GEORGE, SIXTH EARL AND FIRST MARQUIS OF HUNTLY
(CONTINUED)—THE KING IN THE NORTH—CASTLE OF STRATHBOGIE OCCUPIED.
THE King arrived in Aberdeen on the 20th of February,
1593, and stayed several weeks in the city. On the approach of His
Majesty, Huntly and his chief allies went aboard a vessel at Rathbyhaven
and sailed for Caithness. The Castle of Strathbogie was garrisoned by a
body of men under the command of Archibald Carmichael. The Earl of Athole
was appointed Lieutenant-General beyond the Spey, associated with Earl
Marischal. Yet the King seems to have had no intention of proceeding to
extremities against Huntly and the Catholic Earls. There were obvious
reasons for this policy, as about one-third of the Scottish barons were
still more or less firmly attached to the Roman Catholic religion. Thus
the Countess of Huntly was
courteously
received at the Court, and interceded for her husband.
But many incidents and circumstances indicated that the
King was much inclined to treat the Earl of Huntly and his associates with
the utmost possible leniency. On the 16th of March Huntly was relieved
from the horning proclaimed against him.
In September, Huntly proceeded to
punish the Mackintoshes, who had ventured to invade Strathbogie during his
absence. On his return, he pursued them, overtook and completely defeated
them in the Cabrach, where sixty of them were slain. Yet the Earl was not
satisfied. The following year, on the 30th of April, "Huntly made a raid
against the Mackintoshes; burned their houses, slaughtered many people,
and captured an immense booty."
In October, 1593, Huntly, Erroll,
and Angus suddenly appeared at Fala, threw themselves upon their knees
before the King, and entreated him not to condemn them unheard, and
offered to enter ward whenever His Majesty should be pleased to command
them. Those of the Council present were favourable to the Earls, and they
were ordered to repair to Perth and stay there till arrangements could be
made.
The Protestant clergy insisted on
extreme measures against the Catholic Earls, and matters were running to a
crisis. Both parties were mustering their forces throughout the kingdom. A
committee of the Three Estates met at Holyrood, along with six of the
leading ministers, to deliberate on the state of affairs. After some very
animated debates, the King, on the 26th of November, 1593,
pronounced what was called the "Act of Abolition" touching Huntly and his
associates. This Act announced that the true religion established in the
first year of His Majesty’s reign should be the only one professed in
Scotland; and that those who had never embraced it, and those who had
declined from it, should either conform to it before the 11th of February,
or depart from the country to such places as the King
should direct, and there remain till they professed the truth and
satisfied the Church. During their banishment, they were to retain the
full possession of their estates. All accusations against Huntly and his
friends were annulled. They were ordered to inform the King and the
Church, before the iith of January, which of the alternatives they meant
to accept.
This Act pleased neither party. The
Catholic Earls were not disposed to renounce their religion, nor to retain
it only at the cost of exile; while the clergy were extremely annoyed at
this temporising line of action, and immediately proclaimed their
disapproval of it from their pulpits. The Earl of Huntly and his adherents
were excommunicated in May.
In the beginning of June, Parliament
met, and on the 4th an Act of Forfeiture was passed against Huntly and his
associates, and they were proclaimed rebels. They still remained in the
north; and the King issued a commission to the Earls of Argyle and Athole
and Lord Forbes to muster their vassals and wage war against Huntly.
The young Earl of Argyle mustered
his vassals and took the field, and advanced through the mountain passes
in the direction of Strathbogie. He was joined on the march by the
Macleans, Grants, Macgregors, and some of the Mackintoshes. Huntly and
Erroll mustered their followers at Strathbogie, and marched through the
parish of Glass; and on the way Gordon of Cairnborrow and his eight sons
joined them. They advanced up the valley of the Deveron to the Cabrach,
thence by the castle of Auchindoun to the Braes of Glenlivet. Argyle
continued to advance toward Glenlivet, and pitched his camp in this
district, near the Glenrinnes border. On perceiving the approach of
Huntly’s men, Argyle left his camp and drew up his men, numbering about
5000, in three divisions. Sir John Maclean commanded the right wing, which
was posted on the shoulder of a mountain, terminating in an inclined
plane; the left wing was partly protected by marshy ground, and Argyle
himself commanded the reserve, which occupied the heights. Huntly’s force
consisted of about 900 well-armed men, and a few pieces of artillery,
which opened fire on Maclean’s line, and under cover of which the Earl of
Erroll led the attack on the right wing and attempted a flanking movement;
but his company was surrounded and placed in extreme peril. When Huntly
observed this, he rapidly advanced with the main body of his men and
horse, and assailed the right wing and centre of the enemy’s line. After
two hours’ hard fighting, the centre of Argyle’s line was thrown into
confusion and driven back upon the reserve, which also became confused,
and, in spite of his utmost efforts, fled from the field. But the right
wing under Maclean fought with remarkable courage, and at last retired in
good order. The battle was fought on the 13th of October, 1594. On
Argyle’s side, about 500 men were slain; on Huntly’s side 20 men were
slain, and many wounded. Among those slain was Sir Patrick Gordon of
Auchindoun, a son of the fourth Earl of Huntly.
The King had advanced to Dundee when
tidings of the defeat of Argyle reached him, and he immediately pushed
forward. On the march he was joined by the Keiths, Forbesses, Irvines, and
others, and arrived at Aberdeen.
