The Earls of Mar, from their creation in 1057, until
their attainder in 1715.
N 1096, when a great crusade of 30,000 Christians set out for the Holy
Land,
Marticus first Earl of Mar took the command of a party of Scotch
devotees. In 1099 he was present at the taking of Jerusalem,
and in returning home, died in 1100. He was succeeded by his son
Gratanach, or Graitney, as second Earl of Mar. In 1118 his son
Morgund succeeded as third Earl, and died in 1160. His son Gilchrist
only lived until 1166, and was succeeded by his son Morgund, the
fifth Earl, who served King William in many wars. In 1174 the battle
of Morwick was fought, where His Majesty was taken prisoner, and
continued in confinement until December 1175, when Morgund paid a
ransom of Ł300,000, collected throughout the kingdom; and as a
reward for his fidelity, he received from King William the lands of .Drumlanrig. After
a donation of many lands to the Priory
of St. Andrezvs for
the salvation of his own soul and that of his wife Agnes Countess of
Mar, he died in 1177
and
was succeeded by his son Gilbert.
This Gilbert, sixth Earl of Mar, laid the foundation of Kildntmmy
Castle in Mar, ‘which/
in the language of my informant, ‘when entire, was the greatest
object of national splendour and antiquity in the kingdom.’ Gilbert
died in 1181, and was succeeded by his brother Gilchrist, who built
a priory for the Culdee canons regular of St.
Andrews, in
1213. In 1215 he died, and was succeeded by his brother Duncan, who
in the year after made the following donation : ‘ We, Duncan Earl of
Mar, for the glory of God, and for the salvation of the souls of His
Majesty King William, Morgund Earl of Mar, and Margret his Countess,
and for all the souls of the faithful, and for prosperity to His
Majesty Alexander II., freely
grant the lands and tythings of the Church of Leochel to
the Culdee brethren of Monymnsk
Priory, dedicated
to the Virgin Mary.’
He was succeeded by his son William as ninth Earl of Mar, who by His
Majesty Alexander III. was
created Great Chamberlain of Scotland in
1264. He died in 1268, and was succeeded by Donald, his son, as
tenth Earl of Mar, who again in 1294 was succeeded by his son
Graitney, whose sister Isabella married Robert Bruce, afterwards
King of Scotland. Graitney
was a steady supporter of Bruce, and was rewarded with the hand of
Christina, daughter of Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick. He also
received the lordship of Garioch by
charter from His Majesty.
In 1313 his son Donald succeeded, although in confinement, as he had
been taken prisoner by the English at the battle of Methuen, and
kept until the battle of Bannockburn,
when he and Isabella, wife of Robert Bruce, were given in exchange
for the Earl of Hertford. He was called Donald Bain, or White
Donald, and was a person of great honour and integrity, a steady
friend also of Robert Bruce, and was rewarded with charters of the
Thanage of Alveth in Angus,
Selene in Fife,
and Mount
Blairly in Banffshire. Through
his daughter Helen, the Earldom of Mar afterwards descended to the
Erskine family. In 1330 he was elected Regent of Scotland’
but fell soon after in an engagement with Baliol, and was succeeded
by Duncan, his son, as thirteenth Earl of Mar.
In 1342 Duncan was succeeded by Thomas, who, having offended his
Royal master, was attainted, and in 1361 went into exile. In 1371 he
returned home, and was restored to all his honours, and more than
the former degree of Royal favour. On his death in
1377,
James Douglas, the husband of his sister Margaret Mar, succeeded in
right of his wife as fifteenth Earl. This Earl of Douglas and Mar
committed great ravages in England’
but fell at length with his son at Otterbum,
when the Earldom of Mar devolved on Isabella Mar, daughter of Thomas
the fourteenth Earl. Malcolm Drummond of Drummond’
her first husband, became sixteenth, and Alexander Stuart, her
second husband, seventeenth Earl of Mar. On Isabella’s death, as she
had no family, the earldom was claimed by Robert seventh Lord
Erskine, he being descended from Helen, daughter of Graitney the
twelfth Earl of Mar. In 1435 he was succeeded by his son Robert as
eighth Lord Erskine and nineteenth Earl of Mar ; and on being served
heir to Lady Isabella Douglas, Countess of Mar, before the Sheriff
of Aberdeen,
April 22, 1438,
he afterwards, viz. in 1465, received a charter on the Earldom of
Mar, comprehending Strathdon,
Strathdee, Cargarff, Braemar, Cromar, and
the lordship of Garioch.
When James III. ascended the throne, his brother John was made
twentieth Earl of Mar, and in 1480 he was bled to death by command
of the king his brother, on the charges of conspiracy and
witchcraft. Immediately after his death, Robert Cochrane, a
favourite of James III., was made by him Earl of Mar. After the
death of Cochrane, who was hanged on the Bridge
of Lauderby
a number of Scottish noblemen, John Stuart, illegitimate son of
James ill., was made Earl ; to whom succeeded Thomas Erskine ; and
again, when James IV. ascended the throne, he presented the Earldom
to John Stuart by the Countess of Boulogne. This twenty-fifth Earl
of Mar died at Edinburgh in
1508, and was succeeded by Alexander Erskine as twenty-sixth Earl of
Mar. Alexander, son of John Lord Elphinston, was twenty-seventh,
while Alexander, his son, who fell at the battle of Pinkie,
was twenty-eighth Earl of Mar; and again, Robert, his son, the
twenty-ninth.
