ANY procedure which
might be regarded as indicating a claim of supremacy by the see of
St. Andrews over that of Glasgow was jealously watched and
repudiated by the archbishop and clergy of the latter city. In the
end of November, 1535, Archbishop Beaton, being in the town of
Dumfries, in Glasgow diocese, and having taken the opportunity of
elevating his episcopal cross and blessing the people, Archbishop
Dunbar's official protested that these acts, understood to be done
by agreement between the two archbishops, were not to be prejudicial
to the privileges of Glasgow. Four years later similar proceedings
are recorded, Cardinal Beaton having then elevated his cross in the
town of Dumfries, but with the declaration and admission that the
rights of Glasgow were not thereby prejudiced. [Reg. Episc. Nos.
500, 502.]
If the two Dumfries
incidents were not deemed innovations on Glasgow's rights, different
views were entertained regarding similar procedure in the cathedral.
Dates and circumstances as variously recounted are conflicting, but
it seems certain that towards the end of the year 1543, or in the
spring of 1544, within the choir of the cathedral, the archbishop
protested that the carrying of the cardinal's cross in the
metropolitan church, or elsewhere in his diocese or province, should
not be allowed to the prejudice of Glasgow's exemption from the
predominance of St. Andrews. To this the cardinal replied that he
did not carry his cross, or give benediction within the church to
the prejudice of the exemption granted by the Pope but solely by
reason of the goodwill and courtesy of the archbishop. [Reg. Episc.
No. 504.] But shortly after this came the climax. In June, 1545,
when the Queen-mother, Lord Governor Arran, Cardinal Beaton, and
several bishops and abbots, were in Glasgow, attending a meeting of
the privy council, a contest arose between the archbishop and the
cardinal, and their cross-bearers, culminating in a serious riot, in
the course of which blows were struck and wounds given, copes and
vestments were torn, and the crosses of both metropolitans were
broken. [Glasg. Chart. i. pt. i. pp. liv, lv ; Dowden's Bishops, pp.
346-7; Works of John Knox, i. pp. 146-7; Diurnal of Occurrents, p.
39. This incident and also the reception of the French forces
referred to antea, p. 372, is thus noticed in the Diurnal:—"31st
May. The King of France sent 2000 gunnaris, 300 bairdit hors and 200
archearis of the gaird and landit at Dumbartane with greit
provisioun and thair wageis payit for sax monethis to cum and silver
to fie 2000 Scottis for the said sax monthis space. Upoun the fourt
of Junii thir Frenchemen come out of Dunbartane, quhair thai wer
ressavit be the Quenis grace and Governour with greit dignitie; the
principall of thame was callit Monsieur Large Montgomery, quha was
weill treitit be the quenis grace. Upone the same [day] the bischop
of Glasgow pleit with the cardinall about the bering of his croce in
his dyocie, and baith thair croceis was broken in the kirk of
Glasgow throw thair stryving for the samin."]
Archbishop Dunbar
died on 30th April, 1547, and thereafter the see remained vacant for
nearly three years. James Hamilton, "natural brother of our
illustrious governour," was nominated by the Queen-dowager, under an
arrangement whereby £1,000 of the revenues should be assigned to
David and Claud Hamilton, but the appointment did not take effect,
and it was not till March, 1549-50, that the vacancy was filled by
the installation of Alexander Gordon, brother of the fourth earl of
Huntly. Gordon did not retain office much more than a year, and on
4th September, 1551, the Pope, at the request of the Queen-dowager,
provided to the see James Beaton, son of an elder brother of
Cardinal Beaton. The new archbishop had been a chanter in Glasgow
cathedral, was abbot of Aberbrothock from about the year 1545, and
when he received the archbishopric of Glasgow was in the 27th year
of his age. After passing through the stages of acolyte, sub-deacon,
deacon and priest, at Rome in July, he was there consecrated as
archbishop on 28th August, 1552. From bulls, instruments and other
documents recorded in Registrum Episcopatus many particulars are
preserved regarding the placing of Beaton both at Aberbrothock and
Glasgow. These include an absolution from papal censure, a
dispensation on account of incomplete age (the attainment of thirty
years being the requisite qualification for a bishop), mandates to
the suffragans of the archbishopric, chapter and clergy, and calls
for obedience to be given to the archbishop by the people of the
city and diocese and by the vassals in the lands belonging to the
church. [Reg. Episc. Nos. 507-19 ; Dowden's Bishops, p. 350.]
