fbpx
Wikipedia

James V of Scotland

James V (10 April 1512 – 14 December 1542) was King of Scotland from 9 September 1513 until his death in 1542. He was crowned on 21 September 1513 at the age of seventeen months. James was the son of King James IV and Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII of England. During his childhood Scotland was governed by regents, firstly by his mother until she remarried, and then by his first cousin once removed, John Stewart, Duke of Albany. James's personal rule began in 1528 when he finally escaped the custody of his stepfather, Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus. His first action was to exile Angus and confiscate the lands of the Douglases.

James V
Portrait by Corneille de Lyon, c. 1536
King of Scotland
Reign9 September 1513 –
14 December 1542
Coronation21 September 1513
PredecessorJames IV
SuccessorMary
Regents
See list
Born10 April 1512
Linlithgow Palace, Linlithgow, Scotland
Died14 December 1542(1542-12-14) (aged 30)
Falkland Palace, Fife, Scotland
Burial8 January 1543
Spouses
(m. 1537; died 1537)
(m. 1538)
Issue
more...
HouseStewart
FatherJames IV of Scotland
MotherMargaret Tudor
ReligionCatholicism
Signature

James greatly increased his income by tightening control over royal estates and from the profits of justice, customs and feudal rights. He founded the College of Justice in 1532, and also acted to end lawlessness and rebellion in the Borders and the Hebrides. The rivalry among France, England and the Holy Roman Empire lent James unwonted diplomatic weight, and saw him secure two politically and financially advantageous French marriages, first to Madeleine of Valois, and then to Mary of Guise. James also fathered at least nine illegitimate children by a series of mistresses.

James V's reign witnessed the beginnings of Protestantism in Scotland, and his uncle Henry VIII of England's break with Rome in the 1530s placed James in a powerful bargaining position with the papacy, allowing James to exploit the situation to increase his control over ecclesiastical appointments and the financial dividends from church revenues. Pope Paul III also granted him the title of Defender of the Faith in 1537. James V maintained diplomatic correspondence with various Irish nobles and chiefs throughout their resistance to Henry VIII in the 1530s, and in 1540 they offered him the kingship of Ireland. A patron of the arts, James spent lavishly on the construction of several royal residences in the High Gothic and Renaissance styles.

James V has been described as a vindictive king, whose policies were largely motivated by the pursuit of wealth, and a paranoid fear of his nobility which led to the ruthless appropriation of their lands. He has also been characterised as the "poor man's king", due to his accessibility to the poor and his acting against their oppressors. James died in December 1542 following the Scottish defeat by the English at the Battle of Solway Moss. His only surviving legitimate child, Mary, succeeded him at the age of just six days old.

Early life edit

 
 
James V's parents, King James IV and Margaret Tudor

James was the third son of King James IV and his wife Margaret Tudor, the eldest daughter of Henry VII of England, and was the only legitimate child of James IV to survive infancy. He was born on 10 April 1512 at Linlithgow Palace and baptised the following day,[1] receiving the title Duke of Rothesay.[2] James became king at just seventeen months old when his father was killed at the Battle of Flodden on 9 September 1513.

James was crowned in the Chapel Royal at Stirling Castle on 21 September 1513. The nobility accepted Margaret Tudor as regent for her young son, in accordance with the terms of James IV's will, which also stated that Margaret was to retain this position so long as she remained a widow.[3] The long minority of James V would last for nearly fifteen years, with Margaret's position as regent soon challenged by the French-born John, Duke of Albany, who was James V's second cousin and the nearest male heir to the throne after the king and his younger brother, Alexander, Duke of Ross, who was born in April 1514.[4]

In August 1514, Margaret married Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus. This marriage was opposed by many among the nobility, who feared the advancement of the Douglases, and sought to deprive Margaret of the regency because she had remarried.[5]

The Privy Council removed Margaret from the office of regent and appointed the Duke of Albany to replace her.[5]

Minority rule edit

Albany's regency edit

 
John Stewart, Duke of Albany James V's regent from 1515 to 1524

Albany arrived at Dumbarton Castle with eight ships and a troop of French soldiers in May 1514.[6] He entered Edinburgh on 26 May, and in July Parliament confirmed his restoration as Duke of Albany and his position as regent. Albany's noble supporters intended his arrival to bring stable and good government, while Francis I of France sought to use Albany to maintain support for the Auld Alliance with France.[7] The first year of his regency was a period when a vigorous defence of his authority was essential to prevent the crumbling of Scottish government either into anarchy or into English control.[7]

The struggle for control of the person of the king was an essential prelude to Albany's attempt to govern, as he was aware from the beginning that his claims to act for the king and with full royal authority depended on the continued goodwill of the king himself, or rather of whoever had control of his person and could therefore claim to speak with his voice. Margaret and Angus were potentially hostile to Albany's intentions, and James V had to be removed from their influence.[8] Albany besieged Stirling Castle and Margaret was forced to relinquish possession of the king and the Duke of Ross.[7] James would not see his mother again for two years.[9] Having lost the regency, her income and control of her sons, Margaret's departed from the court in September 1515, fleeing from Linlithgow Palace, where she had gone for her lying in, to Tantallon Castle, where she gave birth to her daughter, Lady Margaret Douglas, in Northumberland.[10]

The birth and long journey left her extremely ill and she was not told of the death of her second son Alexander in December 1515 until she had recovered her strength. The earl of Angus made his peace with Albany later in 1516.[11]

A contemporary tribute, paid to the Duke of Albany's success in bringing order and good government to Scotland, by Sebastian Giustinian, the Venetian Ambassador at Henry VIII's Court, was that Scotland, "...was as much under Albany's control as if he were King...".[12] In February 1517, James was brought from Stirling to the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, but during an outbreak of plague in the city, he was moved to the care of Antoine d'Arces at nearby rural Craigmillar Castle.[13]

At Stirling, the ten-year-old James had a guard of 20 footmen dressed in his colours, red and yellow. When he went to the park below the Castle, "by secret and in right fair and soft wedder (weather)," six horsemen would scour the countryside two miles roundabout for intruders.[14] Poets wrote their own nursery rhymes for James and advised him on royal behavior. Although his academic development was effectively cut short under Angus's captivity from 1525 onward, James V had been given a strong grounding by a number of tutors, including David Lyndsay and Gavin Dunbar.[15] James had been taught French and Latin, but as an adult he spoke halting French, and his need for an interpreter to converse with an Italian bishop suggests that his spoken Latin and Italian were poor.[15][16]

 
Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus, James V's step-father

Between 1517 and 1520, Albany sojourned in France, and did not exercise the regency in person, but through his lieutenants including Antoine d'Arces, sieur de la Bastie. On 26 August 1517 Albany and Charles, Duke of Alençon agreed the Treaty of Rouen, which renewed the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France, and promised a French royal bride for James V. At England's request, Albany was detained in France for four years, and with him absent, Queen Margaret returned to Scotland and sought in vain to regain the regency.[9] Young James V was kept a virtual prisoner by Albany and his lieutenants, and Margaret was allowed to see her son only once between 1516 and end of Albany's regency in 1524. Following the signing of the Treaty of Bruges between Henry VIII of England and the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, Francis I allowed the Duke of Albany to return to Scotland to strengthen the Franco-Scottish alliance.[17]

The Treaty of Rouen was ratified, and Madeleine of Valois was suggested as a suitable bride for James V. When the Duke of Albany returned in November 1521 Margaret sided with him against her husband, the Earl of Angus. Albany came to Edinburgh Castle, where James V was kept, and in a public ceremony the keeper gave him the keys, which he passed to Margaret, who gave them back to Albany, symbolising that the government of Scotland was in his hands.[18] Thus, Albany was able to keep an upper hand in regard to the ambitious Angus. The regent put Angus under charges of high treason in December 1521, and later sent him practically a prisoner to France. In November 1522, Albany took an army to besiege Wark Castle defended by Sir William Lisle, but gave up after three days when the weather deteriorated.[19]

Margaret's coup edit

In 1524, Albany was finally removed from power in a coup d'état while he was in France. Margaret, with the help of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran and his followers, brought James V from Stirling to Edinburgh.[17] In August, Parliament declared the regency at an end, and the 12-year-old King James was prematurely "erected" to full kingly powers. In November, Parliament formally recognised Margaret as the chief councillor to the king.[17] Margaret's alliance with the Hamiltons inevitably alienated other noble houses. Henry VIII allowed the Earl of Angus (who Albany had banished) to return to Scotland in 1524, and he entered into an alliance with the Earl of Lennox, an enemy of Margaret and Arran.[17] When Angus arrived in Edinburgh with a large group of armed men, claiming his right to attend Parliament, Margaret ordered cannons to be fired on them from Edinburgh Castle.[17] Parliament subsequently made Angus a Lord of the Articles and a member of the council of regency.

Angus captivity edit

A plan was agreed to end the feuding among these opposing groups by allowing each of them in turn to act as host to the young king. However, the plan fell apart in November 1525 when, at the end of his period of custody, Angus refused to surrender the king who, in effect, became a prisoner of the Red Douglases for the next two-and-a-half years.[17] Angus again "erected" James V to full kingly powers again, took him on justice ayres, and kept him under close supervision. He spoiled the king with various lavish gifts in an attempt to buy his favour and make the detention more tolerable, and when James showed signs of tiring of these gifts, Angus also introduced the adolescent king to the pleasures of the flesh with a succession of prostitutes.[20]

Angus overreached himself, assuming the office of Lord Chancellor, and granting his followers almost every lucrative post available in the royal household.[20] While James V clearly enjoyed some aspects of his captivity, he grew to hate his captor. Several attempts were made to free the young king—one by Walter Scott of Branxholme and Buccleuch, who ambushed the king's forces on 25 July 1526 at the Battle of Melrose and was routed off the field. Another attempt later that year, on 4 September at the Battle of Linlithgow Bridge, failed again to relieve the king from the clutches of Angus.[20] In May 1528 James finally escaped from Angus's captivity when he fled from Edinburgh to Stirling in disguise. After meeting with his mother at Stirling, James V re-entered Edinburgh in July with a large army. Summoned for treason, Angus holed himself up in Tantallon Castle until an agreement was reached whereby he was allowed to go into exile in England after surrendering his castles.[20]

Personal rule edit

Pierre de Ronsard saw James in 1537 when the king was twenty-four and summed up his paradoxical appearance: "La douceur et la force illustroient son visage Si que Venus et Mars en avoient fait partage" - His royal bearing, and vigorous pursuit of virtue, of honour, and love's war, this sweetness and strength illuminate his face, as if he were the child of Venus and Mars.[15]

Religion edit

 
The four European orders of chivalry to which James V belonged — Garter, Thistle, Golden Fleece and St Michael — on the outer gate he built at his birthplace, Linlithgow Palace

