BOTHWELL,
lord of, a title anciently possessed by the De Moravia or Moray family,
descendants of Freskin, a person of Flemish origin, who came to Scotland in
the reign of David the First, and in return for assistance rendered that
monarch in suppressing a rebellion of the inhabitants, obtained a grant of
extensive lands in the province of Moray. See MORAVIA DE, MORAY, or MURRAY,
surname of.
BOTHWELL,
lord, a title conferred by King James the Third on an unworthy favourite,
John, created by him Sir John Ramsay, son of John Ramsay of Corstoun,
(descended from the house of Carnock in Fife, one of the most ancient
families of the name). He was the only one of the favourites who escaped
being put to death when they were hanged over Lauder bridge by the insurgent
nobles, in July 1482. He owed his safety to his clinging closely to the
person of the king, and to James himself earnestly pleading for him, on
account of his youth, he being then only eighteen years of age. In the
following year, on the forfeiture of Lord Crichton, grandson and successor
of the famous Lord-chancellor Crichton, for taking part in the conspiracy of
the duke of Albany against his brother, King James, his majesty bestowed on
Sir John Ramsay his forfeited estates, including Crichton castle, and the
lands, barony and lordship of Bothwell in Lanarkshire, with forty merks of
land in the barony of Moneypenny. He also raised him to the peerage by the
title of Lord Bothwell; all which was confirmed by parliament, as appears
from its records, 16th February 1483-4. He sat as Lord Bothwell
in several parliaments. These honours heaped upon a youth of nineteen years
of age, who had rendered no service to the country, may well have disgusted
the nobility. In 1486, when he was little more than twenty-two, he was sent
to England, to negotiate a truce for three years, and in the following year
he was appointed, with the bishop of Aberdeen, to meet with the ambassadors
of Henry the Seventh, who had arrived at Edinburgh to arrange as to a
lasting peace. On this occasion a marriage was proposed between various
members of the two royal houses, which was of course never carried into
effect, the death of James soon after putting an end to the project. After
the murder of James the Third, Lord Bothwell, as a minion of that weak
monarch, was forfeited, 8th October 1488, and the lordship of
Bothwell, so imprudently bestowed upon him, was conferred on Patrick
Hepburn, Lord Hales, who was created earl of Bothwell, on the 17th
of the same month. [See following article.] The forfeited lord fled to
England, where with Sir Thomas Todd of Shereshaws, another banished
favourite of the late king, he concocted the following scheme for raising
money. Having obtained access to Henry the Seventh, they proposed, by the
assistance of their friends in Scotland, with whom they kept up a private
correspondence, to deliver the king of Scots and his brother into his hands,
and desired only some pecuniary aid. On April 17, 1491, indentures were
entered into at Greenwich between King Henry and ‘John Lord Bothwell and Sir
Thomas Thodde [Todd] knight, of the realm of Scotland, as well for and in
name of theimselves as also of dyvers others named in the said indentures,’
declaring that ‘they shall take, bringe, and delyver into the said king of
Englandis handes the king of Scottes now reynyng and his brother the duke of
Roos (Ross), or at the leste the said king of Scotland,’ In expectation of
this service King Henry lent Sir Thomas Todd the sum of £266 13s. 4d.
sterling, for the repayment of which at the following Michaelmas, he
stipulated that Sir Thomas should leave his son and heir in pledge. [Rymer’s
Faedera, vol. xii. page 440.] The transaction appears to have terminated
with the pecuniary advance, and this singular agreement was never known
until Rymer published the document in 1711.
Lord Bothwell
received a pardon from King James, and returned to Scotland, but was only
acknowledged as Sir John Ramsay. Two letters from him to the English
monarch, the first dated 8th September 1496, giving a minute
account of the support afforded by King James to Perkin Warbeck, are quoted
by Mr. Pinkerton; from which it has been inferred that Ramsay acted as a spy
for Henry the Seventh at the court of his own sovereign. In both letters he
subscribes himself ‘Jhone L. Bothvalle.’ He seems, notwithstanding his
acting the spy upon him, to have become a favourite of James the Fourth,
for, on 18th April 1497, he obtained a formal remission and
letters of rehabilitation under the great seal. He was not. however,
restored to his title and estates, these being in other hands, but he
received from the king, instead, charters of the lands of Tealing and
Polgavy in Forfarshire, Tarrinzeane in Ayrshire, and others, 27th
April 1497, and 13th Sept. 1498; of a house and garden in
Edinburgh, 30th May 1498, and of another house there, 6th
November 1500; also, under the designation of Sir John Ramsay of Tarrinzean,
knight, he had a charter, to himself and his heirs, dated 13th
May 1510, of the lands of Balmain, Fasque, and others, in the county of
Kincardine, which were erected into a free barony, to be called the barony
of Balmain. In the beginning of 1513 King James proposed to send him on an
embassy to Henry the Eighth; but although a safe conduct was got it never
took effect. Sir John Ramsay died soon after, leaving a son, William Ramsay,
who succeeded him. He was the lineal ancestor of Sir Alexander Ramsay of
Balmain, baronet, M.P. for the county of Kincardine, who died without issue,
at his seat of Harlsey, near Northallerton, in Yorkshire, 12th
February 1806, in his ninetieth year, and who was succeeded in his estates
by his nephew Alexander Burnett of Strachan, second son of his sister
Catherine, the wife of Sir Thomas Burnett of Leys, baronet. On succeeding to
his uncle’s estates, Alexander Burnett took the name and arms of Ramsay, and
was created a baronet of Great Britain 13th May 1806. Dying in
1810, he was succeeded by his son Sir Alexander Ramsay of Balmain, baronet,
See RAMSAY, surname of.
BOTHWELL,
earl of, a title in the peerage of Scotland, formerly possessed by the
family of Hepburn, and rendered remarkable in Scottish history by the
marriage of its possessor, the fourth earl, with the unfortunate Mary, queen
of Scots. [For the origin of the name of Hepburn, and the different branches
of the family, see HEPBURN, surname of.] Patrick Hepburn, third Lord Hales,
created earl of Bothwell in 1488, as above mentioned, was descended from one
Adam Hepburn, of a Northumberland family, who, in the reign of David the
Second, received from the earl of March, charters of various lands in
Haddingtonshire. The eldest son of th said Adam Hepburn, Sir Patrick Hepburn
of Hales, born about 1321, appears, from the frequent mention made of him in
reference to safe conducts into England in Rymer’s Faedera, to have
been a person of consequence. His seal is appended to the act of settlement
of the crown of Scotland, 27th march 1371, the achievement being
two lions pulling at a rose, on a chevron, still the arms of the Hepburns.
At the battle of Otterbourne in 12388, he and his son, Patrick, led on one
party of the Scots, and prevented the banner of Douglas from falling into
the hands of the English. By his first wife, whose Christian name was Agnes,
he was the father of Patrick Hepburn, younger of Hales, styled by Fordun
[ii. p. 433] ‘miles magnanimus et athleta bellicosus.’ On 22d June, 1402,
during the lifetime of his father, on his return from a hostile incursion
into England, the party which he commanded were intercepted by the earls of
March and Northumberland at West Nesbit, near Dunse. An obstinate conflict
ensued, in which the Scots had the advantage, but the son of March arriving
with a reinforcement, the victory turned in favour of the English. Young
Hepburn and several other gentlemen, with the flower of the youth of
Lothian, were among the slain. By his wife, a daughter and co-heir of the
family of Vaux or de Vallibus, Lords of Dirleton, he had two sons. Sir Adam
Hepburn of Hales, the elder, was one of the commissioners sent to England in
1423, to treat for the release of King James the First fro captivity. In
1525 he was one of the principal persons arrested along with Murdoch, duke
of Albany. He was afterwards one of the supplementary hostages for the
security of the payment of forth thousand pounds, for the expense of King
James the First during the time he had remained in captivity in England, as,
5th February 1425-6, patrick de Hepburn, William de Hepburn, and
John Halyburton, got a safe conduct to England, to attend on the Lord of
Hales, then a hostage [Faedera.] He was released by order of 9th
November 1427, when William Douglas, lord of Drumlanrig, was substituted in
his place. In 1435, when the estates of the family of Dunbar and March were
seized by the crown, Sir Adam Hepburn was sent with the earl of Angus and
chancellor Crichton, to take possession of the castle of Dunbar, and after
it had been delivered up to them, he was left Constable of this important
fortress. On the 30th September 1436, he assisted William
Douglas, earl of Angus, in the conflict with Henry Percy, earl of
Northumberland, at Piperden, or Pepperdin, near Cheviot, when Sir Robert
Ogle was made prisoner, with most of his followers, and on 31st
March 1438, the year after the murder of James the First, he was one of the
conservators of a truce with England. He had four sons: Sir Patrick, his
heir; William; George Hepburn of Whitsome, Berwickshire, ancestor of the
Hepburns of Riccartoun and Blackcastle; John, one of the lords of Council
and Session, and bishop of Dunblane from 1467 to 1486; and two daughters.
