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Scottish Reformation

The Scottish Reformation was the process by which Scotland broke with the Papacy and developed a predominantly Calvinist national Kirk (church), which was strongly Presbyterian in its outlook. It was part of the wider European Protestant Reformation that took place from the sixteenth century.

Statue of John Knox, a leading figure of the Scottish Reformation.

From the late fifteenth century the ideas of Renaissance humanism, critical of aspects of the established Catholic Church, began to reach Scotland, particularly through contacts between Scottish and continental scholars. In the earlier part of the sixteenth century, the teachings of Martin Luther began to influence Scotland. Particularly important was the work of the Lutheran Scot Patrick Hamilton, who was executed in 1528. Unlike his uncle Henry VIII in England, James V avoided major structural and theological changes to the church and used it as a source of income and for appointments for his illegitimate children and favourites. His death in 1542 left the infant Mary, Queen of Scots as his heir, allowing a series of English invasions later known as the Rough Wooing. The English supplied books and distributed Bibles and Protestant literature in the Lowlands when they invaded in 1547. The execution of the Zwingli-influenced George Wishart in 1546, who was burnt at the stake on the orders of Cardinal David Beaton, stimulated the growth of these ideas in reaction. Wishart's supporters, who included a number of Fife lairds, assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St. Andrews Castle, which they held for a year before they were defeated with the help of French forces. The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to serve as galley slaves. Their martyrdom stirred resentment of the French and inspired additional martyrs for the Protestant cause. In 1549, the defeat of the English with French support led to the marriage of Mary to Francis II of France, the French dauphin, and a regency over Scotland for the queen's mother, Mary of Guise.

Limited toleration and the influence of exiled Scots and Protestants in other countries, led to the expansion of Protestantism, with a group of lairds declaring themselves Lords of the Congregation in 1557 and representing Protestant interests politically. The collapse of the French alliance and the death of the regent, followed by English intervention in 1560, meant that a relatively small but highly influential group of Protestants had the power to impose reform on the Scottish church. The Scottish Reformation Parliament of 1560 approved a Protestant confession of faith, rejecting papal jurisdiction and the Mass. Knox, having escaped the galleys and having spent time in Geneva, where he became a follower of Calvin, emerged as the most significant figure. The Calvinism of the reformers led by Knox resulted in a settlement which adopted a Presbyterian system and rejected most of the elaborate trappings of the Medieval church. When Francis II died in 1560, the Catholic Mary returned to Scotland to take up the government. Her six-year personal reign was marred by a series of crises, largely caused by the intrigues and rivalries of the leading nobles. Opposition to her third husband James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, led to the formation of a coalition of nobles, who captured Mary and forced her abdication in favour of her son, who came to the throne as James VI in 1567. James was brought up a Protestant, but resisted Presbyterianism and the independence of the Kirk.

The Reformation resulted in major changes in Scottish society. These included a desire to plant a school in every parish and major reforms of the university system. The Kirk discouraged many forms of plays, as well as poetry that was not devotional in nature; however, significant playwrights and poets did nevertheless emerge, such as George Buchanan and the Castalian Band of James VI's reign. Scotland's ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm. Native craftsmen and artists turned to secular patrons, resulting in the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls. The Reformation revolutionised church architecture, with new churches built and existing churches adapted for reformed services, particularly by placing the pulpit centrally in the church, as preaching was at the centre of worship. The Reformation also had a severe impact on church music, with song schools closed down, choirs disbanded, music books and manuscripts destroyed, and organs removed from churches. These were replaced by the congregational singing of psalms, despite attempts of James VI to refound the song schools and choral singing. Women gained new educational possibilities and religion played a major part in the lives of many women, but women were treated as criminals through prosecutions for scolding, prostitution, and witchcraft. Scottish Protestantism was focused on the Bible, and starting in the later seventeenth century there would be efforts to stamp out popular activities viewed as superstitious or frivolous. The Kirk became the subject of national pride and many Scots saw their country as a new Israel.