The first action James took as king was to remove Angus from the scene. The Douglas family — excluding James's half-sister Margaret, who was already safely in England, innocent of any crime against him (and thus safe from any revenge James took) — were forced into exile and James besieged their castle at Tantallon. He then subdued the Border rebels and the chiefs of the Western Isles. As well as taking advice from his nobility and using the services of the Duke of Albany in France and at Rome, James had a team of professional lawyers and diplomats, including Adam Otterburn and Thomas Erskine of Haltoun. Even his pursemaster and yeoman of the wardrobe, John Tennent of Listonschiels, was sent on an errand to England, though he got a frosty reception.[21]

James increased his income by tightening control over royal estates and from the profits of justice, customs and feudal rights. He also gave his illegitimate sons lucrative benefices, diverting substantial church wealth into his coffers. James spent a large amount of his wealth on building up a collection of tapestries from those inherited from his father.[22] James sailed to France for his first marriage and strengthened the royal fleet. In 1540, he sailed to Kirkwall in Orkney, then Lewis, in his ship the Salamander, first making a will in Leith, knowing this to be "uncertane aventuris." The purpose of this voyage was to show the royal presence and hold regional courts, called "justice ayres."[23]

Domestic and international policy was affected by the Reformation, especially after Henry VIII broke from the Catholic Church. James V did not tolerate heresy, and during his reign a number of outspoken Protestants were persecuted. The most famous of these was Patrick Hamilton, who was burned at the stake as a heretic at St Andrews in 1528. Later in the reign, the English ambassador Ralph Sadler tried to encourage James to close the monasteries and take their revenue so that he would not have to keep sheep like a mean subject. James replied that he had no sheep, he could depend on his god-father the king of France, and it was against reason to close the abbeys that "stand these many years, and God's service maintained and kept in the same, and I might have anything I require of them."[24] Sadler knew that James did farm sheep on his estates.[25]

James recovered money from the church by getting Pope Clement VII to allow him to tax monastic incomes.[26] He sent £50 to Johann Cochlaeus, a German opponent of Martin Luther, after receiving one of his books in 1534.[27] On 19 January 1537, Pope Paul III sent James a blessed sword and hat symbolising his prayers that James would be strengthened against heresies from across the border.[28] These gifts were delivered by the Pope's messenger while James was at Compiègne in France on 25 February 1537.[29]

According to 16th-century writers, his treasurer James Kirkcaldy of Grange tried to persuade James against the persecution of Protestants and to meet Henry VIII at York.[30] James and Henry corresponded about meeting in 1536. Pope Paul III advised James against travelling to England, and sent an envoy or nuncio to Scotland to discuss the initiative.[31] Although Henry VIII sent his tapestries to York in September 1541 ahead of a meeting, James did not come. The lack of commitment to this meeting was regarded by English observers as a sign that Scotland was firmly allied to France and Catholicism, particularly by the influence of Cardinal Beaton, Keeper of the Privy Seal, and as a cause for war.[32]

In 1540, Irish nobles and chiefs offered James the kingship of Ireland, as a further challenge to Henry VIII.[33]

Building edit

 
The James V Tower at the Palace of Holyroodhouse
 
Façade of Falkland Palace in the French Renaissance style

James V spent a large amount of money (at least £41,000) during his adult reign on extensively remodelling all the major residences and several minor ones, including the construction of new structures, with the most significant work focused on Falkland Palace and Stirling Castle.[34][35] Early in his personal rule James began the construction of the present Late Gothic James V Tower at the north-west corner of the Palace of Holyroodhouse, which provided new royal lodgings on the first and second floors, and a high degree of security. A new west front was also built.[36][37] At Linlithgow Palace, James closed off the original east entranceway and formed a new formal access from the south, including an inner gatehouse and an outer entrance gate decorated with the carved arms of the four chivalric orders of which James was a member: Garter, Thistle, Golden Fleece and Saint Michael. The three-tiered octagonal King's Fountain topped by an imperial crown was built in 1538 as the centrepiece of the courtyard.[38]

At Falkland Palace James V extended his father's buildings in French Renaissance style between 1537 and 1541, and built a real tennis court in the garden in 1541.[39] The court survives to this day and is the oldest in the United Kingdom. James also built a new Late Gothic entrance tower in the south range, and the courtyard facades of the east and south ranges that were built in 1537 and 1539 are the earliest examples of Renaissance architecture in the British Isles.[34][40] The largest of James V's building projects was the construction of the Royal Palace at Stirling Castle, built between 1538 and 1540, with its Renaissance facades and the north, east and south quarters housing the king's and queen's apartments. Work was also carried out at Tantallon Castle, Blackness Castle and Hermitage Castle.[41]

Marriages edit

 
Portrait of James V

As early as August 1517, a clause of the Treaty of Rouen provided that if the Auld Alliance between France and Scotland was maintained, James should have a daughter of Francis I of France as a bride. Yet by the 1520s Francis's two surviving daughters were too frail or too young.[42] In 1528 the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the English diplomat Thomas Magnus both raised the possibility of a marriage between the king and his cousin, Princess Mary, while that same year, Margaret of Austria, Charles V's aunt, suggested that James should marry Charles's sister, Mary of Austria.[43] Charles V also proposed James marry his niece, Maria of Portugal. Perhaps to remind Francis I of his obligations, in 1529 James V began negotiations for his marriage elsewhere, sending the Duke of Albany to Rome to negotiate a marriage to Catherine de' Medici, the niece of Pope Clement VII.[44] By 1533 there was discussion of James marrying one of his second cousins, Christina or Dorothea, the daughters of Christian II of Denmark, while in 1534 Margaret of Valois-Angoulême, sister of Francis I, suggested her sister-in-law Isabella.[45]

In December 1534, Francis I insisted that his eldest daughter Madeleine's health was too poor for marriage, suggesting that James V should marry Mary of Bourbon, daughter of the Duke of Vendôme, instead to fulfil the Treaty of Rouen. Again, the Duke of Albany briefly entertained the idea that James might marry Christina of Denmark, and the king halted progress on the marriage negotiations. There was also an investigation into the possibility of James marrying his former mistress, Margaret Erskine, before the negotiations resumed again, and in March 1536 a final contract made for Mary of Bourbon to marry James V. She would have a dowry as if she were a French princess, and Francis I consolidated the agreement by sending James the collar of the Order of Saint Michael as a token of his affection.[46]

Marriage to Madeleine of Valois edit

 
Portrait of Madeleine of Valois by Corneille de Lyon

James decided to travel to France to meet his prospective bride in person. He sailed from Kirkcaldy on 1 September 1536, with the earls of Arran, Argyll and Rothes, Lord Fleming, David Beaton and a force of 500 men in a fleet of six ships, using the Mary Willoughby as his flagship.[47] Before his departure, James appointed six vice-regents to govern Scotland in his absence.[48] In the event, James V would be away from Scotland for eight months, becoming the first Scottish king to voluntarily remain away from his realm since David II almost two hundred years earlier.[49] Arriving at Dieppe a week later, the Scots travelled to the Duke of Vendôme's court at Saint-Quentin. However, on meeting Mary of Bourbon, James V was not impressed by her. He then travelled south to the French court at the Château d'Amboise, where he met Madeleine, and again pressed Francis for her hand in marriage. Fearing the harsh climate of Scotland would prove fatal to his daughter's already failing health, Francis initially refused to permit the marriage, but the couple persuaded Francis to reluctantly grant permission to their marriage.[50] The marriage contract was signed in November, with Francis I granting Madeleine a dowry of 100,000 écu, and a further 30,000 francs a year for James.[51]

James V renewed the Auld Alliance and fulfilled the terms of the Treaty of Rouen on 1 January 1537 by marrying Madeleine at Notre-Dame de Paris. James received papal approval in the form of the Blessed sword and hat, and was granted the title of Defender of the Faith by Pope Paul III on 19 January 1537, symbolising the hopes of the papacy that he would resist the path that his uncle Henry VIII had followed.[52][53] After months of festivities and celebrations, and visits to Chantilly, Compiègne and Rouen (where Madeleine fell ill), the royal couple embarked for Scotland in May 1537, arriving at Leith on 19 May.[54] Madeleine wrote to her father from Edinburgh on 8 June 1537 saying that she was better and her symptoms had diminished.[55] However, a month later, on 7 July 1537, Queen Madeleine died in her husband's arms at Holyrood Palace of tuberculosis.[56] James V wrote to Francis I to inform him of what had happened, saying that if it were not for the fact that he was relying on the French king to remain his "good father", he would be in even greater pain.[56] The queen was interred in Holyrood Abbey in Edinburgh.

Marriage to Mary of Guise edit

 
Portrait of Mary of Guise attributed to Corneille de Lyon, c. 1537

Following Madeleine's death, James V's thoughts turned to a second French bride to further the interests of the Franco-Scottish alliance. David Beaton was sent to France to persuade Francis I to agree to James marrying his only surviving daughter, Margaret.[56] Francis offered Mary of Guise as a bride instead. The daughter of Claude, Duke of Guise, Mary had recently been widowed by the death of her husband, Louis II d'Orléans, Duke of Longueville. David Beaton wrote to James V from Lyon in October 1537 that Mary was "stark (strong), well complexioned, and fit to travel", and that her father was "marvellous desirous of the expedition and hasty end of the matter," and had already consulted with his brother, the Duke of Lorraine, and Mary herself.[57] The marriage contract was finalised in January 1538, with James V receiving a dowry of 150,000 livres. As was customary, if the king died first, Mary would retain for her lifetime her jointure houses of Falkland Palace, Stirling Castle, Dingwall Castle and Threave Castle, along with the rentals of the earldoms of Fife, Strathearn, Ross and Orkney, and the lordships of Galloway, Ardmannoch and the Isles.[58]

The proxy wedding of James V and Mary of Guise was held on 9 May 1538 at the Château de Châteaudun. Some 2,000 Scottish lords and barons came from Scotland aboard a fleet of ships under Lord Maxwell to attend, with Lord Maxwell standing as proxy for James V. Mary departed from Le Havre on 10 June 1538, and landed in Scotland 6 days later at Crail in Fife. She was formally received by the king at St Andrews a few days later amid pageants and plays performed in her honour, and James and Mary were married in person at St Andrews Cathedral on 18 June 1538. James's mother Margaret Tudor wrote to Henry VIII in July, "I trust she will prove a wise Princess. I have been much in her company, and she bears herself very honourably to me, with very good entertaining."[59] James and Mary had two sons: James, Duke of Rothesay (born 22 May 1540 at St Andrews), and Robert (or Arthur), Duke of Albany (born and baptised on 12 April 1541); however, both died on 21 April 1541, when James was nearly one year old and Robert (or Arthur) was nine days old. Mary's mother, Antoinette de Bourbon, wrote that the couple were still young and should hope for more children.[60] The third and last child of the union was a daughter, Mary, who was born on 8 December 1542.[61]

Outside interests edit

 
Statue at Stirling Castle, said to depict the Gudeman of Ballengeich
 
Groat of James V, Edinburgh mint, 1526 × 1539

According to legend, James was nicknamed "King of the Commons" as he would sometimes travel around Scotland disguised as a common man, describing himself as the "Gudeman of Ballengeich" ('Gudeman' means 'landlord' or 'farmer', and 'Ballengeich' was the nickname of a road next to Stirling Castle—meaning 'windy pass' in Gaelic[62]). One traditional ballad, The Jolly Beggar, is considered by some to refer to his activities.

