ROSS, the name of
a clan, called in Gaelic Clan Rosich na Gille Andras, or the offspring
of the followers of St. Andrew, one of the early chiefs having devoted
himself to that saint. The badge of the clan Ross was the juniper, and
in former times, when its chiefs were earls of Ross, they possessed a
large portion of the county of that name in the north of Scotland. Ross
of Pitcalnie is the representative of the ancient earls. The clan Ross
was one of the eighteen Highland clans that fought on Bruce’s side at
Bannockburn. In 1427 they could muster 2,000 fighting men; in 1715 but
300, and in 1745, 500.
_____
ROSS, Earl of, an ancient
territorial title in Scotland, the first who bore it being Malcolm, in
the reign of Malcolm the Maiden (1153-1165). Ferquhard, the second earl,
called Fearchar Mac an t-Sagairt, or son of the priest, at the head of
the tribes of Moray, repulsed Donald M’William, the son of Donald Bane,
when, soon after the accession of Alexander II. in 1214, that restless
chief made an inroad from Ireland into that province. In 1235 the earl
of Ross marched against the Gallowegians, who had appeared in arms in
support of the claims of Thomas, the illegitimate son of Alan the last
lord of Galloway, and defeated them with great slaughter. In September
1237 he witnessed the treaty entered into by Alexander II. with Henry
III. of England at York. This earl was the founder of the abbey of Fearn
in Ross-shire.
In the time of William,
third earl of Ross, about 1250, an insurrection broke out against him of
some of the people of his own province, and having apprehended their
leader, he imprisoned him at Dingwall. In retaliation, the Highlanders
seized upon the earl’s second son at Balnagowan, but were pursued by the
Monroes and the Dingwalls, and after a sanguinary conflict the youth was
rescued. In requital, the earl made various grants of land to those who
had so bravely assisted him. He was one of the Scots nobles who entered
into an agreement, 8th March 1258, with Lewellyn, prince of Wales, that
the Scots and Welsh should only make peace with England by mutual
consent. He sat in the parliament at Scone, 5th February 1283-4, when
the succession to the throne of Scotland was settled on Margaret of
Norway.
His son, William, fourth
earl, was one of the magnates Scotiae, and was present in the convention
of Brigham, 12th March 1290, when the marriage of Queen Margaret with
Prince Edward of England was proposed. In 1292 he was one of the
nominees on the part of Baliol in his competition for the crown, and he
swore fealty to Edward I., at Berwick, 3d August of the same year. He
was in the Scots army at the battle of Dunbar, 28th April 1296, and on
its defeat he took refuge in Dunbar castle, which, at that period, was
considered the key of Scotland in the south-east border. The day
following, King Edward, with the main body of the English army, arrived
before the castle, and compelled the garrison to surrender. The earl of
Ross was sent a prisoner to London, but soon obtained his release. He
was one of the witnesses to the treaty of Bruce with Haco, king of
Norway, 28th October 1312. With his clan he was at the battle of
Bannockburn, and he signed the memorable letter to the Pope in 1320,
asserting the independence of Scotland. He had two sons, Hugh, his
successor, and John, who with his wife, Margaret, second daughter of
Alexander Comyn, fourth earl of Buchan, got the half of her father’s
whole lands in Scotland. He had also a daughter, Isabel, who became the
wife of Edward Bruce, earl of Carrick and king of Ireland, brother of
Robert the Bruce, 1st June 1317.
Hugh, the next earl of
Ross, fell, in 1333, at Halidonhill, the holy hill or mount (the
additional word hill is superfluous), so called from the supernatural
aid which Oswald king of Northumbria is said to have received in battle
with Cedwall, a noble British chief, and it was, in consequence, long
known by the name of Heaven-field. Hugh’s successor, William, left no
male heir. His eldest daughter, Euphemia, married Sir Walter Lesley of
Lesley, Aberdeenshire, and had a son, Alexander, earl of Ross, and a
daughter, Margaret. Earl Alexander married a daughter of the regent
Albany, and his only child, Euphemia, countess of Ross, becoming a nun,
she resigned the earldom to her uncle John, earl of Buchan, Albany’s
second son. Her aunt Margaret had married Donald, second lord of the
Isles, and that potent chief assumed in her right the title of earl of
Ross, and took possession of the earldom. This led to a contest with the
regent Albany, and as Donald asserted his claim with all the clans of
the Hebrides to back it, the battle of Harlaw in 1411 was the result.