Pre-Reformation Scotland

Pre-Reformation Church

 
Henry Wardlaw (died 1440), Bishop of St Andrews, royal tutor and adviser, founder of The University of St Andrews and key figure in fighting Lollardy

Structure

Christianity spread in Scotland from the sixth century, with evangelisation by Irish-Scots missionaries and, to a lesser extent, those from Rome and England.[1] The church in Scotland attained clear independence from England after the Papal Bull of Celestine III (Cum universi, 1192), by which all Scottish bishoprics except Galloway became formally independent of York and Canterbury. The whole Ecclesia Scoticana, with individual Scottish bishoprics (except Whithorn/Galloway), became the "special daughter of the see of Rome".[2] It was run by special councils made up of all the Scottish bishops, with the bishop of St Andrews emerging as the most important figure.[2] The administration of parishes was often given over to local monastic institutions in a process known as appropriation. By the time of the Reformation in the mid-sixteenth century 80 per cent of Scottish parishes were appropriated, leaving few resources for the parish clergy.[3]

In 1472 St Andrews became the first archbishopric in the Scottish church, to be followed by Glasgow in 1492.[2] The collapse of papal authority in the Papal Schism (1378–1418) allowed the Scottish Crown to gain effective control of major ecclesiastical appointments within the kingdom. This de facto authority over appointments was formally recognised by the Papacy in 1487. The Crown placed clients and relatives of the king in key positions, including James IV's (r. 1488–1513) illegitimate son Alexander Stewart, who was nominated as Archbishop of St. Andrews at the age of 11. This practice strengthened royal influence but it also made the Church vulnerable to criticisms of venality and nepotism.[4] Relationships between the Scottish Crown and the Papacy were generally good, with James IV receiving tokens of papal favour.[2]

Medieval popular religion

Traditional Protestant historiography tended to stress the corruption and unpopularity of the late Medieval Scottish church. Since the late twentieth century, research has indicated the ways in which it met the spiritual needs of different social groups.[5][6] Historians have discerned a decline of monastic life in this period, with many religious houses maintaining smaller numbers of monks. Those remaining often abandoned communal living for a more individual and secular lifestyle. The rate of new monastic endowments from the nobility also declined in the fifteenth century.[5][7] In contrast, the burghs saw the flourishing of mendicant orders of friars in the later fifteenth century, who, unlike the older monastic orders, placed an emphasis on preaching and ministering to the population. The order of Observant Friars were organised as a Scottish province from 1467, and the older Franciscans and the Dominicans were recognised as separate provinces in the 1480s.[4]

 
A mid-16th-century oak panel carving from a house in Dundee.

In most Scottish burghs there was usually only one parish church, in contrast to English towns where churches and parishes tended to proliferate.[2] As the doctrine of Purgatory gained importance in the late Middle Ages, the number of chapelries, priests, and masses for the dead prayed within them, designed to speed the passage of souls to Heaven, grew rapidly.[8] The number of altars dedicated to saints, who could intercede in this process, also increased dramatically. St. Mary's in Dundee had perhaps 48 such altars and St Giles' in Edinburgh more than 50.[2] The number of saints celebrated in Scotland also proliferated, with about 90 being added to the missal used in St Nicholas church in Aberdeen.[9] New cults of devotion related to Jesus and the Virgin Mary began to reach Scotland in the fifteenth century, including the Five Wounds, the Holy Blood, and the Holy Name of Jesus. New religious feasts arose, including celebrations of the Presentation, the Visitation, and Mary of the Snows.[2][9]