During the vacancies
in the see archiepiscopal affairs were administered by
vicars-general, James Houston, sub-dean, having been vicar-general
for part of the years 1547 and 1548; and on several occasions
between the years 1549-51 Gavin Hamilton, dean of the metropolitan
church, is found acting in that capacity. The revenues of the see
were under the charge of "Archibald Hammiltoun, captain of Arrane,"
who actedias "chamberlain of the archbishop," from the decease of
Archbishop Dunbar, in 1547 till the entry of Beaton in 1551. [Glasg.
Prot. No. 1348.]
Archibald Hamilton
seems to have been succeeded by "Mr. Stevin Betoune, chamberlain of
the castle of Glasgow," who, along with the magistrates of the city,
had to defend himself on a charge of violating the sanctuary
privileges alleged to belong to the Place of the Friars Preachers of
Glasgow. On 3rd June, 1553, two men named William Culquhoune and Hew
Lockhart, in the course of a quarrel, had hurt each other, within
the city, and Culquhoune " fled into the said Place and sanctuary
for girth." Thereupon Lockhart's kin and friends came and took him
by force furth of the kirk and delivered him to the provost and
bailies of the city and chamberlain of the castle, all of whom
refused to restore him to the freedom and privilege of the
sanctuary. In a complaint made to the lords of council, the prior
and convent of the Friars Preachers alleged that since the
foundation of their Place, "or past memor of man" it had possessed
the privileges of sanctuary and girth, at least for recent and
sudden crimes, and so reverently observed that it had never formerly
been violated by any person so far as could be remembered. It was
accordingly maintained that the conduct of the magistrates and
chamberlain was " to grait hurt of the freedome and privilege of
Halie Kirk, violatioune of the said sanctuarie, nane uther being in
the west parteis of the realme fra Torphiching [Torphichen, the
chief seat in Scotland of the Knights Hospitallers of St. John of
Jerusalem. ] west, bot the said place allanerlie, sen the tulye was
committit upone suddantie, and na partie is slane be ather." The
defenders called upon the complainers to produce evidence of the
privilege claimed by them, and the court having heard the
declaration of the priors of other "places" in Scotland, to the
effect that "thai never newe sic privilege of girth grantit to thame,"
it was held that the claim of sanctuary had not been established.
[Lib. Coll. etc. pp. lxiii, lxiv. r From the statement that there
was no other sanctuary than the Blackfriars west of Torphichen, it
may be assumed that by this time the Gyrth crosses and Gyrth-burn
had ceased to be regarded as the bounds of a privileged area around
the cathedral.]
By the middle of the
sixteenth century, most of the different craftsmen employed in the
building trade were grouped together in one society and it was under
these circumstances that, on the application of the head men and
masters of the masons, wrights, coopers, sawyers, quarriers, and
others, dwelling within the city, the magistrates and council
confirmed to them a series of statutes and articles whereby the
combined crafts attained the quality of an incorporation in the
usual way. To the altar of St. Thomas the customary contributions
were to be given, and the usual conditions of apprenticeship,
service, inspection and sufficiency of work were likewise inserted
in the seal of cause. Its date is 14th October, 1551, a month after
Archbishop Beaton had been provided to the see, but some time before
he entered on the duties or obtained consecration, and consequently
the document has this peculiarity that it was granted and sealed by
the magistrates and council alone, without the expressed consent of
the archbishop. [Cruikshank's Incorporation of Masons (1879), pp.
3-6.] All other pre-Reformation seals of cause were granted by the
magistrates and council, with the consent and under the seals of the
respective archbishops. |