Sir Patrick
Hepburn, the eldest son, as we learn from Rymer’s Faedera, was a
conservator of truces with England on various occasions, and a commissioner
for the barons for administering justice throughout the kingdom in time of
pestilence, 19th October, 1456. In the same year he was created a
peer of Scotland, by the title of Lord Hales, under which designation he sat
among the nobility in the parliament of 16th October 1467. His
eldest son, Adam, second Lord Hales, attached himself to Lord Boyd of
Kilmarnock, and his brother, Sir Alexander Boyd of Duncow, and in 1466 was
engaged in their audacious enterprize of carrying off King James the Third,
then in his thirteenth year, from Linlithgow to Edinburgh. [See JAMES THE
THIRD.] For his share in this affair he obtained a remission from
parliament, (which, as well as the young king, was entirely under the
influence of the Boyds,) 213th October of that year, ratified
under the great seal, 25th of the same month. He married Helen,
eldest daughter of Alexander, first Lord Home, and by her had five sons;
viz., Patrick, third Lord Hales, and first earl of Bothwell; 2d, Sir Adam
Hepburn of Craigs, master of the King’s stables, 3d, George Hepburn, provost
of Bothwell and Lincluden, abbot of Aberbrothwick, 9th February
1503-4, high treasurer of Scotland, 1509, bishop of the Isles, 10 May 1510,
and commendator both of Aberbrothwick and Icolmkill in 1512; slain at
Flodden, 9th September 1513; 4th, John Hepburn, prior
of St. Andrews, founder of St. Leonard’s college in 1512; and 5th,
James Hepburn, who, after being rector of Dalry and Partoun, was, in 1515,
elected abbot of Dunfermline, and 15th June the same year was
appointed lord high treasurer. In 1516 he was elected bishop of Moray, and
3d October of that year he quitted the treasury. He died in 1525, and was
buried in Elgin cathedral.
Patrick Hepburn,
third Lord Hales, and first earl of Bothwell, in July 1482, had the command
of the castle of Berwick, when that town was invested by the English army,
under the duke of Gloucester, afterwards Richard the Third, and the Scottish
king’s brother, the duke of Albany. After the execution of the king’s
favourites at Lauder, the town of Berwick surrendered to the English, but
Lord Hales, in the castle, made a brave defence. Leaving four thousand men
to block it up, the dukes of Gloucester and albany advanced to Edinburgh, of
which city they took possession without any opposition. [Abercromby’s
Martial Achievements, vol. ii. p. 450.] On 20th September
1484, Lord Hales was one of the conservators of a truce with England. the
annexation by James the Third of the rich temporalities of the priory of
Coldingham to the chapel royal of Stirling, by giving offence to the Lord
Home and his clan, who had been accustomed to consider that priory as very
much their own, was one of the principal causes of the rebellion which cost
that king his life. Lord Home entered into a bond of mutual assistance with
Lord Hales, and the Homes and Hepburns opposed with violence the annexation,
although an act of parliament had been passed declaring it high treason to
obstruct that measure. Lord Hales was a party to the hollow pacification
entered into at Blackness in May 1488, and about the same time he and
several others of the disaffected nobles received from Henry the Seventh a
safe conduct to England; but the progress of events in Scotland prevented
any use being made of it. At the battle of Sauchieburn, then called the
battle of the field of Stirling, which followed, [June 11, 1488], Lord Hales
led the Hepburns in the vanguard against the army of the king; and fifteen
days thereafter, on the surrender of the castle of Edinburgh, the custody of
that important fortress was committed to him, with three hundred mark of the
customs of that city. He was also appointed sheriff-principal of the county
of Edinburgh, and within the constabulary of Haddington, On 120th
September 1488, he received the office of master of the household, and was
constituted high admiral of Scotland for life. On October 13th of
the same year he had a charter of the lands of Crichton castle, with lands
in the counties of Edinburgh and Dumfries, and the lordship of Bothwell in
Lanarkshire, forfeited by Sir John Ramsay, Lord Bothwell, as
above-mentioned. Four days afterwards, [17th October 1488], the
young king, James the Fourth, erected the lordship of Bothwell into an
earldom, and conferred it on Lord Hales, in full parliament, by girding him
with a sword. The same day it was declared in parliament that he should have
the rule and governance of James, duke of Ross, the king’s brother. The
party to which he belonged had then the chief power in the state, and they
showered honours and offices on him for the important part which he had
acted in the late Revolution. On 5th November 1488, he obtained a
grant of the office of steward of Kirkendbright and of the keeping of Thrief
castle, with the feus thereof; and 29th May 1489, he and John
Hepburn, prior of St. Andrews, his brother, had letters of a lease of the
lordship of Orkney and Zetland, and of the keeping of the castle of
Kirkwall, the earl, of the same date, receiving the office of justiciary and
bailiary of that lordship. On the 6th July the same year he was
constituted guardian of the west and middle marches. March 6th,
1491-2, on the resignation of George Douglas, son and heir of Archibald,
earl of Angus, he had a charter of the lordship of Liddisdale, with the
castle of Hermitage, Angus obtaining in excambion, the lordship of Bothwell,
which brought Bothwell castle and its domains into the possession of the
Douglases, an arrangement brought about by the king to prevent the house of
Angus from becoming so powerful as the elder branch of the Douglases had
been. In a parliament held at Edinburgh 18th May 1491, the earl
of Bothwell, and the bishop and dean of Glasgow, were appointed ambassadors
to the courts of France and Spain, to find out a proper match and negotiate
a marriage for the king, and to renew the ancient alliances with these
states. The sum of five thousand pounds was advanced for their expenses. In
the parliament held at Edinburgh, 26th June 1493, a general
revocation was issued of all grants made during the minority of the king,
from which the lands granted to the earl of Bothwell and Sir John Ross,
knight, were specially excepted. In May 1501, the earl of Bothwell, and
Robert, archbishop of Glasgow, and Andrew Forman, papal prothonotary,
afterwards archbishop of St. Andrews, received a safe conduct to England,
which was renewed in the following October, as ambassadors from the king of
Scots, sent to conclude the marriage of James the Fourth with the Princess
Margaret, eldest daughter of Henry the Seventh. The princess was solemnly
married to King James at Richmond, by proxy, January 27, 1503, the earl of
Bothwell being his Majesty’s representative. On her arrival in Scotland in
the following August, on her near approach to Edinburgh, she was received by
the king, richly apparelled in cloth of gold, the earl of Bothwell bearing
the sword of state before him; and attended by the principal nobility of the
court. [Leland’s Collectanea, vol. iv. p. 287.] The earl died soon
after 1507. By Lady Janet Douglas, his wife, only daughter of James, first
earl of Morton, he had issue, with three daughters, three sons, Adam, second
earl of Bothwell; John, consecrated bishop of Brechin, from 1517, to August
1558; and Patrick Hepburn, who was educated by his uncle John, prior of St.
Andrews, whom he succeeded in the priory in 1522. In 1524 he was appointed
secretary, in which office he continued till 1527. In 1535 he was
consecrated bishop of Moray, and at the same time he held the abbacy of
Scone in perpetual commendam. When the Reformation took place he had the
fate of the other Popish prelates, but he kept possession of his episcopal
palace till his death, at Spynie castle, June 20, 1573. Foreseeing what was
coming, he feued out all the lands belonging to the see. [Keith’s
Scottish Bishops.] this prelate had seven natural sons and two natural
daughters, legitimations having passed the great seal for them in 1533,
1545, and 1550.
Adam Hepburn,
second earl of Bothwell, succeeded his father both in his extensive
possessions and in his office of high admiral of Scotland. At the disastrous
battle of Flodden, 89th September 1513, he commanded the reserve,
consisting of his own followers, supported by those of other chiefs
connected with the Lothians, and advanced to support the King’s attack on
the English in so gallant a style that the standard of the earl of Surrey,
the English general, was placed in the utmost danger. With his sovereign and
the greater part of the chivalry of Scotland, he fell on that fatal field.
“Then did his loss his foeman know.
Their king, their lords, their mightiest low,
They melted from the field, as snow,
When streams are swoln and south winds blow,
Dissolves in silent dew.
Tweed’s echoes heard the ceaseless plash,
While many a broken band,
Disordered, through her currents dash,
To gain the Scottish land;
To town and tower, to down and dale,
To tell red Flodden’s dismal tale,
And raise the universal wall.
Tradition, legend, tune and song,
Shall many an age that wall prolong;
Still from the sire the son shall hear
Of the stern strife and carnage drear
Of Flodden’s fatal field,
Where shivered was fair Scotland’s spear,
And broken was her shield.”
Scott’s Marmion.
The second earl of
Bothwell married in 1511 Agnes Stewart, natural daughter of James earl of
Buchan, brother uterine of James the second, by whom he had one son.
Patrick, third
earl of Bothwell, succeeded when an infant to the titles and estates of his
family. In the minority of the king, James the Fifth, and the unsettled
state of the kingdom, great disorders prevailed on the borders, which were
encouraged by the border chiefs, and the duke of Albany, on assuming the
regency, did his utmost to suppress the robberies and violations of the law
that were continually taking place. On April 6, 1528, the earl of Bothwell,
then a young man about sixteen, and Patrick Hepburn, master of Hales, and
several others, their kinsmen and retainers, received a remission for their
treasonably assisting George Lord Home, and the deceased David Home of
Wedderburn, his brother, and their accomplices, being at the time the king’s
rebels, and at his horn. towards the end of the same year he was, by King
James, committed to prison for protecting marauders on the borders, and
after being six months in confinement was only released on the recognizances
of his friends to the amount of twenty thousand pounds. In December 1531, he
secretly passed into England, and held a conference of a treasonable nature
with the earl of Northumberland. On his return he was, by the king’s orders,
seized and confined in the castle of Edinburgh, where he remained a
considerable time, being still therein June 1533. King James the Fifth,
determined to have peace on the borders, and considering Liddisdale as a
nursery of freebooters, to be held in order only by the royal power, in
September 1538 compelled the earl of Bothwell to resign it into his hands.