In the early fourteenth century, the Papacy managed to minimise the problem of clerical pluralism, by which clerics held two or more livings, which elsewhere resulted in parish churches being without priests, or served by poorly trained and paid vicars and clerks. However, the number of poor clerical livings and a general shortage of clergy in Scotland, particularly after the Black Death, meant that in the fifteenth century the problem intensified.[10] As a result, parish clergy were largely drawn from the lower ranks of the profession, leading to frequent complaints about their standards of education or abilities. Although there is little clear evidence that standards were declining, this was expressed as one of the major grievances of the Reformation.[4] Heresy, in the form of Lollardry, began to reach Scotland from England and Bohemia in the early fifteenth century. Lollards were followers of John Wycliffe (c. 1330 –84) and later Jan Hus (c. 1369 –1415), who called for reform of the Church and rejected its doctrine on the Eucharist. Despite evidence of the burning of heretics and some popular support for its anti-sacramental elements, it probably remained a small movement.[11]

Pressure to reform

Humanism

 
Portrait of Hector Boece (1465–1536), a major figure in European humanism, who returned to be the first principal of the University of Aberdeen

From the fifteenth century, Renaissance humanism encouraged critical theological reflection and calls for ecclesiastical renewal in Scotland. As early as 1495 some Scots were in contact with Desiderius Erasmus (1466–1536), the Netherlands-born leading figure in the northern humanist movement. They were also in contact with Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (c. 1455 – 1536), a French humanist and scholar who like Erasmus argued strongly for reform of the Catholic Church by the elimination of corruption and abuses.[12] Scottish scholars often studied on the Continent and at English universities.[13] Humanist scholars trained on the Continent were recruited to the new Scottish universities founded at St Andrews, Glasgow, and Aberdeen.[14] These international contacts helped integrate Scotland into a wider European scholarly world and were one of the most important ways in which the new ideas of humanism entered Scottish intellectual life.[14] By 1497 the humanist and historian Hector Boece, who was born in Dundee and studied at Paris, returned to become the first principal at the new university of Aberdeen.[13]

The continued movement of scholars to other universities resulted in a school of Scottish nominalists at Paris by the early sixteenth century, the most important of whom was John Mair, generally described as a scholastic. His Latin History of Greater Britain (1521) was sympathetic to the humanist social agenda. In 1518 he returned to become Principal of the University of Glasgow.[15] Another major figure was Archibald Whitelaw, who taught at St. Andrews and Cologne, becoming a tutor to the young James III and royal secretary in 1462–1493. Robert Reid, Abbot of Kinloss and later Bishop of Orkney, was responsible in the 1520s and 1530s for bringing the Italian humanist Giovanni Ferrario to teach at Kinloss Abbey. Ferrario established an impressive library and wrote works of Scottish history and biography.[16] Reid was to leave sufficient endowment in his will, for the foundation of Edinburgh University. James McGoldrick suggests that there was a circle of "Erasmian-type scholar-reformers" at the royal court in the first decade of the sixteenth century.[13]

Lutheranism

 
The Martyrs' Monument at Saint Andrews commemorates Protestants executed before the Reformation, including Patrick Hamilton and George Wishart.

From the 1520s the ideas of Martin Luther began to have influence in Scotland, with Lutheran literature circulating in the east-coast burghs. In 1525 Parliament banned their importation.[17] In 1527, the English ambassador at Antwerp noted that Scottish merchants were taking William Tyndale's New Testament to Edinburgh and St. Andrews.[18] In 1528 the nobleman Patrick Hamilton, who had been influenced by Lutheran theology while at the universities of Wittenberg and Marburg, became the first Protestant martyr in Scotland; he was burned at the stake for heresy outside St Salvator's College at Saint Andrews.[19] Hamilton's execution inspired more interest in the new ideas. The Archbishop of St Andrews was warned against any further such public executions as "the reek [smoke] of Maister Patrik Hammyltoun has infected as many as it blew upon".[20]

Political background (1528–1559)