On the death of the earl
of Buchan and Ross at the battle of Verneuil in France in 1424, the
earldom of Ross reverted to the crown. James I., on his return from his
long captivity in England, restored it to the heiress of line, the
mother of Alexander lord of the Isles, who, in 1420, had succeeded his
father, Donald, above mentioned. In 1425, Alexander, lord of the Isles
and master of Ross, was one of the jury on the trial of Murdoch, duke of
Albany, and his sons, and the aged earl of Lennox. Having become
embroiled with his kinsmen, the descendants of the first lord of the
Isles by his first wife, and been a participator in various feuds and
disturbances which had thrown the Hebrides into confusion, he was, in
1427, summoned, with other Highland chiefs, to a parliament held at
Inverness by James I. On his arrival there, however, he and the other
chiefs were, to the number of forth, by a stratagem of the king,
arrested and confined in separate prisons. The countess of Ross, his
mother, was also apprehended, and imprisoned at the same time, on a
charge of encouraging her son in his lawless proceedings. Some of the
imprisoned chiefs were executed, but the greater part, and among them
the lord of the Isles, were soon set at liberty. IN 1429 he summoned
together his vassals, both of Ross and the Isles, and at the head of
10,000 men, wasted the crown lands in the vicinity of Inverness, and
burned the town itself to the ground. At the head of some troops, which
he had promptly collected, the king hastened, by forced marches, to
Lochaber, and surprised the earl. The mere display of the royal banner
won over the clan Chattan and the clan Cameron from his support, and he
himself, suddenly attacked and hotly pursued, was compelled to sue, but
in vain, for peace. Driven to despair, he resolved to cast himself on
the royal, mercy, and on Easter Sunday, on the eve of a solemn festival,
with his legs and arms quite bare and covered only with a plaid, he
rushed into the king’s presence, amidst his assembled court in the
church of Holyrood, and surrendering his sword, which he held by the
point in his hand, fell upon his knees, and abjectly implored his
sovereign’s clemency. His life was spared, but he was committed to close
ward for two years in the castle of Tantallon. His mother, the countess,
was also kept in close confinement in the ancient monastery of Inchcolm,
on the small island of the name in the Firth of Forth (Fordun, vol. iv.
p. 1286.) they were both released after about fourteen months’
imprisonment, and about the same time he succeeded his mother as earl of
Ross. IN 1431, he received a free pardon in parliament for all his
crimes, and for some time afterwards he conducted himself peaceably, and
even rose into favour. During the minority of James II. he held the
office of justiciary of Scotland north of the Forth, and to punish the
chief of the clan Cameron for deserting him in his conflict with the
Crown in 1427, he forced him to fly to Ireland, and bestowed his
forfeited lands upon another. In 1445, the earl entered into a
treasonable league with the earls of Douglas and Crawford against the
infant possessor of the throne, but before his designs could be carried
into effect, he died in 1449, at his castle of Dingwall. From this
stronghold the charters, by which many of the ancient families in
Ross-shire held their lands from the earls of Ross, were dated, “apud
castrum nostrum de Dingwall.”
Alexander’s son, John,
the next earl of Ross and lord of the Isles, having joined the earl of
Douglas in his rebellion against James II., sent in 1455, to the western
coast of Scotland, an expedition of 5,000 men, under the command of his
near kinsman, Donald Balloch, lord of Isla. With this force he desolated
the whole coast from Innerkip to Bute, the Cumbrays, and the island of
Arran, but from the prudent precautions taken by the king to repel the
invaders, the loss was not very considerable. The summary of the damage
sustained is thus related in a contemporary record: “There was slain of
good men, fifteen; of women, two or three; of children, three of four.
The plunder included five or six hundred horse, ten thousand oxen and
kine, and more than a thousand sheep and goats. At the same time, they
burnt down several mansions in Innerkip around the church; harried all
Arran; stormed and leveled with the ground the castle of Brodick; and
waster, with fire and sword, the islands of the Cumbrays. They also
levied tribute upon Bute, carrying away a hundred bolls of malt, a
hundred marts, and a hundred marks of silver.” (Auchinleck Chronicle, p.
55.) The earl of Ross, on his part, with about 500 followers, made an
incursion into Sutherland, and encamped before the castle of Skibo. He
was, however, compelled to retreat into Ross, whence he sent a party of
his men to Strathfleet in Sutherland, to lay waste the country. The earl
of Sutherland’s brother, at the head of a strong force, attacked them on
the sands of Strathfleet, and overthrew them with great slaughter. The
earl of Ross afterwards made his submission, and was received into the
royal favour. We find him in 1457 one of the wardens of the marches. IN
1460, previous to the siege of Roxburgh castle, he offered, at the head
of 3,000 armed vassals, to march in the van of the royal army, so as to
sustain the first shock of conflict from an expected invasion of the
English, and was ordered, with his followers, to remain, as a sort of
body-guard, near the king’s person. On the accession of James III.,
however, his rebellious disposition again showed itself. Edward IV. of
England having entered into a negotiation with him to detach him from
his allegiance, on the 19th October 1461, the earl of Ross, Donald
Balloch, and his son, John of Isla, held a council of their vassals and
dependents at Astornish, at which it was agreed to send ambassadors to
England to treat with Edward, for assistance to effect the entire
conquest of Scotland. The result has already been related (see article,
The Lord of the Isles). On the forfeiture of the lord of the Isles in
1476, the earldom of Ross became vested in the crown.
Hugh Ross of Rarichies,
brother of the last earl of Ross, obtained a charter of the lands of
Balnagowan in 1374, and on him by clan law the chiefship devolved. In
the beginning of the eighteenth century, Donald Ross of Balnagowan, the
last of his race, sold that estate to the Hon. General Ross of Hawkhead,
who, although bearing the same surname, was not in any way related to
him.
