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Robert III of Scotland

Robert III (c. 1337 – 4 April 1406), born John Stewart, was King of Scots from 1390 to his death in 1406. He was also High Steward of Scotland from 1371 to 1390 and held the titles of Earl of Atholl (1367–1390) and Earl of Carrick (1368–1390) before ascending the throne at about the age of 53 years. He was the eldest son of King Robert II and Elizabeth Mure and was legitimized by the second marriage of his parents and by papal dispensation in 1349.

Robert III
Groat of 1390 bearing a crowned facing effigy of Robert III on the obverse
King of Scots
Reign19 April 1390 – 4 April 1406
Coronation14 August 1390
PredecessorRobert II
SuccessorJames I
BornJohn Stewart
c. 1337
Died4 April 1406 (aged 68–69)
Rothesay Castle, Isle of Bute, Scotland
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1367; died 1401)
Issue
more...
HouseStewart
FatherRobert II of Scotland
MotherElizabeth Mure
Events
  • 1363
    During the early months along with his father and others, he was part of an abortive insurrection against David II[1]
  • 1371
    27 March, Robert II crowned at Scone Abbey [2]
  • 1384
    November, Carrick engineered his appointment as guardian of the kingdom sidelining the King [3]
  • 1388
    1 December, Carrick lost guardianship to his younger brother Robert, Earl of Fife [4]
  • 1390

    19 April, Robert II died at Dundonald Castle

    14 August, Carrick crowned as Robert III but without power and Fife retains guardianship[5]
  • 1393
    Ruling powers restored to the King with his elder son David undertaking a more influential role[6]
  • 1399
    January, David (now Duke of Rothesay) appointed Lieutenant of Scotland to rule for three years but under supervision of a group led by Fife (now Duke of Albany)[7]
  • 1401
    Probably late in the year, arrested by Albany[8]
  • 1402
    25–27 March, Rothesay dies in custody but parliament exonerates Albany[9]
  • 1405-6
    Sometime during that winter the King had decided to send his remaining son, James, to France for safe-keeping[10]
  • 1406

    22 March, James's ship bound for France intercepted by the English and the prince began his eighteen-year captivity

    4 April, the ailing King Robert died after learning of his son's fate[11]

John joined his father and other magnates in a rebellion against his great-uncle David II early in 1363 but submitted to him soon afterward. He was married to Anabella Drummond by 1367. In 1368 David created him Earl of Carrick. His father became king in 1371 after the unexpected death of the childless King David. In the succeeding years, Carrick was influential in the government of the kingdom but became progressively more impatient at his father's longevity. In 1384 Carrick was appointed the king's lieutenant after having influenced the general council to remove Robert II from direct rule. Carrick's administration saw a renewal of the conflict with England. In 1388 the Scots defeated the English at the Battle of Otterburn where the Scots' commander, James, Earl of Douglas, was killed. By this time Carrick had been badly injured from a horse-kick but it was the loss of his powerful ally, Douglas, that saw a turnaround in magnate support in favour of his younger brother Robert, Earl of Fife, to whom the council transferred the lieutenancy in December 1388.

In 1390, Robert II died and Carrick ascended the throne as Robert III but without authority to rule directly. Fife continued as Lieutenant until February 1393 when power was returned to the king in conjunction with his son David. At a council in 1399 owing to the king's 'sickness of his person', David, now Duke of Rothesay, became Lieutenant under the supervision of a special parliamentary group dominated by Fife, now styled Duke of Albany. After this, Robert III withdrew to his lands in the west and for a time played little or no part in affairs of state. He was powerless to interfere when a dispute between Albany and Rothesay arose in 1401, leading to Rothesay's imprisonment and death in March 1402. The general council absolved Albany from blame and reappointed him as Lieutenant. The only impediment now remaining to an Albany Stewart monarchy was the king's only surviving son, James, Earl of Carrick. After a clash with Albany's Douglas allies in 1406, the 11-year-old James tried to escape to France. The vessel was intercepted and James became the prisoner of Henry IV of England. Robert III died shortly after learning of his heir's imprisonment.

Early life

John Stewart was born around the year 1337 to Robert, Steward of Scotland and heir presumptive to the throne, and his wife Elizabeth Mure.[12] Robert's mother Marjorie and her half-brother, David II, were the children of the first Bruce king, Robert I.[13] Robert Stewart and Elizabeth Mure were married in 1336 by traditional marriage, recognized as legally binding but not recognized by the Church. The marriage was criticized for being uncanonical, so they married a second time in 1349, after receiving a papal dispensation from Pope Clement VI dated 22 November 1347. Therefore, although their children were actually legitimate, having been born after the first marriage of their parents, John, his three brothers and six sisters were legitimised by their parents' second Church-sanctioned marriage.[14] Styled Lord of Kyle, John is first recorded in the 1350s as the commander of a campaign in the Lordship of Annandale to re-establish Scottish control over English occupied territory.[15] In 1363, he joined his father along with the earls of Douglas and March in a failed insurrection against Robert's uncle, David II. The reasons for the rebellion were varied. In 1362, David II supported several of his royal favorites in their titles to lands in the Stewart earldom of Monteith and thwarted Stewart claims to the earldom of Fife. The King's involvement and eventual marriage with Margaret Drummond may also have represented a threat in the Steward's own earldom of Strathearn where the Drummonds also had interests, while Douglas and March mistrusted David's intentions towards them.[16] These nobles were also unhappy at the king's squandering of funds provided to him for his ransom,[17] and with the prospect that they could be sent to England as guarantors for the ransom payments. The dissension between the King and the Stewarts looked to have been settled before the end of spring 1367.[18]

 
Blason of John, Earl of Carrick

On 31 May the Steward resigned the earldom of Atholl to John, who by this time was already married to Annabella Drummond, the daughter of the queen's deceased brother, Sir John Drummond.[18] David II reinforced the position of John and Annabella by providing them with the Earldom of Carrick on 22 June 1368 and the tacit approval of John as the king's probable heir.[19] A Stewart succession was suddenly endangered when David II had his marriage to Margaret annulled in March 1369 leaving the king free to remarry and with the prospect of a Bruce heir.[20]

On 22 February 1371 David II (who was preparing to marry the Earl of March's sister, Agnes Dunbar) unexpectedly died, presumably to the relief of both John and his father.[21] Robert was crowned at Scone Abbey on 27 March 1371 and before this date had given John—now styled Steward of Scotland—the ancestral lands surrounding the Firth of Clyde.[22] The manner in which the succession was to take place was first entailed by Robert I when female heirs were excluded and David II attempted unsuccessfully on several occasions to have the council change the succession procedure.[22] Robert II quickly moved to ensure the succession of John when the general council attending his coronation officially named Carrick as heir—in 1373 the Stewart succession was further strengthened when parliament passed entails defining the manner in which each of the king's sons could inherit the crown.[23] After the coronation John Dunbar who had received the Lordship of Fife from David II now resigned the title so that the king's second son, Robert, Earl of Monteith could receive the Earldom of Fife—Dunbar was compensated with the provision of the earldom of Moray.[24]

A son, David, the future Duke of Rothesay, was born to Carrick and Annabella on 24 October 1378. In 1381, Carrick was calling himself 'lieutenant for the marches' sustained by his connections to border magnates such as his brother-in-law, James Douglas, son of William, Earl of Douglas, whom he succeeded in 1384.[22]

Guardianship—and its collapse

Robert II's policy of building up Stewart domination in Scotland through the advancement of his sons saw the emergence of Carrick as the pre-eminent Stewart magnate south of the Forth-Clyde line, just as his younger brother Alexander, Earl of Buchan, Lord of Badenoch and Ross had become in the north.[25]

... considering that there are, and have been now for a considerable time, great and numerous defects in the governing of the kingdom by reason of the king's disposition, both by reason of age and for other reasons, and the infirmity of the lord his firstborn son ... have amicably chosen Sir [Robert Stewart], earl of Fife, second-born son of the king, and brother german of the same lord the firstborn son, [as] guardian of the kingdom under the king, ... for putting into effect justice and keeping the law internally, and for the defence of the kingdom with the king's force, as set out before, against those attempting to rise up as enemies.

—Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, 1 December 1388, Edinburgh. http://www.rps.ac.uk/

Prior to 1384 persistent objections regarding Robert II's application of the law were brought to the attention of the council. Some of these grievances maintained that the King had acted unlawfully by deliberately disregarding charges regarding his personal conduct.[26] Buchan's use of cateran supporters drew criticism from Northern nobles and prelates and demonstrated Robert II's inability or reluctance to control his son.[27] The king's failure to take a leading role in prosecuting the war with England and Buchan's abuse of royal power in the north was the backdrop to the general council meeting at Holyrood Abbey in November 1384, where the decision was taken to sideline the king and provide the ruling powers to Carrick as Guardian of Scotland.[28][29][30]

Within weeks Carrick's actions signaled changes in the direction of crown strategy where the Carrick–Douglas affinity was, by far, the largest group to benefit from crown patronage.[26] On 13 March 1385 it emerged that an unauthorised payment of £700 in bullion, a huge amount, had been taken by the guardian from the customs of Edinburgh. It transpired that Fife, also Chamberlain of Scotland, had been struggling to check Carrick's misuse of the Crown finances during 1384–5.[31]

In April 1385, the general council sharply condemned Buchan's behaviour[32] and sat with the intention of maneuvering Carrick into firmly intervening in the north.[33] In July, under Carrick's guardianship, a Scottish army that included a French force commanded by Admiral Jean de Vienne penetrated into the north of England without any serious gains but provoked a damaging retaliatory attack by Richard II.[22] Yet in the north, Carrick did not bring Buchan under control and many of the Guardian's supporters although pleased at the resumption of hostilities with England were unhappy at the continued northern lawlessness.[34] Carrick had been made Guardian partly on the need to curb Buchan's excesses yet despite this by February 1387 Buchan had become even more powerful and influential when he was appointed Justiciar north of the Forth.[33]

 
Battle of Otterburn

The war with England was halted by a series of truces but on 19 April 1388, English envoys sent to Scotland to again extend the ceasefire returned to Richard's court empty-handed—by 29 April Robert II was conducting a council in Edinburgh to authorise renewed conflict with England.[35] Although the Scots army defeated the English at the Battle of Otterburn in Northumberland in August 1388, its leader, the Earl of Douglas, was killed. Douglas died childless, triggering a series of claims on his estate—Carrick backed his brother-in-law Malcolm Drummond, the husband of Douglas's sister, while Carrick's brother, Robert Earl of Fife, took the side of Sir Archibald Douglas, Lord of Galloway, who held an entail on his kinsman's estates, and who ultimately succeeded to the earldom.[36] Fife, with his new powerful Douglas ally, together with those loyal to the king, ensured at the December 1388 council meeting that the guardianship of Scotland would pass from Carrick (who had recently been badly injured from a horse-kick) to Fife.[37][34][36]

There was general approval of Fife's intention to properly resolve the situation of lawlessness in the north and in particular the activities of Buchan his younger brother.[34] Buchan was stripped of his position of justiciar, which would soon be given to Fife's son, Murdoch Stewart. In January 1390 Robert II was in the north-east perhaps to strengthen the now changed political outlook in the north of the kingdom.[38] He returned to Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire in March where he died on 19 April and was buried at Scone on 25 April.[39]

Reign

In diebus illis non erat lex in Scocia sed quilibet potencior minorem oppressit et totum regnum fuit unum latrocinium. Homicidia depredaciones et incendia et cetera maleficia remanserunt inpunita et justicia utlegata extra regni terminos exulavit.

In those days there was no law in Scotland, but the strong oppressed the weak, and the whole kingdom was one den of thieves. Homicides, robberies, fire-raisings, and other misdeeds remained unpunished, and justice seemed banished beyond the kingdom's bounds.

—The Chartularium Episcopatus Moraviensis written at Elgin Cathedral for the year 1398[40][41]

In May 1390 parliament granted John permission to change his regnal name to Robert, probably in part to maintain the link back to Robert I but also to disassociate himself from King John Balliol.[42] The four-month delay in the crowning of Robert III can be seen as a period when Fife and his affinity sought to ensure their future positions, and which also saw Buchan's opportunistic attack on Elgin Cathedral, settling an old score with the Bishop of Moray, and possibly also a protest at Fife's reappointment as the king's lieutenant.[43]

Rothesay's lieutenancy

In 1392, Robert III strengthened the position of his son David, now Earl of Carrick, when he endowed him with a large annuity that allowed the young prince to build up his household and affinity, and then in 1393 regained his right to direct rule when the general council decided that Fife's lieutenancy should end and that Carrick, now of age, should assist his father.[44] This independence of action was demonstrated in 1395–6, when he responded to Carrick's unauthorised marriage to Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of George, Earl of March, by ensuring its annulment.[22] The king appears to have also taken over the conduct of foreign affairs, preserving the peace with Richard II and managing to increase the power of the Red Douglas Earl of Angus in the southeast of the country as a counterbalance to Fife's Black Douglas ally. He further showed his authority when in an attempt to reduce inter-clan feuding and lawlessness, he arranged and oversaw a gladiatorial limited combat between the clans of Kay and Quhele (Clan Chattan) in Perth on 28 April 1396.[45] Carrick progressively acted independently of his father taking control of the Stewart lands in the south-west, while maintaining his links with the Drummonds of his mother, and all at a time when Fife's influence in central Scotland remained strong.[46]

 
Falkland Palace built close to the site of Falkland Castle

The king was increasingly blamed for the failure to pacify the Gaelic areas in the west and north. The general council held in Perth in April 1398 criticised the king's governance, and empowered his brother Robert and his son David—now respectively the Dukes of Albany and Rothesay—to lead an army against Donald, Lord of the Isles, and his brothers.[22] In November 1398, an influential group of magnates and prelates met at Falkland Castle that included Albany, Rothesay, Archibald, Earl of Douglas, Albany's son Murdoch, justiciar North of the Forth along with the bishops Walter of St Andrews and Gilbert of Aberdeen—the outcome of this meeting manifested itself at the council meeting held in January 1399 when the king was forced to surrender power to Rothesay for a period of three years.[43]

The kin of the border earls took advantage of the confusion in England after the deposition of Richard II by Henry IV, and harried and forayed into England causing much damage, and taking Wark Castle around 13 October 1399.[47] A far-reaching dispute between Rothesay and George Dunbar, Earl of March, occurred when Rothesay, rather than remarrying Elizabeth Dunbar as previously agreed, decided to marry Mary Douglas, daughter of the Earl of Douglas. March, enraged by this, wrote to Henry IV on 18 February 1400, and by July had entered Henry's service.[48] In 1401, Rothesay took on a more assertive and autonomous attitude, circumventing proper procedures, unjustifiably appropriating sums from the customs of the burghs on the east coast, before provoking further animosity when he confiscated the revenues of the temporalities of the vacant bishopric of St Andrews.[49] Rothesay had also in conjunction with his uncle, Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, confronted Albany's influence in central Scotland. As soon his lieutenancy expired in 1402, Rothesay was arrested and imprisoned in Albany's Falkland Castle where he died in March 1402.[50] Rothesay's death probably lay with Albany and Douglas, who would have looked upon the possibility of the young prince acceding to the throne with great apprehension. They certainly fell under suspicion, but were cleared of all blame by a general council, 'where, by divine providence and not otherwise, it is discerned that he departed from this life.' [51][52]