It would appear [Pitscottie’s History, p. 237] that the earl was then
banished the kingdom, when he is said to have gone to Venice. He appears to
have returned to England in 1542, and to have engaged in treasonable
negotiations with Henry the Eighth. At a parliament held at Edinburgh, 3d
December 1542, the earldom of Bothwell, and many other estates, were annexed
to the crown. The earl returned to Scotland soon after the death, 13th
December 1542, of King James the fifth. After the arrest of Cardinal Bethune
in the succeeding January, he and the earls of Huntly and Moray offered
themselves as surety for his appearance to answer the charges against him,
and demanded that he should be set at liberty, which was refused by the
governor, Arran. He was also one of the Catholic lords, the earls of Huntly,
Moray, and Argyle being the others, who met at Perth a powerful body of the
barons and landed gentry, and a numerous concourse of bishops and abbots,
and despatched a message to the earl of Arran, by Reid, bishop of Orkney,
that the cardinal should be set at liberty, and that the New Testament
should not be read in the vulgar tongue by the people, which of course could
not be listened to; and being charged, under the pain of treason, to return
to their allegiance, they did not dare to disobey, but sent in their
adherence to the governor. He was present in parliament 15th
Marcy 1543, when he instituted a summons of reduction of the pretended
resignation of the lordship of Liddisdale and castle of Hermitage, said to
have been made by him into his majesty’s hands. In this suit he was
successful, as his estates were restored, and when the English ambassador,
Sir Ralph Sadler, came to Scotland in that year, in order to negotiate a
marriage between the infant queen Mary and the young prince, Edward of
England, he found Bothwell in possession of Liddisdale. Sadler mentions him
as opposed to that match and devoted to the French interest. In one of his
letters, dated May 5th 1543, he thus describes him: ‘as to the
earl of Bothwell, who hath the rule of Liddisdale, I think him the most vain
and insolent man in the world, full of pride and folly, and heere nothing at
all esteemed.’ [Sadler’s State papers, vol. i. p. 184.] In order to
embroil the matrimonial negotiations with England, when Cardinal Bethune and
the earl of Huntly assembled their forces in the north, and Argyle and
Lennox theirs in the west, Bothwell, Home, and the laird of Buccleuch
mustered their feudal array upon the borders. He joined at Leith the force
of ten thousand men under Lennox, Huntly, and Argyle, when they marched to
Linlithgow, and obtained possession of the young queen and conducted her in
triumph to Stirling. He was one of the principal nobles who, in June 1544,
signed the agreement to support the queen mother, Mary of Guise, as regent,
instead of the earl of Arran. He became the rival of the earl of Lennox for
the hand of the queen dowager, when both earls daily frequented the court,
striving in magnificence of apparel and in all courtly games, to excel one
another, but finding at length that this method of attracting her Majesty’s
favour was somewhat costly, Bothwell wisely retired. He appears again to
have, for a short time, changed sides, for a summons was raised against him
for treasonably treating and counselling with the king of England in
December 1542 against King James the Fifth, by the great gifts and sums of
money received by him from Henry of England; for intercommuning with the
earl of Hertford and the English army, when Scotland was invaded in May
1544, and for imprisoning Bute pursuivant, in Haddington, Crichton Castle,
and Linlithgow, in July of that year. From this summons, however, he was
assoilzied in parliament, on 12th December 1544. It was by the
treachery of this earl of Bothwell that in January 1546 George Wishart was
delivered into the hands of Cardinal Bethune. Wishart was in the house of
Ormiston, about eight miles from Edinburgh, when the house was surrounded by
Bothwell and a party of armed men sent by the cardinal to apprehend him. Mr.
Cockburn, the proprietor of Ormiston, at first refused to open the door, but
finding it in vain to resist, the earl and a few of his followers were
admitted. After some expostulations Bothwell gave a promise, confirmed by an
oath, that he would protect Mr. Wishart from the malice of the cardinal, and
procure him a fair trial, or set him at liberty; on which Wishart was placed
in his hands. The earl carried his prisoner to his own castle of Hales, and
seemed at first to have some intention of performing his promise, but by the
persuasion of the queen dowager, he was soon prevailed upon to break it. As
an excuse, on the 19th January, he was brought before the
governor and council, and commanded, under the highest penalties, to deliver
up his prisoner. He complied with that command, and conducted Mr. Wishart to
the castle of Edinburgh, whence he was immediately carried to the castle of
St. Andrews, and soon after martyred. The earl of Bothwell, notwithstanding
this service, was afterwards again imprisoned, and not released till after
the battle of Pinkie, 10th September 1547. The first use he made
of his liberty was to wait upon the duke of Somerset, the invading general,
17th September. On that occasion he is described as a ‘gentleman
of a right cumly porte and stature and heretofore of right honourable and
just meaning and dealing towards the king’s majesty (Henry the Eighth),
whom, therefore, my lord’s grace did, according to his degree and merits,
very friendly welcome and entertain.’ Indignant at his long and frequent
imprisonments, he appears now to have wholly espoused the English interest,
as an instrument, dated at Westminster 3d September 1549, sets forth that
King Edward had taken him under his protection and favour, granting him a
yearly rent of three thousand crowns, and the wages of a hundred horsemen,
for the defence of his person and the annoyance of the enemy, and if he
should lose his ands in Scotland in the English king’s service for the space
of three years, promising to give him lands of similar value in England. [Faedera,
vol iii. p. 173.] He died, (it is supposed in exile,) in September 1556.
He married Margaret Home, said to be of the family of Lord Home, and had a
son, James, fourth earl of Bothwell, the husband of Mary, queen of Scots,
and a daughter, Jean, married, first, 4th January 1562, to John
Stewart, prior of Coldingham, a natural son of King James the Fifth, by whom
she was the mother of Francis, earl of Bothwell, of whom afterwards. She
took for her second husband John, master of Caithness.
James Hepburn,
fourth earl of Bothwell, the unprincipled and ambitious nobleman who became
the third husband of Mary, queen of Scots, was born about 1536, and was
served heir to his father, 3d November 1556,. This ‘glorious, rash, and
hazardous young man,’ as he is happily styled by Walsingham, was destined to
act a principal part in the history of that turbulent period. Although a
Protestant, he adhered to the party of the queen regent, and acted with
vigour against the Lords of the Congregation. On 8th August 1559,
along with Ker of Cessford and Maitland of Lethington, he was nominated, by
commission from Francis and Mary, for settling differences on the borders.
In October following, having learned that Cockburn of Ormiston had received
four thousand crowns from Sir Ralph Sadler for the use of the Lords of the
Congregation, he attacked and wounded him, and carried off the money. Sadler
mentions that the earl of Arran and the Lord James Stewart, afterwards the
Regent Murray, immediately went to Bothwell’s house, in the town of
Haddington, with two hundred horsemen and a hundred footmen, taking with
them two pieces of artillery, in the hope of finding him there, but a
quarter of an hour previously he had received notice that troopers were
entering the west port of the burgh in search of him; on which he fled down
a lane called the Goul, to the Tyne, and running down the bed of the river
for about one hundred and fifty years, stole into the house of Cockburn of
Sandybed, by the backdoor, which opened to the river, changed clothes with
the turnspit, whose duty he performed in Sandybed’s kitchen for some days,
till he was enabled to make his escape. In return for his protection,
Bothwell gave to Sandybed and his heirs and assignees, a perpetual ground
annual, as it is called in Scotland, of four bolls of wheat, four bolls of
barley, and four bolls of oats, to be paid yearly out of his lands of
Mainshill, in the county of Haddington. This ground annual continued to be
paid to the heirs of Cockburn till about 1760, when his descendant, George
Cockburn of Sandybed, who, on succeeding to the estate of Gleneagles, in
Perthshire, took the name of Haldane, sold it and his property of Sandybed
to John Buchan of Letham, and soon after the latter sold and discharged this
ground annual to Francis earl of Wemyss, then proprietor of Mainshill. [Douglas
Peerage, edited by Wood, vol. i. p. 229, note.]
In December 1559,
Bothwell took the command of the French auxiliaries in Scotland. He
afterwards went to France, where, by his dutiful demeanour and zeal in her
service, he recommended himself to the young queen, Mary, then the wife of
the French king, Francis the Second. In 1563 he returned to Scotland.
Immediately thereafter, ‘great excitement was created in Edinburgh, by an
act of violence perpetrated by the earl of Bothwell, with the aid of the
Marquis d’Elboeuf and Lord John Coldingham. They broke open the doors of
Cuthbert Ramsay’s house, in St. Mary’s Wynd, during the night, and made
violent entry in search for his daughter-in-law, Alison Craig, with whom the
earl of Arran was believed to be enamoured. A strong remonstrance was
presented to the queen on this occasion, beseeching her to bring the
perpetrators to punishment; but the matter was hushed up, with promises of
amendment. Emboldened by their impunity, Bothwell and his accomplices
proceeded to further violence. They assembled in the public streets during
the night, with many of their friends. Gavin Hamilton, abbot of Kilwinning,
who had joined the reforming party, resolved to check them in their violent
proceedings. He accordingly armed his servants and retainers, and sallied
out to oppose them, and a serious affray took place, between the Cross and
the Trone. The burghers were mustered by the ringing of the town bells, and
rival leaders were sallying out to the assistance of their friends, when the
earls of Moray and Huntly, who were them residing in the Abbey, mustered
their adherents at the queen’s request, and put a stop to the tumult.
