BEAUMONT, EARL OF BUCHAN—ALEXANDER
STEWART—JOHN— .MURDOCH—JAMES—JOHN—CHRISTIAN, COUNTESS OF BUCHAN—JAMES
DOUGLAS, EARL—MARY, COUNTESS — ERSKINES, EARLS OF BUCHAN.
AFTER the extinction of the Comyns
and the departure of Henry Beaumont, there were no Earls of Buchan for
some time. The extensive territory of the Earldom was much broken up, and
divided among other families. None of the subsequent Earls wielded such
power and influence in the district and in the government of the kingdom
as the Comyns had done.
Henry Beaumont’s claim to the
Earldom of Buchan was admitted in 1323. It appears, however, that he
failed to obtain possession of the Earldom till after the death of
Randolph, Earl of Moray and Regent of Scotland, which occurred on the 20th
of July, 1332. Eleven days after the death of Randolph, Edward Baliol
appeared in the Firth of Forth with a fleet, and immediately landed his
troops on the coast of Fifeshire. His force numbered three thousand men on
foot and four hundred cavalry; and his most ardent supporters were Henry
Beaumont, who claimed the Earldom of Buchan, Lord Wake of Liddel, and
Henry Percy. Among Baliol’s Scottish supporters, the most notable was the
Earl of Athole, whose territories in Athole and Strathbogie were forfeited
by Robert I. There were many others under Baliol’s banner hungering for
land in Scotland, and pretending that they had claims to it. Thus Baliol’s
followers were animated by strong motives. Accordingly, they marched to
Strathearn with remarkable rapidity and spirit, surprised the Scottish
army under Mar, the Regent, at Dupplin on the 11th of August, and
completely defeated the Scots. Mar himself, Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick,
the Earl of Monteith, and many of the Scots were slain. The following day
Baliol took possession of Perth.
On the 24th of September Baliol was
crowned at Scone He then proceeded southward to Roxburgh, surrendered the
independence of Scotland to Edward III., and gave up Berwick and the
territories on the border to his Lord Superior. To support Baliol and ruin
Scotland—Edward III., within five years, led in person four successive
invasions into the Kingdom. In his last invasion, 1336, at the head of a
great army he proceeded to Perth, thence marched to Aberdeen, wasting the
country, and burning villages and towns along his route. He advanced
through the counties of Aberdeen and Banff, crossed the Spey, and marched
onward till he reached Inverness. Sir Andrew Moray, the Regent, wisely
avoided a battle, but he harassed the enemy most effectively; and Edward
III. returned to England without subduing Scotland. Baliol, when left to
his own resources, soon disclosed his nakedness. He became an object of
hatred, suspicion, and contempt among all classes of the Scots, and in
1339 he finally fled from the kingdom, and assumed his natural position as
a pensioned dependent on England.
In 1335 Henry Beaumont, Earl of
Buchan, was staying in his Castle of Dundarg, when he was captured by the
Scots. But, on the payment of a very large ransom he was permitted to
return to England.
The next Earl of Buchan was
Alexander Stewart, the third son of Robert II., who was also Lord of
Badenoch. He was a restless and fierce man, and earned for himself the
name of "The Wolf of Badenoch." Among other oppressive acts he took
possession of some lands which belonged to the Bishopric of Moray. For
this he was excommunicated; but he retaliated by advancing with a body of
his followers in 1390, and burned down the grand Cathedral of Elgin and a
part of the city. Yet the Church of that day was too strong for him, and
he was compelled to do penance for his reckless outrage. He died in 1394,
leaving no legitimate issue; but he left several natural sons.