Albany's lieutenancy

 
The grave of Robert III, Paisley Abbey

Following Rothesay's death, and with the restoration of the lieutenancy to Albany and the Scottish defeat at the battle of Humbleton, Robert III experienced almost total exclusion from political authority and was limited to his lands in the west.[53] By late 1404 Robert, with the aid of his close councilors Henry Sinclair, Earl of Orkney, Sir David Fleming and Henry Wardlaw, had succeeded in re-establishing himself and intervened in favour of Alexander Stewart, the Earl of Buchan's illegitimate son, who was in dispute with Albany over the earldom of Mar.[54] Robert III again exhibited his new resolve when in December 1404 he created a new regality in the Stewartry[55] for his sole remaining son and heir, James, now Earl of Carrick—an act designed to prevent these lands falling into Albany's hands.[56]

By 28 October 1405 Robert III had returned to Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire. With the king's health failing, it was decided in the winter of 1405–6 to send the young prince to France out of the reach of Albany.[57] Despite this, the manner of James's flight from Scotland was unplanned. In February 1406, James together with Orkney and Fleming, at the head of a large group of followers left the safety of Bishop Wardlaw's protection in St Andrews and journeyed through the hostile Douglas territories of east Lothian—an act probably designed to demonstrate James's royal endorsement of his custodians, but also a move by his custodians to further their own interests in the traditional Douglas heartlands.[58] Events went seriously wrong for James and he had to escape to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth along with the Earl of Orkney after his escorts were attacked by James Douglas of Balvenie, and which resulted in Sir David Fleming's death.[59] Their confinement on the rock was to last for over a month before a ship from Danzig, en route for France, picked them up.[60] On 22 March 1406, the ship was taken by English pirates off Flamborough Head, who delivered James to King Henry IV of England. Robert III had moved to Rothesay Castle where, after hearing of his son's captivity, he died 4 April 1406, and was buried in Paisley Abbey, which had been founded by the Stewarts.[61]

Family and issue

 
Robert III and Annabella Drummond (1562 illustration)

King Robert III married Anabella Drummond, the daughter of Sir John Drummond of Stobhall and Mary Montifex, daughter of Sir William Montifex, in c.1366/7. They had seven children:[62]

He also had at least two older illegitimate children:

  • John Stewart of Ardgowan and Blackhall, (b. 1364 – d. 1412) who was an ancestor to the Shaw-Stewart baronets.
  • James Stewart of Kilbride

Historiography

Abbot Walter Bower reported that Robert III described himself as "the worst of kings and the most miserable of men". Gordon Donaldson in his general history Scottish Kings (1967) agrees and writes of the first two Stewart kings "that a famous dynasty, which was to produce so many men of remarkable ability ... made a somewhat pedestrian beginning". He immediately qualifies this statement with "it is true that the sources, both record and narrative, are scanty". He goes further and explains "admittedly, no attempt has yet been made to bring the resources of modern historical research to bear on Robert II and Robert III ... but it is beyond the bounds of probability that even if this is done either of them will emerge as a man who did much positively to shape Scottish history."[63] When Robert III re-established his personal rule in 1393, Donaldson characterises it as a period of anarchy, and of a king who couldn't control his brothers Albany and Buchan, nor his son Rothesay.[64]

Ranald Nicholson agrees with Donaldson in his Scotland: The Later Middle Ages (1974), and describes Robert III as a failure, like his father, because he wasn't dominant. Nicholson's opinion was that in his period as Lieutenant in the 1380s, Robert (John, Earl of Carrick) was incapable of dealing with the breakdown of law and order, citing the number of legal cases. The lameness of Carrick after being kicked by a horse was explained by Nicholson as the excuse needed to have him replaced by his brother Robert, Earl of Fife as the king's lieutenant.[65] Nicholson writes, "nothing much was to be hoped for in the heir apparent", and goes on to blame Robert III for the destruction of Forres and Elgin, despite the lieutenancy of Fife at the time.

Andrew Barrell in his book Medieval Scotland (2000) puts forward that the first two Stewart kings, "had difficulty in asserting themselves, partly because their dynasty was new to kingship and needed to establish itself".[66] Robert III's period of personal rule from 1393 was "disastrous" according to Barrell, and was exemplified by the king's failure to re-take the royal fortress of Dumbarton.[67] Barrell's final assessment of Robert III was of a man crippled in body and incapable or averse to personally confronting Albany but sought to do so through promoting the status of his sons, and even then he failed.[68]

Alexander Grant in Independence and Nationhood (1984) found Robert III to be "probably Scotland's least impressive king". Grant puts this into perspective and writes that it is notable that Robert III's reign could have been worse compared to the turmoil and violence experienced in England and France when ruled by weak kings. Even on Robert's death, Scotland didn't descend into open civil war but was restricted to positioning among the royal family and its magnate groupings.[69] Grant, in The New Cambridge Medieval History, explains that the 13th-century Scottish kings ruled with the endorsement of practically all the political classes but that none of the 14th-century kings, from Robert I to Robert III, did so and retained loyalty by the use of patronage. The benefits of this were outweighed by the disadvantages—alienated lands reduced crown income, endowments had the same effect, the estates granted to nobles and church often in regality led to a loss of royal attendance within these territories and contributed to a diminishment of authority.[70]

Michael Lynch suggests that the earlier 20th-century historians made hasty evaluations of both Robert II and Robert III when they characterised them as "pathetically weak personalities" and their reigns as "nineteen years of senility and sixteen of infirmity". Lynch also makes the point that the complaints made in the later chronicles of lawlessness and disturbance in the country were mainly confined to the north with the king's brother Alexander, Lord of Badenoch and Earl of Buchan at its root. The death of John, Lord of the Isles heralded a state of dissension between the lordship and the crown that was to last for two generations and which even Robert III's successor James I was unable to deal with properly.[71] Lynch states that much of the troubles during Robert III's reign derived from the sharp deterioration of the royal revenues. The unruliness of northern Scotland was the result of competing factions within the royal family—Lynch suggests that the weakness in kingship before 1406 "can be exaggerated", citing Buchan's enforced appearance at Robert III's council to answer for his incendiary attack on Elgin and its cathedral, and Albany's obtainment of a submission from the lord of the Isles.[72]

In Stephen Boardman's The Early Stewart Kings, the younger Robert, then John, Earl of Carrick, is shown to be an energetic ambitious man and fully engaged in the running of the country, at the centre of Anglo-Scottish diplomacy, and who became the pre-eminent magnate in Scotland and whose political importance south of the Forth would eclipse that of his father's.[73] Boardman describes how in 1384 he callously engineered the council to remove his father from power and to place it in his hands.[74] Many of the problems of Robert III's rule, Boardman argues, stemmed from the death of his brother-in-law and close ally James, Earl of Douglas at Otterburn in 1388, when his deliberately constructed and powerful affinity south of the Forth crumbled. That same year Carrick lost the lieutenancy to his brother Robert Earl of Fife, that was, Boardman suggests, a blow to the future king's standing and one from which he would not fully recover.[75] According to Boardman, when Robert became king in 1390 he was the victim of his father's style of government characterised by Robert II's creation of his sons, sons-in-law, and other major territorial nobles as powerful magnates to whom he delegated extensive authority. As a result, Robert III's brothers refused to act simply as liegemen to the king. Robert III, already weakened by the council when he ascended the throne, was in the end completely subordinated to the magnate power of Albany and Douglas.[76]

Fictional portrayals

Robert III has been depicted in historical novels. They include:[77]

Family tree

Some of the most powerful Scots of Robert III's time were his close relatives.

