ane
budge large stature, therefore, commonlie called ‘the Rud of Rowallane.’”
The epithet ‘Rud’ is explained in a note to mean of great stature and
strength, “a man with ‘a back as braid as a barn door,’ and who, in
addition to his bodily ability, has also the inclination for a fray.”
The ‘Historie’ does not give a good account of this fierce personage,
‘the Rud of Rowallan,’ nor of his wife either. “The king, in his bearne
head proponed to round with him, and as he offered swa to doe dang out
his eye with the spang of ane cockle shell. He was a man reguarded not
the well of his house, but in following court, and being unfit for it,
waisted, sold, and wadset all his proper lands of Rowallane, whilk may
be ane example to all his posteritie. He married Margerie Newfound,
daughter to the laird of Michaelhill in the Merse; ane drunken woman,
and ane waistor man, what made then this house to stand but the grace of
God?” The ‘Rud of Rowallan’ died in 1504. He had four sons and a
daughter.
John, his eldest son,
married “Elizabeth Stewart, daughter to the first Lord Evandale,” says
the ‘Historie,’ “whose mother was daughter to the earle of Crawfurd,
called Earle Beardie.” The first Lord Evandale, who was the son of Lord
James Stewart, son of Murdoch, duke of Albany, of the royal house of
Stewart, died without issue in 1488. His nephew, Andrew Stewart, who
afterwards succeeded to the estate of Evandale, was created a peer by
the same title. He left several sons and daughters, and Elizabeth
Stewart, who married John Mure of Rowallan, must have been one of the
latter, although not mentioned so in the published histories. If, as is
understood, she was the daughter of the second, not the first, Lord
Evandale, she was the sister of Andrew Stewart, third Lord Evandale, and
also of Henry Stewart, created Lord Methven, the third husband of
Margaret, queen-mother of Scotland, daughter of Henry VII. Of England,
and grandmother of Mary, queen of Scots. He had four sons and three
daughters. The sons were, John, his successor; Archibald, called ‘Mickle
Archibald;’ Patrick Boyd, and James. From Pitcairn’s Criminal Trials, we
learn that “Nov. 3, 1508. – Patrick Boyde, brother to the laird of
Rowallan,” and 27 others, were “convicted of art and part of convocation
of the lieges against the act of parliament, coming to the Kirk of
Stewarton, in company with John Mure of Rowallan, for the office of
parish clerk of the same kirk, against Robert Cunynghame of
Cunynghamehed and his servants, in the year 1508;” and that “James Muir,
brother to the laird of Rowalloun was, in 1508, convicted of art and
part of the forethought felony and oppression done to John Mowat,
junior, laird of Busbie, and Andrew Stevinstone, in the town of
Stewarton, in company with the laird of Rowalloun.” John is said to have
“deceast before Robert his father in 1501;” if so, he must have
possessed the estate on his father’s resignation. The editor adds in a
note, that he was dead in 1495. A long feud had existed betwixt the
lairds of Crawfurdland and Rowallan, the latter being superior of the
lands of Ardoch as Crawfurdland was first called, during which the
evidents of both houses were destroyed. In a Justice-eyre, held at Ayr
about 1476 by John, Lord Carlyle, chief justice of Scotland on the south
side of the Forth, Robert Muir of Rowallan and John Muir his son, and
others their accomplices, were indicted for breaking the king’s peace
against Archibald Craufurd of Craufurdland.
John Mure of Rowallan,
the eldest son, and grandson of Robert “the Rud,” married Margaret,
third daughter of Archibald Boyd of Bonshaw, brother of Thomas, master
of Boyd, created earl of Arran about 1467. This lady was the means of
putting an end to the feud of the Rowallan family with the Crawfurds. In
her youth she had been mistress to James IV., by whom, with a son,
Alexander, bishop of St. Andrews, she had a daughter, Catherine Stewart,
married to the third earl of Morton. She afterwards “procured to herself
the ward of the laird of Rowallan, John Muir, and married him.” They had
sasine of the lands of Warnockland, the gift of James IV., in January
1498. This John Mure of Rowallan was slain at Flodden in September 1513.
He had four sons and four daughters.