Shortly after the burning of the
cathedral, one of his sons, Duncan Stewart, led a party of his followers
across the mountains which divide the counties of Aberdeen and Forfar, and
plundered the Lowlands. In 1392 Duncan made another raid; and the landed
men of the district, headed by Sir Walter Ogilvie, Sheriff of Angus,
mustered and met him at Gasklune, near the Water of Isla; but he
completely defeated them. Ogilvie, the sheriff, his brother, and others
were slain. The Government, in a general council held at Perth, ordered
Duncan Stewart and his accomplices to be proclaimed outlaws for the
slaughter of Walter Ogilvie and others. Another son of the Lord of
Badenoch and Earl of Buchan, was Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar, and hero
of Harlaw, who has been characterised in preceding sections.
After the death of Alexander
Stewart, the Earldom of Buchan was conferred on John Stewart, a son of the
Duke of Albany. This Earl gained distinction as an officer in the service
of France. He fought in the French army at the battle of Beauge against
the English, who were under the command of the Duke of Clarence. In this
action, Clarence was slain, the Earl of Buchan having stunned and unhorsed
him by a blow of his mace; and the English were defeated. For this Charles
VII. conferred on the Earl of Buchan the sword of the Constable of France.
He was killed at the battle of Verneuil, on the 27th of August, 1424. He
left no legitimate issue, and the Earldom went to his brother, Murdoch,
Duke of Albany and Regent of Scotland.
But after the return of James I. in
1424, he resolved to punish the Albany branch of his own kindred. On the
13th of May, 1424, Sir Walter Stewart, eldest son of the Duke of Albany;
Malcolm Fleming, brother-in-law of Albany; and Thomas Boyd, a member of
the Kilmarnock family, were arrested and imprisoned; and towards the end
of this year, the Earl of Lennox, father-in-law of Albany, and Sir Robert
Graham, were seized and imprisoned. This was the prelude to a desperate
move and tragedy meditated by the King.
He summoned a Parliament, which met
at Perth on the 12th of March, 1425. On the ninth day of the Parliament,
the Duke of Albany and his son, Sir Alexander Stewart; the Earls of
Douglas, March, and Angus; William Hay of Erroll; Sir Alexander Seton of
Gordon; Sir Alexander Irvine of Drum; and others—in all thirty barons and
knights—were arrested. At the same time the King seized the castles of
Falkland and Doune, and imprisoned Albany’s wife in the castle of
Tantallon. These proceedings astonished the Scottish barons and knights;
but the move was specially directed against the Duke of Albany and his
family, so the other barons were released after a very short imprisonment.
In May, Parliament reassembled at
Stirling, and prepared to settle the doom of Albany and his family. A
court was held in Stirling Castle on, the 26th of May, 1426. Walter
Stewart, the eldest son of Albany, was tried before the King and a jury of
twenty-one barons; he was found guilty, condemned, and immediately
beheaded. The following day, the King’s own cousin, the Duke of Albany,
and his son, Alexander, and the aged Earl of Lennox, were tried,
convicted, and sentenced to death. They were all executed before the
Castle of Stirling. Albany and his sons were men of stalwart and
commanding presence, and their hard fate at the hands of the King excited
much sympathy amongst the people.
After the execution of the Duke of
Albany, the Earldom of Buchan reverted to the Crown; and it remained in
the hands of the Crown till after the death of James II., and in 1469
James III. conferred the Earldom of Buchan on James Stewart, the second
son of Sir James Stewart, "the Black Knight of Lorne," by Joan Beaufort,
the widow of James I. Thus the new Earl was the King’s uncle. The Earl
married Margaret Ogilvie, the heiress of Sir Alexander Ogilvie of
Auchterhouse, by whom he had issue; and he took the titles of Earl of
Buchan and Lord Auchterhouse.
In 1467, James Ill, granted to his
uncle and his wife the lands of the Baronies of Strathalva and Down, with
the Castle of Banff, and the fishings of the water of Deveron.
