BANNATYNE,
in old writings spelled Benachtyne, and Bannachtyne,
a surname supposed originally to have been the same
as Ballantyne.
The most ancient families of the name were the
Bannatynes of Corhouse, of Newtyle, descended from
the former; James Bannatyne of Newhall, son of the
laird of Newtyle, Forfarshire, appointed a lord of
session 14th February, 1626; died 1636; of Cainys,
now Kames, in the Island of Bute; and of Kelly,
founded by a second son of that family. By charters
and bonds of man rent the Bannatynes may be traced
as in possession of Kames early in the fourteenth
century, when it is supposed that Kames castle, a
single tower, which was long the residence of the
family, was built. A tumnlus on the side of a small
stream near the Point House, Rothesay, is shown
where a bloody battle took place between the
Bannatynes of Kames and the Spences of North Kames.
The castle was formerly surrounded by a ditch, which
was filled up, and a modern house added to the tower
by the late Lord Bannatyne, of whom a notice is
given below, and who sold the estate to Mr. James
Hamilton, writer to the signet. Although the
Bannatynes are no longer in possession of Kames,
their name is perpetuated as having once been
connected with Bute in the village of Port Bannatyne,
about 8 miles from Rothesay. Connected with the
ancient family of Bannatyne of Kames was George
Bannatyne, the collector of our Scottish poetry, the
subject of the following notice, whose father, Mr.
James Bannatyne, a writer in Edinburgh, possessed
the estate of Kirkton of Newtyle, in Forfarshire,
the manor house of which was called Bannatyne House.
He was a man of some eminence in his profession, and
held the office of Tabular, or Keeper of the Rolls,
to the Court of Session, in which his second but
then eldest living son, Thomas Bannatyne, who became
a lord of session, under the designation of Lord
Newtyle, was conjoined with him as his successor by
royal precept May 2, 1583. The father, James
Bannatyne, died in 1583. The son, Thomas Bannatyne,
was born on the last day of August, 1540, and
appears for the first time as justice-depute, 17th
February, 1572. On the 20th April, 1577, he was
appointed an ordinary lord of session in place of
Sir John Bellenden of Auchinoul. He was one of the
commissioners for opening parliament, 18th November,
1583, and also in August 1584. On the 18th November,
1583, he was appointed by his colleagues on the
bench their collector for the following year "of the
fourtie shillings quhilk sall be givin them be the
parties pleyand before them, quha tynes the pley the
time of the giving of the saids lords decret of
dempnation or absolvitor,’
(Books of
Sederant,) a tax which the Court had been authorised
to levy by an act of parliament passed a short time
before. Lord Newtyle died 13th August. 1591.
(Haig and Brunton’s
Senators of the College of Justice,
p. 164.) In 1596 his son, Mr. James Bannatyne, was
retoured his heir in the lands of Kirkton of Newtyle,
with the brewhouse and cornteind, and half of tIre
barony of Balmaw, which before the Reformation
belonged to the abbey of Lindores, having been
granted to that monastery by Alexander the Third,
along with some other territorial grants. These
properties belong now to Lord Wharncliffe.
BANNATYNE, GEORGE,
the collector of the national poetry of the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and whose name
has been adopted by a distinguished Scottish
literary club, founded by Sir Walter Scott, in 1823,
was born February 22, 1545. His father, the
above-mentioned James Bannatyne of the Kirktown of
Newtyle, Forfarshire, by his wife, Katherine
Taillefer, had twenty-three children, and George was
the seventh child. He was brought up to trade, but
it does not appear at what particular time he began
to be engaged in business, nor what branch of
business he pursued. His famous collection was
written in the months of October, November, and
December, in his retirement in Bannatyne House,
Forfarshire, during a pestilence which raged in
Edinburgh in the latter part of 1568. "Bannatyne's
Manuscript," says Sir Walter Scott, in a memoir of
him, which he wrote for the Bannatyne Club, "is in a
folio form, containing upwards of eight hundred
pages, very neatly and closely written, and
designed, as has been supposed, to be sent to the
press. The labour of compiling so rich a collection
was undertaken by the author during the time of
pestilence in the year 1568, when the dread of
infection compelled men to forsake their usual
employments, which could not be conducted without
admitting the ordinary promiscuous intercourse
between man and his kindred men. In this dreadful
period, when hundreds, finding themselves surrounded
by danger and death, renounced all care, save that
of selfish precaution for their own safety, and all
thoughts save apprehensions of infection, George
Bannatyne had the courageous energy to form and
execute the plan of saving the literature of a whole
nation ; and undisturbed by the universal mourning
for the dead, and general fears of the living, to
devote himself to the task of collecting and
recording the triumphs of human genius; thus, amid
the wreck of all that was mortal, employing himself
in preserving the lays by which immortality is at
once given to others, and obtained for the writer
himself." Many of the productions of the "Makkaris"
of ancient days would have perished had not George
Bannatyne thus rescued them from oblivion. On the
north side of Bannatyne house, there is a capacious
circular turret, which is believed to have been Mr.
Bannatyne’s
study, while engaged in this laborious but
interesting task.