Mungo, his eldest son,
succeeded him. His half-sister, Catherine, countess of Morton, had three
daughters, the eldest of whom, Lady Margaret Douglas, married the regent
earl of Arran, duke of Chatelherault, ancestor of the dukes of Hamilton;
the second, Lady Beatrix, married Lord Maxwell; and the youngest, Lady
Elizabeth, became the wife of the regent Morton. These noblemen,
therefore, stood in near relationship to Mungo Mure of Rowallan, which
they were all very ready, the regent Morton in particular, to
acknowledge. Mungo Mure of Rowallan was with Robert Boyd of the
Kilmarnock family when he arrived, with a party of horse, to the
assistance of the regent Arran in the skirmish at Glasgow, in 1543, with
the earl of Glencairn. In the appendix to the ‘Historie’ there is an
account of “the behaviour of the house of Kilmarnock towardis the house
of Rowallane, and of their house towards them,” in which he is thus
referred to: “It is understandit that Mungow Muir of Rowallane, quhois
mother was Boyd, joynit with Robert Boyd guidmane of Kilmarnock, in
seeking revengement of the slaughter of James Boyd, the king’s sisteris
sone, quho sould have bene Lord Boyd, bot befoir he was fullie restorrit
was slaine be the earl of Eglintoune. Nixt, my lord of Glencairne
proponing ane richt to the barronie of Kilmarnock proclaimit ane court
to be holdin at the Knockanlaw, quhair the said Robert Boyd guidmane of
Kilmarnock and Mungow Muir of Rowallane, with the assistance of thair
friends, keipit the said day and place of court, offirit battle to the
said earl of Glencairn, and stayit him from his pretendit court hoilding.
Thridlie, the foirsaid Robert Boyd guidmane of Kilmarnock, and the said
Mungow Muir of Rowallane, entirit in the field of Glasgow, the said
Mungow being lairglie better accompanied then the foirsaid Robert, they
behavit themselfe so valiantlie in that fact that the Duik Hamiltone
quho reckonit both his lyfe and honour to be preservit be thair handis,
maid the said Robert Boyd, guidman of Kilmarnock, Lord Boyd, lyk also as
he revardit the said Mungow Muir with dyvers fair giftis. The said
Robert Boyd hichlie esteemit of the sais Mungow Muir of Rowallane and
gave him the first place of honour al his dayis, acknawleging the
alternation of his estait to the worthines of the said Mungowis handis.”
This Mungo is particularly mentioned as having greatly improved the old
castle of Rowallan. He was slain in battle at Pinkiefield “at the black
Satterday, in the yeare of our lord 1547.” He married Isabel, daughter
of Sir Hugh Campbell of Loundoun, sheriff of Ayr, and had five sons and
six daughters.
His eldest son, John Mure of Rowallan, took great delight in planting,
and built a portion of Rowallan castle. He “lived gratiouslie,” says the
‘Historie,’ and “died in 1581, in the 66th year of his age.” The year is
supposed to be a mistake for 1591, as it is given in the family
Genealogical tree, drawn up in 1597. A ‘letter of Soleance,’ subscribed
at Irvine and Kilwinning, 16th and 17th March 1571, is inserted in the
Appendix to the ‘Historie’ so often quoted, from Alexander Cowper, mason
in Kilwinning, “with consent and assent” of certain persons named, his
“cheife and capitall branchis, bayth on the father side and mother
side,” granting his remission, free forgiveness and pardon to John Mure
of Rowallan, William Mure, his son and heir, John Mure and Mungo Mure,
his sons, and two others, and “thair complices, kin, freindis, allys,
assistaris and parttakeris, the crewall wonding, hurting and bluding of
me, the said Alexander, to the great effusions of my blude, done and
committit be the saidis persones thair seruandis and complicis,” in the
month of February, 1570. In March 1571 Robert Lord Boyd and John Mure of
Rowallan were charged by the regent Mar to appear before the secret
council, with a view to adjust the feud which prevailed between the
families of Kilmarnock and Rowallan. The account above quoted of the
mutual friendly offices between these families appears to have been
drawn up in reference to this charge. It recites many good deeds done by
the Mures to the Boyds, in particular, amongst others, that after
Robert, master of Boyd, had slain Sir Neil Montgomerie of Lainshaw, he
was received and concealed by John Muir of Rowallan, who, with his
friends and servants, was the means of saving his life, when pursued by
the Montgomeries; and also that after the battle of Langside he kindly
received the said Robert, being then Lord Boyd, although he had fallen
into disfavour with the regent Moray, and much more to the same purport.