James was also a keen lute player.[63] In 1562, Sir Thomas Wood reported that James had "a singular good ear and could sing that he had never seen before" (sight-read), but his voice was "rawky" and "harske." At court, James maintained a band of Italian musicians who adopted the name Drummond. These were joined for the winter of 1529/30 by a musician and diplomat sent by the Duke of Milan, Thomas de Averencia de Brescia, probably a lutenist.[64] The historian Andrea Thomas makes a useful distinction between the loud music provided at ceremonies and processionals and instruments employed for more private occasions or worship, the music fyne described by Helena Mennie Shire. This quieter music included a consort of viols played by four Frenchmen led by Jacques Columbell.[65] It seems certain that David Peebles wrote music for James V and probable that the Scottish composer Robert Carver was in royal employ, though evidence is lacking.[66]

As a patron of poets and authors, James supported William Stewart and John Bellenden, the son of his nurse, who translated the Latin History of Scotland compiled in 1527 by Hector Boece into verse and prose.[67] Sir David Lindsay of the Mount, the Lord Lyon, head of the Lyon Court and diplomat, was a prolific poet. He produced an interlude at Linlithgow Palace thought to be a version of his play The Thrie Estaitis in 1540. James also attracted the attention of international authors. The French poet Pierre de Ronsard, who had been a page of Madeleine of Valois, offered unqualified praise;

"Son port estoit royal, son regard vigoureux

De vertus, et de l'honneur, et guerre amoureux
La douceur et la force illustroient son visage
Si que Venus et Mars en avoient fait partage"

His royal bearing, and vigorous pursuit
of virtue, of honour, and love's war,
this sweetness and strength illuminate his face,

as if he were the child of Venus and Mars.[68][69]

When he married Mary of Guise, Giovanni Ferrerio, an Italian scholar who had been at Kinloss Abbey in Scotland, dedicated to the couple a new edition of his work On the True Significance of Comets against the Vanity of Astrologers.[70] Like Henry VIII, James employed many foreign artisans and craftsmen in order to enhance the prestige of his renaissance court.[71] Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie listed their professions;

he plenished the country with all kind of craftsmen out of other countries, as French-men, Spaniards, Dutch men, and Englishmen, which were all cunning craftsmen, every man for his own hand. Some were gunners, wrights, carvers, painters, masons, smiths, harness-makers (armourers), tapesters, broudsters, taylors, cunning chirugeons, apothecaries, with all other kind of craftsmen to apparel his palaces.[72]

One technological initiative was a special mill for polishing armour at Holyroodhouse next to his mint. The mill had a pole drive 32 feet long powered by horses.[73] Mary of Guise's mother Antoinette of Bourbon sent him an armourer. The armourer made steel plates for his jousting saddles in October 1538 and delivered a skirt of plate armour in February 1540. In the same year, for his wife's coronation, the treasurer's accounts record that James personally devised fireworks made by his master gunners. His goldsmith John Mosman renovated the crown jewels for the occasion.[74] When James took steps to suppress the circulation of slanderous ballads and rhymes against Henry VIII, Henry sent Fulke ap Powell, Lancaster Herald, to give thanks and to make arrangements for the present of a lion for James's menagerie of exotic pets.[75]

War with England and death edit

 
Portrait of James V and Mary of Guise, anonymous artist, c. 1542, at Falkland Palace

The death of James's mother in 1541 removed any incentive for peace with England, and war broke out. Initially, the Scots won a victory at the Battle of Haddon Rig in August 1542. The Imperial ambassador in London, Eustace Chapuys, wrote on 2 October that the Scottish ambassadors ruled out a conciliatory meeting between James and Henry VIII in England until the pregnant Mary of Guise delivered her child. Henry would not accept this condition and mobilised his army against Scotland.[76] James was with his army at Lauder on 31 October 1542. Although he hoped to invade England, his nobles were reluctant.[77] He returned to Edinburgh, on the way writing a letter in French to his wife from Falahill mentioning he had three days of illness.[78] On 24 November his army suffered a serious defeat at the Battle of Solway Moss. Following a few days spent at Linlithgow Palace with Queen Mary, who was in the final stages of her pregnancy, on 6 December James travelled to Falkland Palace, where he soon took ill.[79][16]

Although James V's army had been beaten at Solway Moss, it was neither a personal humiliation for the king (who was not there) nor the result of noble disaffection. In fact, James had substantial support for his war policy and early in December he had made plans to renew the conflict with England.[16] James was on his deathbed at Falkland when news arrived from Linlithgow that the queen had given birth to a daughter. According to John Knox, on hearing of the birth of his daughter, the king said "It cam wi' a lass, and it will gang wi' a lass" (meaning "It began with a girl and it will end with a girl").[80] This could refer to the Stewart dynasty's accession to the throne through Marjorie Bruce, daughter of Robert the Bruce. The prophecy could have been intended to express his belief that his new-born daughter Mary would be the last of the Stewart monarchs. In fact, the last Stewart monarch was female: Anne, Queen of Great Britain. James V died at Falkland Palace on 14 December 1542, aged thirty. The king had been ill on a number of occasions during the previous decade: in 1533 "of a sore fois (face)"; in 1534 of the "pox, and fevir contenew"; in Paris in 1536; and in 1540, when he wrote to his wife to say that he had been as ill as he had ever been in his life, but was now recovered. Evidently his immune system had not recovered, as he had been ill again in November 1542.[16] It is likely that James V died from cholera or dysentery, rather than shame or despair brought on by the news of Solway Moss.[16]

 
The Royal Vault in the ruins of Holyrood Abbey, which contains the remains of James V

James was succeeded by his infant daughter, Mary, Queen of Scots. On 7 January 1543 the king's body was conveyed from Falkland to the Forth ferry at Kinghorn, before being transported to Edinburgh, escorted by a funeral cortege, and accompanied by Cardinal Beaton, the Earls of Arran, Argyll, Rothes, Marischal and other nobles.[71] James V was buried on 8 January at Holyrood Abbey, next to his first wife, Madeleine, and his two sons. A stone tomb was erected, on which Andrew Mansioun carved a lion, a crown and an eighteen-foot-long inscription in Roman letters. Alms were distributed to the poor of Edinburgh who had been present at the soul-Mass and dirge performed for the king.[71] During the Rough Wooing, the invading English armies inflicted structural damage on Holyrood Abbey in 1544 and 1547, destroying James V's tomb.[81][82]

James was the last monarch to die in Scotland until 8 September 2022 when Queen Elizabeth II died at Balmoral Castle in Aberdeenshire, 480 years later. Days later her body was carried through the streets of Edinburgh, the first time that a royal cortege had passed through the city since James V's burial.[83]

Issue edit

Legitimate issue edit

Name Birth Death Notes
By Madeleine of France
no issue
By Mary of Guise
James, Duke of Rothesay 22 May 1540 21 April 1541  
Arthur or Robert, Duke of Albany 12 April 1541 20 April 1541  
Mary, Queen of Scots 8 December 1542 8 February 1587 Married, firstly, Francis II of France; no issue. Married, secondly, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, and had issue (the future James VI and I). Married, thirdly, James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell; no issue.

Illegitimate issue edit

Name Birth Death Notes
By Elizabeth Shaw
James Stewart, Commendator of Kelso and Melrose c. 1529[84] 1557 His daughter, Marjorie, married the half-nephew of his brother, Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney. Some sources, however, state he had no issue.
By Margaret Erskine
James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray c. 1531[84] 23 January 1570 Prior of St Andrews; Regent of Scotland, for his nephew James VI and I. Married Agnes Keith, Countess of Moray, and had issue. He was the first head of government to be assassinated with a firearm.
By Elizabeth Stewart
Adam Stewart, Prior of Perth ? 20 June 1575 Married Janet Ruthven and had issue. In June 1596, James VI gave £200 to Adam's son, James Stewart, for his travelling expenses in foreign countries.[85]
By Christine Barclay
James Stewart ? ?  
By Elizabeth Carmichael
John Stewart, Commendator of Coldingham c. 1531[84] November 1563 Married Jean Hepburn and had issue including Francis Stewart, 5th Earl of Bothwell. Also had illegitimate issue.
By Elizabeth Bethune
Jean Stewart c. 1533 7 January 1587/88 Married Archibald Campbell, 5th Earl of Argyll; no issue.
By Euphame Elphinstone
Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney and Lord of Zetland (Commendator of Holyrood) c. 1533[84] 4 February 1593 Married Jean Kennedy and had issue. Also had illegitimate issue.
Unnamed child ? ? Died in childhood

Fictional portrayals edit

James V has been depicted in historical novels, poems, short stories and one notable opera. They include the following:[86]

  • Scott, Walter (1810), The Lady of the Lake, a Romantic narrative poem set in the Trossachs. He appears in disguise. The poem was tremendously influential in the nineteenth century and inspired the Highland Revival. James also features in Scott's Tales of a Grandfather.
  • "Johnnie Armstrong", a traditional ballad relating the story of Scottish raider and folk hero Johnnie Armstrong of Gilnockie, who was captured and hanged by King James V in 1530.
  • Rossini, Gioachino (1819), La Donna del Lago, an opera based on Scott's poem. Sung in Italian, James V appears as "Giacomo V".
  • Gibbon, Charles (1881), The Braes of Yarrow. The novels features Scotland in the aftermath of the Battle of Flodden, covering events to 1514. Margaret Tudor, "Boy-King" James V and Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Angus, are prominently featured.[87]
  • Barr, Robert (1902), A Prince of Good Fellows. James is the titular prince and the main character. He is depicted as an "adventure-loving persona".[86]
  • Gunn, John (1913), The Fight at Summerdale. The novel depicts Orkney, Edinburgh and Normandy in the 16th century. James V "appears more than once" in the various chapters.[86]
  • Knipe, John (1921), The Hour Before the Dawn. Depicts events "just before" and "after" the death of James V. James V, Mary of Guise and David Beaton are prominently depicted.[86]