Bothwell afterwards successfully employed the mediation of Knox, to procure
a reconciliation with Gavin Hamilton, the earl of Arran, and others of his
antagonists.’ [Wilson’s Memorials of Edinburgh, vol. i. p. 73.] Soon
after this he was banished the kingdom for being engaged in a conspiracy
against thee earl of Moray. He returned home in 1565, and on May 2d of that
year, he was denounced rebel and put to the horn for not appearing to answer
an indictment for high treason, in conspiring to seize the queen’s person,
&c., having proposed to the earl of Arran, with whom he had been lately
reconciled, to carry off the queen to the castle of Dumbarton, ‘and thair
keep her surelie, or utherwyse demayne hir person at your plesour, quhill
scho aggre to quhatsumeuir thing ye shall desyre’ [Pitcairn’s Criminal
Trials, v. i. part 2, p. 462]; the very method he himself afterwards
adopted at Dunbar, to secure the queen’s hand. Arran revealed the plot to
the queen at Falkland, and on being confronted in presence of her majesty
and the lords of secret council, Bothwell denied the allegation, whereupon
Arran challenged him to judicial combat, and both were committed to the
castle of Edinburgh, from which Bothwell escaped, and was once more
constrained to quit the kingdom. On the indictment being called in court,
Alexander Hepburn of Whitsome, his kinsman, protested in his name against
sentence of outlawry being passed against him, as he durst not appear at
that time on account of the great convention of his enemies, by which his
life was endangered. On the disgrace and expatriation of the earl of Moray
and his friends, after the weak attempt at insurrection called the
‘Roundabout Raid,’ which arose out of their opposition to Mary’s marriage
with Darnley, Bothwell and other lords, foes to that faction, were recalled
from exile by the queen, to strengthen her own party. On February 22d, 1566,
Bothwell married Lady Jean Gordon, daughter of the fourth earl of Huntly.
After the assassination of Rizzio, on the 9th March that year, he
acquired an undue influence over the mind of the queen. It is stated by
Pennant [Tour, v. i. p. 70] that he made the first impression on her
too susceptible heart, by once galloping, in full armour, down the dangerous
steeps of the Calton hill, and leaping his steed into the ring, while a
tournament was held in the adjoining valley of Greenside. This, however,
appears to be nothing more than a tradition of the locality. He appeared to
the queen the only one of the nobles who was sincerely attached to her, for
she had found them all rude and stern, and engaged in fierce and ambitious
designs against her. Hence, besides his attractive manners, handsome figure,
and courtly address, the ascendancy which this profligate nobleman at this
time obtained over her. He was appointed warden of the Three Marches, an
office never before held by one person, created high admiral, and had a
grant of the abbeys of Haddington and Melrose. By his interest his
brother-in-law, the earl of Huntly, was constituted high chancellor of the
kingdom, and no matter of importance was transacted without his advice. When
the queen’s attachment to Darnley was converted into aversion, Bothwell’s
insinuating address and unremitting assiduity had the effect intended on her
warm and tender heart, and many instances of her partiality for him are
given by contemporary historians; the most striking of which was the
following: Having proceeded to Liddisdale to apprehend some marauders,
Bothwell was, on 7th October 1566, attacked and wounded by one of
them. The queen was then at Jedburgh holding a justice Court, and on hearing
of his wound she evinced her feelings for him by riding from that town to
Hermitage Castle, where Bothwell lay, a journey of twenty Scotch miles,
through a country then almost impassable, and infested with banditti.
Finding that the earl was not dangerously wounded she returned to Jedburgh
that same night. This rapid journey and the anxiety of her mind on
Bothwell’s account, threw her into a fever, and her life was, for a short
time, despaired of. On her recovery, attended by Bothwell, she proceeded, 7th
November, to Coldingham, whence she went to Dunbar and Tantallan, and
arrived at Craigmillar, 17th of the same month. In the following
December he accompanied her to Edinburgh, Stirling, and Drymen. Two months
afterwards, namely, on the 10th of February, 1567, occurred the
murder of Darnley, in which Bothwell was the principal actor. He had
obtained a situation for one of his menials in the queen’s service, and so
was enabled to obtain the keys of the provost of St. Mary’s house at
Kirk-of-Field, where Darnley was lodged. He immediately caused counterfeit
impressions of them to be taken. [Laing, v. ii. p. 296.] Shortly
after nine o’clock on the evening of the 9th he left the lodgings
of the laird of Orminston, (James Ormiston of that ilk), in company with
whom and several of his own servants, his accomplices in the dark
transaction that was about to ensue, he passed down the Blackfriars’ Wynd,
entering the gardens of the Dominican monastery by a gate opposite the foot
of the Wynd; and by a road nearly on the site of what now forms the High
School Wynd, they reached the postern in the town wall, which gave admission
to the lodging of Darnley. Bothwell joined the queen, who was then visiting
her husband, while his accomplices were busy arranging the gunpowder in the
room below, and, after escorting her home to the palace, he returned to
complete his purpose. [See Documents illustrative of the murder of
Darnley in Pitcairn’s Criminal Trials.] A loud explosion, about two
o’clock in the morning, shook the whole town, and startled the inhabitants
from their sleep; and at day dawn the dead body of Darnley and that of his
page were found lying in the garden. On the 21st of February, the
queen and Bothwell went to Seton, where they remained till the 10th
of March, on which day they returned to Edinburgh. On 19th March
Bothwell was appointed governor of Edinburgh Castle, when he nominated Sir
James Balfour his deputy governor. On the 24th of the same month
he again accompanied the queen to Seton, and on the 10th April
they returned to the capital. The clamours of the people, and the
remonstrances of the earl of Lennox, Darnley’s father, made it necessary for
the queen to bring her favourite to trial; but on the day appointed,
Saturday, 12th April, Bothwell appeared with such a formidable
retinue as overawed his accusers. No witness were called to prove the guilt
of such a powerful antagonist, and he was in consequence acquitted. Nor was
this all. At a parliament held on the 19th he obtained the
ratification of all the possessions and honours which the queen had
conferred on him, and was farther appointed captain and keeper of the castle
of Dunbar. But the sway which he had now acquired over Mary’s mind was shown
more indisputably by an act in favour of the Reformed religion, to which, at
this time, she gave her full assent. Immediately afterwards, viz., on the 20th
April, Bothwell invited several of the nobles to an entertainment at his
house, and at a late hour, when they were excited with wine, he opened to
them his purpose of marrying the queen. By mingled promises and threats, he
prevailed on all present to subscribe a paper or bond approving of the
match, and engaging to support it, if acceptable to Mary, with their united
forces, lives, and fortunes. Eight bishops, nine earls, and seven barons,
signed this document, armed with which Bothwell, in accordance with his own
former advice to the earl of Arran, resolved that she should not have the
power to refuse him. On the 21st April, the queen went to
Stirling to visit her son; on her return on the 24th, Bothwell,
at the head of a thousand horse, met her at Cramond Bridge, and dispersing
her slender train, conducted her, without the least opposition on her part,
to the castle of Dunbar, where she remained for ten days, and where, it is
said, he forcibly ravished her. From Dunbar he conveyed her to Edinburgh
castle, and the preparations for their marriage were hurried on with
indecent haste. On May 3d, he was divorced from his wife for adultery with
her maid, and on the 7th his marriage with Lady Jean Gordon was
formally annulled. On the 123th he was created marquis of Fife and duke of
Orkney On the 14th the marriage contract of the queen and
Bothwell was signed, and on the 15th their nuptials were publicly
solemnized in the chapel of Holyrood, first according to the rites of the
Protestant church, and afterwards, in private, in the Popish form, Adam
Bothwell, bishop of Orkney, officiating at the former ceremony. That same
night the distich of Ovid [Fasti, book v.] was affixed to the palace
gate:
‘Mense malas Malo nubere vulgus ait;’
and from the misery and
ruin that sprung from this fatal union, is traced the vulgar prejudice that
still regards it as unlucky to marry in the month of May.
Bothwell was now
anxious to secure the person of the young prince, for whose protection,
almost as soon as the marriage was celebrated, a considerable body of the
nobles had entered into an association at Stirling. Alarmed at this
confederacy Mary issued a proclamation requiring her subjects to take arms
for her defence. On the 7th June Bothwell and the queen went to
Borthwick castle, whence the former proceeded to Melrose, to arrange an
expedition against Lord Home, and then returned to the queen at Borthwick.
On the 11th June the confederated lords appeared suddenly before
that strong fortress. Bothwell, having timely warning of their approach,
escaped hastily to Dunbar, wither two days afterwards he was followed by the
queen. On the 15th, exactly one month after Queen Mary’s fatal
marriage with this nobleman, the army of the queen and that of the
confederated lords met at Carberry hill, on the same ground which the
English had possessed at the battle of Pinkie. The forces of the queen,
consisting of four thousand men of Lothian and the Merse, were commanded by
Bothwell, having under him the Lords Seton, Yester, and Borthwick, with four
barons of the Merse, viz. Wedderburn, Langton, Cumledge, and Hirsel; and
those of the Bass, Waughton, Ormiston in Lothian, and Ormiston of that ilk
in Tiviotdale. The confederate army was led by the Lord Home and the earl of
Morton, afterwards regent. Gallantly arrayed in brilliant armour, Bothwell
“showed himself, mounted on a brave steed;” and offered by single combat to
decide the quarrel. His proffered gage was eagerly seized by Kirkaldy of
Grange, but Bothwell would not accept of him as an opponent as being of
inferior rank to himself. He likewise rejected Sir William Murray of
Tullibardine, and his brother, Murray of Purdorvis, for the same reason.