John Muir of Rowallan subscribed the bond in support of the Reformation
in 1562, and the same year he was a member of the Scottish estates. In
1568, when Queen Mary escaped from Lochleven castle, she wrote the laird
of Rowallan a letter dated 6th May that year, requiring him to meet her
at Hamilton, as soon as he could muster his retainers, all well armed
for her service. It does not appear, however, that he complied with the
summons. In 1584 John Mure of Rowallan, “and his spouse and six persons
with them in company,” received a license from James VI., to eat flesh
in Lent, and upon Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays “for ane zeir next
hereafter,” and in February 1588 he had the present of a gray courser
from his kinsman, the earl of Morton, on the latter going abroad. In the
letter which accompanied the gift he says: “I think ze sall find him als
meit in haikney for zour self or zour wife to ryd upoun as ony uther,
for I chosit him to have been presentit to the king quhen the Scots
horse suld have been send to the duke of Gwies.” He married a daughter
of Cunninghame of Cunninghamehead, and had three sons and three
daughters. His third son, Mungo Mure, received a remission, of date 1st
March 1607, for being concerned in the slaughter of Hew, fourth earl of
Eglintoun. He died in London in November 1632. Before his departure, we
are told, he greatly lamented “the crying sinne of innocent blood.”
William, the eldest son,
succeeded his father. He was “of a meik and gentle spirit, and delyted
much in the study of phisick, which he practiced especiallie among the
poore people with very good success. He was ane religious man, and died
gratiouslie in the yeare of his age 69, the year of our lorde 1616.”
With three daughters he had three sons, Sir William, who succeeded him;
John Mure of Blacklaw, who was slain at a combat at Beith, and Hugh of
Skirnalland.
Sir William, the eldest
son, the next laird of Rowallan, is described as “ane strong man of
bodie, and delyted much in hunting and halking.” He died in 1639, aged
63. He was thrice married, and had issue by each of his wives.
His eldest son, by his
first wife, Elizabeth Montgomery, daughter of the laird of Hazlehead,
was William Mure of Rowallan, the eminent poet, a memoir of whom is
given below. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir William Mure of
Rowallan, in the end of 1657. This Sir William Mure was firmly attached
to the Reformed doctrines, and was the intimate friend of the celebrated
Mr. Guthrie, first minister of Fenwick. It is said that conventicles
were held in the house of Rowallan during his time. Whether on this
account or not, it is certain that he suffered much during the troubles
of the Church of Scotland. He was imprisoned in 1665, in the castle of
Stirling, with the lairds of Cunninghamehead and Nether-Pollock. When
other gentlemen were liberated upon the bond of peace in 1668, these
three were retained in confinement, but in the year following, on the
removal of Bishop Burnet from Glasgow, they presented a petition for
release to the duke of Lauderdale, the commissioner, which was granted.
IN 1683 Sir William Mure again fell under the suspicion of the court,
and was apprehended, with his eldest son, in London. They were sent to
Edinburgh and committed prisoners to the Tolbooth. In the same year his
second son, John, was taken prisoner, and carried to Edinburgh. In a
short time the health of the young laird of Rowallan required
indulgence, and he was allowed to be removed from the prison to a
private house. In April 1684, they were both discharged, upon giving a
bond of £2,000, to appear when called upon. Sir William died in or about
1686. He married about 1640, Elizabeth, daughter of James Hamilton of
Aikenhead, provost of Glasgow, and had two sons and a daughter.
The elder son, William
Mure of Rowallan, the last lineal representative of the family, was
entered a student at the university of Glasgow in 1660. His share in the
afflictions of his father has been already noticed. This did not shake
his attachment to the church for which he suffered. His name frequently
occurs in the records of the parish of Kilmarnock. He is mentioned
there, for the last time, in 1695, in a commission to defend a process
of translation before the synod. He was a member of the Scots
parliament, and died in 1700. He married, about 1670, Dame Mary Scott,
apparently heiress of Collarny in Fife, by whom he had three daughters,
Anna, Margaret, and Jean. The latter, his only surviving daughter and
sole heiress, married, first, William Fairlie of Bruntsfield, near
Edinburgh, afterwards designed of Fairlie, to whom she had issue.