Ancestors edit

References edit

  1. ^ Robert Kerr Hannay, Letters of James IV (SHS: Edinburgh, 1953), p. 243.
  2. ^ Mackay, Æneas (1892). "James V of Scotland" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 29. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 153–161.
  3. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 3.
  4. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. xii.
  5. ^ a b Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 28.
  6. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 54.
  7. ^ a b c Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 60.
  8. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 79.
  9. ^ a b Ross, Stewart, The Stewart Dynasty (Thomas and Lochar, 1993), p. 194.
  10. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), pp. 91–92.
  11. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 61.
  12. ^ Emond, Ken, James V (John Donald, 2019), p. 143.
  13. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 5, p. 130.
  14. ^ HMC Earl of Mar & Kellie at Alloa House (London, 1904), pp. 11–2.
  15. ^ a b c Ross, Stewart, The Stewart Dynasty (Thomas and Lochar, 1993), p. 197.
  16. ^ a b c d e Cameron, Jamie, James V (Tuckwell, 1998), p. 556.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Ross, Stewart, The Stewart Dynasty (Thomas and Lochar, 1993), p. 195.
  18. ^ Ken Emond, The Minority of James V (Edinburgh, 2019), p. 140.
  19. ^ Ken Emond, The Minority of James V (Edinburgh, 2019), p. 175.
  20. ^ a b c d Ross, Stewart, The Stewart Dynasty (Thomas and Lochar, 1993), p. 196.
  21. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), 12–15, 36: Murray, Atholl, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol. 10 (SHS: Edinburgh, 1965), pp. 13–51.
  22. ^ Dunbar, John G., Scottish Royal Palaces (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1999).
  23. ^ HMC Mar & Kellie (London, 1904), 15, Will 12 June 1540: Cameron, Jamie, James V (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1998), pp. 245–248.
  24. ^ Clifford, Arthur ed., Sadler State Papers, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1809), p. 30.
  25. ^ Athol Murray, 'Crown Lands', An Historical Atlas of Scotland (Scottish Medievalists, 1975), p. 73: After James's death 600 sheep were given to James Douglas of Drumlanrig, HMC 15th Report: Duke of Buccleuch (London, 1897), p. 17.
  26. ^ Cameron, Jamie, James V (Tuckwell, 1998), p. 260.
  27. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1905), p. 236.
  28. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., Letters of James V ( (HMSO: Edinburgh, 1954), 328:Reid, John J., 'The Scottish Regalia', PSAS, 9 December (1889), 28: this sword is lost.
  29. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1907), p. 18.
  30. ^ Steuart, A. Francis, ed., Memoirs of Sir James Melville of Halhill (Routledge, 1929), pp. 14–17.
  31. ^ Denys Hay, Letters of James V (Edinburgh, 1954), p. 320.
  32. ^ Campbell, Thomas P., Henry VIII and the Art of Majesty, Tapestries at the Tudor Court (Yale, 2007), p. 261.
  33. ^ Thomas D'Arcy McGee (1862), A Popular History of Ireland: from the Earliest Period to the Emancipation of the Catholics, Book VII, Chapter III.
  34. ^ a b Dunbar, John G., Scottish Royal Palaces (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1999), p. 27.
  35. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, the court of James V (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), p. 92.
  36. ^ Dunbar, John G., Scottish Royal Palaces (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1999), p. 61.
  37. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, the court of James V (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), pp. 99–100.
  38. ^ Dunbar, John G., Scottish Royal Palaces (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1999), p. 18.
  39. ^ Henry Paton, Accounts of the Masters of Work, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1957), pp. 270, 275, 279–81.
  40. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, the court of James V (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), p. 111.
  41. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, the court of James V (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), p. 49.
  42. ^ Hay, Denys, Letters of James V (HMSO, 1954), pp. 51–52.
  43. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 4 part IV (London, 1836), p. 545.
  44. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., The Letters of James V, HMSO (1954), p. 173, 180–2, 189,
  45. ^ Calendar of State Papers Venice, vol. 4 (London, 1871), no.861.
  46. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., The Letters of James V (HMSO: Edinburgh, 1954), 318: Bapst, E., Les Mariages de Jacques V, 273.
  47. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 5 part 4 cont. (London, 1836), pp. 59–60.
  48. ^ The vice-regents were Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow (the Lord Chancellor), James Beaton, Archbishop of St Andrews, the earls of Huntly, Montrose, and Eglinton, and Lord Maxwell (Cameron 1998, p. 288).
  49. ^ Cameron, Jamie, James V, Tuckwell (1998), p. 133.
  50. ^ Marshall, Rosalind, Scottish Queens, 1034-1714 (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2003), pp. 102–3.
  51. ^ Marshall, Rosalind, Scottish Queens, 1034-1714 (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2003), p. 104.
  52. ^ Cameron, Jamie, James V, Tuckwell (1998), p. 288.
  53. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., Letters of James V, HMSO (1954), 328.
  54. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 5 part 4 cont., (1836), 79, Clifford to Henry VIII.
  55. ^ Denys Hay, Letters of James V (HMSO: Edinburgh, 1954), pp. 331–2.
  56. ^ a b c Marshall, Rosalind, Scottish Queens, 1034-1714 (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2003), p. 108.
  57. ^ Letters & Papers Henry VIII, vol. 12, part 2 (London, 1891) no. 962: Lang, Andrew, 'Letters of Cardinal Beaton, SHR (1909), 156: Marshall (1977), 45, (which suggests he thought the couple had not met)
  58. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., The Letters of James V (HMSO, 1954), pp. 340–341.
  59. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 5 part 4 (London, 1836), 135, Margaret to Henry, 31 July 1538.
  60. ^ Wood, Marguerite, Balcarres Papers, vol. 1 (STS, 1923), 60–61.
  61. ^ Fraser, Antonia, Mary Queen of Scots, pp. 3 & 12.
  62. ^ Black (1861), Picturesque Tourist of Scotland, pp. 180–181.
  63. ^ "The Court of Mary, Queen of Scots". BBC Radio 3. 28 February 2010.
  64. ^ Hay, Denys, ed., Letters of James V (HMSO, 1954), pp. 63, 169, 170: Shire, Helena M., in Stewart Style (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1996), pp. 129–133.
  65. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie (John Donald, 2005), pp. 92–4, 98: H. M. Shire, Song Dance and Poetry (Cambridge, 1969).
  66. ^ Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie (John Donald, 1998), pp. 105–7.
  67. ^ Van Heijnsbergen, Theo, 'Literature in Queen Mary's Edinburgh: the Bannatyne Manuscript', in The Renaissance in Scotland (Brill, 1994), pp. 191–6.
  68. ^ Bingham, Caroline, James V (Collins, 1971), p. 12, verse quoted from William Drummond of Hawthornden, History of the 5 Jameses (1655), pp. 348–9
  69. ^ Drummond of Hawthorden, William, Works, Edinburgh (1711), p. 115.
  70. ^ Ferrerio, Giovanni, De vera cometae significatione contra astrologorum omnium vanitatem. Libellus, nuper natus et aeditus, Paris , Vascovan, (1538).
  71. ^ a b c Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, the court of James V (John Donald: Edinburgh, 2005), pp. 226–243.
  72. ^ Lindsay of Pitscottie, Robert, The History of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1778), p. 238: abbreviated in Lindsay of Pitscottie, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1814), p. 359.
  73. ^ Accounts of the Masters of Work, vol. 1 (HMSO: Edinburgh, 1957), pp. 101–102, 242 290: Thomas Andrea, Princelie Majestie (John Donald, 2005), p. 173.
  74. ^ Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1907), 95, 287 (taslet), 357 fireworks: Marguerite Wood, Balcarres Papers, vol. 1 (SHS: Edinburgh, 1923), pp. 18, 20.
  75. ^ Letters & Papers Henry VIII, vol. 14 part 1 (London, 1894), xix, no. 406: vol. 14 part 2 (London, 1895), no. 781.
  76. ^ Calendar State Papers Spanish: 1542–1543, vol. 6 part 2, London (1895), p. 144, no.66.
  77. ^ State Papers Henry VIII, vol.5 part 4 part 2, (1836), 213: Laing, David, ed., The Works of John Knox, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1846) pp. 389–391.
  78. ^ Strickland, Agnes, Lives of the queens of Scotland and English princesses, vol. 1, Blackwood (1850), 402 part translated only; now preserved as National Archives of Scotland SP13/27.
  79. ^ Knox, John, . Archived from the original on 29 August 2009.
  80. ^ Ackroyd, Peter, Tudors (The History of England Volume 2). Pan Books ISBN 978-1-4472-3681-8
  81. ^ Gallagher, p. 1085.
  82. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 8 (1908) 142–143: Works of Drummond of Hawthornden: History of the Five Jameses, (Edinburgh 1711), p. 116
  83. ^ Wade, Mike; Parker, Charlie (13 September 2022). "In hushed reverence, they lined Royal Mile". The Times. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  84. ^ a b c d HMC: 6th Report & Appendix (London, 1877), p. 670: Pope Clement VII sent a dispensation to James V dated 30 August 1534 that allowed four of the children to take holy orders when they came of age. The document stated that James elder was in his fifth year, James younger and John in their third years, and Robert in his first year.
  85. ^ National Records of Scotland, Exchequer vouchers E23/7.
  86. ^ a b c d Nield (1968), p. 70
  87. ^ Nield (1968), p. 67

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWood, James, ed. (1907). "James V". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.