In February 1778, Munro
Ross of Pitcalnie presented a petition to the king, claiming the earldom
of Ross, as male descendant of the above-named Hugh Ross of Rarichies.
This petition was sent to the House of Lords, but no decision appears to
have followed upon it.
_____
ROSS, Duke of, a title
possessed by Prince James, second son of James III. By royal charter
dated 23d January 1480-1, when he was only in his fifth year, the whole
lands of the earldom were conferred on him, and on 29th January 1487-8,
he was created duke of Ross, marquis of Ormond, earl of Edirdale, and
lord of Brechin and Navar. Entering into holy orders, he became in 1497
archbishop of St. Andrews, and went to Rome, where he was confirmed by
the Pope. On his return, he received from his brother, James IV., the
abbacies of Holyrood and Dunfermlinein commendam. He also held, in the
same way, the monastery of Arbroath, IN 1502 he was appointed
lord-high-chancellor of the kingdom, but died in the beginning of 1504,
aged twenty-eight, and was interred in the chancel of the cathedral of
St. Andrews. He is celebrated by Ariosto (Orlando Furioso, canto X.) in
some lines, which Hoole has translated:
No form so
graceful can our eyes behold,
For Nature made him and destroy’d the mould’
The title of the Duke of Ross he bears,
No chief like him in dauntless mind compares.
The next who bore the
title of duke of Ross was Alexander, the posthumous son of James IV.,
born 30th April 1514, died December 18, 1515.
Lord Darnley, the husband
of Queen Mary, was by her created earl of Ross, by charter dated 15th
May 1565. One of the titles conferred on Charles I., at his baptism, 23d
December 1600, was earl of Ross, and the lands of the earldom which were
possessed by his mother, Anne, queen of James VI., were conferred upon
him, after her death, by charter, dated 20th June 1619.
_____
Ross, lord of Hawkhead, a
title of the earl of Glasgow, by which he holds his seat in the house of
lords. The title had been previously held, for nearly three centuries,
by a different family, originally from England, the first of whom,
Godfrey de Ros, came into Scotland in the twelfth century, He belonged
to a Norman family which took their designation from the lordship of Ros
in Yorkshire. From Richard de Morville he received the lands of
Stewarton in Ayrshire, and many of that potent baron’s charters were
witnessed by him and his sons, James, Reginald, and Peter de Ros. His
descendant, Sir John Ross of Hawkhead, was that Sir John Ross, who, in
1449, with James Douglas, brother of the earl of Douglas, and James
Douglas, brother of Douglas of Lochleven, formed one of the combatants
against three Burgundian knights, in presence of James II. and his
court, and who, in 1673, was one of the ambassadors to England.
The son of this doughty
knight, Sir John Ross, first Lord Ross of Hawkhead, was one of the
barons of parliament, 3d February 1489-90, and Ross de Halkhead is
inserted among the comini barones in the parliament, 11th March 1503-4.
He appears to have died in 1506. His son, John, second Lord Ross of
Hawkhead, fell at Flodden, leaving a son, Ninian, third Lord Ross. The
latter was one of the Scots nobles who, in 1515, were sent ambassadors
to France, to endeavour to get Scotland included in the pacification
with England, and in 1584 he ratified a treaty with the English. By a
first wife, a daughter of John, earl of Lennox, he had a son, Robert,
master of Ross, who was killed at the battle of Pinkie in 1547, in the
lifetime of his father. By a second wife, Elizabeth, the widowed
countess of Errol, daughter of the first Lord Ruthven, he had another
son, James, fourth Lord Ross, who was one of the jury on the mock trial
of the earl of Bothwell in April 1567, and entered into the association
in support of Queen Mary at Hamilton, 8th May 1568. He was one of the
lords of the queen’s party who subscribed the letter to Queen Elizabeth
of Mary’s behalf, in March 1570. He died in April 1581. The fourth lord
had, with two daughters, two sons, Robert, fifth lord, who died in
October 1695, and Sir William Ross of Muiriston, who carried on the line
of the family.
The fifth lord’s son,
James, sixth Lord Ross, married Margaret, eldest daughter of Walter,
first Lord Scott of Buccleuch, afterwards countess of Eglinton, and had,
with three daughters, three sons, James, seventh Lord Ross, who voted
against the five articles of Perth in the parliament of 1621; William,
eighth Lord Ross; and Robert, ninth Lord Ross, who all died unmarried;
the first in March 1636, the second in 1640, and the third in August
1648. On the death of the ninth lord, the title and estates devolved on
the heir male, Sir William Ross of Muiriston, appointed sheriff
principal of Renfrewshire in 1646, son of Sir William Ross of Muiriston,
above mentioned.