See also

References

  1. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 17–19
  2. ^ Nicholson, Scotland: The later middle Ages, p. 185
  3. ^ Nicholson, Scotland: The later middle Ages, p. 189
  4. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 151–2
  5. ^ Nicholson, Scotland: The later middle Ages, pp. 203–4
  6. ^ Penman, Kings and Queens of Scotland, p. 131
  7. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 214–5
  8. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 235–6
  9. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 244
  10. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 291–2
  11. ^ Lynch, Scotland: A new History, p. 141
  12. ^ Weir, Britain's Royal Family, p. 228
  13. ^ Weir, Britain's Royal Family, pp. 210–211
  14. ^ Weir, Britain's Royal Family, p. 216–25
  15. ^ Penman, Kings and Queens of Scotland, p. 128
  16. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 16–18
  17. ^ Penman, Kings and Queens of Scotland, p. 120
  18. ^ a b Boardman, Annabella, ODNB
  19. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 22
  20. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 23–4
  21. ^ Penman, Kings and Queens of Scotland, p. 130
  22. ^ a b c d e f Boardman, Robert III, ODNB
  23. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, pp. 141–2
  24. ^ Grant in Jones et al., The New Cambridge Medieval History, p. 360
  25. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, p. 140–2
  26. ^ a b Boardman, Early Stewart Kings,p. 130
  27. ^ For an account of the background to Buchan's activities in the north of Scotland and the context in which he operated see Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pages 83–9
  28. ^ "Records of the Parliaments of Scotland". www.rps.ac.uk.
  29. ^ Grant in Jones et al., New Cambridge History, pp. 360–1
  30. ^ Oram, et al., Kings & Queens, p. 126
  31. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 135–6
  32. ^ Lynch, Scotland: A New History, p. 139
  33. ^ a b Boardman, Early Stewart Kings,p. 135
  34. ^ a b c Grant in Jones, et al., New Cambridge History p. 361
  35. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 139 & 142
  36. ^ a b Grant in Tuck & Goodman, War and Border Societies, p. 51
  37. ^ "Records of the Parliaments of Scotland". www.rps.ac.uk.
  38. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 171
  39. ^ The date of Robert II's death and the disputed date for Robert II's burial and the reasons for the delay in Robert III's coronation are explained by Dauvit Broun in Brown & Tanner, History of Scottish Parliament pp. 112–6
  40. ^ Dunbar, A Revised Chronology of Scottish History, p. 174
  41. ^ Innes, C. Registum Moravienses, p. 382
  42. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, p. 146
  43. ^ a b Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 173–5
  44. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, pp. 195–6
  45. ^ Penman, Kings & Queens of Scotland, p. 131
  46. ^ Grant in Jones et al., New Cambridge Medieval History, p. 361
  47. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, p. 226
  48. ^ Sadler, Border Fury, p. 296
  49. ^ Boardman, David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay, ODNB
  50. ^ Grant in Jones et al., The New Cambridge Medieval History, p. 362
  51. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland. p. 149
  52. ^ Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, 14 May 1402, Edinburgh. http://www.rps.ac.uk/
  53. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, p. 255
  54. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, p. 281
  55. ^ For an understanding of the designation of baronies and earldoms into regalities and their powers during the reign of Robert III, see Alexander Grant, Franchises North of the Border, pp.193–199 in Michael Prestwick (Ed), Liberties and Identities in the Medieval British Isles
  56. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, pp. 281–2
  57. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, p. 291
  58. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, pp. 293–4
  59. ^ Brown, James I, ODNB
  60. ^ Boardman,Early Stewart Kings, p. 293
  61. ^ Penman, Kings and Queens of Scotland, p. 134
  62. ^ Weir, Britain's Royal Family, p. 229–31
  63. ^ Donaldson, Scottish Kings, p. 38
  64. ^ Donaldson, Scottish Kings, p. 41
  65. ^ Nicholson, Scotland: The Later Middle Ages, p. 199
  66. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, p. 137
  67. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, p. 147
  68. ^ Barrell, Medieval Scotland, pp. 150–1
  69. ^ Grant, Independence and Nationhood, p. 184
  70. ^ Grant, New Cambridge Medieval History, p. 367
  71. ^ Lynch, Medieval Scotland, p. 140
  72. ^ Lynch, Medieval Scotland, p. 142
  73. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 55
  74. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 304
  75. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 305
  76. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, p. 308
  77. ^ a b Brewer (2004), p. 301
  78. ^ Nield (1968), p. 48
  79. ^ "lords of Misrule synopsis". cunninghamh.tripod.com.
  80. ^ "A Folly of Princes synopsis". cunninghamh.tripod.com.
  81. ^ "The Captive Crown synopsis". cunninghamh.tripod.com.

Sources

  • Barrell, Andrew D. M. (2000), Medieval Scotland, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-58602-X
  • Boardman, S. I. (September 2004). "Annabella". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8063. Retrieved 20 February 2009. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Boardman, Stephen (2007), The Early Stewart Kings: Robert II and Robert III, 1371–1406, The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland Series, Edinburgh: John Donald, an imprint of Birlinn Ltd, ISBN 978-1-904607-68-7
  • Boardman, S. I. (May 2006). "Robert II". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23713. Retrieved 19 October 2008. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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Robert III of Scotland
Born: c. 1337 Died: 4 April 1406
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Scots
19 April 1390 – 4 April 1406
Succeeded by
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by Earl of Atholl
1367 – 1390
Vacant
Title next held by
David Stewart
New title Earl of Carrick
1368 – 5 March 1390
Succeeded by
Court offices
Preceded by High Steward of Scotland
c. 1371–1390
Reverted to crown
New title Guardian of Scotland
November 1384–December 1388
Succeeded by