When the southern barons entered
into a conspiracy against the King, the Earl of Buchan naturally continued
loyal. The King crossed the Forth, and passed into the north-eastern
counties, where a strong force rallied round him. He then marched
southward, and came in sight of the rebellious barons at Blackness in West
Lothian, and the Earl of Buchan attacked and drove back the left wing of
the insurgent army. Negotiations were opened, and the Earl of Buchan
insisted on severe measures against the insurgent nobles; but the Earls of
Huntly and Erroll were opposed to this, and they retired to the north. It
was evident, however, that Buchan’s view was right. A pacification was
arranged in May, 1488, in which the barons promised to return to their
allegiance and maintain the rights of the Crown and the peace of the
kingdom; and thereupon the King disbanded his army and returned to
Edinburgh.
But the disaffected barons remained
in arms, with the young Prince James at their head, against his father.
The King again mustered an army, and advanced towards Stirling to secure
the passage of the Forth, but the gates of the castle were closed against
him, as the governor had joined the insurgent barons. On the 11th of June,
1488, the two armies approached each other at a small brook called the
Sauchie Burn, about a mile from the field of Bannockburn. An engagement
ensued. Although the Royal troops were greatly outnumbered, the action was
fiercely contested; but at last the king’s men were driven back and
defeated by the charges of the border spearmen. The King, in retiring from
the field, was thrown from his horse, and some of the rebels came up and
killed him. Thus fell James III., in the thirty-seventh year of his age,
and the twenty-eighth of his reign.
The victorious barons passed the
night on the field of battle. On the following morning they proceeded to
Linlithgow, issued a proclamation, and immediately seized the Royal
treasure and the reins of Government The Earls of Buchan, Huntly, and
Lennox, Lord Forbes and others, who fought for James III., were summoned
to appear before Parliament and answer to a charge of treason. Parliament
met at Edinburgh on the 6th of October, 1488, and proceeded to consider
the position of those who had been summoned for treason. The Earl of
Buchan appeared and tendered his submission; and he was pardoned and
restored to power. None of the others who was cited appeared, and
consequently their possessions were placed at the disposal of Parliament.
In 1489 the Earls of Huntly and
Lennox, Lord Forbes, and others, rose in arms against the party in power.
But after a short struggle the rising was suppressed. The new King, James
IV., was not at all inclined to treat harshly those who had supported his
father; and the young ruler soon became popular.
The Earl of Buchan died in 1499, and
was succeeded by his son, Alexander, second Earl of Buchan. He died in
1508, and was succeeded by his son, John, third Earl of Buchan. He married
Margaret, daughter of James Scrymgeour of Dudhope, Constable of Dundee, by
whom he had issue. John Stewart, Master of Buchan, fought and fell on the
disastrous field of Pinkie, in 1547. Earl John was succeeded by his
grand-daughter, Christian, Countess of Buchan, in 1551. She married Robert
Douglas, second son of Sir Robert Douglas of Lochleven, and in 1574 a
charter of the Earldom, together with Earlshill, was granted to him and
the Countess. Their son, James Douglas, was served heir to his father in
1583, and to his mother in 1588, as fifth Earl of Buchan. He married
Margaret Ogilvie, a daughter of Lord Deskford. The Earl died in 1601,
leaving an only daughter as heiress—Mary Douglas, Countess of Buchan.
She married James Erskine, a son of
John, twentieth Earl of Mar. Thus James Erskine in right of his wife
became sixth Earl of Buchan. He was one of the Lords of the Bedchamber to
Charles I., and usually resided in England. The Countess died in 1628,
leaving an only son and two daughters. Earl James died in 1640, and was
succeeded by his son, James, seventh Earl of Buchan. He died in 1664, and
was succeeded by his only son, William, eighth Earl of Buchan. At the
Revolution of 1688, the Earl supported the cause of James VII., and
appeared in arms against the new Government. He was captured and
imprisoned in Stirling Castle, but was not brought to trial. He died in
Stirling Castle in 1695, leaving no issue.