William, tenth lord, was
colonel of foot in the counties of Ayr and Renfrew in 1648, and one of
the committee of the Estates in 1649. In 1654 he was fined by Cromwell
£3,000 sterling, and died in 1656. His son, George, eleventh Lord Ross,
was, at the Restoration, sworn a privy councilor, and appointed
lieutenant-colonel of the royal regiment of guards. He died in 1682. He
married first, Lady Grizel Cochrane, only daughter of the first earl of
Dundonald, by whom he had a son, William, twelfth lord, and a daughter,
the Hon. Grizel Ross, the wife of Sir Alexander Gilmour of Craigmillar,
baronet, with issue. By a second wife, Lady Jean Ramsay, eldest daughter
of the second earl of Dalhousie, afterwards viscountess of Oxfurd, he
had a son, the Hon. Charles Ross, who purchased Balnagowan. This
gentleman, an officer in the army, entered heartily into the Revolution,
but engaged in the plot of Sir James Montgomery of Skelmorlie in 1690,
for the restoration of the abdicated family, for which he was committed
to the tower of London. In 1693 he was one of the lessees of the pool
tax, and in 1695 he became colonel of the 5th, or Royal Irish regiment
of dragoons. Elected M.P. for Ross-shire, in 1707, he took an active
part in the debates of the House of Commons, in support of the Tory
administration. In 1712 he was promoted to the rank of general in the
army. On the accession of George I. in 1714, he was deprived of the
command of the Royal Irish regiment of dragoons. In 1720 he was promoted
to the rank of general in the army. On the accession of George I. in
1714, he was deprived of the command of the Royal Irish regiment of
dragoons. In 1720 he was one of the secret committee of the House of
Commons to inquire into the conduct of the South Sea directors, and
having made a complaint against Mr. Vernon, M.P. for Whitchurch, for
making corrupt application to him on behalf of Mr. Aislabie, one of the
directors, that gentleman was expelled parliament, 12th May 1721, and
General Ross received the thanks of the house. In 1729, soon after the
accession of George II., he was restored to the command of his regiment.
He died unmarried at Bath, 5th August 1732. He had a sister, the Hon.
Jean Ross, who married the sixth earl of Dalhousie, with issue.
William, the twelfth
lord, born about 1656, succeeded his father in 1682, and entered
zealously into the Revolution of 1689. He was a privy councilor to King
William and afterwards to Queen Anne, and in 1704 was
lord-high-commissioner to the Church of Scotland. He was also one of the
lords of the treasury, and a commissioner for the Union, of which treaty
he was a staunch promoter. At the general election in 1715 he was chosen
one of the sixteen Scots representative peers, and the same year was
appointed lord-lieutenant of Renfrewshire. He died 15th March 1738. He
was four times married. By his first wife, Agnes, daughter and heiress
of Sir John Wilkie of Fouldean, Berwickshire, he had a son, George,
thirteenth Lord Ross, and three daughters. 1st Euphemia, countess of
Kilmarnock, mother of that earl of Kilmarnock, who was beheaded on
Towerhill for his share in the rebellion of 1745. 2d, Mary, duchess of
Athol; and 3d, the Hon. Grizel Ross, wife of James Lockhart of Carstairs,
Lanarkshire, baronet, with issue. None of his lordship’s other wives had
issue, except Lady Anne Hay, eldest daughter of the second marquis of
Tweeddale, by whom he had a daughter, Anne, who died unmarried.
George, thirteenth lord,
was appointed one of the commissioners of excise in Scotland, 24th
November 1726, and one of the commissioners of the customs, 21st
September 1730. He succeeded his father in 1738, and made a settlement
of his estates, 17th June 1751, on his son and the heirs male of his
body, and failing them on his daughters, Jane, the wife of John Mackye
of Polgowan, advocate, and M.P., who took the name of Ross, but had no
issue; Elizabeth, who married the third earl of Glasgow, with issue; and
Mary, who died unmarried, and the heirs male of their bodies, remainder
to his nearest heirs and assigns. He died 17th June 1754, in his 73d
year. By his wife, Lady Elizabeth Kerr, third daughter of the second
marquis of Lothian, he had, with the three daughters already mentioned,
three sons; 1. William, fourteenth Lord Ross; 2. the Hon. Charles Ross,
who, on the death of his grand-uncle, General Ross, in August 1732,
inherited the estate of Balnagowan. In 1741 he was elected M.P. for
Ross-shire. He was an officer in the army, and fell at the battle of
Fontenoy, 30th April 1745, unmarried. His untimely fate was commemorated
by Collins in one of his beautiful odes. Balnagowan devolved on his
father. 3. The Hon. George Ross, who died without issue.
William, 14th lord, was,
when master of Ross, an officer in the royal army, commanded by the earl
of Loudoun at Inverness in 1745. In the attempt to surprise Prince
Charles Edward at Moy in February 1746, he was thrown down by the
cavalry in their flight, and much hurt. He declared that he had been in
many perils, but never found himself in such a grievous condition as on
that day. He succeeded his father in June 1754, but possessed the title
little more than two months, as he died 19th August the same year, aged
34, unmarried, when the title became extinct.