robert, scotland, robert, 1337, april, 1406, born, john, stewart, king, scots, from, 1390, death, 1406, also, high, steward, scotland, from, 1371, 1390, held, titles, earl, atholl, 1367, 1390, earl, carrick, 1368, 1390, before, ascending, throne, about, years,. Robert III c 1337 4 April 1406 born John Stewart was King of Scots from 1390 to his death in 1406 He was also High Steward of Scotland from 1371 to 1390 and held the titles of Earl of Atholl 1367 1390 and Earl of Carrick 1368 1390 before ascending the throne at about the age of 53 years He was the eldest son of King Robert II and Elizabeth Mure and was legitimized by the second marriage of his parents and by papal dispensation in 1349 Robert IIIGroat of 1390 bearing a crowned facing effigy of Robert III on the obverseKing of ScotsReign19 April 1390 4 April 1406Coronation14 August 1390PredecessorRobert IISuccessorJames IBornJohn Stewartc 1337Died4 April 1406 aged 68 69 Rothesay Castle Isle of Bute ScotlandBurialPaisley AbbeySpouseAnabella Drummond m 1367 died 1401 wbr Issuemore David Stewart Duke of Rothesay James I King of ScotsHouseStewartFatherRobert II of ScotlandMotherElizabeth MureEvents 1363 During the early months along with his father and others he was part of an abortive insurrection against David II 1 1371 27 March Robert II crowned at Scone Abbey 2 1384 November Carrick engineered his appointment as guardian of the kingdom sidelining the King 3 1388 1 December Carrick lost guardianship to his younger brother Robert Earl of Fife 4 1390 19 April Robert II died at Dundonald Castle 14 August Carrick crowned as Robert III but without power and Fife retains guardianship 5 1393 Ruling powers restored to the King with his elder son David undertaking a more influential role 6 1399 January David now Duke of Rothesay appointed Lieutenant of Scotland to rule for three years but under supervision of a group led by Fife now Duke of Albany 7 1401 Probably late in the year arrested by Albany 8 1402 25 27 March Rothesay dies in custody but parliament exonerates Albany 9 1405 6 Sometime during that winter the King had decided to send his remaining son James to France for safe keeping 10 1406 22 March James s ship bound for France intercepted by the English and the prince began his eighteen year captivity 4 April the ailing King Robert died after learning of his son s fate 11 John joined his father and other magnates in a rebellion against his great uncle David II early in 1363 but submitted to him soon afterward He was married to Anabella Drummond by 1367 In 1368 David created him Earl of Carrick His father became king in 1371 after the unexpected death of the childless King David In the succeeding years Carrick was influential in the government of the kingdom but became progressively more impatient at his father s longevity In 1384 Carrick was appointed the king s lieutenant after having influenced the general council to remove Robert II from direct rule Carrick s administration saw a renewal of the conflict with England In 1388 the Scots defeated the English at the Battle of Otterburn where the Scots commander James Earl of Douglas was killed By this time Carrick had been badly injured from a horse kick but it was the loss of his powerful ally Douglas that saw a turnaround in magnate support in favour of his younger brother Robert Earl of Fife to whom the council transferred the lieutenancy in December 1388 In 1390 Robert II died and Carrick ascended the throne as Robert III but without authority to rule directly Fife continued as Lieutenant until February 1393 when power was returned to the king in conjunction with his son David At a council in 1399 owing to the king s sickness of his person David now Duke of Rothesay became Lieutenant under the supervision of a special parliamentary group dominated by Fife now styled Duke of Albany After this Robert III withdrew to his lands in the west and for a time played little or no part in affairs of state He was powerless to interfere when a dispute between Albany and Rothesay arose in 1401 leading to Rothesay s imprisonment and death in March 1402 The general council absolved Albany from blame and reappointed him as Lieutenant The only impediment now remaining to an Albany Stewart monarchy was the king s only surviving son James Earl of Carrick After a clash with Albany s Douglas allies in 1406 the 11 year old James tried to escape to France The vessel was intercepted and James became the prisoner of Henry IV of England Robert III died shortly after learning of his heir s imprisonment Contents 1 Early life 2 Guardianship and its collapse 3 Reign 3 1 Rothesay s lieutenancy 3 2 Albany s lieutenancy 4 Family and issue 5 Historiography 6 Fictional portrayals 7 Family tree 8 See also 9 References 10 SourcesEarly life EditJohn Stewart was born around the year 1337 to Robert Steward of Scotland and heir presumptive to the throne and his wife Elizabeth Mure 12 Robert s mother Marjorie and her half brother David II were the children of the first Bruce king Robert I 13 Robert Stewart and Elizabeth Mure were married in 1336 by traditional marriage recognized as legally binding but not recognized by the Church The marriage was criticized for being uncanonical so they married a second time in 1349 after receiving a papal dispensation from Pope Clement VI dated 22 November 1347 Therefore although their children were actually legitimate having been born after the first marriage of their parents John his three brothers and six sisters were legitimised by their parents second Church sanctioned marriage 14 Styled Lord of Kyle John is first recorded in the 1350s as the commander of a campaign in the Lordship of Annandale to re establish Scottish control over English occupied territory 15 In 1363 he joined his father along with the earls of Douglas and March in a failed insurrection against Robert s uncle David II The reasons for the rebellion were varied In 1362 David II supported several of his royal favorites in their titles to lands in the Stewart earldom of Monteith and thwarted Stewart claims to the earldom of Fife The King s involvement and eventual marriage with Margaret Drummond may also have represented a threat in the Steward s own earldom of Strathearn where the Drummonds also had interests while Douglas and March mistrusted David s intentions towards them 16 These nobles were also unhappy at the king s squandering of funds provided to him for his ransom 17 and with the prospect that they could be sent to England as guarantors for the ransom payments The dissension between the King and the Stewarts looked to have been settled before the end of spring 1367 18 Blason of John Earl of Carrick On 31 May the Steward resigned the earldom of Atholl to John who by this time was already married to Annabella Drummond the daughter of the queen s deceased brother Sir John Drummond 18 David II reinforced the position of John and Annabella by providing them with the Earldom of Carrick on 22 June 1368 and the tacit approval of John as the king s probable heir 19 A Stewart succession was suddenly endangered when David II had his marriage to Margaret annulled in March 1369 leaving the king free to remarry and with the prospect of a Bruce heir 20 On 22 February 1371 David II who was preparing to marry the Earl of March s sister Agnes Dunbar unexpectedly died presumably to the relief of both John and his father 21 Robert was crowned at Scone Abbey on 27 March 1371 and before this date had given John now styled Steward of Scotland the ancestral lands surrounding the Firth of Clyde 22 The manner in which the succession was to take place was first entailed by Robert I when female heirs were excluded and David II attempted unsuccessfully on several occasions to have the council change the succession procedure 22 Robert II quickly moved to ensure the succession of John when the general council attending his coronation officially named Carrick as heir in 1373 the Stewart succession was further strengthened when parliament passed entails defining the manner in which each of the king s sons could inherit the crown 23 After the coronation John Dunbar who had received the Lordship of Fife from David II now resigned the title so that the king s second son Robert Earl of Monteith could receive the Earldom of Fife Dunbar was compensated with the provision of the earldom of Moray 24 A son David the future Duke of Rothesay was born to Carrick and Annabella on 24 October 1378 In 1381 Carrick was calling himself lieutenant for the marches sustained by his connections to border magnates such as his brother in law James Douglas son of William Earl of Douglas whom he succeeded in 1384 22 Guardianship and its collapse EditRobert II s policy of building up Stewart domination in Scotland through the advancement of his sons saw the emergence of Carrick as the pre eminent Stewart magnate south of the Forth Clyde line just as his younger brother Alexander Earl of Buchan Lord of Badenoch and Ross had become in the north 25 considering that there are and have been now for a considerable time great and numerous defects in the governing of the kingdom by reason of the king s disposition both by reason of age and for other reasons and the infirmity of the lord his firstborn son have amicably chosen Sir Robert Stewart earl of Fife second born son of the king and brother german of the same lord the firstborn son as guardian of the kingdom under the king for putting into effect justice and keeping the law internally and for the defence of the kingdom with the king s force as set out before against those attempting to rise up as enemies Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 1 December 1388 Edinburgh http www rps ac uk Prior to 1384 persistent objections regarding Robert