Tradition still points out the spot where Fairlie was married to the
heiress of Rowallan. The ceremony was performed by a curate, in the
fields, about a quarter of a mile from the house of Rowallan, at a tree,
still called the marriage tree, which stands on the top of a steep bank,
above that part of the stream called “Janet’s kirn.” The heiress of
Rowallan married, secondly, David, first earl of Glasgow, and had to him
three daughters, Lady Betty, who died in infancy; Lady Jean, who, by
special destination, succeeded to Rowallan, and Lady Anne, who died
unmarried. Jean Mure, countess of Glasgow, died September 3, 1724, and
was succeeded by her elder surviving daughter of the second marriage,
Lady Jean Boyle Mure of Rowallan, who married the Hon. Sir James
Campbell of Lawers, K.B., third and youngest son of the second earl of
Loudoun. Their son, James Mure Campbell, succeeded to the estate of
Rowallan, and was the fifth earl of Loudoun (see LOUDOUN, fifth earl).
_____
The Mures of Caldwell in
Renfrewshire are directly descended from Sir Reginald Mure of Abercorn
and Cowdams, who appears to have been chamberlain of Scotland as early
as 1329, the first year of the reign of David II. He is supposed to have
been the same Reginald whose name appears with that of Gilchrist More in
the Ragman Roll, as having sworn fealty to Edward I. in 1296. His
paternal inheritance seems to have been Cowdams in Ayrshire, which
belonged to him previously to 1326, as an agreement concerning these
lands between him and the monks of Paisley is dated in that year. Mr.
Mure of Caldwell is still their feudal superior. Gilchrist More, here
mentioned, was Sir Reginald’s son. He received the half of the estate of
Caldwell on his marriage with the daughter of Caldwell of that ilk.
Johannes Mure, jun. de Cowdams, appears in 1446, as one of the
commissioners for fixing the boundaries of the burgh of Prestwick, near
Ayr.
Sir Reginald, who was
granduncle of the queen, Elizabeth Mure, first wife of Robert I.,
acquired his extensive estates of Abercorn, &c., in the Lothians and
Stirlingshire, by marriage with one of the coheiresses of Sir John
Graham of Eskdale and Abercorn. He adhered steadily to the cause of
David II. in the Baliol wars with England, and was one of the
commissioners appointed in 1340 to treat with the lords Percy, Moubray,
and Neville of a truce between the two kingdoms. With one daughter, he
had two sons, William, who succeeded to Abercorn, and died without male
issue, and Gilchrist More, already mentioned, who carried on the line of
the family.
Sir Adam Mure, the fourth
in succession from Gilchrist, was knighted by James IV., and is supposed
to have been slain at the battle of Flodden. His son, John Mure of
Caldwell, on 20th February 1515, took by assault, at the head of his
followers, “the castle and palace” of the archbishop of Glasgow,
situated near the city, battering the walls in breach “with artillery,”
and carrying off a rich booty. He married Lady Janet Stewart, daughter
of Matthew earl of Lennox, and grand-aunt of Lord Darnley, husband of
Mary, queen of Scots, and died in 1533. His eldest son, John Mure of
Caldwell, had, with other children, two sons, John, his heir, and
William of Glanderstoun, ancestor of the Mures of Glanderstoun. The
granddaughter of the latter was the mother of the Rev. William Carstairs,
a divine of great political influence in the reign of William III.
Sir John, the elder son,
was knighted by James V. He was slain, 10th September 1570, by the
Cunninghames of Cunninghamehead and Raeburne of that ilk, the same who
were afterwards principals in the murder of his cousin, Hugh, earl of
Eglintoun, in 1585.
His son, Sir Robert Mure
of Caldwell, was one of the jury appointed in 1580 to try the Lord
Ruthven, high-treasurer of Scotland, for the murder of David Rizzio. He
was on terms of great intimacy and confidence with James VI., by whom he
was knighted, and to whom he was related through the Lennoxes. Six
letters addressed to him by that monarch, preserved at Caldwell, have
been inserted in the ‘Selections from the Caldwell Papers,’ printed for
the Maitland Club in 3 vols. 4to, in 1854. About 1610 the lands of
Thornton near Kilmarnock, long in possession of the family, were
alienated to a cadet, founder of the house of Mure of Thornton, the male
line of which becoming extinct in 1701, in the person of Sir Archibald
Mure, lord provost of Edinburgh, the estate passed by his heir female to
John Cuningham of Caddell, and is now held by his descendant, in feu of
the Caldwell family.