James V

After entering his personal reign in 1528, James V avoided pursuing the major structural and theological changes to the church undertaken by his contemporary Henry VIII in England. In exchange for his loyalty to Rome, he was able to appoint his many illegitimate children and favourites to office in the Church, particularly David Beaton[citation needed] who became a Cardinal in 1538 and Archbishop of Saint Andrews in 1539. James increased crown revenues by heavily taxing the church, taking £72,000 in four years. The results of such appointments and taxation undermined both the status and finances of the Church.[21] The Church was also divided by jurisdictional disputes between Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow and James Beaton, Archbishop of St. Andrews until his death in 1539. As a result, in 1536 the first provincial church council called since 1470 failed to achieve major reforms or a united front against heresy.[22] After the execution of Patrick Hamilton, the Crown prosecuted some men and a small number of executions followed in the 1530s and 1540s, but there was no systematic persecution, as the king was not interested in wide-scale bloodletting. An increasing number of lairds and nobles began to favour reform, particularly in Angus, the Mearns, Fife and within the University of St Andrews.[23] Leading figures included Alexander Cunningham, 5th Earl of Glencairn and John Erskine of Dun.[24] In 1541 Parliament passed legislation to protect the honour of the Mass, prayer to the Virgin Mary, images of the saints, and the authority of the pope.[25]

Rough Wooing

 
Cardinal Beaton, defender of the old faith, and leader of the pro-French faction.

James V died in 1542, leaving the infant Mary, Queen of Scots as his heir, with the prospect of a long minority. At the beginning of the Mary's reign, the Scottish political nation was divided between a pro-French faction, led by Cardinal Beaton and by the Queen's mother, Mary of Guise; and a pro-English faction, headed by Mary's prospective heir James Hamilton, Earl of Arran.[26] Initially Arran became Regent, backed by the small "evangelical party" at court, who favoured religious reform. The Parliamentary Act of 1543 removed the prohibition against reading the Bible in the vernacular.[27] A planned marriage between Mary and Edward, the son of Henry VIII of England, which had been agreed under the Treaty of Greenwich (1543), led to a backlash in Scotland and a coup led by Cardinal Beaton. He repudiated the reforming policies, and all consideration of an English marriage for the Queen, angering the English.[28] They invaded in order to enforce the match, an action later known as the "rough wooing", which devastated south-east Scotland.[28]

In 1546, George Wishart, a preacher who had come under the influence of Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli, was arrested and burnt at the stake in St. Andrews on the orders of Cardinal Beaton. Wishart's supporters, who included a number of Fife lairds, assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St. Andrews Castle, which they held for a year while under siege, before they were defeated with the help of French forces. The survivors, including chaplain John Knox, were condemned to be galley slaves, helping to create resentment of the French and martyrs for the Protestant cause.[29]

In 1547, the English under Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset renewed their invasion and defeated the Scots at Pinkie, occupied south-east Scotland with forts at Lauder, Haddington and an outpost at Dundee. This occupation (1547–1549) encouraged the reforming cause; the English supplied books and distributed Bibles and Protestant literature in the Lowlands.[30] Several earls pledged themselves 'to cause the word of God to be taught and preached'.[31] To counter the English, the Scots secured French help, the price of which was the betrothal of the infant Queen to the French dauphin, the future Francis II; she departed to France in 1548, where she was to be raised and educated. At this point, "the policy of Henry VIII had failed completely".[32] French ascendancy was made absolute over the next decade. In 1554, Arran was given the title Duke du Châtellerault and removed from the regency in favour of Mary of Guise (the Queen Mother).[32]

Regency of Mary of Guise

 
Arms of Mary of Guise in the Magdalen Chapel, Edinburgh

During her regency (1554–1560), the Queen's mother ensured the predominance of France in Scottish affairs. She put Frenchmen in charge of the treasury and the Great Seal, and the French ambassador Henri Cleutin sometimes attended the Privy Council.[33] At first Mary of Guise cultivated a policy of limited toleration of Protestants, hoping to gain their support for her pro-French policies and against England, which from 1553 was under the rule of the Catholic Mary Tudor, who married the future Philip II of Spain in 1554.[34] Hopes for reform of the existing church helped keep the political nation unified.[35] But the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to the dauphin in 1558 heightened fears that Scotland would become a French province. Reformers were given hope by the accession, in England, of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth in 1558, which created a confessional frontier in Great Britain.[36]