  • Bingham, Caroline (1971), James V King of Scots, London: Collins, ISBN 0-0021-1390-2
  • Cameron, Jamie (1998), Macdougall, Norman (ed.), James V: The Personal Rule, 1528–1542, The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland, East Linton: Tuckwell Press, ISBN 978-1-8623-2015-4
  • Dawson, Jane (2007), Scotland Reformed 1488–1587, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, vol. 6, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-1455-4
  • Donaldson, Gordon (1965), Scotland: James V to James VII, The Edinburgh History of Scotland, vol. III, Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, ISBN 978-0-9018-2485-1
  • Dunbar, John (1999). Scottish Royal Palaces. Tuckwell Press. ISBN 1--86232-042-X.
  • Ellis, Henry, 'A Household book of James V', in Archaeologia, vol. 22, (1829), 1–12
  • Emond, Ken (2019), The Minority of James V: Scotland in Europe, 1513-1528, Edinburgh: John Donald, ISBN 978-1-9109-0031-4
  • Ross, Stewart (1993), The Stewart Dynasty, Nairn: Thomas and Lochar, ISBN 978-1-8998-6343-3
  • Thomas, Andrea (2005), Princelie Majestie: The Court of James V of Scotland, Edinburgh: John Donald, ISBN 0--85976-611-X
  • Hadley Williams, Janet (1996), Stewart Style 1513–1542, Edinburgh: Tuckwell Press, ISBN 1-8984-1082-8
  • Hadley Williams, Janet (2000), Sir David Lyndsay, Selected Poems, Glasgow: ASLS, ISBN 0-9488-7746-4
  • Harrison, John G. (2008). Wardrobe Inventories of James V: British Library MS Royal 18 C (PDF). Historic Scotland.
  • Nield, Jonathan (1968), A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales, Ayer Publishing, ISBN 978-0-8337-2509-7
  • Wormald, Jenny (1981), Court, Kirk, and Community: Scotland 1470–1625, The New History of Scotland, vol. 4, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 0-7486-0276-3

External links edit

James V of Scotland
Born: 10 April 1512 Died: 14 December 1542
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Scotland
1513–1542
Succeeded by
Peerage of Scotland
Vacant
Title last held by
James (IV)
Duke of Rothesay
1511–1513
Vacant
Title next held by
James