William Mure of Caldwell,
the fourth in succession to Sir Robert, was a staunch Covenanter. He and
a few other west-country gentlemen of similar sentiments, met in arms at
Chitterfleet, in the parish of Beith, on 28th November 1666, and having
collected a body of horsemen, amounting to about fifty in all, and
consisting chiefly of the tenantry of Caldwell and the neighbouring
estates, they set out, under Caldwell’s command, to join Colonel Wallace
of Achans, who was marching from Galloway in the direction of the
Pentlands, by Lesmahago and Lanark. On the way, finding themselves
intercepted by the king’s troops, under General Dalzell, they retraced
their steps, and dispersed. Caldwell was attainted, fled to Holland, and
died in exile. His estates were bestowed on General Dalzell; and
Caldwell’s lady, a daughter of Sir William Cunninghame of
Cunninghamehead, was imprisoned, with two of his daughter, in Blackness
castle, where she underwent much cruel persecution.
Barbara Mure, the second
daughter, lived to obtain, by special act of parliament, 19th July 1690,
a full restoration of the family estates. She married John Fairlie of
that ilk, but dying without issue, was succeeded, in 1710, by her
kinsman, William Mure, fourth laird of Glanderstoun, descended from
William, second son of the John Mure who inherited Caldwell in 1539.
This William Mure bore his share in the persecution of the times, having
been imprisoned and fined, on a charge of nonconformity, in 1683. A
Journal of a tour by him through England and the Netherlands in 1696, is
printed among the ‘Caldwell Papers.’ Dying without issue, he was
succeeded by his nephew, William Mure, eldest son of Mure of Rhoddens in
Ireland. His son, William Mure of Caldwell, M.P. for Renfrewshire from
1742 to 1761, was appointed one of the barons of the exchequer in
Scotland in the latter year. In 1753 he bought Wester or Little Caldwell
from the duke of Hamilton. The portion of the estate the Mures had
previously possessed was called Easter Caldwell. Baron Mure was an
intimate associate of David Hume the historian, and the author of one of
two tracts on speculative points of political economy, printed for
private circulation. His correspondence and miscellaneous papers occupy
the greater part of two of the three volumes of the ‘Caldwell Papers.’
He was rector of the university of Glasgow in 1764-5, and died in 1776.
His eldest son, Colonel
William Mure of Caldwell, was the friend of Sir John Moore, but early
left the army. He was rector of the university of Glasgow in 1793-4. He
married Anne, eldest daughter of Sir J. Hunter Blair, bart. of Dunskev,
with issue, and died February 9, 1831.
Col. Mure’s eldest son,
William Mure of Caldwell, D.C.L., born July 9, 1799, was educated at
Westminster, and studied at Edinburgh and in Germany, where he imbibed
that taste for critical inquiry which made his name extensively known
among the scholars of modern Europe. He married in 1825, Laura, 2d
daughter of William Markham, Esq. of Becca Hall, Yorkshire, with issue;
vice-lieutenant of Renfrewshire and colonel of its militia; was M.P. for
that county from 1846 to 1855; lord-rector of Glasgow university in
1847-48; author of ‘Brief Remarks on the Chronology of the Egyptian
Dynasties; showing the Fallacy of the System laid down by Messrs.
Champollion, in Two Letters on the Museum of Turin,’ London, 1829, 8vo;
‘A Dissertation on the Calendar of the Zodiac of Ancient Egypt,’
Edinburgh, 1832, 8vo; ‘A Tour in Greece,’ 1842; ‘A Critical History of
the Language and Literature of Ancient Greece,’ 5 vols., 8vo. 1850-57;
and the compiler of the ‘Caldwell Papers.’ He died at London, April 1,
1860, in his 61st year.
His eldest son, William
Mure of Caldwell, lieutenant-colonel Scots fusilier guards, married 3d
daughter of 1st Lord Leconfield.
David Mure, born in 1810,
3d son of Col. William Mure, who died in 1831, passed advocate at the
Scottish bar in the latter year. In 1853 he was appointed sheriff of
Perthshire, and in 1858 solicitor-general for Scotland; lord-advocate in
April 1859, and elected M.P. for Buteshire soon after.