II s application of the law were brought to the attention of the council Some of these grievances maintained that the King had acted unlawfully by deliberately disregarding charges regarding his personal conduct 26 Buchan s use of cateran supporters drew criticism from Northern nobles and prelates and demonstrated Robert II s inability or reluctance to control his son 27 The king s failure to take a leading role in prosecuting the war with England and Buchan s abuse of royal power in the north was the backdrop to the general council meeting at Holyrood Abbey in November 1384 where the decision was taken to sideline the king and provide the ruling powers to Carrick as Guardian of Scotland 28 29 30 Within weeks Carrick s actions signaled changes in the direction of crown strategy where the Carrick Douglas affinity was by far the largest group to benefit from crown patronage 26 On 13 March 1385 it emerged that an unauthorised payment of 700 in bullion a huge amount had been taken by the guardian from the customs of Edinburgh It transpired that Fife also Chamberlain of Scotland had been struggling to check Carrick s misuse of the Crown finances during 1384 5 31 In April 1385 the general council sharply condemned Buchan s behaviour 32 and sat with the intention of maneuvering Carrick into firmly intervening in the north 33 In July under Carrick s guardianship a Scottish army that included a French force commanded by Admiral Jean de Vienne penetrated into the north of England without any serious gains but provoked a damaging retaliatory attack by Richard II 22 Yet in the north Carrick did not bring Buchan under control and many of the Guardian s supporters although pleased at the resumption of hostilities with England were unhappy at the continued northern lawlessness 34 Carrick had been made Guardian partly on the need to curb Buchan s excesses yet despite this by February 1387 Buchan had become even more powerful and influential when he was appointed Justiciar north of the Forth 33 Battle of OtterburnThe war with England was halted by a series of truces but on 19 April 1388 English envoys sent to Scotland to again extend the ceasefire returned to Richard s court empty handed by 29 April Robert II was conducting a council in Edinburgh to authorise renewed conflict with England 35 Although the Scots army defeated the English at the Battle of Otterburn in Northumberland in August 1388 its leader the Earl of Douglas was killed Douglas died childless triggering a series of claims on his estate Carrick backed his brother in law Malcolm Drummond the husband of Douglas s sister while Carrick s brother Robert Earl of Fife took the side of Sir Archibald Douglas Lord of Galloway who held an entail on his kinsman s estates and who ultimately succeeded to the earldom 36 Fife with his new powerful Douglas ally together with those loyal to the king ensured at the December 1388 council meeting that the guardianship of Scotland would pass from Carrick who had recently been badly injured from a horse kick to Fife 37 34 36 There was general approval of Fife s intention to properly resolve the situation of lawlessness in the north and in particular the activities of Buchan his younger brother 34 Buchan was stripped of his position of justiciar which would soon be given to Fife s son Murdoch Stewart In January 1390 Robert II was in the north east perhaps to strengthen the now changed political outlook in the north of the kingdom 38 He returned to Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire in March where he died on 19 April and was buried at Scone on 25 April 39 Reign EditIn diebus illis non erat lex in Scocia sed quilibet potencior minorem oppressit et totum regnum fuit unum latrocinium Homicidia depredaciones et incendia et cetera maleficia remanserunt inpunita et justicia utlegata extra regni terminos exulavit In those days there was no law in Scotland but the strong oppressed the weak and the whole kingdom was one den of thieves Homicides robberies fire raisings and other misdeeds remained unpunished and justice seemed banished beyond the kingdom s bounds The Chartularium Episcopatus Moraviensis written at Elgin Cathedral for the year 1398 40 41 In May 1390 parliament granted John permission to change his regnal name to Robert probably in part to maintain the link back to Robert I but also to disassociate himself from King John Balliol 42 The four month delay in the crowning of Robert III can be seen as a period when Fife and his affinity sought to ensure their future positions and which also saw Buchan s opportunistic attack on Elgin Cathedral settling an old score with the Bishop of Moray and possibly also a protest at Fife s reappointment as the king s lieutenant 43 Rothesay s lieutenancy Edit In 1392 Robert III strengthened the position of his son David now Earl of Carrick when he endowed him with a large annuity that allowed the young prince to build up his household and affinity and then in 1393 regained his right to direct rule when the general council decided that Fife s lieutenancy should end and that Carrick now of age should assist his father 44 This independence of action was demonstrated in 1395 6 when he responded to Carrick s unauthorised marriage to Elizabeth Dunbar daughter of George Earl of March by ensuring its annulment 22 The king appears to have also taken over the conduct of foreign affairs preserving the peace with Richard II and managing to increase the power of the Red Douglas Earl of Angus in the southeast of the country as a counterbalance to Fife s Black Douglas ally He further showed his authority when in an attempt to reduce inter clan feuding and lawlessness he arranged and oversaw a gladiatorial limited combat between the clans of Kay and Quhele Clan Chattan in Perth on 28 April 1396 45 Carrick progressively acted independently of his father taking control of the Stewart lands in the south west while maintaining his links with the Drummonds of his mother and all at a time when Fife s influence in central Scotland remained strong 46 Falkland Palace built close to the site of Falkland Castle The king was increasingly blamed for the failure to pacify the Gaelic areas in the west and north The general council held in Perth in April 1398 criticised the king s governance and empowered his brother Robert and his son David now respectively the Dukes of Albany and Rothesay to lead an army against Donald Lord of the Isles and his brothers 22 In November 1398 an influential group of magnates and prelates met at Falkland Castle that included Albany Rothesay Archibald Earl of Douglas Albany s son Murdoch justiciar North of the Forth along with the bishops Walter of St Andrews and Gilbert of Aberdeen the outcome of this meeting manifested itself at the council meeting held in January 1399 when the king was forced to surrender power to Rothesay for a period of three years 43 The kin of the border earls took advantage of the confusion in England after the deposition of Richard II by Henry IV and harried and forayed into England causing much damage and taking Wark Castle around 13 October 1399 47 A far reaching dispute between Rothesay and George Dunbar Earl of March occurred when Rothesay rather than remarrying Elizabeth Dunbar as previously agreed decided to marry Mary Douglas daughter of the Earl of Douglas March enraged by this wrote to Henry IV on 18 February 1400 and by July had entered Henry s service 48 In 1401 Rothesay took on a more assertive and autonomous attitude circumventing proper procedures unjustifiably appropriating sums from the customs of the burghs on the east coast before provoking further animosity when he confiscated the revenues of the temporalities of the vacant bishopric of St Andrews 49 Rothesay had also in conjunction with his uncle Alexander Stewart Earl of Buchan confronted Albany s influence in central Scotland As soon his lieutenancy expired in 1402 Rothesay was arrested and imprisoned in Albany s Falkland Castle where he died in March 1402 50 Rothesay s death probably lay with Albany and Douglas who would have looked upon the possibility of the young prince acceding to the throne with great apprehension They certainly fell under suspicion but were cleared of all blame by a general council where by divine providence and not otherwise it is discerned that he departed from this life 51 52 Albany s lieutenancy Edit The grave of Robert III Paisley Abbey Following Rothesay s death and with the restoration of the lieutenancy to Albany and the Scottish defeat at the battle of Humbleton Robert III experienced almost total exclusion from political authority and was limited to his lands in the west 53 By late 1404 Robert with the aid of his close councilors Henry Sinclair Earl of Orkney Sir David Fleming and Henry Wardlaw had succeeded in re establishing himself and intervened in favour of Alexander Stewart the Earl of Buchan s illegitimate son who was in dispute with Albany over the earldom of Mar 54 Robert III again exhibited his new resolve when in December 1404 he created a new regality in the Stewartry 55 for his sole remaining son and heir James now Earl of Carrick an act designed to prevent these lands falling into Albany s hands 56 By 28 October 1405 Robert III had returned to Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire With the king s health failing it was decided in the winter of 1405 6 to send the young prince to France out of the reach of Albany 57 Despite this the manner of James s flight from Scotland was unplanned In February 1406 James together with Orkney and Fleming at the head of a large group of followers left the safety of Bishop Wardlaw s protection in St Andrews and journeyed through the hostile Douglas territories of east Lothian an act probably