The estate of Balnagowan,
after an ineffectual opposition from Sir Alexander Gilmour, went to his
lordship’s cousin, Sir James Lockhart, second baronet of Carstairs. The
fifth baronet of the Lockhart family, Admiral Sir John Lockhart, assumed
the name of Ross, and the estate of Carstairs being sold in 1762, he
adopted the designation of Balnagowan, by which the family is now known.
The admiral’s eldest son, Lieutenant-general Sir Charles Ross, sixth
baronet, married, first, Matilda Theresa, a countess of the Holy Roman
Empire, the daughter and heiress of General Count James Lockhart of
Carnwath, and by her had a son, who died in childhood, and a daughter,
Matilda. He married, secondly, Mary, eldest daughter of the second
duchess of Leinster, with issue. His brother, Lieutenant-colonel. John
Ross of the Coldstream Guards, was killed at the battle of Talavera. The
sixth baronet’s eldest son, Sir Charles William Augustus Ross, seventh
baronet, born in 1812, succeeded his father 8th February 1814. He
married his cousin, Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Colonel Robert Ross of
the 4th dragoon guards, with issue.
_____
The family of Ross of
Dalton, Dumfries-shire, and Ross House, Shropshire, are descended from
Randolph Ross, second son of John, second Lord Ross, who fell at Flodden,
and brother of Ninian, third Lord Ross.
_____
The ancient family of
Ross of Craigie, Perthshire, were hereditary governors of Spey castle in
Perth, till the Reformation, when the keys of the fortress were
surrendered, under protest, to the provost and council, by John Ross of
Craigie. This gentleman, one of the chief favourites of King James V.,
was taken prisoner by the English at the rout of Solway. On the 11th
September 1618, Mr. Thomas Ross, some time a minister, a son of the
laird of Craigie, was executed at the Cross of Edinburgh, for that while
studying at Oxford, he affixed upon the principal gate of one of the
colleges a libel against his own countrymen in England, likening them to
the seven lean kine of Egypt, and using many opprobrious terms against
them. The vice-chancellor of Oxford sent him to the king, who ordered
him down to Scotland. At his examination, he said that necessity drove
him to it, that he might procure some benefit from the king. He
confessed at his execution that he was a man of a proud spirit, but
thought the punishment greater than the fault (Calderwood’s Historie,
vol. vii. P. 336.)
General Patrick Ross of
Innernethie, descended from the Craigie line, by his wife Mary Clara
Maule, related to the Panmure family, had, with other issue,
Major-general Sir Patrick Ross, born 26th January 1778. He entered the
army in 1794, and served in India for nine years, as captain of the 22d
light dragoons. During the Peninsular war, he was lieutenant-colonel of
the 48th foot, and served in the Ionian islands for seven years as
lieutenant-colonel of the 75th foot. After being resident and commandant
of St. Maura and Zante, he served as major-general on the staff at Curfu,
and in 1819 was created a knight grand commander of the order of St.
Michael and St. George. He was afterwards governor and
commander-in-chief of Antigua, Montserrat, and Barbuda, and on his
return to England in 1834 he was made a knight commander of the royal
order of the Guelphs of Hanover. In 1821 he attained the rank of
major-general, and in 1846 was appointed governor of St. Helena.
_____
The family of Ross of
Netherley in Kincardineshire, formerly of Rossie, Forfarshire, is a
branch of the Rosses, Lord Ross of Hawkhead, and therefore of Norman
lineage. In February 1853, Mr. Horatio Ross, at one period M.P. for
Aberdeen, having sold Rossie, purchased the estate of Netherley for
£33,000. He married a Miss MacRae of Inverness-shire, with issue. Rossie
castle, a handsome pile near Montrose, was erected by his father,
Hercules Ross of Rossie, in 1805.
ROSS, ALEXANDER, a voluminous miscellaneous writer, the author of
about thirty different works, in prose and poetry, most of which are now
forgotten, was born at Aberdeen, in 1590. After being episcopally
ordained, he left Scotland some time in the reign of Charles I., and was
appointed one of his majesty’s chaplains, and master of the free school
of Southampton. He retired from the latter a short time before his
death, and passed the remainder of his days in the family of the Henleys
of Hampshire, to whom he left his library and a sum of money concealed
among his books. Very little is recorded concerning him, except that,
notwithstanding the troubles of the times, he contrived to accumulate
much wealth, and died in 1654, leaving, among numerous other
benefactions, £200 to the town council of Aberdeen, for the foundation
of two bursaries, £50 to the poor of the parish of All-Saints, and £50
to the Bodleian Library. Ross appears to have enjoyed considerable
reputation in his day, and is alluded to by Butler, in his Hudibras, in
the well-known lines:
“There was an ancient sage
Philosopher,
And he had read Alexander Ross over.”
His works are:
Rerum Judsicarum, Libri 2. Carmine. Lond. 1617, 8vo. Lib. Tertius. Lond.
1619. Liber quartus. Lond. 1632, 4to.
Questions and Answers on the first vi. Chapters of Genesis, the first
book. Lond. 1620, 8vo.
Tonsor and Cutem Rasus. Lond. 1627, 8vo.
