July 10, 2011 <Back to Index>
PAGE SPONSOR |
James III (10 July, 1451 – 11 June, 1488) was King of Scots from 1460 to 1488. James was an unpopular and ineffective monarch owing to an unwillingness to administer justice fairly, a policy of pursuing alliance with the Kingdom of England, and a disastrous relationship with nearly all his extended family. His reputation as the first Renaissance monarch
in Scotland has sometimes been exaggerated, based on late chronicle
attacks on him for being more interested in such unmanly pursuits as music than hunting, riding and leading his kingdom into war. In fact the artistic legacy of his reign is slight, especially when compared to that of his successors, James IV and James V.
Such evidence as there is consists of portrait coins produced during
his reign, displaying the king in three-quarter profile, and wearing an
imperial crown, the Trinity Altarpiece by Hugo van der Goes, which was probably not commissioned by the king, and an unusual hexagonal chapel at Restalrignear Edinburgh, perhaps inspired by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. He was born to James II of Scotland and Mary of Guelders.
His exact date and place of birth have been a matter of debate —
although not since the 1950s. Claims were made that he was born in May
1452, or 10 or 20 July 1451. The place of birth was either Stirling Castle or the Castle of St Andrews, depending on the year. His most recent biographer, the historian Norman Macdougall, argued strongly for late May 1452 at St Andrews, Fife. He succeeded his father, James II on 3 August 1460, and was crowned at Kelso Abbey, Roxburghshire, a week later. During his childhood, the government was led by three successive factions, led respectively by the king's mother, Mary of Gueldres (1460 - 1463) (who briefly secured the return of the burgh of Berwick to Scotland), James Kennedy, Bishop of St Andrews and Gilbert, Lord Kennedy (1463 - 1466), and Robert, Lord Boyd (1466 - 1469). The Boyd faction made itself unpopular, especially with the king, by self-aggrandisement. Lord Boyd's son, Thomas, was made Earl of Arran and married to the king's sister, Mary. However, the family successfully negotiated the king's marriage to Margaret of Denmark, daughter of Christian I of Denmark in 1469, in the process ending the 'Norwegian annual' fee owed to Denmark for the Western Isles, and receiving Orkney and Shetland (theoretically only as a temporary measure to cover Margaret's dowry). Thus Scotland
in 1470 reached its greatest ever territorial extent, when James
permanently annexed the islands to the crown. James married Margaret of Denmark in July 1469 at Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh. The marriage produced three sons: James IV of Scotland, James Stewart, Duke of Ross, John Stewart, Earl of Mar. Conflict
broke out between James and the Boyd family following the marriage.
Robert and Thomas Boyd (with Princess Mary) were out of the country
involved in diplomacy when their regime was overthrown. Mary's marriage
was later declared void in 1473. The family of Sir Alexander Boyd was
executed by James in 1469. James's
policies during the 1470s revolved primarily around ambitious
continental schemes for territorial expansion, and alliance with
England. Between 1471 and 1473 he suggested annexations or invasions of Brittany, Saintonge and Guelders.
These unrealistic aims resulted in parliamentary criticism, especially
since the king was reluctant to deal with the more humdrum business of
administering justice at home. In 1474 a marriage alliance was agreed with Edward IV of England, by which the future James IV of Scotland was to marry Princess Cecily of York, daughter of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville.
It might have been a sensible move for Scotland, but it went against
the traditional enmity of the two countries dating back to the reign of Robert I and the Wars of Independence,
not to mention the vested interests of the border nobility. The
alliance, therefore (and the taxes raised to pay for the marriage) was
at least one of the reasons why the king was unpopular by 1479. Also
during the 1470s conflict developed between the king and his two
brothers, Alexander, Duke of Albany and John, Earl of Mar. Mar died suspiciously in Edinburgh in 1480 and his estates were forfeited and possibly given to a royal favourite, Robert Cochrane. Albany fled to France in 1479, accused of treason and breaking the alliance with England. But by 1479 the alliance was collapsing, and war with England existed on an intermittent level in 1480 - 1482. In 1482 Edward launched a full-scale invasion, led by the Duke of Gloucester, the future Richard III,
and including the Duke of Albany, styled "Alexander IV", as part of the
invasion party. James, in attempting to lead his subjects against the
invasion, was arrested by a group of disaffected nobles, at Lauder
Bridge in July 1482. It has been suggested that the nobles were already
in league with Albany. The king was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle,
and a new regime, led by 'lieutenant-general' Albany, became
established during the autumn of 1482. Meanwhile the English army,
unable to take Edinburgh Castle, ran out of money and returned to
England, having taken Berwick-upon-Tweed for the last time. James
was able to regain power, buying off members of Albany government, so
that by the December 1482 Parliament Albany's government was
collapsing. In particular his attempt to claim the vacant earldom of
Mar led to the intervention of the powerful George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntly, on the king's side. In January 1483 Albany fled to his estates at Dunbar.
The death of his patron, Edward IV, on 9 April, left Albany in a weak
position, and he fled over the border to England. He remained there
until 1484, when he launched another abortive invasion at Lochmaben. Another attempted return has been argued to have occurred in 1485, when (admittedly suspect) accounts suggest he escaped from Edinburgh Castle on a rope made of sheets. Certainly his right-hand man, James Liddale of Halkerston, was arrested and executed around that time. Albany was killed in a joust in Paris later that year. Despite
his lucky escape in 1482, when he easily could have been murdered or
executed in an attempt to bring his son to the throne, during the 1480s
James did not reform his behaviour. Obsessive attempts to secure
alliance with England continued, although they made little sense given
the prevailing politics. He continued to favour a group of 'familiars',
unpopular with the more powerful magnates. He refused to travel for the
implementation of justice, and remained invariably resident in
Edinburgh. He was also estranged from his wife, Margaret of Denmark, who lived in Stirling,
and increasingly his eldest son. Instead he favoured his second son.
Matters came to a head in 1488 when he faced an army raised by the
disaffected nobles, and many former councillors at the Battle of Sauchieburn, and was defeated and killed. His heir, the future James IV, took arms against his father, provoked by the favouritism given to his younger brother. Persistent legends, based on the highly coloured and unreliable accounts of 16th century chroniclers such as Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie, John Leslie and George Buchanan, claim that James III was assassinated at Milltown, near Bannockburn,
soon after the battle. There is no contemporary evidence to support
this account, nor the allegation that he fled the battle, nor the tale
that his assassin impersonated a priest in order to approach James. A
story is told that, on the eve of the Battle of Sauchieburn, Sir David
Lindsay, son of Sir John, Lord Lindsay of the Byres, presented James
III with a "great grey horse" that would carry him faster than any
other horse into or away from the battle. Unfortunately, the horse
threw the king during the battle, and James III was either killed in
the fall, or was finished off by enemy soldiers. Whatever
his other faults, James does not seem to have been a coward nor (as
Pitscottie claimed) did he avoid conflict or 'manly pursuits'. He
actively pursued military conflict in 1482 and 1488 with disastrous
results, and frequently proposed unrealistic schemes to take armies to
the continent. It is most likely that he was killed in the heat of
battle. James is buried at Cambuskenneth Abbey. |