Reforming Councils

The Church responded to some of the criticisms being made against it. John Hamilton, Archbishop of St Andrews, instigated a series of provincial councils (in 1549, 1552, probably in 1556, and in 1559), modelled on the contemporaneous Council of Trent.[37] These blamed the advance of the Protestant heresies on "the corruption of morals and the profane lewdness of life in churchmen of all ranks, together with crass ignorance of literature and of the liberal arts". In 1548, attempts were made to eliminate concubinage, clerical pluralism, clerical trading, and non-residence, and to prohibit unqualified people from holding church offices. Further, the clergy were enjoined to scriptural reflection, and bishops and parsons instructed to preach at least four times a year. Monks were to be sent to university, and theologians appointed for each monastery, college, and cathedral. But in 1552, it was acknowledged that little had been accomplished. Attendance at Mass was still sparse and "the inferior clergy of this realm and the prelates have not, for the most part, attained such proficiency in the knowledge of the Holy Scriptures as to be able by their own efforts rightly to instruct the people in the Catholic faith and other things necessary to salvation or to convert the erring."[38]

Expansion of Protestantism

 
Lord James Stewart, later the 1st Earl of Moray, one of the nobles whose change of sides in 1559 helped precipitate the Reformation crisis

Protestantism continued to expand in this period and became more distinct from those who wanted reform within the existing church. Originally organised as conventicles that consisted of members of a laird's family, or kin group and social networks, who continued to attend the Catholic Church, Protestants began to develop a series of privy kirks (secret churches), whose members increasingly turned away from existing church structures. Their organisation was sufficient in 1555 for Knox to return to Scotland. He administered a Protestant communion and carried out a preaching tour of the privy kirks. He urged the members to reject Nicodemism, by which they held Protestant convictions, but attended Catholic services. Despite being offered protection by the Earl of Argyll, he returned to Geneva in 1556.[39] In the absence of a leading clerical figure, the leadership of the movement was taken by the few nobles who had embraced Protestantism and a new generation that included Argyll's son Lord Lorne, the illegitimate son of the late King James V, Lord James Stewart (later the Earl of Moray), and Lord John Erskine.[40] In 1557 a "first bond" was signed by Argyll, Glencairn, Morton, Lorne, and Erskine, for mutual support against "Sathan and all wicked power that does intend tyranny and truble against the foresaid congregation." This group, which eventually became known as 'the Lords of the Congregation', was a direct challenge to the existing regime.[41]

Reformation crisis (1559–1560)

On 1 January 1559 the anonymous Beggars' Summons was posted on the doors of friaries, threatening friars with eviction on the grounds that their property belonged to the genuine poor. This was calculated to appeal to the passions of the populace of towns who appeared to have particular complaints against friars.[42][42] Knox returned to Scotland and preached at the church of St. John the Baptist's at Perth on 11 May on Christ cleansing the temple. The congregation responded by stripping the shrines, images and altars of the church and then sacked the local friaries and Carthusian house. The regent responded by sending troops to restore order and Glencairn led a force to defend the town's new Protestant status. A royal delegation, including Argyll and James Stuart persuaded the burgh to open its gates, but the heavy handed treatment by the regent's forces led to a breakdown in negotiations. Argyll and Stuart changed sides and the Lords of the Congregation now began raising their followers for an armed conflict.[43]