Bothwell then challenged Morton, who accepted the challenge, and the combat
was appointed to take place on foot, but old Lord Lindsay of the Byres
requested Morton to allow him to meet Bothwell instead, being his right as
next of kin to the murdered Darnley. Morton consented, and Lindsay, kneeling
down before both armies, audibly implored the Almighty to ‘strengthen the
arm of the innocent, that the guilty might be punished.’ Twenty knights were
to attend on each side, and the lists were in course of being marked out,
when the other lords interdicted the combat. Some authorities say that Mary,
making use of her royal prerogative, prohibited the encounter. She demanded
a conference with Kirkaldy of Grange, who approached and knelt before her;
and while he was urging the queen to separate herself from Bothwell, and
join the confederates, who sought only the re establishment of order and
good government, that unscrupulous and unprincipled nobleman secretly
desired one of his harquebussiers to shoot him. The man was in the act of
levelling his piece at the unsuspecting knight, when the queen observed him;
uttering a scream, she threw herself before the harquebuss, and exclaimed to
Bothwell that surely he would not disgrace her so far as to murder one to
whom she had promised protection. [Life of Kirkaldy, p. 171.]
Bothwell then took his last farewell of Mary, and rode off the field with a
few followers. For a short time he took refuge among his vassals in the
castle of Dunbar; then, equipping a few vessels, which, as lord high
admiral, he was easily enabled to do, he proceeded by sea to the north, and
remained for sometime with the earl of Huntly and his uncle, Adam Hepburn,
bishop of Moray. He was soon, however, abandoned by them, when he sailed for
Orkney. After in vain attempting to obtain admittance into the castle of
Kirkwall, he plundered the town, and, retiring to Shetland with two small
vessels, turned pirate. On 11th August a commission was granted,
by the lords of the secret council, to Kirkaldy of Grange and Murray of
Tullibardine, to pursue him by sea and land, with fire and sword [Anderson’s
Collections.] The laird of Grange, on board the Unicorn of Leith, was
accompanied in the pursuit of the obnoxious earl, by Adam Bothwell, bishop
of Orkney, (of whom in next article), although not three months before he
had performed the marriage ceremony for him and Mary. While pursued by
Kirkaldy’s fleet a violent storm arose, and Bothwell’s ship, becoming
unmanageable, was driven towards the coast of Norway, after parting company
with the other vessel, which contained his plate, furniture, valuables, and
armour, brought from the castle of Edinburgh. [Bothwell’s Declaration.]
Off the Norwegian shore he fell in with a vessel richly laden, and
immediately attacked it. After a desperate fight, despairing of victory, he
resolved to seek safety in flight, leaving his ship stranded and bulged on a
sandbank. In a small boat, alone and unattended, he reached Carmesund, in
Norway. Thence he fled to Denmark, where his person being recognized he was
put into close confinement in the castle of Draxholm. For eight years he
languished in captivity, deprived of his reason, and in that unhappy
condition he died 14th April, 1578.
“A fugitive among his own,
Disguised, deserted, desolate –
A weed upon the torrent thrown –
A Cain among the sons of men –
A pirate on the ocean – then
A Scandinavian captive’s doom,
To die amid the dungeon’s gloom!”
Delta
“Thus perished the chief
of the Hepburns, whose sounding titles of ‘the most potent and noble prince,
James, duke of Orkney,’ marquis of Fife, earl of Bothwell, lord of Hales, of
Crichton, Liddisdale, and Zetland; high admiral of Scotland; warden of the
three marches; high sheriff of Edinburgh, Haddington, and Berwick; baillie
of Lauderdale; governor of Edinburgh castle and captain of Dunbar, only
served to make the scene of the fettered felon, expiring in the dungeons of
Draxholm, a more striking example of retributive fate, and of that guilty
ambition, misdirected talent and insatiable pride, the effect of which had
filled all Europe with horror and amazement.” [Life of Kirkaldy, p.
191.] Before his death, in an interval of returning reason, the miserable
Bothwell confessed his own share in the murder of Darnley, and fully
exculpated Mary from any participation in his crimes. He left no issue. Lady
Jean Gordon, his first wife, who is described as a lady of great prudence,
was afterwards twice married, first, on 13th December 1573, to
Alexander, eleventh earl of Sutherland, who died in 1594; and secondly, to
Alexander Ogilvy of Boyne. She enjoyed a jointure out of Lord Bothwell’s
estates in Haddingtonshire, till her death in 1629, in the 84th
year of her age. The earl of Bothwell was forfeited by the Scottish
parliament 29th December, 1567, and thus the Hepburns were for
ever deprived of the landed property and titles which they had enjoyed for
so long a period, taking the first rank among the families of East Lothian.
The narrative
written by the last earl of Bothwell of the house of Hepburn, embracing his
personal history after his flight from Scotland, his adventures on the coast
of Norway, and imprisonment in Denmark, has been privately printed for the
Bannatyne Club from the original in the royal library at the castle of
Drottningholme in Sweden, and was presented to the members of the club by
Messrs, Henry Cockburn and Thomas Maitland (Lords Cockburn and Dundrennan),
under the title of ‘Les Affaires de Conte de Bodwell, l’An. MDXXVIII.’
An English translation also appeared in the ‘New Monthly Magazine,’ in which
periodical the authenticity of the document if fully established. M. Mignet,
the French historian, in a History of Mary Queen of Scots, in two volumes,
published in 1851, attempts, from a collection of Mary’s letters said to be
in the possession of Prince Labanoff, and certain Spanish manuscripts
obtained by his own researches in the archives of Simancas, to prove Mary’s
complicity in Darnley’s murder, but however guilty as a woman and faulty as
a queen she might have been, and however far led away by her passion, for
Bothwell, we hesitate to believe her so deeply criminal as to be a
consenting party to the assassination of her own husband.
__________
The next and last
possessor of the title of earl of Bothwell was Francis Stewart, eldest son
of John Stewart prior of Coldingham, natural son of King James the Fifth, by
Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Carmichael, captain of Crawford. The prior
obtained a legitimation under the great seal of Scotland 7th
February 1551, and died at Inverness in 1563, when on a northern circuit
with his brother, the earl of Moray. He had married, 4th January
1562, Lady Jane Hepburn, only daughter of Patrick, third earl of Bothwell,
and sister of the turbulent earl, the murderer of Darnley. This marriage was
celebrated at Seton house in East Lothian with great spendour, Queen Mary
honouring the nuptials with her presence. Two sons were the issue, Francis
and Hercules. Francis, the elder, was, by the special favour of King James
the Sixth, in consideration of his descent from the Hepburns, created, 29th
July 1576, earl of Bothwell, and had a grant of several lands, with the
offices of sheriff-principal of the county of Edinburgh and within the
constabulary of Haddington, and lord high admiral of Scotland. He was also
appointed sheriff of the county of Berwick and bailiary of Lauderdale. This
nobleman rendered himself remarkable by his restless disposition, and his
several daring attempts to obtain possession of the person of the king. In
his youth he went for a short time to France, but in July 1582 he returned
to Scotland, and soon took part against James Stewart, earl of Arran, the
most unprincipled of all the favourites of James the Sixth. In conjunction
with Lord Home and the laird of Cowdenknows, he forfeited Kelso, and bade
defiance to Arran’s power. Having a personal altercation with Sir William
Stewart, Arran’s brother, in presence of the king at Holyroodhouse, Stewart
gave him the lie in very rude language. A few days afterwards, on the 30th
July 1588, they accidentally met in the High Street, when each had his
retainers with him. A battle immediately ensued. Sir William, driven sown
the street by the superior numbers of his opponents, retreated into
Blackfriar’s Synd. There he was thrust through the body by Bothwell, and
slain on the spot. [Birrel’s Diary. p. 13.] Feuds of this kind were
so common at that turbulent period that little notice seems to have been
taken of this affray, and Bothwell was never seriously prosecuted for it.
In 1587, on the
news reaching Scotland of the execution of Queen Mary, a strong desire was
manifested to attack England, and avenge her death. Bothwell refused to put
on mourning, and declared that the best ‘dule weed’ was a steel coat. In
1588, he aided the Catholic earls of Huntly, Errol, and Angus, in their
rebellion against the king, and on James’ proceeding to the north he
threatened to ravage the borders and compel his return, but his forces
gradually left him, and when the king came back to Edinburgh he threw
himself on his knees before his majesty in the chancellor’s garden, and was
sent prisoner to Holyrood.