designed to demonstrate James s royal endorsement of his custodians but also a move by his custodians to further their own interests in the traditional Douglas heartlands 58 Events went seriously wrong for James and he had to escape to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth along with the Earl of Orkney after his escorts were attacked by James Douglas of Balvenie and which resulted in Sir David Fleming s death 59 Their confinement on the rock was to last for over a month before a ship from Danzig en route for France picked them up 60 On 22 March 1406 the ship was taken by English pirates off Flamborough Head who delivered James to King Henry IV of England Robert III had moved to Rothesay Castle where after hearing of his son s captivity he died 4 April 1406 and was buried in Paisley Abbey which had been founded by the Stewarts 61 Family and issue Edit Robert III and Annabella Drummond 1562 illustration King Robert III married Anabella Drummond the daughter of Sir John Drummond of Stobhall and Mary Montifex daughter of Sir William Montifex in c 1366 7 They had seven children 62 David Stewart Duke of Rothesay b 24 Oct 1378 d 26 Mar 1402 who was betrothed to Elizabeth Dunbar but later married Lady Marjory Douglas the daughter of Archibald Douglas 3rd Earl of Douglas and Joanna de Moravia of Strathearn James I Stewart b Dec 1394 d 21 Feb 1437 King of Scots Robert Stewart died young Margaret Stewart died between 1450 and 1456 married Archibald Douglas 4th Earl of Douglas the son of Archibald Douglas 3rd Earl of Douglas and Joanna de Moravia of Strathearn Mary Stewart married 1st George Douglas 1st Earl of Angus married 2nd Sir James Kennedy the Younger and gave birth to Gilbert Kennedy 1st Lord Kennedy betrothed to Sir William Cunningham married 3rd to Sir William Graham of Kincardine married 4th Sir William Edmonstone of Culloden and 1st of Duntreath ancestors of the Edmonstone baronets Egidia Stewart died unmarried Elizabeth Stewart married James Douglas 1st Lord Dalkeith son of Sir James Douglas and Agnes Dunbar He also had at least two older illegitimate children John Stewart of Ardgowan and Blackhall b 1364 d 1412 who was an ancestor to the Shaw Stewart baronets James Stewart of KilbrideHistoriography EditAbbot Walter Bower reported that Robert III described himself as the worst of kings and the most miserable of men Gordon Donaldson in his general history Scottish Kings 1967 agrees and writes of the first two Stewart kings that a famous dynasty which was to produce so many men of remarkable ability made a somewhat pedestrian beginning He immediately qualifies this statement with it is true that the sources both record and narrative are scanty He goes further and explains admittedly no attempt has yet been made to bring the resources of modern historical research to bear on Robert II and Robert III but it is beyond the bounds of probability that even if this is done either of them will emerge as a man who did much positively to shape Scottish history 63 When Robert III re established his personal rule in 1393 Donaldson characterises it as a period of anarchy and of a king who couldn t control his brothers Albany and Buchan nor his son Rothesay 64 Ranald Nicholson agrees with Donaldson in his Scotland The Later Middle Ages 1974 and describes Robert III as a failure like his father because he wasn t dominant Nicholson s opinion was that in his period as Lieutenant in the 1380s Robert John Earl of Carrick was incapable of dealing with the breakdown of law and order citing the number of legal cases The lameness of Carrick after being kicked by a horse was explained by Nicholson as the excuse needed to have him replaced by his brother Robert Earl of Fife as the king s lieutenant 65 Nicholson writes nothing much was to be hoped for in the heir apparent and goes on to blame Robert III for the destruction of Forres and Elgin despite the lieutenancy of Fife at the time Andrew Barrell in his book Medieval Scotland 2000 puts forward that the first two Stewart kings had difficulty in asserting themselves partly because their dynasty was new to kingship and needed to establish itself 66 Robert III s period of personal rule from 1393 was disastrous according to Barrell and was exemplified by the king s failure to re take the royal fortress of Dumbarton 67 Barrell s final assessment of Robert III was of a man crippled in body and incapable or averse to personally confronting Albany but sought to do so through promoting the status of his sons and even then he failed 68 Alexander Grant in Independence and Nationhood 1984 found Robert III to be probably Scotland s least impressive king Grant puts this into perspective and writes that it is notable that Robert III s reign could have been worse compared to the turmoil and violence experienced in England and France when ruled by weak kings Even on Robert s death Scotland didn t descend into open civil war but was restricted to positioning among the royal family and its magnate groupings 69 Grant in The New Cambridge Medieval History explains that the 13th century Scottish kings ruled with the endorsement of practically all the political classes but that none of the 14th century kings from Robert I to Robert III did so and retained loyalty by the use of patronage The benefits of this were outweighed by the disadvantages alienated lands reduced crown income endowments had the same effect the estates granted to nobles and church often in regality led to a loss of royal attendance within these territories and contributed to a diminishment of authority 70 Michael Lynch suggests that the earlier 20th century historians made hasty evaluations of both Robert II and Robert III when they characterised them as pathetically weak personalities and their reigns as nineteen years of senility and sixteen of infirmity Lynch also makes the point that the complaints made in the later chronicles of lawlessness and disturbance in the country were mainly confined to the north with the king s brother Alexander Lord of Badenoch and Earl of Buchan at its root The death of John Lord of the Isles heralded a state of dissension between the lordship and the crown that was to last for two generations and which even Robert III s successor James I was unable to deal with properly 71 Lynch states that much of the troubles during Robert III s reign derived from the sharp deterioration of the royal revenues The unruliness of northern Scotland was the result of competing factions within the royal family Lynch suggests that the weakness in kingship before 1406 can be exaggerated citing Buchan s enforced appearance at Robert III s council to answer for his incendiary attack on Elgin and its cathedral and Albany s obtainment of a submission from the lord of the Isles 72 In Stephen Boardman s The Early Stewart Kings the younger Robert then John Earl of Carrick is shown to be an energetic ambitious man and fully engaged in the running of the country at the centre of Anglo Scottish diplomacy and who became the pre eminent magnate in Scotland and whose political importance south of the Forth would eclipse that of his father s 73 Boardman describes how in 1384 he callously engineered the council to remove his father from power and to place it in his hands 74 Many of the problems of Robert III s rule Boardman argues stemmed from the death of his brother in law and close ally James Earl of Douglas at Otterburn in 1388 when his deliberately constructed and powerful affinity south of the Forth crumbled That same year Carrick lost the lieutenancy to his brother Robert Earl of Fife that was Boardman suggests a blow to the future king s standing and one from which he would not fully recover 75 According to Boardman when Robert became king in 1390 he was the victim of his father s style of government characterised by Robert II s creation of his sons sons in law and other major territorial nobles as powerful magnates to whom he delegated extensive authority As a result Robert III s brothers refused to act simply as liegemen to the king Robert III already weakened by the council when he ascended the throne was in the end completely subordinated to the magnate power of Albany and Douglas 76 Fictional portrayals EditRobert III has been depicted in historical novels They include 77 The Fair Maid of Perth 1828 by Walter Scott 77 The novel covers events from 1396 to 1402 depicting Scottish Clan feuds and other disturbances in Robert III s reign Robert III himself David Stewart Duke of Rothesay and Robert Stewart Duke of Albany are prominently depicted Archibald the Grim Earl of Douglas stands out among the secondary characters 78 The Lords of Misrule 1976 by Nigel Tranter Covers events from c 1388 to 1390 Depicting the last years of Robert II of Scotland and the rise of Robert III to the throne As the elderly king has grown feeble weary and half blind his sons daughters and other nobles campaign for power An ungoverned Scotland is ravaged by their conflicts Robert Stewart Duke of Albany and Alexander Stewart Earl of Buchan are prominently featured 79 A Folly of Princes 1977 by Nigel Tranter Covers events from c 1390 to 1402 Robert III turns out to be a weak king His son David Stewart Duke of Rothesay and brother Robert Stewart Duke of Albany rival each other for political power in his court But the struggle attracts the attention of Richard II and Henry IV leading to English involvement 80 The Captive Crown 1977 by Nigel Tranter Covers events from 1402 to 1411 It depicts the last few years in the reign of Robert III the captivity of James I of Scotland at the hands of Henry IV and the events back in Scotland Concluding with the Battle of Harlaw 81 Family tree EditSome of the most powerful Scots of Robert III s time were his close