 
Map of the Siege of Leith dated 7 May 1560 from Petworth House

A series of local reformations followed, with Protestant minorities gaining control of various regions and burghs, often with the support of local lairds and using intimidation, while avoiding the creation of Catholic martyrs, to carry out a "cleansing" of friaries and churches, followed by the appointment of Protestant preachers. Such reformations occurred in conservative Aberdeen and the ecclesiastical capital of St. Andrews together with other eastern ports. In June, Mary of Guise responded by dispatching a French army to St. Andrews to restore control, but it was halted by superior numbers at Cupar Muir and forced to retreat.[44] Edinburgh fell to the Lords in July, and Mary moved her base to Dunbar. However, the arrival of French reinforcements of 1,800 men forced the Lords onto the defensive and they abandoned the capital.[45]

The Lords appealed for help from England and Mary from France. English agents managed the safe return of Earl of Arran, the eldest son and heir of Chatelherault, allowing him to accept the leadership of the Lords.[45] In October the regent was declared "suspended" and replaced by a "great council of the realm".[46] However, Mary of Guise's forces continued to advance, once again threatening St. Andrews. The situation was transformed by the arrival of the English fleet in the Firth of Forth in January 1560, and the French retreated to the stronghold of Leith near Edinburgh.[47] The English and the Lords agreed further support by the Treaty of Berwick in February 1560 and an English army crossed the border to lay siege to the French in Leith. Mary of Guise fell ill and died in June. With no sign of reinforcements, the French opened negotiations. Under the Treaty of Edinburgh (5 July 1560) both the French and English removed their troops from Scotland, leaving the Protestant Lords in control of the country. The Lords accepted Mary Queen of Scots and her husband, now Francis II of France, as monarchs and were given permission to hold a parliament, although it was not to touch the issue of religion.[47]

Reformation Parliament

 
Mary and Francis II, 1559, in whose names the Reformation Parliament was called

The Scottish Parliament met in Edinburgh 1 August 1560.[46] Fourteen earls, six bishops, nineteen lords, twenty-one abbots, twenty-two burgh commissioners, and over a hundred lairds, claimed the right to sit.[48] Ignoring the provisions of the Treaty of Edinburgh, on 17 August, Parliament approved a Reformed Confession of Faith (the Scots Confession), and on 24 August it passed three Acts that abolished the old faith in Scotland. Under these, all previous acts not in conformity with the Reformed Confession were annulled; the sacraments were reduced to two (Baptism and Communion) to be performed by reformed preachers alone; the celebration of the Mass was made punishable by a series of penalties (ultimately death) and Papal jurisdiction in Scotland was repudiated.[49] The Queen declined to endorse the acts that Parliament had passed and the new kirk existed in a state of legal uncertainty.[50]

First Book of Discipline

The Lords had intended Parliament to consider a Book of Reformation, which they had commissioned and was largely the work of Knox. However, they were unhappy with the document and established a committee of "six Johns", including Knox, John Winram, John Spottiswood, John Willock, John Douglas, and John Row, to produce a revised version. The result of the delay was that the document, known as the First Book of Discipline, was considered not by the full Parliament, but only by a thinly attended convention of nobles and about 30 lairds, in January 1561 and then only approved individually and not collectively.[48] The Book proposed a programme of parish-based reformation that would use the resources of the old Church to pay for a network of ministers, a parish-based school system, university education, and poor relief. However, this proposal for the use of church wealth was rejected. Instead, an Act of Council kept two-thirds of the Church's assets in the hands of its existing holders, while the remaining third was divided between the Crown and the reformist measures. The educational programme, was abandoned, ministers remained poorly paid, and the Church was underfunded.[51]

Post-Reformation church

Confession of faith

 
A later edition of the Scots Confession

The Scots Confession was produced by Knox and five colleagues in four days. Its structure parallels that of the Apostles' Creed, with 25 chapters based around themes of the Father, Son, Church and Consummation. It remained the standard of the Kirk until it was replaced by the Westminster Confession, negotiated with English Parliamentary allies during the English Civil War and adopted by the Kirk in 1647.[52] The Confession was strongly Calvinist in tone. It emphasised the "inscrutable providence" of God, who had determined all things. It stressed the extreme depravity of mankind, who deserved eternal damnation and the mercy of God in selecting a portion of humanity for salvation through grace alone.[53] It denied transubstantiation, but retained the real presence in the Eucharist. It largely avoided negative emotive condemnations of Catholicism, focusing on setting out the new faith in simple language. It saw the Kirk as a "catholik" community of, "the elect of all nations, realms, nations, tongues, Jews and Gentiles".[54] In 1581, as part of a reaction to the perceived threat of Catholicism, the court signed a King's, or Negative Confession, probably commissioned by James VI, that much more harshly denounced Catholicism.[55]