In 1541 George Gordon, Earl of Huntly, was created thirtieth Earl of
Mar, and in 1542 was appointed administrator, collector, and trustee
for Mar, the lordship of the Garloch,
the lands and bailiwicks of Braemar and Cromar,
all of which the last Earl had forfeited. Changes were, however, the
order of the times ; for in 1561 James Stuart, illegitimate son of
James V., was
made thirty-first Earl. To him succeeded Robert Erskine as
thirty-second Earl, and his son Robert as thirty-third.June 4, 1563,
John Erskine took his seat in * Parliament as thirty-fourth Earl of
Mar. He was governor of Stirling;
and while Regent, founded in 1572 the building at the head of the High
Streetof
that city, known as ‘ Mar's
Work! Before
his death he appointed his brother Alexander -to be governor of Stirling, until
his own son came of age ; and also recommended to him and Lady Mar,
his wife, the charge of the young king, now about seven years of
age.
The Regent was succeeded by his son John as fourteenth Lord Erskine
and thirty-fifth Earl of Mar. The young Earl received his education
with the king, whom the Estates of the kingdom had committed to the
care of the Dowager Countess of Mar. For the part this Earl took,
when grown up, in the raid of Ruthven and
subsequent events, he was sent into exile, and his estates forfeited
to the Crown; but on sending a very contrite letter to His Majesty
he was pardoned, and soon after returned home. Not only was he
restored to all his lands and honours, but to such a degree of Royal
favour and confidence, that on the 9th of October 1595 King James
gave his son Henry in charge to the Earl, by the following letter,
written by his own hand :—
‘ My
Lord OF Mar,—Because
on the security of my son, I have concredited to you the charge of
his keeping, upon the trust I have in your honesty. This I command
out of my own mouth, being in the company of those I like. Otherwise
than from any charge that comes from me, you shall not deliver him ;
and in case God calls me at any time, see that neither for the
Queen, Estates, • their pleasure, you deliver him till he be
eighteen years of age, and then he can command himself.
‘Given at Stirling\ July
24, 1595.’
In January 1603, the mother of this Earl, the Dowager Countess of
Mar, died. The fashions in those days had not been so evanescent as
they are now, or her last legacy had not been of much value. I give
one or two of the items :—
‘I, Dame Amabelle Murray, Countess of Mar, relict of John umquhile
Erl of Mar, Regent of Scotland’
lavis in legacie to Marie Erskyne, my oy (grandchild), my goun of
black damas, with the black grogram taftie, to be ain new goun.’
*Item,
I laive to Annie Erskyne, my oy, my goun of damask taftie round
taillet, the foir breists thairof lynit with plush, and to her twelf
elas of whyte grogram taftie of my auin making.
*Item,
To my sister, the Lady Abercairney, my goun of chamlet of silk,
pastmentit wt bred velvet pastments, the brestis thairof lynit with
plush, wt my doublet and skirt of plain black velvet.
*Item,
To the Parson of Innernauhtie (Inver-nochtie) and
Agnes Bruce his spouse, by attour my former legacie, aught bolls of
meale.
‘Item, To
William Brogg, chirurgeon> four bolls eat meale.
'Amabelle Murray C. Mar.’
On the 1st of April James took his journey for England with
the Earl of Mar and a great retinue. Before, however, they had gone
as far as York, the
Earl of Mar was compelled to return to
Scotland to
appease Queen Anne, who had demanded from Lady Mar, Henry, Charles,
and Elizabeth, her children ; which Lady Mar could not grant, as the
Earl had left her with instructions not to resign them into the
hands of any person
without an order under his own hand.
Having accommodated matters with the Queen, he prepared to return to England; but
considering his having to turn back as an omen of evil—of death, in
short—he believed it necessary to make his will. This will is
curious, but too long for insertion here. Happily his fears were not
verified : he continued to live and enjoy the king’s favour, and not
a little degree of his confidence too, as the following copy of an
autograph letter from James shows. It was written in September 1607,
when Prince Joinville, brother to the Duke of Guise, came over to England,
and with the French ambassador made a visit to His Majesty in Edinburgh;—
‘Dear Jock,—As
I’m gaing to gie an audience this morning to the French ambassador,
I desier you to be sae gude to send me a pair of yeir best silken
hose, with the goud clocks at them.—Your affectionat cusine, ‘JAMES R.’
The Earl died at a very advanced age, in the year 1634, and was
succeeded by his son John as fifteenth Lord Erskine and thirty-sixth
Earl of Mar. On the breaking out of the rebellion he joined the
Covenanters, but soon left them for the Royal party, with whom for
the remainder of his life he acted steadily. He was succeeded by his
son John, who was also attached to the kings interest. For this
adherence he was sentenced to pay a fine of 24,000 merks. After
other fines, his whole estate was sequestrated, and during
Cromwell’s time he lived in a small cottage at the gate of Alloa
House. His
estates were restored by Charles II. He
died in 1664, and was succeeded by his son Charles as seventeenth
Lord Erskine and thirty-eighth Earl of Mar. He was also attached to
the interests of Charles II., and
was made a member of his Privy Council in 1682. He raised, at his
own charge, a regiment of foot, and continued colonel of it until
his death. The regiment is still known as ‘ The Royal Scots
Fusiliers ’ —the 21st.
After his death, in 1689, his son John succeeded as eighteenth Lord
Erskine and thirty-ninth Earl of Mar. Shortly after his accession he
was appointed one of the Privy Council for Scotland;
and
among many other honours and offices, was one of the sixteen Scots
Peers in the first British Parliament. He continued in favour until
the death of Queen Anne, when, being deprived of all his offices, he
went north to the Castle
of Kildrummy,
and soon after, unfortunately for himself and country, went to Glenlivet,
and proclaimed the Chevalier de St. George under the title of James viii.;
the sequel of which event belongs to another part of this volume. |