{"id":87606,"date":"2018-02-24T15:53:00","date_gmt":"2018-02-24T15:53:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2023-01-06T20:21:33","modified_gmt":"2023-01-06T20:21:33","slug":"first-james","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/2018\/02\/24\/first-james\/","title":{"rendered":"First James"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px;\" class=\"sharethis-inline-share-buttons\" ><\/div><h1 style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\"><\/h1>\n<pre style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; padding-left: 18px;\">                         The First James of Scotland<br \/>By Rballoch.<br \/><br \/>James1 of Scotland<br \/><br \/><br \/>=============================================<br \/>On 20 February, 1437 King James I of Scotland was assasinated. In memory of<br \/>this King, I have written a small biography of his life and his reign. This<br \/>by no means is a full account of the events in the Kings life -- or the<br \/>events that took place in Scotland at the time, but the major events are<br \/>covered to give an idea who this man was.<br \/>JAMES I of Scotland<br \/><br \/>********************************<br \/><br \/>King of Scots (1424--37), born in Dunfermline, Fife, the second son of<br \/>Robert III. After his elder brother David was murdered at Falkland (1402),<br \/>allegedly by his uncle, the Duke of Albany, James was sent for safety to<br \/>France, but was captured by the English, and remained a prisoner for 18<br \/>years. Albany meanwhile ruled Scotland as governor until his death in 1420,<br \/>when his son, Murdoch, assumed the regency,<br \/><br \/>and the country rapidly fell into disorder.<br \/>The Regents<br \/><br \/>===================<br \/>James Stewart of the Royal house of Stuart spent most of his childhood life<br \/>in exile as a prisoner of the English. The Scots who ruled in his absence<br \/>as regents would not pay his high ransom the English demanded for his<br \/>return to Scotland. Finally, after 18 years in exile, his countrymen agreed<br \/>to his ransom and James returned to Scotland.<br \/>Scotland was in a near state of armed insurrection when James returned. The<br \/>previous regent, Murdoch, had been a poor and corrupt regent and the clan<br \/>feuds in the Highlands continued unabated. In the Lowlands and Borders, the<br \/>Border Barons rode their raids, terrorized the burghs, and pursued the<br \/>Crowns revenues by theiving the crown taxes for themselves. Less that 4% of<br \/>revenues were actually reaching Edinburgh when James took over.<br \/>Murdoch, the regent soon regretted paying for James's return. \"If God gives<br \/>me but a dog's life,\" said James when he saw and heard what had befallen<br \/>his country, \"I will make the key keep the castle and the bracken bush keep<br \/>the cow through all Scotland\". In a week after his coronation a parliament<br \/>at Perth declared that peace would be enforced throughout the realm, and of<br \/>\"any man presume to make war against another he shall suffer the full<br \/>penalties of the law.\"<br \/>Once released (1424), James dealt ruthlessly with potential rivals to his<br \/>authority, executing Murdoch and his family.<br \/>Within a year, James had broken the power of his cousins the Albany<br \/>Stewarts and seized their estates. Upon some real or contrived charge of<br \/>treason, the former regent of Scotland who had let James remain a prisoner<br \/>in England so long, Murdoch and his two sons, with the aged father-in-law<br \/>of one of them, were first imprisoned and then taken to the heading-block<br \/>at Stirling.<br \/>There were men who mourned their death, despite all the corruption,<br \/>believing them friends of the poor and the victims of James's tyranny. The<br \/>romantic and frequently misguided attachment to the unsuccessful members of<br \/>the House of Stewart has deep roots in Scotland's history.<br \/><br \/>James Takes Control of Scotland<br \/><br \/>________________________________<br \/><br \/><br \/><br \/>He was 32 when he came back to Scotland, of medium height but large-boned<br \/>and thickset, quick in his movements like a fox. He was an athlete, rider<br \/>and wrestler, skilled with bow and spear, and proud of the strength in his<br \/>broad chest and muscled arms. His darting and inquisitive mind was<br \/>fascinated by the machinery of war, gunnery in particular, as it intrigued<br \/>most men of the day. He was also a poet and<br \/><br \/>muscian, and almost unique in the contradictory powers of tranquil<br \/>reflection and uncompromising action. Beyond firm government perhaps, the<br \/>greatest gift he brought to a bleak Scotland was some of the first of its<br \/>lyrical verse.<br \/>Idle as a prisoner, albiet well kept prisoner, in England he had read all<br \/>he could, and his long poem \"The Kingis Quair\", inspired by Chaucer's<br \/>translation of a French allegory, is a soft voice speaking with a love of<br \/>evocative words.<br \/>James was the first of many Stewart kings to act as a patron of the arts,<br \/>and almost certainly wrote the tender, passionate collection of poems,<br \/>(\"The King's Quire\" or book), c.1423--4.<br \/>It was not a woeful wretch who came home to Scotland, but the first real<br \/>king the country had had since the death of Robert Bruce in 1329.