The King, with his army, proceeded
to Strathbogie, and the castle was dismantled and defaced. The Castle of
Slains, the seat of the Earl of Erroll, and other mansions of the Gordons,
were also dismantled. On returning to Aberdeen, the King caused a number
of the Earl of Huntly’s adherents to be executed, and then proclaimed a
general pardon to those who had been with him at the Battle of Glenlivet,
provided they paid the fines imposed by the council. After making some
arrangements for preserving peace, and appointing the Duke of Lennox—Huntly’s
brother-in-law—Governor of the North, the King disbanded the army, and in
November proceeded to the south.
Huntly fled to Caithness. The
sentence of forfeiture passed against him had never been acted upon; and
the Duke of Lennox gave over the management of Huntly’s estates to the
Countess. In March, 1595, the Earl left Scotland, and made a tour through
France and Germany. The Countess of Huntly made the utmost efforts to
obtain her husband’s pardon. In August, 1596, the Earl returned to
Scotland, and there were indications that the Government would restore
him. The Earl had forwarded overtures to the King, offering submission,
and petitioning to be absolved from the sentence of excommunication. At a
meeting of the barons and some of the clergy, it was agreed that, under
certain conditions, to be drawn up by the King and the Privy Council,
Huntly might be received, but the majority of the clergy were opposed to
this proposal, and they engaged in a bitter struggle with the King.
At a General Assembly which met at
Dundee on the 10th of May, 1597, the conditions prescribed for the
absolution and admission of the Earls of Huntly, Erroll, Angus, and the
Laird of Gight, were discussed, and a commission was appointed to receive
them into the Church. The ceremony of their reconciliation to the church
took place at Aberdeen in the Old Church. The church was crowded, many of
the noblemen and gentlemen of the county were present Immediately before
the sermon, the Earls publicly subscribed the Confession of Faith. After
the sermon, they rose and in a loud voice confessed their defection and
apostasy, and professed their present conviction of the truth of the
Protestant faith and their resolution to adhere to it. The Earl of Huntly
then declared, before God, the King, and the Church, his penitence for the
slaughter of the Earl of Moray. The three Earls were then absolved from
the sentence of excommunication. They next communicated in the Prostestant
form, and solemnly swore to keep order in all respects and to execute
justice within their territories. The Laird of Gight appeared in the garb
of a penitent, and threw himself upon his knees before the pulpit, and
implored pardon for supporting the Earl of Bothwell, and prayed to be
released from the sentence of excommunication; this was granted, and he
was reconciled. The following day, the reconciliation of the Earls was
proclaimed at the Cross on the Castlegate, amid a great assemblage of the
people, who shouted joyfully, drank the health of the Earls, and tossed
their glasses in the air.
The estates and titles of Huntly and
the other Catholic Earls were restored to them by Parliament in December,
1597. On the 17th of April, 1599, he was created Marquis of Huntly, Earl
of Enzie, Viscount of Inverness, &c. In 1601 he received a Royal
Commission of Justiciary and Lieutenancy for the reduction of the Isles to
order and obedience. About this time several projects touching the Western
Isles were on foot.
A contract was entered into between
the King on the one hand, and on the other James Learmonth of Balcomie,
Sir James Anstruther, Captain William Murray, the Duke of Lennox, and
others. They undertook to colonise the Island of Lewis, and develop its
rich resources. The contract is dated 29th of June, 1598. On the 7th of
July an Act of Council in favour of the new colonists was passed, to this
effect :—"That a summons be raised to seek a declaration upon the late Act
of Parliament against Highlandmen and Islesmen for non-production of their
titles and rights, that they should be charged to appear before His
Majesty and the Privy Council to find caution according to the acts and
penalties contained therein, and being denounced rebels . . . That there
shall be a process of forfeiture regularly deduced against these
Highlandmen, and their goods given to the new colonising gentlemen. . . .
That their lands shall by a new right and disposition be conveyed to the
new colonisers, and to no others." The new colonisers or "gentlemen
adventurers," as they are called in the record, took possession of the
Island of Lewis, and in November, 1600, Parliament ratified their "infeftment
of the island.
They did not long retain possession
of Lewis. The tragic narrative is presented in the Register of the Privy
Council thus:—"His Majesty, after good advice and deliberation, resolved
to reduce that isle to obedience, and plant a number of good and dutiful
subjects in it. For this purpose His Majesty disposed the right of that
isle to certain barons and gentlemen, who enterprised the conquest of the
isle, establishing religion and policy in it, and rooting out the
barbarity and wickedness which were so common in it. Likewise, they having
by force made a perfect conquest of that isle, and reduced it to as great
obedience as any part of the mainland, so that all kind of traffic by sea
was very frequent there, yet it is a truth that certain of the chiefs of
the isle, confederated with the chiefs of the adjacent isles, under the
pretence of friendship, conspired and devised the extermination and ruin
of the gentlemen adventurers and their whole company. At last, in the
winter of 1602, finding the proper time when these gentlemen expected no
such hid treason, they then attacked them and slew them; and they have
taken possession of the isle, intending by force to hold it against His
Majesty’s authority." Those of the adventurers not slain made terms with
the islesmen, and departed from the island. The King was enraged, and
ordered a muster of his subjects in the northern counties from the river
Dee to the Orkney Islands—to reconquer the Island of Lewis. But the King
had at the time too many irons in the fire, and the Isle of Lewis was not
reconquered for a long time.