james, scotland, james, april, 1512, december, 1542, king, scotland, from, september, 1513, until, death, 1542, crowned, september, 1513, seventeen, months, james, king, james, margaret, tudor, daughter, henry, england, during, childhood, scotland, governed, r. James V 10 April 1512 14 December 1542 was King of Scotland from 9 September 1513 until his death in 1542 He was crowned on 21 September 1513 at the age of seventeen months James was the son of King James IV and Margaret Tudor daughter of Henry VII of England During his childhood Scotland was governed by regents firstly by his mother until she remarried and then by his first cousin once removed John Stewart Duke of Albany James s personal rule began in 1528 when he finally escaped the custody of his stepfather Archibald Douglas 6th Earl of Angus His first action was to exile Angus and confiscate the lands of the Douglases James VPortrait by Corneille de Lyon c 1536King of ScotlandReign9 September 1513 14 December 1542Coronation21 September 1513PredecessorJames IVSuccessorMaryRegentsSee list Margaret Tudor 1513 1514 1524 1525 John Stewart Duke of Albany 1514 1524 Born10 April 1512Linlithgow Palace Linlithgow ScotlandDied14 December 1542 1542 12 14 aged 30 Falkland Palace Fife ScotlandBurial8 January 1543Holyrood AbbeySpousesMadeleine of France m 1537 died 1537 wbr Mary of Guise m 1538 wbr Issuemore James Duke of Rothesay Mary Queen of Scots Illegitimate James Stewart Commendator of Kelso and Melrose James Stewart 1st Earl of Moray John Stewart Commendator of Coldingham Robert Stewart 1st Earl of Orkney Jean Campbell Countess of ArgyllHouseStewartFatherJames IV of ScotlandMotherMargaret TudorReligionCatholicismSignature James greatly increased his income by tightening control over royal estates and from the profits of justice customs and feudal rights He founded the College of Justice in 1532 and also acted to end lawlessness and rebellion in the Borders and the Hebrides The rivalry among France England and the Holy Roman Empire lent James unwonted diplomatic weight and saw him secure two politically and financially advantageous French marriages first to Madeleine of Valois and then to Mary of Guise James also fathered at least nine illegitimate children by a series of mistresses James V s reign witnessed the beginnings of Protestantism in Scotland and his uncle Henry VIII of England s break with Rome in the 1530s placed James in a powerful bargaining position with the papacy allowing James to exploit the situation to increase his control over ecclesiastical appointments and the financial dividends from church revenues Pope Paul III also granted him the title of Defender of the Faith in 1537 James V maintained diplomatic correspondence with various Irish nobles and chiefs throughout their resistance to Henry VIII in the 1530s and in 1540 they offered him the kingship of Ireland A patron of the arts James spent lavishly on the construction of several royal residences in the High Gothic and Renaissance styles James V has been described as a vindictive king whose policies were largely motivated by the pursuit of wealth and a paranoid fear of his nobility which led to the ruthless appropriation of their lands He has also been characterised as the poor man s king due to his accessibility to the poor and his acting against their oppressors James died in December 1542 following the Scottish defeat by the English at the Battle of Solway Moss His only surviving legitimate child Mary succeeded him at the age of just six days old Contents 1 Early life 2 Minority rule 2 1 Albany s regency 2 2 Margaret s coup 2 3 Angus captivity 3 Personal rule 3 1 Religion 3 2 Building 4 Marriages 4 1 Marriage to Madeleine of Valois 4 2 Marriage to Mary of Guise 5 Outside interests 6 War with England and death 7 Issue 7 1 Legitimate issue 7 2 Illegitimate issue 8 Fictional portrayals 9 Ancestors 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp nbsp James V s parents King James IV and Margaret Tudor James was the third son of King James IV and his wife Margaret Tudor the eldest daughter of Henry VII of England and was the only legitimate child of James IV to survive infancy He was born on 10 April 1512 at Linlithgow Palace and baptised the following day 1 receiving the title Duke of Rothesay 2 James became king at just seventeen months old when his father was killed at the Battle of Flodden on 9 September 1513 James was crowned in the Chapel Royal at Stirling Castle on 21 September 1513 The nobility accepted Margaret Tudor as regent for her young son in accordance with the terms of James IV s will which also stated that Margaret was to retain this position so long as she remained a widow 3 The long minority of James V would last for nearly fifteen years with Margaret s position as regent soon challenged by the French born John Duke of Albany who was James V s second cousin and the nearest male heir to the throne after the king and his younger brother Alexander Duke of Ross who was born in April 1514 4 In August 1514 Margaret married Archibald Douglas 6th Earl of Angus This marriage was opposed by many among the nobility who feared the advancement of the Douglases and sought to deprive Margaret of the regency because she had remarried 5 The Privy Council removed Margaret from the office of regent and appointed the Duke of Albany to replace her 5 Minority rule editAlbany s regency edit nbsp John Stewart Duke of Albany James V s regent from 1515 to 1524 Albany arrived at Dumbarton Castle with eight ships and a troop of French soldiers in May 1514 6 He entered Edinburgh on 26 May and in July Parliament confirmed his restoration as Duke of Albany and his position as regent Albany s noble supporters intended his arrival to bring stable and good government while Francis I of France sought to use Albany to maintain support for the Auld Alliance with France 7 The first year of his regency was a period when a vigorous defence of his authority was essential to prevent the crumbling of Scottish government either into anarchy or into English control 7 The struggle for control of the person of the king was an essential prelude to Albany s attempt to govern as he was aware from the beginning that his claims to act for the king and with full royal authority depended on the continued goodwill of the king himself or rather of whoever had control of his person and could therefore claim to speak with his voice Margaret and Angus were potentially hostile to Albany s intentions and James V had to be removed from their influence 8 Albany besieged Stirling Castle and Margaret was forced to relinquish possession of the king and the Duke of Ross 7 James would not see his mother again for two years 9 Having lost the regency her income and control of her sons Margaret s departed from the court in September 1515 fleeing from Linlithgow Palace where she had gone for her lying in to Tantallon Castle where she gave birth to her daughter Lady Margaret Douglas in Northumberland 10 The birth and long journey left her extremely ill and she was not told of the death of her second son Alexander in December 1515 until she had recovered her strength The earl of Angus made his peace with Albany later in 1516 11 A contemporary tribute paid to the Duke of Albany s success in bringing order and good government to Scotland by Sebastian Giustinian the Venetian Ambassador at Henry VIII s Court was that Scotland was as much under Albany s control as if he were King 12 In February 1517 James was brought from Stirling to the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh but during an outbreak of plague in the city he was moved to the care of Antoine d Arces at nearby rural Craigmillar Castle 13 At Stirling the ten year old James had a guard of 20 footmen dressed in his colours red and yellow When he went to the park below the Castle by secret and in right fair and soft wedder weather six horsemen would scour the countryside two miles roundabout for intruders 14 Poets wrote their own nursery rhymes for James and advised him on royal behavior Although his academic development was effectively cut short under Angus s captivity from 1525 onward James V had been given a strong grounding by a number of tutors including David Lyndsay and Gavin Dunbar 15 James had been taught French and Latin but as an adult he spoke halting French and his need for an interpreter to converse with an Italian bishop suggests that his spoken Latin and Italian were poor 15 16 nbsp Archibald Douglas 6th Earl of Angus James V s step father Between 1517 and 1520 Albany sojourned in France and did not exercise the regency in person but through his lieutenants including Antoine d Arces sieur de la Bastie On 26 August 1517 Albany and Charles Duke of Alencon agreed the Treaty of Rouen which renewed the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France and promised a French royal bride for James V At England s request Albany was detained in France for four years and with him absent Queen Margaret returned to Scotland and sought in vain to regain the regency 9 Young James V was kept a virtual prisoner by Albany and his lieutenants and Margaret was allowed to see her son only once between 1516 and end of Albany s regency in 1524 Following the signing of the Treaty of Bruges between Henry VIII of England and the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Francis I allowed the Duke of Albany to return to Scotland to strengthen the Franco Scottish alliance 17 The Treaty of Rouen was ratified and Madeleine of Valois was suggested as a suitable bride for James V When the Duke of Albany returned in November 1521 Margaret sided with him against her husband the Earl of Angus Albany came to Edinburgh Castle where James V was kept and in a public ceremony the keeper gave him the keys which he passed to Margaret who gave them back to Albany symbolising that the government of Scotland was in his hands 18 Thus Albany was able to keep an upper hand in regard to the ambitious Angus The regent put Angus under charges of high treason in December 1521 and later sent him practically a prisoner to France In November 1522 Albany took an army to besiege Wark Castle defended by Sir William Lisle but gave up after three days when the weather deteriorated 19 Margaret s coup edit In 1524 Albany was finally removed from power in a coup d etat while he was in France Margaret with the help of James Hamilton 1st Earl of Arran and his followers brought James V from Stirling to Edinburgh 17 In August Parliament declared the regency at an end and the 12 year old King James was prematurely erected to full kingly powers In November Parliament formally recognised Margaret as the chief councillor to the king 17 Margaret s alliance with the Hamiltons inevitably alienated other noble houses Henry VIII allowed the Earl of Angus who Albany had banished to return to Scotland in 1524 and he entered into an alliance with the Earl of Lennox an enemy of Margaret and Arran 17 When Angus arrived in Edinburgh with a large group of armed men claiming his right to attend Parliament Margaret ordered cannons to be fired on them from Edinburgh Castle 17 Parliament subsequently made Angus a Lord of the Articles and a member of the council of regency Angus captivity edit A plan was agreed to end the feuding among these opposing groups by allowing each of them in turn to act as host to the young king However the plan fell apart in November 1525 when at the end of his period of custody Angus refused to surrender the king who in effect became a prisoner of the Red Douglases for the next two and a half years 17 Angus again erected James V to full kingly powers again took him on justice ayres and kept him under close supervision He spoiled the king with various lavish gifts in an attempt to buy his favour and make the detention more tolerable and when James showed signs of tiring of these gifts Angus also introduced the adolescent king to the pleasures of the flesh with a succession of prostitutes 20 Angus overreached himself assuming the office of Lord Chancellor and granting his followers almost every lucrative post available in the royal household 20 While James V clearly enjoyed some aspects of his captivity he grew to hate his captor Several attempts were made to free the young king one by Walter Scott of Branxholme and Buccleuch who ambushed the king s forces on 25 July 1526 at the Battle of Melrose and was routed off the field Another attempt later that year on 4 September at the Battle of Linlithgow Bridge failed again to relieve the king from the clutches of Angus 20 In May 1528 James finally escaped from Angus s captivity when he fled from Edinburgh to Stirling in disguise After meeting with his mother at Stirling James V re entered Edinburgh in July with a large army Summoned for treason Angus holed himself up in Tantallon Castle until an agreement was reached whereby he was allowed to go into exile in England after surrendering his castles 20 Personal rule editPierre de Ronsard saw James in 1537 when the king was twenty four and summed up his paradoxical appearance La douceur et la force illustroient son visage Si que Venus et Mars en avoient fait partage His royal bearing and vigorous pursuit of virtue of honour and love s war this sweetness and strength illuminate his face as if he were the child of Venus and Mars 15 Religion edit nbsp The four European orders of chivalry to which James V belonged Garter Thistle Golden Fleece and St Michael on the outer gate he built at his birthplace Linlithgow Palace The first action James took as king was to remove Angus from the scene The Douglas family excluding James s half sister Margaret who was already safely in England innocent of any crime against him and thus safe from any revenge James took were forced into exile and James besieged their castle at Tantallon He then subdued the Border rebels and the chiefs of the Western Isles As well as taking advice from his nobility and using the services of the Duke of Albany in France and at Rome James had a team of professional lawyers and diplomats including Adam Otterburn and Thomas Erskine of Haltoun Even his pursemaster and yeoman of the wardrobe John Tennent of Listonschiels was sent on an errand to England though he got a frosty reception 21 James increased his income by tightening control over royal estates and from the profits of justice customs and feudal rights He also gave his illegitimate sons lucrative benefices diverting substantial church wealth into his coffers James spent a large amount of his wealth on building up a collection of tapestries from those inherited from his father 22 James sailed to France for his first marriage and strengthened the royal fleet In 1540 he sailed to Kirkwall in Orkney then Lewis in his ship the Salamander first making a will in Leith knowing this to be uncertane aventuris The purpose of this voyage was to show the royal presence and hold regional courts called justice ayres 23 Domestic and international policy was affected by the Reformation especially after Henry VIII broke from the Catholic Church James V did not tolerate heresy and during his reign a number of outspoken Protestants were persecuted The most famous of these was Patrick Hamilton who was burned at the stake as a heretic at St Andrews in 1528 Later in the reign the English ambassador Ralph Sadler tried to encourage James to close the monasteries and take their revenue so that he would not have to keep sheep like a mean subject James replied that he had no sheep he could depend on his god father the king of France and it was against reason to close the abbeys that stand these many years and God s service maintained and kept in the same and I might have anything I require of them 24 Sadler knew that James did farm sheep on his estates 25 James