<br \/>His bride was Joan Beaufort, a niece of English king Henry IV, and a sixth<br \/>of his ransom had been obligingly remitted as her dowry. It was not only a<br \/>marriage of dynastic arrangement, and many believe the tender poem referred<br \/>to above , was about her as he viewed her from his prison tower, and fell<br \/>in love with as she walked among the court.<br \/>From James I, perhaps comes that legendary Stewart charm, more disasterous<br \/>to Scotland than an Albany's corrupt rule. But, the man who had sighed and<br \/>written for and about love at a garden window in London, was merciless and<br \/>resolute on a throne. His concern for law and order, while it was needed to<br \/>secure his crown, also had roots in a poet's sense of justice, but he did<br \/>not respond like a poet. When he had exterminated his cousins, he turned<br \/>upon the Highlands. He was the first<br \/><br \/>of his family to treat the clans like cattle, showing that contempt most of<br \/>them had for the Gaelic people, and making the Highlander's ultimate self-<br \/>sacrifice for the House of Stewart as pointless as it was herioc.<br \/>He summoned over 40 Highland Chiefs in 1428 before him and his parliament<br \/>at Inverness. Among the Highlanders were Alexander of the Isles, (the<br \/>current Lord of the Isles), the son of Donald of Harlaw. They were greeted<br \/>as thugs upon arrival, as each appeared before the throne he was seized by<br \/>men-at-arms and thrown into the dungeon pit. One by one, the Chiefs of Clan<br \/>Donald, MacKay, MacKenzie, Campbell and all the tribes and leaders of the<br \/>north, while the poet king entertained the<br \/><br \/>parliament with a witty Latin squib on their certain hempen departure. In<br \/>fact, three were hanged and the rest released after a brutal , but short<br \/>imprisonment. Clemency was granted for any offences they might have<br \/>commited, but it was wasted on Alexander of the Isles. He and his wild<br \/>Islanders, remembered the treachery that had preceded it, and when King and<br \/>parliament were gone, came back by ship over rivers, and burnt the burgh of<br \/>Inverness to the ground, one of seven bonfires which<br \/><br \/>the MacDonald's lit upon that ground in their clan's riotous history.<br \/>James marched to Lochaber, isolated Alexander from his allies, and forced<br \/>him to come to Edinburgh in submission. Wearing shirt and drawers only,<br \/>holding his 2 handed claymore by the blade, he knelt before the high altar<br \/>of Holyrood and humbly offered the hilt of the weapon to the king. James<br \/>would have hanged him, it is said, but for the intercession of the Queen,<br \/>and was instead sent to a Lothian castle in the keeping of a Douglas earl.<br \/>In the 13 years he strengthened the machinery of government and justice,<br \/>replacing the baron's law with the king's law, and restoring the crown to a<br \/>respect it had not received since Bruce's heart was taken from his rib<br \/>cage. Copies of law were distributed among all sheriffs so that no man<br \/>might claim ignorance of the law. Of course this really only worked in the<br \/>Lowlands, as the Highlands and Isles were still ruled by the clan system<br \/>and the supreme authority there, was the individual Chief of the clan --<br \/>with the King coming in a distant second.<br \/>Justice was attempted to be available to all, but since this principle was<br \/>easier to enact through parliament than to put into actual practise, the<br \/>king himself chose a special court from the Three Estates to consider<br \/>complaints and abuses. He also set up a commitee of wise and discreet men<br \/>to examine the laws at intervals, and to advise upon their admendment if<br \/>neccessary. The power of the civil justice and criminal courts were<br \/>strengthened under James I's reign. He clearly wished to<br \/><br \/>establish a parliament such as he had seen at work in England.<br \/>For more information of his mammoth changes to Scottish courts and<br \/>parliaments, see the book \"Scotland from the Earliest Times to 1603\" - by<br \/>William Croft Dickinson. (Although it may be difficult to obtain a copy).<br \/>Though orthodox in faith and sincere in piety, he was a rough opponent of<br \/>Rome when he felt it threatened his own countries independence. He denied<br \/>the Pope's power of provision, the right to appoint bishops to vacant sees<br \/>on Scotland, and thus have influence over one of the estates in its<br \/>parliament.It had become the kings right to approve a bishop-elect before<br \/>consecration and papal promotion, and he stopped his churchmen from<br \/>bargaining with Rome for these benefices, arguing with some justice that<br \/>the traffic was impoverishing his kingdom. With his parliament, he declared<br \/>this \"barratry\" illegal, taxed the export of gold and silver, and forbade<br \/>the clerics to travel abroad without royal license, the Pope demanded the<br \/>repeal of the acts. The king's response was to acknowledge the authority of<br \/>the Counsil of Basle, which had attempted to reform such papal powers of<br \/>provision.<br \/>He was hard and exacting on the true duties of his churchmen, and ordered<br \/>them to set their house in order, lest the crown's past generousity be cut.