Three Decads of Divine Meditations, whereof each one containeth three
parts; 1. History; 2. An Allegory; 3. A Prayer; with a commendation of a
private countrey life. Lond. (without date, but about 1630,) 4to.
Commentum de Terrae motu circulari, refutatum, 2 libris, contra
Lansbergum et Carpentarium. Lond. 1634, fol.
Virgilii Evangelizantis Christiadus, libri xiii. Lond. 1634, 1638, 8vo.
A work much admired in its time, being a Cento on the Life of Christ,
collected from Virgil.
The New Planet no Planet; or, the Earth no wandering Star, against
Galilaeus and Copernicus. London, 1640, 1646, 4to.
Mel Heliconium; or, Poeticall Honey gathered out of the weeds of
Parnassus. The first book is divided into vii. Chapters, according to
the first vii. Letters of the alphabet, containing clviii. Fictions; out
of which are extracted many historicall, naturall, morall, politicall
and theologicall observations, both delightfull and usefull, with xlvii.
Meditations in verse. Lond. 1642, 12mo.
God’s House, or the House of Prayer vindicated from Profaneness; a
Sermon. Lond. 1642, 4to.
God’s House made a Don of Thieves; a Sermon. Lond. 1642, 4to.
Medicus Medicatus; or, the Physician’s Religion cured. Lond. 1645, 8vo.
Philosophical Touchstone; or, Observations on Sir Kenelm Digby’s
Discourse on the Nature of Bodies and of the reasonable Soul; and
Spinoza’s opinion of the Morality of the Soul briefly confuted. Lond.
1645, 4to.
The Picture of the Conscience. Lond. 1646, 12mo.
Mystagogus Poeticus, or the Muses’ Interpreter. Lond. 1647, 8vo. Of this
work the 6th edition was printed at London, 1675, 8vo.
Enchiridum Oratorium et Poeticum. Lond. 1650, 8vo.
Arcana Microcosmi; or the Hid Secrets of Man’s Body discovered in
Anatomical Duel between Aristotle and Galen; with a refutation of Thomas
Browne’s vulgar errors from Bacon’s Natural History, and W. Harvey’s
book De Generatione, &c. Lond. 1651, 12mo. 1652, 8vo.
View of all the Religions in the World, with the Lives of certain
notorious Heretics. Lond. 1652, 12mo. 1672, 1675, sixth edit. 1683, 8vo.
The History of the World, the second Part, in six Books, being a
Continuation of Sir Walter Raleigh’s. Lond. 1652, folio.
Observations upon Hobbes’s Leviathan. Lond. 1653, 12mo.
Animadversions and Observations upon Sir Walter Raleigh’s History of the
World, wherein his mistakes are noted, and some doubtful passages
cleared. Lond. 1653, 8vo.
Abridgement and Translation of John Wollebius’s Christian Divinity. Lond.
1657, 8vo.
Chymera Phthagoria.
Meditations upon Predestination.
Melissomachia.
Four Books of Epigrams in Latin Elegiacs.
Colloquia Plautina.
Chronology in English.
There was another
Alexander Ross, an Episcopal divine at Aberdeen, and author of ‘A
Consolatorie Sermon, preached, April 15, 1635, upon the Death of Patrick
Forbes, late Bishop of Aberdeen,’ who is frequently confounded with the
preceding. He was the son of James Ross, minister of Strachan, in
Kincardineshire, and afterwards at Aberdeen. He is supposed to have been
born between 1570 and 1580, and was minister first of Insch, then, in
1631, of Footdee, and lastly, in 1636, of St. Nicholas church, Aberdeen.
He died August 11, 1639.
ROSS, ALEXANDER, an eminent poet, the son of a farmer in the
parish of Kincardine-O’Neil, Aberdeenshire, was born there, April 13,
1699. He studied at Marischal college, Aberdeen, where he obtained a
bursary, and took the degree of M.A. in 1718. Soon after he was engaged
as tutor in the family of Sir William Forbes of Craigievar, baronet,
and, on quitting this situation, he became for some time teacher first
at the parish school of Aboyne, and subsequently at that of Laurencekirk,
In 1726 he married Jane Cattanach, the daughter of a farmer in
Aberdeenshire, by whom he had a numerous family. In 1732, through the
interest of Mr. Garden of Troup, he was appointed schoolmaster of
Lochlee, in Forfarshire, where he spend the remainder of his simple and
unvaried life in the discharge of the duties of his humble office. His
beautiful pastoral poem, entitled ‘Helenore, or the Fortunate
Shepherdess,’ was published at Aberdeen in 1768, together with a few
Scottish songs, among which are the favourite ditties of ‘Woo’d and
Married and a’;’ ‘The Rock and the wee Pickle Tow;’ ‘The Bride’s Breast
Knot;’ ‘To the Begging we will go,’ &c. A second edition appeared in
1778, dedicated to the duchess of Gordon, and the work has since been
frequently reprinted. A fifth edition of ‘The Fortunate Shepherdess’ was
published at Dundee in 1812, with a Life of the author, prefixed by his
grandson, the Rev. Alexander Thomson, minister of Lentrathen, in
Forfarshire. On the first publication of the poem, a letter, highly
laudatory of it, appeared in the Aberdeen Journal, under the fictitious
signature of Oliver Old Style, accompanied by an epistle in verse to the
author, from the pen, it is understood, of Dr. Beattie, being the
latter’s only attempt in the Scots vernacular. In the north of Scotland,
where the Buchan dialect is spoken, ‘The Fortunate Shepherdess’
continues to be as popular as the productions of Burns or Ramsay. Ross
died May 20, 1784. He left in manuscript eight small volumes of poems
and other compositions, an account of which is given in Campbell’s
Introduction to the History of Poetry in Scotland.
