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An Account of the Proceedings of the Estates in Scotland 1689-1690
In two volumes Edited by E. W. M. Balfour-Melville, D.Litt. (1954)


INTRODUCTION

Included in Highland Papers Volume IV which the late Sheriff Macphail edited for the Scottish History Society is an item entitled ‘ The End of the Active Resistance to William of Orange in Scotland.’ In his introductory note the editor stated, ‘ Among the papers of the late Dr. Maitland Thomson is a document which appears to be the copy of or, extracts from, some official narrative, which has so far escaped identification.’ He proceeded to give excerpts from Nos. 134-40 and 142-4 of the ‘ Continuation of the Proceedings of the Parliament in Scotland ’ so far as they related to military operations in the Highlands. Somewhat oddly No. 141, though it consists almost entirely of news from the Highlands, was omitted by him, possibly because it may have been lacking from the set transcribed by Dr. Maitland Thomson. Nor does Sheriff Macphail, though he knew that ‘ the early numbers are called Proceedings of the Convention of Estates in Scotland,’ seem to have been aware that much news from the Highlands is contained in numbers both before 134 and after 144. Dr. Maitland Thomson, however, drew on Nos. 146 and 147 for his article on the Oliphants in the Scots Peerage (vi. 558-9), where he stated that ‘ the newspaper ’ was pointed out to him by Professor Sanford Terry. (There is no ground for calling it an official narrative, as did Sheriff Macphail.)

The Council of the Scottish History Society therefore welcomed the proposal first made to it by Mr. E. S. de Beer that, departing from its usual practice of printing only unpublished manuscripts, the Society should reissue in two volumes the 147 numbers which appear to constitute the whole series. This was thought the more desirable since, so far as could be ascertained, the only complete set in any British library is that owned by the University Library of Cambridge. The British Museum has two sets, of which one lacks No. 85 and the other Nos. 98, 99 and 141, and has also a few odd numbers. A set in the Bodleian Library includes Nos. 1-143. In the National Library of Scotland there are 49 numbers, of which the latest is No. 87. Glasgow University Library has Nos. 1, 2 and 12. Aberdeen University has only the first number.

For the volumes now issued by the Society Nos. 1-136 have been printed from a set in the possession of Sir James Fergusson of Kilkerran, Bt., and the remainder from that at Cambridge. Sir James Fergusson’s is of special interest as having belonged at various times to a son of Archibald Constable, to J. Hill Burton and to Miss Henrietta Tayler. Bound up with it is an account of the happenings at Whitehall in January 1689, when ‘such of the Scots nobles and gentlemen as were in Town’ invited William of Orange to call a meeting of the Estates and meanwhile to undertake the administration of Scotland. This is here printed as an appendix at the end of Volume II.

The 147 numbers of the periodical cover the time from March 14, 1689, to October 18, 1690. While the terminus a quo is obvious as the day of the Convention’s first meeting, there is no clear reason why publication ceased at the latter date. Not ‘ an official narrative,’ it appears to be the work of an independent English journalist who stayed for the time in Edinburgh and sent up twice weekly to London an account of Scottish affairs for the information of his compatriots. That he was English seems to be proved by his use of such terms as ‘ knights and burgesses ’ for the commissioners of shires and burghs, ‘ Lord Mayor ’ for the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, ‘bailiff’ for bailie, and ‘William III’ as the King’s title. His unfamiliarity with Scottish terms also becomes evident when the Master of Forbes appears as  'Mayor of Forbes’ and Macdougall younger of Logan as ‘Macdougall Mayor of Logan.’ Baffled by the distinction between burgh and landward districts of Ross, he turns the latter word into ‘landneart.’ Again, five of the numbers for January and February 1690 are dated ‘Edinburgh, 1689’ after the style of the calendar still being used in England.

In London the periodical was published by two successive printers, Richard Chiswell and Richard Baldwin. Of these the former produced Nos. 1-127 at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul’s Churchyard. According to the Dictionary of National Biography he lived from 1639 to 1711, commencing business before 1666. His publications included the votes of the House of Commons in 1680, Bishop Burnet’s History of the Reformation and many theological works. The contemporary London bookseller, John Dunton, described him as deserving the title of ‘ metropolitan bookseller of England if not of all the world.’ Although he continued in business till the year of his death, the production of this periodical passed in July 1690 to Richard Baldwin, another of the best-known publishers of the day, who printed Nos. 128-38 in the Old Bailey (probably in Bull Court) and Nos. 139-47 near the Oxford Arms in Warwick Lane. Of him John Dunton wrote that when he removed from the Old Bailey to Warwick Lane ‘ his fame for publishing spread so fast he grew too big to handle his small tools,’ meaning that he gave up bookbinding. Much information about him is contained in the Bibliographical Society’s Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers, 1668-1725.