<br \/>But, Scotlands detestment of so called \"heretics\", which resulted in the<br \/>first heretical buring, during the regent before James' reign, was started<br \/>again in 1433. A second was burnt, Paul<br \/><br \/>Crawar, a reasonable fellow by the sound of him, a Bohemian graduate of<br \/>medicine and the arts who had come to St. Andrews University as an emissary<br \/>of the Hussites. He was said to have preached free love and socialism (or a<br \/>form of it) by his detractors, that enduring combination of human desires.<br \/>The smoldering flames that would spread from his burning, burnt longer than<br \/>his judges could have imagined.<br \/>Law, administration, and political and church reform were all done or<br \/>attempted during James I's reign. No king had done so much for Scotland,<br \/>outside of war and independence, since Alexander II, and few had so many<br \/>enemies. The work he set off was too great for any one man, and in his<br \/>efforts to break the powers of the barons he was often careless and<br \/>foolish. He alienated the Douglases (one of the most powerful Lowland<br \/>Scottish families) by imprisoning their earl, and deprived the Earl of<br \/>March of his title and estates because of his father's desertion to the<br \/>English 30 years before. Four-fifths of his ransom was yet to be paid and<br \/>many of the lords had kinsman still held hostage in England, and bitterly<br \/>resented the kings indifference to them. His custom of appropriating<br \/>estates to the crown when there was doubt about an heir may have been good<br \/>housekeeping or feudal custom, but most men considered it robbery. His<br \/>large family of first and distant cousins was full of jealousy, spite, envy<br \/>and greed, and it was perhaps inevitable that this Stewart king should die<br \/>by a Stewart plot.<br \/>He himself made it possible by weaking his prestige with a half-hearted war<br \/>with England. On her way to marry the Dauphin his daughter Margaret<br \/>narrowly escaped a piratical attack by an English ship, and what seems on<br \/>the surface to be a good excuse, James besieged the castle of Roxburgh,<br \/>which had been in English hands now, for 100 years. He abandoned it without<br \/>assualt, the reason is unclear, but it is said that his wife warned him of<br \/>plots against him if he pressd on. And there was<br \/><br \/>a plot, within his own family and his own household, and the unpopularity<br \/>of the king's withdrawl from a chivalrous field (the castle) gave the<br \/>plotters courage. At it's veiled centre was the Earl of Atholl, \"that old<br \/>servant of many evil days\", a son of Robert II's second marriage and by his<br \/>own reckoning the rightful king of Scotland.<br \/><br \/>His son, Sir Robert Stewart, was the King's Chamberlain, and it was he who<br \/>found a willing assassin in Sir Robert Graham, a man with his own festering<br \/>grudge and a scarred memory of the imprisonment and banishment.<br \/>At the end of 1436 James went to keep Christmas with the Dominican friars<br \/>at Perth. As he crossed the Forth a Highland woman warned him that he would<br \/>never return alive, a common warning in Scots history and just as commonly<br \/>ignored. She followed him to Perth, it is said, repeating her tedious<br \/>warnings, and she was present on the night of February 20 when Robert<br \/>Stewart opened the door of the convent where the King was staying, and<br \/>admitted the Graham.<br \/>James was in his wife's chamber, talking to her and her ladies, relaxed in<br \/>his dressing-gown, amused by the Highland's woman's last warning and<br \/>telling stories of omens and premonitions. When he heard the noise of heavy<br \/>feet, clanking armour, his quick mind sensed what they meant. He wrenched<br \/>up the planking of the floor and dropped into a vault or drain below,<br \/>hoping to escape into a court beyond but forgetting that its mouth had<br \/>recently been sealed to prevent his tennis-balls from rolling into it.<br \/>Graham and his eight confederates broke into the room, dragged<br \/><br \/>out the fighting King, and butchered him with twenty-eight dagger-strokes.<br \/>The Queen was wounded in her efforts to save her husband, and it might have<br \/>been better for Graham had he killed her too since he had gone this far.<br \/>This \"freshest and fairest flower\" of the King's youth became a tigress in<br \/>revenge. Atholl and Robert Stewart, Graham and his hired cutthroats were<br \/>soon taken, and suffered long and appalling torture until the Queen's grief<br \/>was satisfied and they were sent to the merciful headsman.<br \/>And so ended the life of James I of Scotland on 20 February, 1437....560<br \/>years ago this year.<br \/><\/pre>\n<div><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The First James of ScotlandBy Rballoch.James1 of Scotland=============================================On 20 February, 1437 King James I of Scotland was assasinated. In memory ofthis King, I have written a small biography of his life and his reign. Thisby no means is a full account of the events in the Kings life &#8212; or theevents that took place in [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/87606"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=87606"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/87606\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=87606"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=87606"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/cvnextjob.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=87606"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}