recovered money from the church by getting Pope Clement VII to allow him to tax monastic incomes 26 He sent 50 to Johann Cochlaeus a German opponent of Martin Luther after receiving one of his books in 1534 27 On 19 January 1537 Pope Paul III sent James a blessed sword and hat symbolising his prayers that James would be strengthened against heresies from across the border 28 These gifts were delivered by the Pope s messenger while James was at Compiegne in France on 25 February 1537 29 According to 16th century writers his treasurer James Kirkcaldy of Grange tried to persuade James against the persecution of Protestants and to meet Henry VIII at York 30 James and Henry corresponded about meeting in 1536 Pope Paul III advised James against travelling to England and sent an envoy or nuncio to Scotland to discuss the initiative 31 Although Henry VIII sent his tapestries to York in September 1541 ahead of a meeting James did not come The lack of commitment to this meeting was regarded by English observers as a sign that Scotland was firmly allied to France and Catholicism particularly by the influence of Cardinal Beaton Keeper of the Privy Seal and as a cause for war 32 In 1540 Irish nobles and chiefs offered James the kingship of Ireland as a further challenge to Henry VIII 33 Building edit nbsp The James V Tower at the Palace of Holyroodhouse nbsp Facade of Falkland Palace in the French Renaissance style James V spent a large amount of money at least 41 000 during his adult reign on extensively remodelling all the major residences and several minor ones including the construction of new structures with the most significant work focused on Falkland Palace and Stirling Castle 34 35 Early in his personal rule James began the construction of the present Late Gothic James V Tower at the north west corner of the Palace of Holyroodhouse which provided new royal lodgings on the first and second floors and a high degree of security A new west front was also built 36 37 At Linlithgow Palace James closed off the original east entranceway and formed a new formal access from the south including an inner gatehouse and an outer entrance gate decorated with the carved arms of the four chivalric orders of which James was a member Garter Thistle Golden Fleece and Saint Michael The three tiered octagonal King s Fountain topped by an imperial crown was built in 1538 as the centrepiece of the courtyard 38 At Falkland Palace James V extended his father s buildings in French Renaissance style between 1537 and 1541 and built a real tennis court in the garden in 1541 39 The court survives to this day and is the oldest in the United Kingdom James also built a new Late Gothic entrance tower in the south range and the courtyard facades of the east and south ranges that were built in 1537 and 1539 are the earliest examples of Renaissance architecture in the British Isles 34 40 The largest of James V s building projects was the construction of the Royal Palace at Stirling Castle built between 1538 and 1540 with its Renaissance facades and the north east and south quarters housing the king s and queen s apartments Work was also carried out at Tantallon Castle Blackness Castle and Hermitage Castle 41 Marriages edit nbsp Portrait of James V As early as August 1517 a clause of the Treaty of Rouen provided that if the Auld Alliance between France and Scotland was maintained James should have a daughter of Francis I of France as a bride Yet by the 1520s Francis s two surviving daughters were too frail or too young 42 In 1528 the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the English diplomat Thomas Magnus both raised the possibility of a marriage between the king and his cousin Princess Mary while that same year Margaret of Austria Charles V s aunt suggested that James should marry Charles s sister Mary of Austria 43 Charles V also proposed James marry his niece Maria of Portugal Perhaps to remind Francis I of his obligations in 1529 James V began negotiations for his marriage elsewhere sending the Duke of Albany to Rome to negotiate a marriage to Catherine de Medici the niece of Pope Clement VII 44 By 1533 there was discussion of James marrying one of his second cousins Christina or Dorothea the daughters of Christian II of Denmark while in 1534 Margaret of Valois Angouleme sister of Francis I suggested her sister in law Isabella 45 In December 1534 Francis I insisted that his eldest daughter Madeleine s health was too poor for marriage suggesting that James V should marry Mary of Bourbon daughter of the Duke of Vendome instead to fulfil the Treaty of Rouen Again the Duke of Albany briefly entertained the idea that James might marry Christina of Denmark and the king halted progress on the marriage negotiations There was also an investigation into the possibility of James marrying his former mistress Margaret Erskine before the negotiations resumed again and in March 1536 a final contract made for Mary of Bourbon to marry James V She would have a dowry as if she were a French princess and Francis I consolidated the agreement by sending James the collar of the Order of Saint Michael as a token of his affection 46 Marriage to Madeleine of Valois edit nbsp Portrait of Madeleine of Valois by Corneille de Lyon James decided to travel to France to meet his prospective bride in person He sailed from Kirkcaldy on 1 September 1536 with the earls of Arran Argyll and Rothes Lord Fleming David Beaton and a force of 500 men in a fleet of six ships using the Mary Willoughby as his flagship 47 Before his departure James appointed six vice regents to govern Scotland in his absence 48 In the event James V would be away from Scotland for eight months becoming the first Scottish king to voluntarily remain away from his realm since David II almost two hundred years earlier 49 Arriving at Dieppe a week later the Scots travelled to the Duke of Vendome s court at Saint Quentin However on meeting Mary of Bourbon James V was not impressed by her He then travelled south to the French court at the Chateau d Amboise where he met Madeleine and again pressed Francis for her hand in marriage Fearing the harsh climate of Scotland would prove fatal to his daughter s already failing health Francis initially refused to permit the marriage but the couple persuaded Francis to reluctantly grant permission to their marriage 50 The marriage contract was signed in November with Francis I granting Madeleine a dowry of 100 000 ecu and a further 30 000 francs a year for James 51 James V renewed the Auld Alliance and fulfilled the terms of the Treaty of Rouen on 1 January 1537 by marrying Madeleine at Notre Dame de Paris James received papal approval in the form of the Blessed sword and hat and was granted the title of Defender of the Faith by Pope Paul III on 19 January 1537 symbolising the hopes of the papacy that he would resist the path that his uncle Henry VIII had followed 52 53 After months of festivities and celebrations and visits to Chantilly Compiegne and Rouen where Madeleine fell ill the royal couple embarked for Scotland in May 1537 arriving at Leith on 19 May 54 Madeleine wrote to her father from Edinburgh on 8 June 1537 saying that she was better and her symptoms had diminished 55 However a month later on 7 July 1537 Queen Madeleine died in her husband s arms at Holyrood Palace of tuberculosis 56 James V wrote to Francis I to inform him of what had happened saying that if it were not for the fact that he was relying on the French king to remain his good father he would be in even greater pain 56 The queen was interred in Holyrood Abbey in Edinburgh Marriage to Mary of Guise edit nbsp Portrait of Mary of Guise attributed to Corneille de Lyon c 1537 Following Madeleine s death James V s thoughts turned to a second French bride to further the interests of the Franco Scottish alliance David Beaton was sent to France to persuade Francis I to agree to James marrying his only surviving daughter Margaret 56 Francis offered Mary of Guise as a bride instead The daughter of Claude Duke of Guise Mary had recently been widowed by the death of her husband Louis II d Orleans Duke of Longueville David Beaton wrote to James V from Lyon in October 1537 that Mary was stark strong well complexioned and fit to travel and that her father was marvellous desirous of the expedition and hasty end of the matter and had already consulted with his brother the Duke of Lorraine and Mary herself 57 The marriage contract was finalised in January 1538 with James V receiving a dowry of 150 000 livres As was customary if the king died first Mary would retain for her lifetime her jointure houses of Falkland Palace Stirling Castle Dingwall Castle and Threave Castle along with the rentals of the earldoms of Fife Strathearn Ross and Orkney and the lordships of Galloway Ardmannoch and the Isles 58 The proxy wedding of James V and Mary of Guise was held on 9 May 1538 at the Chateau de Chateaudun Some 2 000 Scottish lords and barons came from Scotland aboard a fleet of ships under Lord Maxwell to attend with Lord Maxwell standing as proxy for James V Mary departed from Le Havre on 10 June 1538 and landed in Scotland 6 days later at Crail in Fife She was formally received by the king at St Andrews a few days later amid pageants and plays performed in her honour and James and Mary were married in person at St Andrews Cathedral on 18 June 1538 James s mother Margaret Tudor wrote to Henry VIII in July I trust she will prove a wise Princess I have been much in her company and she bears herself very honourably to me with very good entertaining 59 James and Mary had two sons James Duke of Rothesay born 22 May 1540 at St Andrews and Robert or Arthur Duke of Albany born and baptised on 12 April 1541 however both died on 21 April 1541 when James was nearly one year old and Robert or Arthur was nine days old Mary s mother Antoinette de Bourbon wrote that the couple were still young and should hope for more children 60 The third and last child of the union was a daughter Mary who was born on 8 December 1542 61 Outside interests edit nbsp Statue at Stirling Castle said to depict the Gudeman of Ballengeich nbsp Groat of James V Edinburgh mint 1526 1539 According to legend James was nicknamed King of the Commons as he would sometimes travel around Scotland disguised as a common man describing himself as the Gudeman of Ballengeich Gudeman means landlord or farmer and Ballengeich was the nickname of a road next to Stirling Castle meaning windy pass in Gaelic 62 One traditional ballad The Jolly Beggar is considered by some to refer to his activities James was also a keen lute player 63 In 1562 Sir Thomas Wood reported that James had a singular good ear and could sing that he had never seen before sight read but his voice was rawky and harske At court James maintained a band of Italian musicians who adopted the name Drummond These were joined for the winter of 1529 30 by a musician and diplomat sent by the Duke of Milan Thomas de Averencia de Brescia probably a lutenist 64 The historian Andrea Thomas makes a useful distinction between the loud music provided at ceremonies and processionals and instruments employed for more private occasions or worship the music fyne described by Helena Mennie Shire This quieter music included a consort of viols played by four Frenchmen led by Jacques Columbell 65 It seems certain that David Peebles wrote music for James V and probable that the Scottish composer Robert Carver was in royal employ though evidence is lacking 66 As a patron of poets and authors James supported William Stewart and John Bellenden the son of his nurse who translated the Latin History of Scotland compiled in 1527 by Hector Boece into verse and prose 67 Sir David Lindsay of the Mount the Lord Lyon head of the Lyon Court and diplomat was a prolific poet He produced an interlude at Linlithgow Palace thought to be a version of his play The Thrie Estaitis in 1540 James also attracted the attention of international authors The French poet Pierre de Ronsard who had been a page of Madeleine of Valois offered unqualified praise Son port estoit royal son regard vigoureuxDe vertus et de l honneur et guerre amoureux La douceur et la force illustroient son visage Si que Venus et Mars en avoient fait partage His royal bearing and vigorous pursuit of virtue of honour and love s war this sweetness and strength illuminate his face as if he were the child of Venus and Mars 68 69 When he married Mary of Guise Giovanni Ferrerio an Italian scholar who had been at Kinloss Abbey in Scotland dedicated to the couple a new edition of his work On the True Significance of Comets against the Vanity of Astrologers 70 Like Henry VIII James employed many foreign artisans and craftsmen in order to enhance the prestige of his renaissance court 71 Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie listed their professions he plenished the country with all kind of craftsmen out of other countries as French men Spaniards Dutch men and Englishmen which were all cunning craftsmen every man for his own hand Some were gunners wrights carvers painters masons smiths harness makers armourers tapesters broudsters taylors cunning chirugeons apothecaries with all other kind of craftsmen to apparel his palaces 72 One technological initiative was a special mill for polishing armour at Holyroodhouse next to his mint The mill had a pole drive 32 feet long powered by horses 73 Mary of Guise s mother Antoinette of Bourbon sent him an armourer The armourer made steel plates for his jousting saddles in October 1538 and delivered a skirt of plate armour in February 1540 In the same year for his wife s coronation the treasurer s accounts record that James personally devised fireworks made by his master gunners His goldsmith John Mosman renovated the crown jewels for the occasion 74 When James took steps to suppress the circulation of slanderous ballads and rhymes against Henry VIII Henry sent Fulke ap Powell Lancaster Herald to give thanks and to make arrangements for the present of a lion for James s menagerie of exotic pets 75 War with England and death edit nbsp Portrait of James V and Mary of Guise anonymous artist c 1542 at Falkland Palace The death of James s mother in 1541 removed any incentive for peace with England and war broke out Initially the Scots won a victory at the Battle of Haddon Rig in August 1542 The Imperial ambassador in London Eustace Chapuys wrote on 2 October that the Scottish ambassadors ruled out a conciliatory meeting between James and Henry VIII in England until the pregnant Mary of Guise delivered her child Henry would not accept this condition and mobilised his army against Scotland 76 James was with his army at Lauder on 31 October 1542 Although he hoped to invade England his nobles were reluctant 77 He returned to Edinburgh on the way writing a letter in French to his wife from Falahill mentioning he had three days of illness 78 On 24 November his army suffered a serious defeat at the Battle of Solway Moss Following a few days spent at Linlithgow Palace with Queen Mary who was in the final stages of her pregnancy on 6 December James travelled to Falkland Palace where he soon took ill 79 16 Although James V s army had been beaten at Solway Moss it was neither a personal humiliation for the king who was not there nor the result of noble disaffection In fact James had substantial support for his war policy and early in December he had made plans to renew the conflict with England 16 James was on his deathbed at Falkland when news arrived from Linlithgow that the queen had given birth to a daughter According to John Knox on hearing of the birth of his daughter the king said It cam wi a lass and it will gang wi a lass meaning It began with a girl and it will end with a girl 80 This could