On the 28th
May 1589, with the earls of Huntly and Crawford, he was brought to trial on
a charge of high treason and other crimes, and especially in trafficking
with strangers, such as Jesuits and seminary priests, for the overthrow of
the protestant religion. Bothwell was farther charged with having received
from one Colonel Semple a thousand crowns, and from France, by the earl of
Errol, the same sum, which he made use of to raise soldiers, without having
his majesty’s commission to do so. They denied the principal charges but
were found guilty of treason. The king, however, would not consent to their
execution, and the matter was allowed to remain in abeyance for upwards of
two years, when the earls of Huntly and Crawford received a full pardon [Pitcairn’s
Criminal Trials, vol. i. part 2, pp. 172-181.] Lord Bothwell was
imprisoned in Tantallan Castle, but after a few months he was released on
payment of a heavy fine to the Crown. In October of that year, when King
James went to Denmark on his marriage expedition, Bothwell and the duke of
Lennox were appointed to govern the kingdom in his absence, and it is
recorded that while they were at the head of the government, ‘greater peace,
tranquility, and justice were not heard of long before.’ But on the return
of the king his troubles commenced. In January 1591, a midwife of the name
of Agnes Sampson, known as the ‘wise wife of Keith,’ and some other persons
were burnt at Edinburgh for sorcery and witchcraft. By some of these persons
the earl of Bothwell was accused of having consulted them, in order to know
the time of the king’s death, and of having employed their art to raise the
storms which had detained him so long in Denmark, as well as endangered the
lives of the king and queen during their voyage to Scotland in the preceding
year. Being in consequence cited to appear before the Secret Council, he
obeyed the citation. According to Sir James Melville, he voluntarily
surrendered himself a prisoner in the castle of Edinburgh, very naturally
insisting that ‘the devil, wha was a lyer from the beginning, nor yet his
sworn witches, aucht not to be credited.’ In the “Historie of King James the
Sext,’ we are told that after appearing before the lords of the secret
council he was ‘committed to prison within the castle of Edinburgh, till
farther trial should be taken of him. For the king, at the persuasion of
Chancellor Maitland, suspected the said Bothwell, that he meant and intended
some evil against his person, and remained long constant in that opinion
divers years after. The king wrote to all the nobility at diverse times to
convene for his trial, but they all disobeyed, because they knew that the
king had no just occasion of grief nor crime to allege against him, but only
at the instigation of Chancellor Maitland, whom they all hated to the death
for his proud arrogance used in Denmark against the earl Marischal.’ The
latter was ambassador extraordinary to the Danish court. After lying twenty
days in prison, Bothwell, on the 22d June 1591, effected his escape from the
castle of Edinburgh, by the agency of one Lauder, captain of the watch, whom
he gained over, and who fled with him. On this it was resolved to put in
force his former conviction for treason. On the 25th of the
same month, sentence of forfeiture was pronounced against him at the cross
of Edinburgh, and it was declared high treason for any one to ‘reset,
supply, show favour, intercommune, or have intelligence with him.’ The earl
fled to the borders, and assembled his retainers, under pretence of driving
Chancellor Maitland from the king’s councils. On the 2d August a
proclamation was issued for the pursuit of the earl, and the king resolved
to march against him in person. On the 7th, however, the king
issued another proclamation dispensing with the attendance of those whom he
had summoned to arms, as he had abandoned the proposed expedition against
Bothwell. On the 27th of December, the earl repaired to
Edinburgh, and being favoured by some of the king’s attendants, he was
admitted with his followers, late in the evening, into the courtyard of
Holyroodhouse, in which the king was then residing. He advanced directly
towards the royal apartments, the doors of which were instantly shut. He
attempted to force open some of them with hammers and other weapons, and
called for fire to burn others, but the alarm being communicated to the
city, the inhabitants ran to arms. An attack was also made on the queen’s
apartments, on the supposition that the king was there, but the door of the
gallery was ably defended by Henry Lindsay, the master of her majesty’s
household, and the king was conveyed for safety to a turret above. During
the fray a gentleman named Scott, brother of Scott of Balwearie in Fife, was
shot in the thigh, and the king’s master-stabler, named William Shaw, was
killed, as was also one with him named Peter Shaw. The earl was at last
repulsed, and made his escape with difficulty but eight of his men were
taken, and on the following morning they were hanged without trial, on a new
gallows that was erected opposite the palace gate for the purpose. [Birrel’s
Diary.] For this extraordinary attempt to seize the king, Bothwell and
his accomplices, among whom we find his countess, James Douglas of Spott,
Archibald Wauchope, younger of Niddry, John Hamilton of Samuelston, and
other country gentlemen, were attained in parliament, 12th July
1592. On the 17th of the same month he and his partisans made
another desperate attempt in Falkland palace to seize the person of the
king, who, betrayed by some of his courtiers, and feebly defended by others,
had very nearly fallen into their hands. He owned his safety to the fidelity
and vigilance of Sir Robert Melville, and the irresolution of Bothwell’s
followers. Foiled in this enterprise, the earl fled to England, where he was
taken under the protection of Queen Elizabeth. His countess, who had been
left in Scotland, was received into the royal favour on the 17th
November, but on the 23d of the same month a proclamation was issued
ordering that no one ‘should reset her, give her entertainment, or have any
commerce of society with her in any case.’ This lady was Lady Mary Douglas,
eldest daughter of David, seventh earl of Angus, and widow of Sir Walter
Scott of Buccleuch, who died in 1574. All resetters and assisters of
Bothwell having been ordered by parliament not to approach nearer to the
royal presence than ten miles, and many of them having disobeyed, on the 8th
December, a warrant was issued to the lord provost and magistrates of
Edinburgh to apprehend Dame Margaret Douglas, countess of Bothwell,
Archibald Wauchope, younger of Niddrie, John Hamilton of Samuelston, Sir
James Scott of Balwearie, Andrew Ker of Ferniehirst, Walter Scott of Harden,
and several others, all avowed partisans of the outlawed earl. A great
variety of proclamations were at this time issued against Bothwell and his
adherents, and a number of persons were denounced rebels for resetting him
and his accomplices. The Criminal Records of the period are full of such
denunciations, and even the town of Kelso did not escape prosecution for the
same offence. On the 12th of May 1593, the inhabitants, with only
one exception, a person named William Lauder, were ordered to find security
that they shall ‘satisfy his Majesty’s will in silver, providing the same
shall not exceed the sum of two thousand merks.’ On the 17th,
judgment was given against them, and they were ordered to pay a fine of
‘seventeen hundred merks, and to find caution in the Baikis of Secret
Counsall that they shall not resett, supplie, or intercommune with the said
sometime earl or his accomplices, furnish them meit, drink, house, nor
harbery, under whatsomever collour or pretence, under the penalty of two
thousand punds.’ [Pitcairn’s Criminal Trials, vol. i. part
ii.] On the 1st June of that year (1593) ‘the sometime earl,’ and
four others, namely, Gilbert Pennycuik, John Rutherford of Hunthill, elder,
Thomas Rutherford of Hunthill, younger, and Simon Armstrong, younger of
Whitehaugh, were summoned ‘for certane crymes of treasone and lesemajestic,’
at the instance of Mr. David Macgill and Mr. John Skene, ‘advocates to our
sovereign lord.’ In this summons, which is a long document in Latin, the
invasion of the palaces of Holyroodhouse and Falkland, and other matters,
are all recapitulated. On this occasion the previous ‘summons and
executions’ were produced, with letters of relaxation, dated March 16,
1592-3, bearing that Bothwell had been ‘relaxit frae the process of horning
led against him.’ On the 21st of July, the earl was ‘called of
new,’ as it is termed, at the window of the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, and
failing of course to appear, he was solemnly declared a traitor, his
property was confiscated, and his armorial bearings were torn by the heralds
at the Cross in the presence of a great number of spectators.
Bothwell had still
many powerful friends, especially among the noblemen and gentlemen of his
own name of Stewart, and it is said that Queen Elizabeth herself interceded
with James for his pardon. The repeated proclamations against him, in which
he and his resetters were denounced with the utmost rigour, had excited a
vast sympathy in his favour, and many, especially the enemies of the court
favourites, viewed him as a persecuted individual. a number of his friends
held a meeting at Edinburgh, and it was resolved to take advantage of the
odium which Chancellor Maitland had recently incurred, to invite Bothwell to
appear before the king, and to ‘offer himself to his clemency and mercy.’