ROSS, SIR JOHN, a celebrated arctic voyager, was the fourth son
of the Rev. Andrew Ross, minister of Inch, Wigtonshire, where he was
born in 1777. His mother, Elizabeth Corsan, was a descendant of the
Corsans of Mickleknox, who, for seventeen generations, were provosts of
Dumfries. He entered the navy in 1786, and after being a midshipman for
fifteen years, was promoted to be lieutenant in 1801. In 1806, when
lieutenant of the Surinam, he was wounded in cutting out a Spanish
vessel from under the batteries of Bilboa. In 1812 he was appointed
commander of the Briseis, on the Baltic station. With his lieutenant, a
midshipman, and 18 men, he gallantly attacked and recaptured an English
merchant ship, armed with six guns and four swivels, and defended by a
party of French troops. Subsequently, he captured also a French
privateer, and drove on shore three other vessels of the same
description. In 1814, Captain Ross was appointed to the Actaeon, 16
guns, and in 1815, to the Driver sloop.
In 1818, the year which
was distinguished as the commencement of his Arctic career, he became a
post-captain. The extraordinary changes reported to have taken place in
the state of the Polar sea, determined the government to send out an
expedition for Arctic discovery, the command of which was given to
Captain Ross. In his instructions, he was directed to explore Baffin’s
Bay, and search for a north-west passage from it into the Frozen Ocean,
and thence into the Pacific. Parliament offered a premium of £20,000
sterling to the first vessel which should reach the North Pole, and pass
it. The vessels employed were the Isabella of 368 tons, commanded by
Ross himself, and the brig Alexander, of 252 tons, under Lieutenant,
afterwards Sir Edward Parry. The chief geographical result of his voyage
was the more accurate determination of the situation of Baffin’s Bay,
which, until then, was believed to extend ten degrees farther to the
east than it actually does, and the re-discovery of Lancaster Sound, up
which, however, he did not continue his progress far enough to find that
it was open. He was obliged o leave the coast on account of danger from
the ice, and, on his return, he published an account of his expedition
under the title of ‘Voyage of Discovery for the purpose of exploring
Baffin’s Bay.’ London, 1819, 4to.
In 1829, Captain Ross was
enabled, through the munificent aid of his friend, Mr., afterwards Sir
Felix Booth, an eminent distiller, then serving the office of sheriff of
London, to undertake another expedition into the Arctic seas, with a
view to determine the practicability of a new passage which had been
confidently said to exist, particularly by Prince Regent’s Inlet. In May
of the year mentioned he set sail from London in the Victory steamer,
with his nephew, Commander Ross, R.N., as second in command. The latter,
afterwards Sir James Clark Ross, had the departments of astronomy,
natural history, and surveying, in the expedition. He was the third son
of George Ross of Balsarroch, county of Galloway, and had accompanied
his uncle in his first expedition. Between 1819 and 1825 he was engaged,
under Sir Edward Parry, in three other voyages to the Arctic regions,
and again in 1827 he was the companion of Parry in his attempt to reach
the Pole from the northern shores of Spitzbergen, by traveling with
sledge-boats over the ice.
Captain Ross fixed 1832
as the period of his return, but from the 27th day of July 1829, when he
left the port of Wideford in Greenland, where he had been obliged to
refit, -- his vessel, the Victory, having lost her mainmast, -- till
August 1833, nothing was heard of him. (In that month he and his crew
were picked up in a most miserable condition by Captain R. W. Humphreys
of the Isabella of Hull, his own old ship, and brought safely to
England. A public subscription had been set on foot for sending out a
ship in search of him. The sum of £7,000 was raised, the Treasury
contributing liberally, and Captain Back, whose experience had eminently
qualified him for the service, was appointed to command it. He sailed in
the spring of 1833, but received intelligence of Captain Ross’s return,
in time to prevent him from encountering any dangers in the prosecution
of the search for him.
The sufferings of Captain
Ross and his crew, during their protracted stay in the Arctic regions,
were of the severest description. After passing three winters of
unparalleled rigour, finding their provisions nearly consumed, they were
obliged, in May 1832, to abandon the Victory, and set out upon a journey
of nearly 300 miles over the ice, which proved one of uncommon hardship
and difficulty. In the moth of July they reached Fury Beach. “During
this journey,” we are told, “they had not only to carry their provisions
and sick, but also a supply of fuel. Without melting snow they could not
procure even a drink of water. Winter set in, and no choice was left but
to retrace their steps, and spend another inclement season in canvas,
covered with snow.” In August 1833, they fell in with the Isabella, and
were taken on board, “after having been for four years lost to the
civilized world.”