In October 1587 Bannatyne was admitted a
merchant and guild brother of the city of Edinburgh.
Sir Walter Scott conjectures that, as usual in a
Scottish burgh, his commerce was general and
miscellaneous. In a few years, we are further told,
he had amassed a considerable capital, " which he
employed to advantage in various money - lending
transactions." Bannatyne died some time previous to
1608. He had married Isobel Mawchan or Maughan,
relict of Baillie William Nisbet, who brought him a
son and a daughter. The son died young. His daughter
was married, in her 16th year, to George Foulis of
Woodhall and Ravelstone, whose grandson, William
Foulis of Woodhall, bestowed the valuable collection
of Scottish poetry left by George Bannatyne on the
Hon. William Carmichael of Skirling, advocate,
brother of the earl of Hyndford. Allan Ramsay
afterwards selected from it materials for his
‘Evergreen.’
In 1770 Lord Hailes published a more accurate
selection from it. In 1772 the Bannatyne Manuscript
was presented by the third earl of Hyndford to the
Advocates’
Library, in which it is now preserved. Bannatyne
himself wrote one or two pieces of original poetry,
but these are of no great merit. The club that bears
his name was instituted in 1823 for the publication
of works illustrative of the history and antiquities
of Scotland. Of this club Sir Walter Scott was
president, and he regularly took the chair on their
anniversary dinners from 1823 to 1831. For their
first dinner on March 9, 1823, he composed an
excellent song, (now inserted among his poems,)
which was sung by Mr. James Ballantyne, bookseller,
and heartily chorused by the company:-
"Assist me, ye friends of old books and old wine,
To sing in the praises of Sage Bannatyne,
Who left such a treasure of old Scottish lore,
As enables each age to print one volume more,
One volume more, my friends, one volume more,
We’ll
ransack old Banny for one volume more.
BANNATYNE, RICHARD,
secretary to John Knox, and compiler of
‘
Memoriales of Transactions in Scotland from 1569 to
1573,’
was, it is satisfactorily ascertained, a person of
respectability and learning, and much esteemed by
the great reformer, whose friendship and confidence
he enjoyed till his death. Very little is known
concerning him. It appears probable that he was a
descendant of the family of which George Bannatyne
was a cadet. It is uncertain whether he belonged to
the profession of the law, or was a licentiate of
the church. In the prefatory notice to Mr. Pitcairn’s
edition of the
‘
Memoriales,’
printed in 1836 for the Bannatyne Club, which
contains all the particulars of Richard Bannatyne’s
life that can now be obtained, and to which we have
been indebted for these details, there occurs the
following passage: "There is no reason for supposing
that Bannatyne had ever been employed as an
authorized reader or catechist under John Knox.
Although the first minister of Edinburgh would most
likely require the services of such an individual,
to aid him in overtaking the laborious but important
duties of parochial visitation and catechising, &c.,
yet it is not known that Knox availed himself of the
continued personal assistance and services of any
other person than Richard Bannatyne. But at the same
time it ought to be remarked, that in the course of
the ‘Memoriales,’
notice is repeatedly taken of Richard Bannatyne
having made appearances in the General Assembly, and
before the Kirk Session of
Edinburgh, during the illness or absence of John
Knox; and that he was permitted to address these
courts as a ‘prolocutor’
or speaker ;" which he could only have done in the
capacity of a member, or law-agent appearing on
behalf of another. At the first General Assembly
held after the death of Knox, which took place in
November 1572, Richard Bannatyne presented a
petition, or "supplication," praying that he should
be appointed by the church to put in order, for
their better preservation, the papers and scrolls
left to him by the reformer. The Assembly agreed to
his request, and granted him "the summ of fourty
pounds, to be payed off the 1572 years crope," for
so doing. About 1575, after he had completed the
task assigned to him, Richard Bannatyne became clerk
to Mr. Samuel Cockburn, of Tempill, or Tempillhall,
advocate, in whose service he remained for thirty
years, and whom he appointed joint executor of his
last will and testament with his only brother, James
Bannatyne, merchant in Ayr. To his master’s
daughter, Alice, he left a legacy of two hundred
merks, besides smaller gifts to his domestics.
Richard Bannatyne died September 4, 1605. Of the
‘Memoriales’
there are two MSS. extant, understood to be
transcripts of the original; one in the library of
the university of Edinburgh, and the other in the
Advocates’
Library.
From the latter Sir John Graham Daizell,
published, in 1806 an octavo volume, entitled
‘
Journal of the Transactions in Scotland.' which
excited great interest from the historical value of
the contents. The university transcript having been
afterwards discovered, Mr. Pitcairn had the
advantage of collating the two with each other,
whereby he was enabled to produce the first complete
edition of Bannatyne's work which has yet appeared.