His kinsman, David Erskine, fourth
Lord Cardross, succeeded to the Earldom as ninth Earl of Buchan. After the
succession of George I. he was elected a representative peer in 1715,
1722, and 1727. ln 1697 he married Frances, a daughter and heiress of the
honourable Henry Fairfax of Hurst, in the county of Berks, and by her he
had three sons and two daughters. He died in 1745, and was succeeded by
his eldest surviving son, Henry David Erskine, tenth Earl of Buchan.
He was born on the 17th of April,
1710: and married Agnes, a daughter of Sir James Stewart, Baronet, of
Goodtrees, by whom he had issue—David Erskine, Lord Cardross, Henry of
Almonddell, and Thomas. His second son, Henry, was born in November, 1746.
He studied law, and was called to the Scottish bar in 1768.
He was a man of remarkable talents,
and soon obtained a wide practice. He was appointed Lord Advocate in 1783,
but had to resign office the same year on a change of Government. He was
elected Dean of the Faculty of Advocates in 1786. In 1806, on the return
of the Whigs to office, he was again appointed Lord Advocate. He was much
esteemed for amiability, brilliant wit, and legal knowledge.
Thomas, the Earl’s youngest son, was
born in 1750. He served for a short time both in the army and navy; but
resigned his commission and directed his attention to the study of law,
and was called to the English bar in his twenty-eighth year. He soon took
a foremost place at the bar, and some of his speeches are fine specimens
of English forensic oratory. In 1783 he entered Parliament as member for
Portsmouth; but his success in the House of Commons was not remarkable. In
1806 he was appointed Lord Chancellor, and received the title of Baron
Erskine. He held the Great Seal only for a short time, as he had to retire
on the dissolution of the Whig Government in the spring of 1807. In 1817
he published a political fragment entitled "Armata," which contains some
good remarks on constitutional law and history.
John Stockdale had published a
defence of Warren Hastings, composed by the Rev. John Logan, which it was
alleged contained a libel upon the House of Commons, and Erskine undertook
the defence of Stockdale. The trial took place on the 9th December, 1789,
and the following quotation from Erskine’s speech on the occasion refers
to the government of India:-
"Gentlemen, I think I can observe
that you are touched with this way of considering the subject, and I can
account for it. I have not been considering it through the cold medium of
books, but have been speaking of man and his nature, and of human
dominion, from what I have seen of them myself amongst reluctant nations
submitting to our authority. I know what they feel, and how such feelings
can alone be suppressed. I have heard them in my youth from a naked
savage, addressing the Governor of a British colony, holding a bundle of
sticks in his hand, as the notes of an unlettered eloquence. ‘Who is it’
said the jealous ruler over the desert, encroached upon by the restless
foot of English adventure, ‘who is it that causes the river to rise in the
high mountains and empty itself into the ocean? Who is it that causes to
blow the loud winds of winter, and that calms them again in summer? Who is
it that rears up the shade of these lofty forests, and blasts them with
the quick lightning at his pleasure? The same Being who gave to you a
country on the other side of the waters, and gave ours to us; and by this
title we will defend it,’ said the warrior, throwing down his tomahawk
upon the ground, and raising the war sound of his nation. These are the
feelings of subjugated men all round the globe; and, depend upon it,
nothing but fear will control where it is vain to look for affection."
Erskine died in 1823.
Earl David died in December, 1767,
and was succeeded by his eldest son, David Stewart Erskine, eleventh Earl
of Buchan. He married Margaret Fraser, a daughter of William Fraser of
Fraserfield, in 1771. The Earl engaged little in public affairs; but he
took a keen interest in antiquarian and literary subjects.
He died on the 19th of April, 1829,
without issue, and was succeeded by his nephew, Henry David Erskine,
twelfth Earl of Buchan. In 1809 he married Elizabeth, youngest daughter of
Sir Charles Shipley, and by her had issue. He died in 1857, and was
succeeded by his son, David Stewart Erskine. thirteenth Earl of Buchan.