The narrative of this
second expedition was published in 1835, in a quarto volume of 350
pages. Its great results were the discovery of Boothia Feliz, a country
larger than Great Britain, and so called after Sir Felix Booth, and that
of the true position of the north magnetic Pole. The latter was
discovered by Captain Ross’s nephew, who had the honour of placing
thereon the British flag. This intrepid officer, whose whole life may
almost be said to have been passed in the Arctic and Antarctic seas,
commanded the expedition to the South Polar regions from 1839 to 1843,
and attained the highest latitude ever reached (78 deg. 10 min.). He
approached within 160 miles of the south magnetic Pole, and discovered a
southern continent which he named ‘Victoria Land,’ and an active volcano
of nearly 13,000 feet elevation, which he called Mount Erebus, after his
ship. For these services he was knighted in 1844. In 1847 he published
at London, in 2 vols. 8vo. ‘A Voyage of Discovery and Research in the
Southern and Antarctic Regions during the years 1839-43, by Captain Sir
James Clark Ross.’
In consequence of his
Arctic voyages, Captain Ross received numerous marks of public
approbation. IN 1834 he was knighted and made a companion of the order
of the Bath. The freedom of the cities of London, Liverpool, Bristol,
Hull, and other towns, was bestowed upon him. He was presented with gold
medals from the Geographical Society of London, the Geographical
Institute of Paris, the Royal Societies of Sweden, Austria, Denmark, &c.
Foreign powers also marked their sense of his discoveries. He was
appointed a commander of the Sword of Sweden; a knight of the second
class of St. Anne of Russia (in diamonds); the second class of the
legion of honour of France; the second class of the Red Eagle of
Prussia; and the second class of Leopold of Belgium. He also got six
gold snuff-boxes from Russia, Holland, Denmark, Austria, London, and
Baden; a sword of the value of £100 from the Patriotic Fund; and one of
the value of £200 from the king of Sweden, for service in the Baltic and
White Seas, and various other acknowledgments.
In 1838 Sir John Ross was
appointed British consul at Stockholm, and he held that office till
1844. The following year, when Sir John Franklin went out on his last
fatal expedition to the Polar seas, his friend, Sir John Ross, made him
a promise, that if he should be lost, he would sail for the Arctic
regions and look for him. This promise he kept. In 1850, at the age of
seventy-three, Sir John went out in the Felix, a small vessel of no more
than 90 tons, and remained a winter is the ice. He relinquished his
half-pay and his pensions for the cause he had so much at heart, yet the
admiralty refused to contribute even a portion of the necessary stores.
Though the first of our Arctic voyagers, he was excluded from the Arctic
councils, at which his experience and advice would have been very
valuable. In the spring of 1855, he published a pamphlet on his ill
treatment. At the time of his death he was a rear-admiral. He died in
London, Aug. 31, 1856. He was twice married; first, in 1816, to the
daughter of T. Adair, Esq., writer to the signet, Edinburgh; and, 2dly,
in 1834, to a daughter of T. Jones, Esq. of London. His works are:
Voyage of Discovery in
H.M.S. Isabella and Alexander, for the purpose of exploring Baffin’s
Bay, and enquiring into the possibility of a North-west passage. London,
1819, 4to.
A Treatise on Navigation by Steam, comprising a History of the Steam
Engine. London, 1828, 4to.
Narrative of a Second Voyage to the Arctic Regions. London, 1834, 12mo.
Narrative of a Second Voyage by Capt. Ross, R.N., in search of a
North-west passage, including the Reports of his nephew, Capt. James
Clark Ross. London, 1835, 4to.
Appendix. London, 1835, 4to.
Letters to young Sea Officers.
Memoirs of Lord de Saumarez.
A pamphlet on his ill treatment by the Admiralty. London, 1855.
His nephew, Sir James
Clark Ross, the son of George Ross, Esq. of Balsarroch, was also a
distinguished Arctic navigator. Born in London, April 15, 1800, he
entered the navy in April 1812, on board the Briseis, commanded by his
uncle, Captain Ross, and accompanied him, as a midshipman, in his first
voyage in search of a North-west passage. From 1819 to 1825, he was
engaged with Captain Parry in his three voyages, and during his absence,
in 1822, he was made lieutenant. He again accompanied Captain Parry in
1827, and on his return to England he was appointed commander. He also
joined his uncle, Captain John Ross, from 1829 to 1833, on his second
voyage in search of a North-west passage, and in Oct. 1834, became
post-captain. In 1839 he was appointed to the command of an expedition
in the Erebus and Terror, to the Antarctic seas. After his return in
1843 he married, and received the honour of knighthood in 1844. In 1847
he published the results of his discoveries and Researches in the
Southern and Antarctic regions in two volumes. In Jan. 1848 he made a
voyage in the Enterprise to Baffin’s Bay, in search of Sir John
Franklin, but was unsuccessful. He died April 3, 1862. |