_____
The Mures of Auchindrane
were long a flourishing family in the south of Ayrshire. In 1611, John
Mure of Auchindrane was accused of the murder of a retainer of Kennedy
of Colzean, committed where there were no witnesses, but which was
discovered in a remarkable manner. The corpse of the murdered man had
been buried in Girvan churchyard, but the laird of Colzean dreaming of
him in his sleep, caused his body to be taken up, and insisted on all
who lived near to come and touch the corpse. All did so but Auchindrane
and his son, whom nobody suspected, till his young daughter, Mary Mure,
seeing the crown, went in among them, and when she came near the dead
body, the blood sprang from it, on which Auchindrane was apprehended and
put to the torture. ‘The Auchindrane Tragedy,’ founded on this murder,
is one of the dramatic compositions of Sir Walter Scott.
MURE, SIR WILLIAM, of Rowallan, a poet of the 17th century, was
born in 1594. He was the eldest son of Sir William Mure of Rowallan, by
his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Montgomery of Hazlehead, and sister of
Alexander Montgomery, author of ‘The Cherrie and the Slae.’ He obtained
an excellent classical education, and in his early years began to
cultivate a taste for poetry. The ‘Historie’ of his family above quoted
says of him: “This Sir William was pious and learned, and had an
excellent vein in poesie; he delyted much in building and planting.”
Before his twentieth year he attempted a poetical version of the story
of Dido and Eneas, from Virgil. In the ‘Muse’s Welcome,’ a collection of
poems and addresses made to King James on his visiting Scotland in 1617,
there is an address by Mure of Rowallan. In 1628, he published a
translation, in English sapphics, of Boyd of Trochrig’s beautiful Latin
poem, ‘Hecatombe Christiana,’ together with a small original piece
called ‘Doomesday.’ His principal work is his ‘True Crucifixe for true
Catholikes,’ published at Edinburgh in 1629.
For some years afterwards
he seems to have been employed on a version of the Psalms, which was
much wanted in Scotland at that time. The old English version was not
popular; and the one executed by King James and Sir William Alexander of
Menstrie, subsequently earl of Stirling, was so disliked that the
bishops would not press it upon the church. King James’ version was not
sanctioned by the Assembly, and some expressions in it gave offence to
the people, such as the sun being called “The lord of light,” and the
moon, “The pale lady of the night.” Though this version was rejected,
still many wished that the old one should be improved, or a better one
substituted in its place. Several gentlemen attempted particular psalms;
but a version of the whole was undertaken by Sir W. Mure of Rowallan,
which he seems to have finished in 1639. Principal Baillie, who attended
the Westminster Assembly, as a commissioner from the Church of Scotland,
in a letter, dated at London, January 1st, 1644, says, “I wish I had
Rowallan’s Psalter here, for I like it better than any I have yet seen.”
It does not, however, appear that Sir William’s version was transmitted
to the Assembly. That of Mr. Rous, which was recommended by the English
parliament, was finally adopted, and has ever since been used in
Scotland; but the committee appointed in 1650 to revise Mr. Rous’s
version, were instructed to avail themselves of the help of Sir William
Mure’s. (Historic and Descent of the House of Rowallane, pp. 92-94.)
During the civil war, Sir
William Mure took arms on the popular side. In the first army raised
against the king, he commanded a company in the Ayrshire regiment, and
was a member of the convention of 1643, by which the Solemn League and
covenant was ratified with England. He was a member of the ‘Committee of
warre’ for the sheriffdom of Ayr in 1644, and in the beginning of that
year he accompanied the Scots army which marched to the aid of the
parliamentary cause, and was wounded at the battle of Longmarston Moor,
July 2. He was also present at the storming of Newcastle, in the
following month. He died in the end of 1657. Specimens of his poems,
many of which are still in manuscript, will be found in Lyle’s ‘Ancient
Ballads and Songs,’ published at London in 1827. Sir William Mure was
twice married, first, in 1615, when only twenty-one, to Anna, daughter
of Dundas of Newliston, by whom he had five sons and six daughters; and,
secondly, to Dame Jane Hamilton, Lady Duntreath, by whom he had two sons
and two daughters. His second son, Captain Alexander Mure, was slain in
the war against the rebels in Ireland; another of them, Patrick, the
youngest son of the first marriage, was created a baronet of Nova Scotia
in 1622. The title is now extinct. |