Accordingly, he was invited back to Scotland by the duke of Lennox, the earl
of Athole, and Lord Ochiltree, all noblemen of his own name, to whom he was
related. On the 24th July 1593, only three days after he had been
solemnly declared a traitor, this daring and rebellious peer seized the
gates of the palace of Holyroodhouse, and, accompanied by a person of the
name of Colville, brother of the laird of Easter Wemyss, was introduced into
the royal apartments with a numerous train of armed followers The king,
deserted by his attendants and incapable of resistance, called to Bothwell
to consummate his treasons by piercing his sovereign to the heart; but the
earl fell on his knee and implored pardon. James yielded from necessity to
his entreaties, and a few days afterwards he signed a capitulation, whereby
he pledged himself to grant him a remission of all past offences, to procure
a ratification of it in parliament, and to dismiss Chancellor Maitland from
his councils and presence. Bothwell, on his part, promised to withdraw from
the court, and, ‘by reason the original cause of his trouble was the
suspicion of witchcraft, he offered himself to trial by whomsoever of his
majesty’s subjects he should please to appoint upon the jury, and a short
day was assigned to that effect.’ The trial accordingly took place on 10th
August, when Bothwell was acquitted of consulting with witches against the
king’s life. That same night he slept at Holyroodhouse, and detected a plot
for the escape of the king to Falkland, which he prevented from being
carried into effect, and the next day he gave a banquet to his Majesty at
his house in Leith. He now became the leader of the English party and of the
Kirk. His enemies, Lord Home, Chancellor Maitland, or more property Lord
Thirlstane, the Master of Glammis, and Sir George Home, were banished the
court, and on the 26th July a proclamation was issued in favour
of the earl of Bothwell, his countess, James Douglas of Spott, and others,
charging the lieges that ‘nane of them tak upon hand to slander, murmur,
reproach, or backbite the said earl and his friends.’ His triumph, however,
was of short duration. On the 7th of September, at a convention
of the nobility and others at Stirling, called by the king, and which was
attended only by the duke of Lennox, the earls of Glencairn, Mar, Morton,
and Montrose, and Lords Hamilton, Lindsay, and Livingstone, with two or
three commissioners for the boroughs, his majesty entered into a long detail
about Bothwell and his proceedings, alleging that the earl kept him in
thraldom and captivity, that he had been compelled to grant him a remission
of his offences against law and his own free will, and he desired that they
should by their general votes acknowledge the same. The convention, however,
unanimously answered that ‘captive he could not be esteemed, seeing that
since his last talking with Bothwell at Holyroodhouse he had been at
Falkland, next at Edinburgh, and last of all at extreme liberty and pastime
for the space of many days in the palace of Hamilton, unaccompanied by any
suspected person on the part of Bothwell;’ and they farther declared that
they really ‘could not condescend to his majesty on that point.’ All that
the king could persuade them to sanction was a declaration, on the 13th
of September, that ‘his Highness, as a free prince, may at his peasure xall
sik of his nobilitie, counsall, officers, and others gude subjects as his
Highness has, or best shall like;’ and Bothwell and certain individuals were
ordered not to approach nearer the king than ten miles without the royal
permission. A memorial signed by the king was also transmitted to the earl,
who was then residing in Edinburgh, intimating that if he would renounce the
former conditions extorted by force in Holyroodhouse, being a breach of the
royal prerogative, a remission would be granted for all past offences, which
would be ratified by the parliament to be held on the 20th of
November, the earl finding security that he would forthwith retire out of
the kingdom, and remain ‘furth of the same’ during the king’s pleasure. The
king at the same time wrote to him to proceed to the prior of Blantyre and
Sir Robert Melville, to confer with them on the subject; but, fearing that
some plot was concocted against him, his lordship sent an excuse. On the
121th October he was served with a summons to appear before the king and
council on the 25th, to answer sundry charges of high treason;
and, having failed to appear, he was denounced a rebel. On the 11th
of December he was put to the horn, and repeated proclamations were issued
against him. On the day last named Birrel mentions that he fought a duel
with Ker of Cessford. Retiring to the borders, the earl succeeded in raising
a force of five hundred moss-troopers, with which he entered Kelso on the
evening of the 1st of April, 1594, and on the following day he
marched to Dalkeith. At that time considerable excitement prevailed in the
kingdom, occasioned by some correspondence which had been carried on by the
earls of Huntly, Errol, and other roman Catholic noblemen and gentlemen,
with Spain, the chief object of which was believed to be the subversion of
the Protestant religion in Scotland, and the restoration of popery. Of this
Bothwell cleverly took advantage to create a feeling in his favour. While at
Dalkeith, he issued a long proclamation, in which he made the correspondence
with Spain a prominent topic of grievance. He also addressed letters to the
English ambassadors on the subject, and one to his ‘right reverend and
loving brethren,’ as he calls them, ‘the synodal assemblie of ministers then
convenit at Dunbar.’ On the 3d of April he proceeded to Leith with between
four and five hundred troopers, accompanied by Lord Ochiltree and several
partisans of inferior rank. On hearing that the earl was at Keith, the king
proceeded to St. Giles’ church, and addressing the people he declared to
them that if they would assist him against Bothwell he would banish all the
Catholic lords. A large body of the citizens mustered at his call, and
headed by James in person, marched to Leith. Bothwell had drawn up his men
in battle-array on the south-west side of that town, but as soon as he
perceived the force under the king advancing from Edinburgh, he retreated to
Hawkhill near Restalrig castle, which overlooks Lochend, and then at an easy
pace he passed through the village of Restalrig, and proceeded to the mill
at Wester Duddingstone, about a mile and a half distant. Thence he continued
his march with the utmost leisure to the little village of Niddry Marischal,
on the property of Wauchope of Niddry, whose eldest son was one of his chief
supporters, and had been often prosecuted on his account. Ascending an
eminence called the Wowmat, he dismissed his followers; (according to
Douglas they abandoned him;) reserving only a few. Lord Home, the Master of
Glammis, and others, were commanded by the king to pursue the earl with both
horse and foot. On their approach to Niddry Green, they sent forward three
gentlemen to view the ground, but being perceived, the earls watches fell
upon them, and compelled them to return to their friends. Bothwell and his
few attendants immediately charged Home and Glammis, with great impetuosity,
and forced them and their followers to flee in every direction. He pursued
them till within half-a-mile of the spot where the king stood. The foot fled
to the neighbouring castle of Craigmillar, upon the field in front of which
Bothwell sounded a retreat, in sight of the king and his supporters, and
marched back unmolested to the Wowmat, whence he proceeded to Dalkeith,
where he remained during the night, and on the following day betook himself
to the south From Birrel’s Diary and Pitcairn’s Criminal Trials, it appears
that in 1594, several persons were executed for receiving and entertaining
Bothwell, among whom was the governor of Blackness castle, who was accused
of agreeing with the earl to receive the king as a prisoner in that
fortress. On the 16th September the same year a proclamation was
issued, declaring it treasonable to have any intercourse with his lordship,
and on the 30th of that month, another appeared, rehearsing all
his treasons, and asserting that his ‘dissembled hypocrisy this three years
past had procured to him the favour of ower mony of people, by the quhilk he
was enabled to work all this insolencies against his Highness.’ His brother,
Hercules Stewart, suffered on the scaffold the same year.
Bothwell fled to
England, but Queen Elizabeth, in compliance with the earnest remonstrances
of James, obliged him to leave her kingdom. James had also influence enough
with the presbyterian ministers to induce them to excommunicate him. After
an abortive attempt to join Huntly and the Catholic lords in another
rebellion, the earl fled to Caithness, whence he was compelled to retire for
safety to France, and afterwards to Spain and Italy, where he renounced the
protestant faith, and lived many years in obscurity and indigence, plunging
into the lowest and most infamous debauchery. He died at Naples, in the year
1624, in great misery. Before engaging in his treasonable attempts, he had
made over his large estates to his stepson, Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch,
in whose family then remained long after the earl’s attainder. Bothwell had
three sons and three daughters. Francis, the eldest son, obtained a
rehabilitation under the great seal of Scotland 30th July 1614,
which was ratified by act of parliament 28th June 1633. the
titles were never restored, but according to Scott o Scotstarvet, the last
ear of Bothwell’s eldest son received from the earl of Buccleuch, by decret
arbitral of Charles the First, the extensive estates of his father, which
he sold to the Winton family, having married Lady Isabella Seton, only
daughter of Robert first earl of Winton. The offspring of this marriage was
a son and a daughter. The son Charles is stated, on the authority of Scott
of Scotstarvet, to have been a trooper in the civil wars. He was served heir
to his father in 1647. His name and that of his sister, Margaret, are
entered in the parish register of Tranent, from which is appears that he was
born in April 1618. John, the second son of the earl, was the last
commendator of Coldingham, and he got the lands and baronies which belonged
to that priory united into a barony in 1621. On the 2d June 1638 his son
Francis had a charter of the burgh of barony of Coldingham. In the Memoirs
of Captain Creighton [Swift’s Works, vol. xiv. p. 297] it is stated
that Francis Stewart, grandson of the earl of Bothwell, was a private
gentleman in the Horse Guards in the reign of Charles the Second, by whom he
was made captain of dragoons, and he commanded the cavalry on the left in
the action against the Covenanters at Bothwell Bridge in 1679. The reader of
Scott’s works will readily remember the Sergeant Bothwell of Old Mortality.
Henry Stewart, the earl’s third son, had also a charter of the lordship of
Coldingham in 1621. Of the earl’s three daughters, Elizabeth, the eldest,
married James, second son of William first Lord Cranstoun, and was the
mother of William the third lord. Margaret, the second, became the wife of
Alan, fifth Lord Cathcart, without issue; and Helen, the youngest, married
Macfarlane of Macfarlane, by whom she had several children.
__________
The surname of
BOTHWELL is of great antiquity, being derived from the lordship of Bothwell
in Lanarkshire. The name Botheville, Bothel, Boethwell, Bothell, or Bothwell,
has been supposed to have originated in the Celtic Both, an eminence,
and wall, a castle, the castle of Bothwell standing considerably
elevated above the Clyde. A more probably conjecture is, that it is a
compound of the two Celtic words Both, in its signification of a
dwelling and ael or hyl, a river, which is strictly
descriptive of Bothwell castle, as it is also of the castle of Bothell or
Bothall in Northumberland, situated on the Wentsbeck. In the reign of
Alexander the Second the barony of Bothwell was held by Walter Olifard,
justiciary of Lothian, who died in 1242. The writer of the genealogy of the
Bothwells, Lords Holyroodhouse, in the Appendix to ‘Nisbet’s System of
Heraldry,’ (vol. ii. p. 242,) quoting the Chartulary of the Episcopal See of
Glasgow, thinks it highly probable that the Olifards got the barony of
Bothwell by the marriage of an heir female of the surname of Bothwell. [See
OLIPHANT, surname of.] it afterwards passed by marriage to the Morays or
Murrays. In the time of King Edward the First it was given to Aymer de
Valence, earl of Pembroke, appointed by him governor of the south part of
Scotland. Upon his forfeiture, it was bestowed by King Robert the Bruce on
Andrew Moray, lord of Bothwell, who married Christian, sister of that
monarch.