relatives Robert I King of ScotlandMarjorie BruceDavid II King of ScotlandRobert II King of ScotlandRobert III King of ScotlandRobert Stewart Duke of AlbanyAlexander Stewart Earl of BuchanDavid Stewart Duke of RothesayJames I King of ScotlandMurdoch StewartAlexander Stewart Earl of MarSee also EditScottish monarchs family treeReferences Edit Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 17 19 Nicholson Scotland The later middle Ages p 185 Nicholson Scotland The later middle Ages p 189 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 151 2 Nicholson Scotland The later middle Ages pp 203 4 Penman Kings and Queens of Scotland p 131 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 214 5 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 235 6 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 244 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 291 2 Lynch Scotland A new History p 141 Weir Britain s Royal Family p 228 Weir Britain s Royal Family pp 210 211 Weir Britain s Royal Family p 216 25 Penman Kings and Queens of Scotland p 128 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 16 18 Penman Kings and Queens of Scotland p 120 a b Boardman Annabella ODNB Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 22 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 23 4 Penman Kings and Queens of Scotland p 130 a b c d e f Boardman Robert III ODNB Barrell Medieval Scotland pp 141 2 Grant in Jones et al The New Cambridge Medieval History p 360 Barrell Medieval Scotland p 140 2 a b Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 130 For an account of the background to Buchan s activities in the north of Scotland and the context in which he operated see Boardman Early Stewart Kings pages 83 9 Records of the Parliaments of Scotland www rps ac uk Grant in Jones et al New Cambridge History pp 360 1 Oram et al Kings amp Queens p 126 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 135 6 Lynch Scotland A New History p 139 a b Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 135 a b c Grant in Jones et al New Cambridge History p 361 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 139 amp 142 a b Grant in Tuck amp Goodman War and Border Societies p 51 Records of the Parliaments of Scotland www rps ac uk Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 171 The date of Robert II s death and the disputed date for Robert II s burial and the reasons for the delay in Robert III s coronation are explained by Dauvit Broun in Brown amp Tanner History of Scottish Parliament pp 112 6 Dunbar A Revised Chronology of Scottish History p 174 Innes C Registum Moravienses p 382 Barrell Medieval Scotland p 146 a b Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 173 5 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 195 6 Penman Kings amp Queens of Scotland p 131 Grant in Jones et al New Cambridge Medieval History p 361 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 226 Sadler Border Fury p 296 Boardman David Stewart Duke of Rothesay ODNB Grant in Jones et al The New Cambridge Medieval History p 362 Barrell Medieval Scotland p 149 Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 14 May 1402 Edinburgh http www rps ac uk Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 255 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 281 For an understanding of the designation of baronies and earldoms into regalities and their powers during the reign of Robert III see Alexander Grant Franchises North of the Border pp 193 199 in Michael Prestwick Ed Liberties and Identities in the Medieval British Isles Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 281 2 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 291 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 293 4 Brown James I ODNB Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 293 Penman Kings and Queens of Scotland p 134 Weir Britain s Royal Family p 229 31 Donaldson Scottish Kings p 38 Donaldson Scottish Kings p 41 Nicholson Scotland The Later Middle Ages p 199 Barrell Medieval Scotland p 137 Barrell Medieval Scotland p 147 Barrell Medieval Scotland pp 150 1 Grant Independence and Nationhood p 184 Grant New Cambridge Medieval History p 367 Lynch Medieval Scotland p 140 Lynch Medieval Scotland p 142 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 55 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 304 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 305 Boardman Early Stewart Kings p 308 a b Brewer 2004 p 301 Nield 1968 p 48 lords of Misrule synopsis cunninghamh tripod com A Folly of Princes synopsis cunninghamh tripod com The Captive Crown synopsis cunninghamh tripod com Sources EditBarrell Andrew D M 2000 Medieval Scotland Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 58602 X Boardman S I September 2004 Annabella Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8063 Retrieved 20 February 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Boardman Stephen 2007 The Early Stewart Kings Robert II and Robert III 1371 1406 The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland Series Edinburgh John Donald an imprint of Birlinn Ltd ISBN 978 1 904607 68 7 Boardman S I May 2006 Robert II Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23713 Retrieved 19 October 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Boardman S I 2004 Robert III Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ODNB online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23714 Retrieved 9 January 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Boardman Stephen 2007 The Gaelic World and the Early Stewart Court in Broun Dauvit MacGregor Martin eds Miorun Mor nan Gall The Great Ill Will of the Lowlander Lowland Perceptions of the Highlands Medieval and Modern 1st ed the Centre for Scottish and Celtic Studies University of Glasgow OCLC 540108870 Brewer Ebenezer Cobham 1892 Character Sketches of Romance Fiction and the Drama vol 3 2004 ed The Minerva Group Inc ISBN 978 1 4102 1335 8 Brown Keith M Tanner Roland 2008 The History of the Scottish Parliament Parliament and Politics In Scotland 1235 1560 vol 1 Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1485 1 Brown Michael 2004 The Wars of Scotland 1214 1371 Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1238 6 Brown M H 2004 James I Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14587 Retrieved 16 May 2010 Subscription or UK public library membership required Burns Charles ed 1976 Calendar of Papal Letters to Scotland of Clement VII of Avignon 1378 1394 Scottish History Society ISBN 978 0 9500260 8 4 Dunbar Archibald H 1899 Scottish Kings A Revised Chronology of Scottish History Edinburgh David Douglas Duncan A A M 2004 Murray Sir Andrew of Bothwell 1298 1338 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19590 Retrieved 23 October 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Grant Alexander 1992 The Otterburn War from the Scottish Point of View in Goodman Anthony Tuck Anthony eds War and Border Societies in the Middle Ages Routledge ISBN 0 415 08021 5 Grant Alexander 1984 Independence and Nationhood Edward Arnold Publishers Ltd ISBN 0 7131 6309 7 Grant Alexander 2000 Fourteenth century Scotland in Jones Michael et al eds 2 The New Cambridge Medieval History C 1300 C1415 Woodbridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 36290 3 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Check url value help Innes Cosmo 1837 Registrum Episcapus Moraviensis Edinburgh Ballantyne Club Paul James Balfour ed 1904 The Scots Peerage vol I Edinburgh David Douglas Grant Alexander 2008 Franchises North of the Border in Prestwich Michael ed Liberties and Identities in the Medieval British Isles Woodbridge The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 374 1 Nield Jonathan 1968 A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales Ayer Publishing ISBN 978 0 8337 2509 7 Penman Michael 2001 The House Divided Bruce vs Balliol 1290 1371 in Oram Richard ed The Kings amp Queens of Scotland Stroud Gloustershire Tempus Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7524 1991 9 Rogers Clifford J 1999 The Wars of Edward III Sources and Interpretations Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 0 85115 646 0 Sadler John 2006 Border Fury England and Scotland at War 1296 1568 Longman ISBN 1 4058 4022 6 University of St Andrews Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 retrieved 25 February 2009 Webster Bruce 2004 David II Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 3726 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Webster Bruce 2004 Balliol Edward b in or after 1281 d 1364 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 1206 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Subscription or UK public library membership required Webster Bruce 1998 Scotland without a King 1329 1341 in Grant Alexander Stringer Keith eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1110 X Weir Alison 2008 Britain s Royal Family A Complete Genealogy London Vintage Books ISBN 9780099539735 Robert III of ScotlandHouse of StewartBorn c 1337 Died 4 April 1406Regnal titlesPreceded byRobert II King of Scots19 April 1390 4 April 1406 Succeeded byJames IPeerage of ScotlandPreceded byRobert Stewart Earl of Atholl1367 1390 VacantTitle next held byDavid StewartNew title Earl of Carrick1368 5 March 1390 Succeeded byDavid StewartCourt officesPreceded byRobert Stewart High Steward of Scotlandc 1371 1390 Reverted to crownNew title Guardian of ScotlandNovember 1384 December 1388 Succeeded byRobert Stewart Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert III of Scotland amp oldid 1124219790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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