refer to the Stewart dynasty s accession to the throne through Marjorie Bruce daughter of Robert the Bruce The prophecy could have been intended to express his belief that his new born daughter Mary would be the last of the Stewart monarchs In fact the last Stewart monarch was female Anne Queen of Great Britain James V died at Falkland Palace on 14 December 1542 aged thirty The king had been ill on a number of occasions during the previous decade in 1533 of a sore fois face in 1534 of the pox and fevir contenew in Paris in 1536 and in 1540 when he wrote to his wife to say that he had been as ill as he had ever been in his life but was now recovered Evidently his immune system had not recovered as he had been ill again in November 1542 16 It is likely that James V died from cholera or dysentery rather than shame or despair brought on by the news of Solway Moss 16 nbsp The Royal Vault in the ruins of Holyrood Abbey which contains the remains of James V James was succeeded by his infant daughter Mary Queen of Scots On 7 January 1543 the king s body was conveyed from Falkland to the Forth ferry at Kinghorn before being transported to Edinburgh escorted by a funeral cortege and accompanied by Cardinal Beaton the Earls of Arran Argyll Rothes Marischal and other nobles 71 James V was buried on 8 January at Holyrood Abbey next to his first wife Madeleine and his two sons A stone tomb was erected on which Andrew Mansioun carved a lion a crown and an eighteen foot long inscription in Roman letters Alms were distributed to the poor of Edinburgh who had been present at the soul Mass and dirge performed for the king 71 During the Rough Wooing the invading English armies inflicted structural damage on Holyrood Abbey in 1544 and 1547 destroying James V s tomb 81 82 James was the last monarch to die in Scotland until 8 September 2022 when Queen Elizabeth II died at Balmoral Castle in Aberdeenshire 480 years later Days later her body was carried through the streets of Edinburgh the first time that a royal cortege had passed through the city since James V s burial 83 Issue editLegitimate issue edit Name Birth Death Notes By Madeleine of France no issue By Mary of Guise James Duke of Rothesay 22 May 1540 21 April 1541 Arthur or Robert Duke of Albany 12 April 1541 20 April 1541 Mary Queen of Scots 8 December 1542 8 February 1587 Married firstly Francis II of France no issue Married secondly Henry Stuart Lord Darnley and had issue the future James VI and I Married thirdly James Hepburn 4th Earl of Bothwell no issue Illegitimate issue edit Name Birth Death Notes By Elizabeth Shaw James Stewart Commendator of Kelso and Melrose c 1529 84 1557 His daughter Marjorie married the half nephew of his brother Robert Stewart 1st Earl of Orkney Some sources however state he had no issue By Margaret Erskine James Stewart 1st Earl of Moray c 1531 84 23 January 1570 Prior of St Andrews Regent of Scotland for his nephew James VI and I Married Agnes Keith Countess of Moray and had issue He was the first head of government to be assassinated with a firearm By Elizabeth Stewart Adam Stewart Prior of Perth 20 June 1575 Married Janet Ruthven and had issue In June 1596 James VI gave 200 to Adam s son James Stewart for his travelling expenses in foreign countries 85 By Christine Barclay James Stewart By Elizabeth Carmichael John Stewart Commendator of Coldingham c 1531 84 November 1563 Married Jean Hepburn and had issue including Francis Stewart 5th Earl of Bothwell Also had illegitimate issue By Elizabeth Bethune Jean Stewart c 1533 7 January 1587 88 Married Archibald Campbell 5th Earl of Argyll no issue By Euphame Elphinstone Robert Stewart 1st Earl of Orkney and Lord of Zetland Commendator of Holyrood c 1533 84 4 February 1593 Married Jean Kennedy and had issue Also had illegitimate issue Unnamed child Died in childhoodFictional portrayals editJames V has been depicted in historical novels poems short stories and one notable opera They include the following 86 Scott Walter 1810 The Lady of the Lake a Romantic narrative poem set in the Trossachs He appears in disguise The poem was tremendously influential in the nineteenth century and inspired the Highland Revival James also features in Scott s Tales of a Grandfather Johnnie Armstrong a traditional ballad relating the story of Scottish raider and folk hero Johnnie Armstrong of Gilnockie who was captured and hanged by King James V in 1530 Rossini Gioachino 1819 La Donna del Lago an opera based on Scott s poem Sung in Italian James V appears as Giacomo V Gibbon Charles 1881 The Braes of Yarrow The novels features Scotland in the aftermath of the Battle of Flodden covering events to 1514 Margaret Tudor Boy King James V and Archibald Douglas 5th Earl of Angus are prominently featured 87 Barr Robert 1902 A Prince of Good Fellows James is the titular prince and the main character He is depicted as an adventure loving persona 86 Gunn John 1913 The Fight at Summerdale The novel depicts Orkney Edinburgh and Normandy in the 16th century James V appears more than once in the various chapters 86 Knipe John 1921 The Hour Before the Dawn Depicts events just before and after the death of James V James V Mary of Guise and David Beaton are prominently depicted 86 Ancestors editAncestors of James V of Scotland8 James II of Scotland4 James III of Scotland9 Mary of Guelders2 James IV of Scotland10 Christian I of Denmark5 Margaret of Denmark11 Dorothea of Brandenburg1 James V of Scotland12 Edmund Tudor 1st Earl of Richmond6 Henry VII of England13 Margaret Beaufort3 Margaret Tudor14 Edward IV of England7 Elizabeth of York15 Elizabeth WoodvilleReferences edit Robert Kerr Hannay Letters of James IV SHS Edinburgh 1953 p 243 Mackay AEneas 1892 James V of Scotland In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 29 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 153 161 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 3 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p xii a b Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 28 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 54 a b c Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 60 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 79 a b Ross Stewart The Stewart Dynasty Thomas and Lochar 1993 p 194 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 pp 91 92 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 61 Emond Ken James V John Donald 2019 p 143 Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland vol 5 p 130 HMC Earl of Mar amp Kellie at Alloa House London 1904 pp 11 2 a b c Ross Stewart The Stewart Dynasty Thomas and Lochar 1993 p 197 a b c d e Cameron Jamie James V Tuckwell 1998 p 556 a b c d e f Ross Stewart The Stewart Dynasty Thomas and Lochar 1993 p 195 Ken Emond The Minority of James V Edinburgh 2019 p 140 Ken Emond The Minority of James V Edinburgh 2019 p 175 a b c d Ross Stewart The Stewart Dynasty Thomas and Lochar 1993 p 196 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie John Donald Edinburgh 2005 12 15 36 Murray Atholl Pursemaster s Accounts Miscellany of the Scottish History Society vol 10 SHS Edinburgh 1965 pp 13 51 Dunbar John G Scottish Royal Palaces Tuckwell East Linton 1999 HMC Mar amp Kellie London 1904 15 Will 12 June 1540 Cameron Jamie James V Tuckwell East Linton 1998 pp 245 248 Clifford Arthur ed Sadler State Papers vol 1 Edinburgh 1809 p 30 Athol Murray Crown Lands An Historical Atlas of Scotland Scottish Medievalists 1975 p 73 After James s death 600 sheep were given to James Douglas of Drumlanrig HMC 15th Report Duke of Buccleuch London 1897 p 17 Cameron Jamie James V Tuckwell 1998 p 260 Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland vol 6 Edinburgh 1905 p 236 Hay Denys ed Letters of James V HMSO Edinburgh 1954 328 Reid John J The Scottish Regalia PSAS 9 December 1889 28 this sword is lost Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1907 p 18 Steuart A Francis ed Memoirs of Sir James Melville of Halhill Routledge 1929 pp 14 17 Denys Hay Letters of James V Edinburgh 1954 p 320 Campbell Thomas P Henry VIII and the Art of Majesty Tapestries at the Tudor Court Yale 2007 p 261 Thomas D Arcy McGee 1862 A Popular History of Ireland from the Earliest Period to the Emancipation of the Catholics Book VII Chapter III a b Dunbar John G Scottish Royal Palaces Tuckwell East Linton 1999 p 27 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie the court of James V John Donald Edinburgh 2005 p 92 Dunbar John G Scottish Royal Palaces Tuckwell East Linton 1999 p 61 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie the court of James V John Donald Edinburgh 2005 pp 99 100 Dunbar John G Scottish Royal Palaces Tuckwell East Linton 1999 p 18 Henry Paton Accounts of the Masters of Work vol 1 Edinburgh 1957 pp 270 275 279 81 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie the court of James V John Donald Edinburgh 2005 p 111 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie the court of James V John Donald Edinburgh 2005 p 49 Hay Denys Letters of James V HMSO 1954 pp 51 52 State Papers Henry VIII vol 4 part IV London 1836 p 545 Hay Denys ed The Letters of James V HMSO 1954 p 173 180 2 189 Calendar of State Papers Venice vol 4 London 1871 no 861 Hay Denys ed The Letters of James V HMSO Edinburgh 1954 318 Bapst E Les Mariages de Jacques V 273 State Papers Henry VIII vol 5 part 4 cont London 1836 pp 59 60 The vice regents were Gavin Dunbar Archbishop of Glasgow the Lord Chancellor James Beaton Archbishop of St Andrews the earls of Huntly Montrose and Eglinton and Lord Maxwell Cameron 1998 p 288 Cameron Jamie James V Tuckwell 1998 p 133 Marshall Rosalind Scottish Queens 1034 1714 John Donald Edinburgh 2003 pp 102 3 Marshall Rosalind Scottish Queens 1034 1714 John Donald Edinburgh 2003 p 104 Cameron Jamie James V Tuckwell 1998 p 288 Hay Denys ed Letters of James V HMSO 1954 328 State Papers Henry VIII vol 5 part 4 cont 1836 79 Clifford to Henry VIII Denys Hay Letters of James V HMSO Edinburgh 1954 pp 331 2 a b c Marshall Rosalind Scottish Queens 1034 1714 John Donald Edinburgh 2003 p 108 Letters amp Papers Henry VIII vol 12 part 2 London 1891 no 962 Lang Andrew Letters of Cardinal Beaton SHR 1909 156 Marshall 1977 45 which suggests he thought the couple had not met Hay Denys ed The Letters of James V HMSO 1954 pp 340 341 State Papers Henry VIII vol 5 part 4 London 1836 135 Margaret to Henry 31 July 1538 Wood Marguerite Balcarres Papers vol 1 STS 1923 60 61 Fraser Antonia Mary Queen of Scots pp 3 amp 12 Black 1861 Picturesque Tourist of Scotland pp 180 181 The Court of Mary Queen of Scots BBC Radio 3 28 February 2010 Hay Denys ed Letters of James V HMSO 1954 pp 63 169 170 Shire Helena M in Stewart Style Tuckwell East Linton 1996 pp 129 133 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie John Donald 2005 pp 92 4 98 H M Shire Song Dance and Poetry Cambridge 1969 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie John Donald 1998 pp 105 7 Van Heijnsbergen Theo Literature in Queen Mary s Edinburgh the Bannatyne Manuscript in The Renaissance in Scotland Brill 1994 pp 191 6 Bingham Caroline James V Collins 1971 p 12 verse quoted from William Drummond of Hawthornden History of the 5 Jameses 1655 pp 348 9 Drummond of Hawthorden William Works Edinburgh 1711 p 115 Ferrerio Giovanni De vera cometae significatione contra astrologorum omnium vanitatem Libellus nuper natus et aeditus Paris Vascovan 1538 a b c Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie the court of James V John Donald Edinburgh 2005 pp 226 243 Lindsay of Pitscottie Robert The History of Scotland Edinburgh 1778 p 238 abbreviated in Lindsay of Pitscottie vol 2 Edinburgh 1814 p 359 Accounts of the Masters of Work vol 1 HMSO Edinburgh 1957 pp 101 102 242 290 Thomas Andrea Princelie Majestie John Donald 2005 p 173 Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1907 95 287 taslet 357 fireworks Marguerite Wood Balcarres Papers vol 1 SHS Edinburgh 1923 pp 18 20 Letters amp Papers Henry VIII vol 14 part 1 London 1894 xix no 406 vol 14 part 2 London 1895 no 781 Calendar State Papers Spanish 1542 1543 vol 6 part 2 London 1895 p 144 no 66 State Papers Henry VIII vol 5 part 4 part 2 1836 213 Laing David ed The Works of John Knox vol 1 Edinburgh 1846 pp 389 391 Strickland Agnes Lives of the queens of Scotland and English princesses vol 1 Blackwood 1850 402 part translated only now preserved as National Archives of Scotland SP13 27 Knox John from History of the Reformation book 2 Archived from the original on 29 August 2009 Ackroyd Peter Tudors The History of England Volume 2 Pan Books ISBN 978 1 4472 3681 8 Gallagher p 1085 Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland vol 8 1908 142 143 Works of Drummond of Hawthornden History of the Five Jameses Edinburgh 1711 p 116 Wade Mike Parker Charlie 13 September 2022 In hushed reverence they lined Royal Mile The Times Retrieved 13 September 2022 a b c d HMC 6th Report amp Appendix London 1877 p 670 Pope Clement VII sent a dispensation to James V dated 30 August 1534 that allowed four of the children to take holy orders when they came of age The document stated that James elder was in his fifth year James younger and John in their third years and Robert in his first year National Records of Scotland Exchequer vouchers E23 7 a b c d Nield 1968 p 70 Nield 1968 p 67Sources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wood James ed 1907 James V The Nuttall Encyclopaedia London and New York Frederick Warne Bingham Caroline 1971 James V King of Scots London Collins ISBN 0 0021 1390 2 Cameron Jamie 1998 Macdougall Norman ed James V The Personal Rule 1528 1542 The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland East Linton Tuckwell Press ISBN 978 1 8623 2015 4 Dawson Jane 2007 Scotland Reformed 1488 1587 The New Edinburgh History of Scotland vol 6 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1455 4 Donaldson Gordon 1965 Scotland James V to James VII The Edinburgh History of Scotland vol III Edinburgh Oliver amp Boyd ISBN 978 0 9018 2485 1 Dunbar John 1999 Scottish Royal Palaces Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 86232 042 X Ellis Henry A Household book of James V in Archaeologia vol 22 1829 1 12 Emond Ken 2019 The Minority of James V Scotland in Europe 1513 1528 Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 978 1 9109 0031 4 Ross Stewart 1993 The Stewart Dynasty Nairn Thomas and Lochar ISBN 978 1 8998 6343 3 Thomas Andrea 2005 Princelie Majestie The Court of James V of Scotland Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 0 85976 611 X Hadley Williams Janet 1996 Stewart Style 1513 1542 Edinburgh Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 8984 1082 8 Hadley Williams Janet 2000 Sir David Lyndsay Selected Poems Glasgow ASLS ISBN 0 9488 7746 4 Harrison John G 2008 Wardrobe Inventories of James V British Library MS Royal 18 C PDF Historic Scotland Nield Jonathan 1968 A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales Ayer Publishing ISBN 978 0 8337 2509 7 Wormald Jenny 1981 Court Kirk and Community Scotland 1470 1625 The New History of Scotland vol 4 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0276 3External links edit nbsp Media related to James V of Scotland at Wikimedia Commons James V at the official website of the British monarchy Portraits of James V of Scotland at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp James V of ScotlandHouse of StewartBorn 10 April 1512 Died 14 December 1542 Regnal titles Preceded byJames IV King of Scotland1513 1542 Succeeded byMary Peerage of Scotland VacantTitle last held byJames IV Duke of Rothesay1511 1513 VacantTitle next held byJames Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James V of Scotland amp oldid 1218972606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.