The ancestor of
the noble family of Bothwell, Lords Holyroodhouse, was John de Bothwill, who
received from King David the Second a charter (dated at Dundee, 31st
July 1369), in which he is styled his beloved cousin, of ten pounds sterling
and four chalders of grain yearly, due to the king from the thanage of Doun
in Banffshire, for his life, and another 19th April 1371, of all
his majesty’s lands of the park of Gargwoll in the same shire, also for his
life. The family of Bothwell fixed their residence in Edinburgh, where they
ranked among the principal citizens, and near which city they had a
considerable estate in lands. Richard Bothwell was provost of Edinburgh in
the reign of King James the Third. He married Elizabeth, daughter of William
Sommerville of Plean in Stirlingshire, by whom he had two sons and a
daughter. The second son, Richard Bothwell, was prebendary of Glasgow and
rector of Ashkirk, doctor of the civil and canon laws, and provost of the
church of St. Mary in the Fields, within the walls of the city of Edinburgh.
He was director of the Chancery in the reign of King James the Fifth, by
whom he was appointed a lord of session, at its first institution, 25th
May, 1532. On account of his advanced age the king dispensed with his
attendance, 7th march 1539, but reserved to him his salary and
privileges. [Haig and Brunton’s Senators of College of Justice.] He
died in 1547. The daughter, Margaret, married Sir Duncan Forrester of
Garden, comptroller to James the Fifth in 1503.
Francis Bothwell,
the eldest son, was likewise appointed a senator of the College of Justice
on its first institution, on the temporal side, while his brother, Dr.
Richard Bothwell, was named on the spiritual side. Francis had a charter of
two pieces of waste ground in Edinburgh, and served the office of provost of
that city in 1535. He married Janet, one of the two daughters and coheirs of
Patrick Richardson of Meldrumsheugh, burgess of Edinburgh, with whom he got
lands in the neighbouring regality of Broughton. He had two sons and a
daughter, namely, Richard, provost of Edinburgh in the reign of Queen Mary,
whose male line is extinct, and Adam, the celebrated bishop of Orkney, of
whom a notice follows. Janet, the daughter, married Sir Archibald Napier of
Merchiston, and became the mother of John Napier, the inventor of the
logarithms.
Adam Bothwell, the
second son, was preferred to the see of Orkney by Queen Mary, 8th
October 1562, after being duly elected by the chapter, and on 13th
November 1565, he was appointed a lord of session. He was one of the four
Scottish bishops who embraced the Reformation, and as he had in his own
person the property of the bishopric of Orkney, he made an excambion of the
greater part of it with Robert Stewart, abbot of Holyroodhouse, one of the
natural brothers of the queen, for his abbey, which was ratified by a
charter under the great seal of Scotland, 25th September 1569. He
was one of the eight bishops who signed the bond granted by the nobility to
the earl of Bothwell, engaging to support his marriage with Queen Mary (see
ante), and, as already stated, he performed the marriage ceremony
between them according to the rites of the protestant church. He was one of
the first to desert the party of the queen, and only two months after her
fatal marriage with Bothwell, he placed the crown on the head of her infant
son. At the meeting of the General Assembly in December of that same year
(1567), “the haill kirk found that he transgressed the act of the kirk in
marrying the divorced adulterer; and, therefore, deprived him of all
functione of the ministrie, conforme to the tenor of the act made thereupon,
ay and whill [until] the kirk be satisfied of the sclander committed be
him.” [Booke of the Universall Kirk of Scotland, p. 71.] In the
Assembly held in July 1568, the bishop made due ‘obedience and submission,’
and engaged “upon some Sonday to make ane sermone in the kirk of
Halyrudehouse, and in the end thereof to confess his offence in marrying the
queene woith the earle of Bothwell,” whereupon the kirk restored him again
to the ministry. The same year (1568) the ancient barony of Broughton and
the surrounding lands comprehended within its jurisdiction, were granted to
him by James the Sixth, but in 1587 he surrendered them to the Crown, in
favour of Sir Lewis Bellenden of Auchnoul, lord-justice-clerk. The bishop
was much employed in matters of state, and in September 1568, he accompanied
the Regent Moray to York as one of the commissioners against Queen Mary. For
his opposition to the Regent Morton, he was for a short time imprisoned in
the castle of Stirling. He died 23d August, 1593, at the age of 67, and was
interred in the nave of the Abbey Church of Holyrood, where a monument was
erected to his memory. [Keith’s Scottish Bishops.] This monument is
still to be seen in the ruined chapel, attached to the second pillar from
the great east window that once overlooked the high altar. By his wife,
Margaret, daughter of John Murray of Touchadam, he had three sons and one
daughter, the latter married to Sir William Sandilands of St. Monance. A
vignette view of the bishop’s mansion in Brye’s Close, High Street,
Edinburgh, (now the warehouse and property of Messrs, Clapperton and Co.,)
as seen from the north, is given in Wilson’s Memorials of Edinburgh,
vol. ii. p. 7.
A tradition exists
that the heroine of the touching ballad, named “Lady Ann Bothwell’s Lament,’
beginning
‘Balow, my boy, lie still and sleip!
It grieves me sair to see thee weip;’
was a daughter of Adam
Bothwell, bishop of Orkney. Mr. Robert chambers, in his Scottish ballads,
speaking of this pathetic lament, has committed a mistake when he says that
the bishop was raised to a temporal peerage, under the title of Lord
Holyroodhouse. It was his son, and not himself, who was the first Lord
Holyroodhouse. His daughter, anna, it is said, was betrayed, when very young
and by the aid of her nurse, into a disgraceful connexion with the Hon. Sir
Alexander Erskine, third son of John, seventh earl of Mar, of whom a
portrait still exists by Jamieson, in which he is represented in a military
dress, with a cuirass and scarf. He is said to have been one of the
handsomest men of his time, with a noble and expressive countenance. The
desertion of his unfortunate victim was believed by his contemporaries to
have exposed him to the signal vengeance of heaven. He was blown up, along
with the earl of Haddington, and about eighty other persons of distinction,
in the castle of Dunglas, Berwickshire, in 1640, the powder magazine having
been ignited by a servant boy, out of revenge against his master. In the
ballad, supposed to have been written by the heroine herself, who was at one
time conjectured to have been the countess of Bothwell, and another a Miss
Boswell of Auchinleck, the following verses seem prophetic of his fate:
“Balow, my boy; they father’s fled,
When he the thriftless son has play’d.
Of vows and oaths forgetful, he
Prefers the wars to thee and me.
But now, perhaps, thy curse and mine
Makes him eat acorns with the swine.
“Yet I can’t chuse, but ever will
Be loving to thy father still;
Where’er he gae, where’er he ride,
My luve with him doth still abide.
In weel or wae, where’er he gae,
My heart can ne’er depart from frae.
“Then curse him not; perhaps now he,
Stung with remorse, is blessing thee;
Perhaps at death; for who can tell,
Whether the judge of heaven or hell
By some proud foe, has struck the blow,
And laid the dear deceiver low.
“I wish I were into the bounds
Where he lies smothered in his wounds –
Repeating, as he pants for air,
My name, whom once he called his fair.
No woman’s yet so fierxely set,
But she’ll forgive, though not forget
Balow, my boy; lie still and sleip!
It grieves me sair to see thee weip.”
These two last verses,
however, are not to be found in the version of the ballad in Bishop Percy’s
collection, which differs considerably from that in chambers’ Scottish
Ballads.
John Bothwell, the
eldest son of the bishop, designed of Alhammer, succeeded his father as
commendator of the abbey of Holyroodhouse, and was appointed a lord of
session, 2d July 1593. Enjoying the favour and confidence of King James the
Sixth, he was sworn of his privy council, and accompanied him to England in
1603. On the journey he received the keys of the town of Berwick, in his
majesty’s name. He was created a peer by the title of ‘Lord Halyrudhous,’ by
charter dated at Whitehall, 20th December 1607. to him and the
heirs make of his body, whom failing, to the heirs male of Adam, bishop of
Orkney, his father, whom failing, to his own lawful and nearest heirs. His
lordship married Mary, daughter of Sir John Carmichael of Carmichael, with
whom he got twelve thousand marks of portion, and died in November 1609,
leaving an only son, John, second Lord Holyroodhouse, who died, unmarried,
in 1635. The title remained dormant for ninety-nine years.
William Bothwell,
third son of Adam bishop of Orkney, had a son, Adam Bothwell, whose
grandson, Alexander Bothwell of Glencorse, as lineally descended from Sir
Richard Bothwell, provost of Edinburgh, the bishop’s elder brother, served
himself heir before the sheriffs of Edinburgh, 4th February,
1704, to his grandfather, Adam Bothwell of Whelpside, grandchild of Sir
Francis, the provost, as also to the second Lord Holyroodhouse. He married
Janet, daughter of John Trotter of Mortonhall, by whom he had a son, Henry
Bothwell of Glencorse, who was served heir to John Lord Holyroodhouse, 8th
February 1734, and presented to the king a petition claiming the title. This
petition was by his majesty’s commands laid before the House of Lords, 20th
March 1734, but no determination was ever come to respecting it. He
nevertheless assumed the title, and died in the Canongate, Edinburgh, 10th
February 1755. By his wife, Mary, daughter of Lord Niel Campbell of
Ardmaddie, second son of Archibald marquis of Argyle, he had five sons and
four daughters, None of his sons had make issue, and the peerage may now be
said to be extinct. |