The following graphic and interesting notice of
Richard Bannatyne, which records also one of the
latest appearances in the pulpit of John Knox, is
taken from the Diary of Mr. James Melville, 1556—1601,
printed at Edinburgh in 1829. "The town of
Edinbruche recouered againe, and the guid and honest
men therof retourned to thair houses. Mr. Knox, with
his familie, past hame to Edinbruche; being in Sanct
Andros, he was verie weak. I saw him every day of
his doctrine go hulie and fear, with a forming of
martriks about his neck, a staff in the au hand, and
guid godlie Richard Ballanden, his servand haldin
vpe the vther oxtar, from the Abbay to the paroche
kirke, and be the said Richart and another servant,
lifted vpe to the pulpit, whar he behouit to lean at
his first entrie; bot or he haid done with his
sermont, he was sa active and vigorous, that he was
lyke to ding that pulpit in blads, and file out of
it! Sa, soone efter his coming to Edinbruche, he
becam unable to preatch; and sa instituting in his
roum, be the ordinar calling of the kirk and the
congregation, Mr. James Lawsone, he tuk him to his
chamber, and most happelie and comforta—
blie departed this lyff." (Melville's Diary,
p. 26.)
The scene that took place just before Knox breathed
his last, in which Bannatyne acted a prominent part,
is thus described by Calderwood, (vol. iii. p. 237)
: "About five houres he sayeth to his wife,
‘
Goe, read where I cast my first anker;’
and so, she read the 17th chapter of the Gospel
according to Johne; and, after that, some sermons of
Mr. Calvin’s
upon the Ephiesians. About halfe houre to tenne they
went to the ordinar prayer, which being ended,
Doctor Preston said unto him,
‘
Sir, heard yee the prayers?’
He answered,
‘I
would to God that yee and all men heard them as I
heard: I praise God for that heavenlie sound.’
Then Robert Campbell of Kinzeancleuche sitteth doun
before him on a stoole, and incontinent he sayeth,
‘
Now, it is come!’
for he had given a long sigh and sob. Then said
Richard Bannatyne to him,
‘
Now, Sir, the time yee have long called to God for,
to witt, an end of your battell, is come, and seeing
all naturall powers faile, give us some signe that
yee remember upon the comfortable promises which yee
have oft shewed unto us.’
He lifted up his one hand, and incontinent therafter
randered his spirit, about eleven houres at night."
Bannatyne’s
attachment to the reformer, and high appreciation of
his character, are well illustrated in the following
anecdote. When Knox was accused by Robert Hamilton
of St. Andrews, of being " as great a
murtherer as any Hamilton in Scotland, and,
therefore, suld not cry out so fast against
murtherers, he being privy to an attempt to
assassinate Darnley at Perth," he challenged the
accuser to make good his charge, and
Hamilton at once retracted it. Upon which Bannatyne
said to him, "Gif I knew my maister to he sic a man,
I wold not serve him for all the geir in Sanct
Andrews."
BANNATYNE, Sir WILLIAM MACLEOD, Knt.,
one of the senators of the College of Justice, was
born January 26, 1743. He was the son of Mr.
Roderick Macleod, writer to the signet, and through
his mother he succeeded to the estate of Kames in
the island of Bute, when he assumed the name of
Bannatyne. His aunt, Lady Clanranald, was imprisoned
in the Tower of London, for having afforded
protection to Prince Charles during his wanderings,
after the battle of Culloden. Being of a gay and
easy disposition, he had not been many years in
possession of Kames, when he was obliged to part
with it, and, as already stated, it was purchased by
Mr. James Hamilton, writer to the signet. He
received a liberal education, and was admitted
advocate, January 22, 1765. While at the bar
he deservedly acquired the character of a sound and
able lawyer. Among his intimate friends were Blair,
Mackenzie, Cullen, Erskine, Abercromby, and Craig.
He was a contributor to the Mirror and Lounger, and
was the last survivor of that illustrious band of
men of genius who shed so bright a lustre on the
periodical literature of Scotland, about the end of
the eighteenth century. In private life, his
benevolent and amiable qualities of heart and mind,
and his rich store of literary and historical
anecdote, endeared him to a numerous and highly
distinguished circle of friends. On the death of
Lord Swinton, in 1799, he was promoted to the bench,
and took his seat as Lord Bannatyne, on the 16th May
of that year. He retired in 1823, when he had the
honour of knighthood conferred upon him. He died at
Edinburgh, November 30, 1833, in his 91st year.
Although as a speaker Lord Bannatyne was perspicuous
and distinct, his judicial remarks when written by
himself, from his parenthetical style, were
exceedingly involved and confused. Nevertheless, his
decisions were sound, and his legal opinions had
always due weight with his brethren on the bench.
The Highland Society was originated by him and some
other patriotic gentlemen in 1784, and he was an
original member of the Bannatyne Club.
He had collected a valuable library, rich in
historical, genealogical, and antiquarian works, and
at its sale, which took place 25th April, 1834, six
months after his decease, a set of the Bannatyne
publications was purchased for Sir John Hay,
baronet, of Smithfield and Haystown, for one hundred
and sixty-eight pounds sterling. It wanted, however,
one or two of the "Garlands." The following is a
likeness of Lord Bannatyne taken by Kay in 1799:
His mansion, Whiteford House, near the bottom
of the Canongate of Edinburgh, became a type-foundry
after his death.