The original purpose for which the periodical was issued seems to have been the furnishing to the London public of regular information about the proceedings of the Convention called for the settlement of the Scottish crown, when James II had already been removed from the English throne in favour of William and Mary. When this had been decided, however, matters of the first political importance remained to be dealt with, especially the government of the Church and the committee system in Parliament. Moreover, Jacobite opposition to the Convention’s transfer of the crown was active and prolonged. Edinburgh Castle held out under the Duke of Gordon until June 13. Viscount Dundee’s rising followed, and after the battle of Killiecrankie and the abortive attack on Dunkeld military operations went on in the Highlands for another year and more. All this furnished material for the journalistic venture to continue altogether for nineteen months, the title being changed according to circumstances. Thus the first number is headed ‘ An account of the Proceedings of the Estates in Scotland,’ which is followed by ‘ A Continuation of the Proceedings of the Convention of the Estates of Scotland ’ up to No. 26 (except No. 22, which describes the delivery of the crown at Whitehall), and again No. 29. Nos. 27, 28, 30 and 31 have simply ‘A Continuation of the Proceedings in Scotland.’ With the Convention turned into a parliament the title becomes ‘ A Continuation of the Proceedings of the Parliament in Scotland’ for Nos. 32-52, the words ‘during their late sitting and of other affairs relating to that kingdom’ being added for Nos. 46-52. ‘A Continuation of the Proceedings in Scotland’ is again the title for Nos. 53-100, that for the remainder being the same as for Nos. 46-52.

In fulfilling his principal task of reporting what was done in the Estates, the writer has given the text of many statutes which can no doubt be found in the record edition of the Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland, but he has also included some drafts of Acts introduced but not passed, particularly in connection with the Church and the Lords of the Articles, and some speeches made at the opening of Parliament and in its debates. This is of the more value, since in Thomas Thomson’s compilation the Minutes (as distinct from the Acta) are wanting for the session of Parliament in 1689, and for the greater part of the first session and the whole of the second session in 1690.

Apart from the proceedings of Convention and Parliament, accounts are given of the negotiations for the surrender of Edinburgh Castle and of the Bass. Reports of Dundee’s movements and those of Government troops are transmitted week by week as received in Edinburgh, not always proving accurate but none the less interesting for their effects on opinion at the time. The attack on Dunkeld is described in a letter from one of Colonel Cleland’s soldiers. The fear that a Jacobite force from Ireland would invade Western Scotland is clearly brought out, as is the damage done by French privateers off the Scottish coast. Much space is devoted to the fighting in Ireland and in that connection to the Danish troops which crossed Scotland on their way to reinforce the Duke of Schomberg. Many cases heard by the Committee of Estates and by the Privy Council are mentioned, including the deprivation of numerous parish ministers for failing to read the Proclamation of April 11 or to pray for William and Mary, before legislation had been passed to alter the government of the Church. From time to time there are such tit-bits of scandal as the dispute between Sir James Rocheid and his sister-in-law, the murder of a soldier in the Pleasance by Lord Bellenden, the robbery of the mail near Haddington by two of the Seton family and the prosecution of an Edinburgh landlady for speaking ill of her lodger, the Countess of Callander.

The method adopted in editing these volumes has been to omit the text of the Acts of Parliament printed in the record edition, giving references to the appropriate pages therein. Proclamations have been summarised with references to the Earl of Crawford’s Tudor and Stuart Proclamations. The headings of the various numbers of the periodical have been reproduced only in the case of No. 1 and where a change has been made from the previous title. The phrase ‘Licensed and entrd according to order,’ which appears on each number, is here printed only the first time. All the advertisements of books published by Richard Chiswell have been omitted as having no bearing on Scottish history. The spelling (including misprints, grammar and capital letters of the original have been retained but not the copious italics.

Annotation has been kept to a minimum and confined almost entirely to the identification of places and persons, particularly where a laird is indicated in the text only by his estate. Correct forms have been given in footnotes where those of the text might be misleading or obscure as, for instance, Askin (p. 9) and Pulwart (p. 11), but in such cases as Lothain (p. 2) and Leaven (p. 8) this seemed unnecessary. To obviate tiresome iteration, footnotes have normally been added only on the first occasion that a name appears.

Acknowledgment is gratefully made of help given in the identification of persons by Sir Thomas Innes of Learney, K.C.V.O., Dr. C. A. Malcolm, O.B.E., Mr. C. T. McInnes, and Mrs. Margaret W. Bayne, and by Professor G. 0. Sayles in connection with Irish place-names.

Volume 1  | Volume 2


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