Liturgy and worship

The Reformation saw a complete transformation of religious observance. In the place of the many holy days and festivals of the Catholic Church and the occasional observance of the Mass, the single surviving holy day was Sunday and regular attendance and participation was required of the laity. Latin was abandoned in favour of the vernacular. Congregational psalm singing replaced the elaborate polyphony of trained choirs. An emphasis was put on the Bible and the sermon, which was often longer than an hour, although many parishes, which had no minister, would have had only a "readers service", of psalms, prayers and Bible readings. The Geneva Bible was widely adopted.[56] Protestant preachers fleeing Marian persecutions in England had brought with them Edward VI's second Book of Common Prayer (of 1552), which was commended by the Lords of the Congregation. Knox too initially supported it, however, before leaving Geneva, and with the encouragement of Calvin, he had written his own Book of Common Order and it was this that was printed and approved by the General Assembly of 1562. Enlarged, it was reprinted with the Confession and the Psalms in metre in 1564, and it remained the standard until replaced with the Westminster Directory in 1643.[57] A Gaelic translation of the Book of Common Order was produced in 1563, the first book printed in Gaelic, but there would be no Gaelic Bible until the eighteenth century.[56]

Church polity

 
The ruins of St. Andrews Cathedral, the stone was taken and reused in many of the surrounding houses

The First Book of Discipline envisaged the establishment of reformed ministers in each of approximately 1,080 parishes. By the end of 1561, 240 of these places had been filled. By 1567 there were about 850 clergy and by 1574 there were just over 1,000. These were mainly concentrated in the south and east. In the Highlands there were shortages and very few spoke the Gaelic of the local population. The universities were unable supply sufficient trained ministers over a generation and many, over three-quarters in 1574, were holders of the junior post of readers, rather than qualified ministers. The bulk of these were former Catholic clergy.[58] The untidy system of thirteen medieval dioceses was to be replaced by ten more rational districts, each to be overseen by a superintendent. This plan was complicated by the conversion of three bishops to Protestantism, who were allowed to remain in their posts. Few superintendents were appointed and temporary commissioners were nominated to fill the gaps. In 1576, when the General Assembly considered the structure of the Kirk, it recognised five offices: archbishops, bishops, superintendents, commissioners, and visitors.[58]

Beside these posts was a system of church courts of kirk sessions and presbyteries, which dealt with discipline and administration. Some local sessions had existed before 1560, moderators emerged in 1563, but the presbytery not until 1580. By the 1590s Scotland was organized into about fifty presbyteries with about twenty ministers in each. Above them stood a dozen or so synods and at the apex the general assembly.[59] The system of kirk sessions gave considerable power within the new kirk to local lairds, who were able to take on the dignity and authority of an elder.[60]

Continued reformation

 
Mary Queen of Scots depicted with her son, James VI and I; in reality, Mary saw her son for the last time when he was ten months old

In the 1560s the majority of the population was probably still Catholic in persuasion, and the Kirk would find it difficult to penetrate the Highlands and Islands, but began a gradual process of conversion and consolidation that, compared with reformations elsewhere, was conducted with little persecution. The monasteries were not dissolved but allowed to die out with their monks, and before 1573 no holders of benefices were turned out, even for refusing to conform.[61] The focus on the parish church as the centre of worship meant the abandonment of much of the complex religious provision of chapelries, monasteries, and cathedrals, many of which were allowed to decay or, like the Cathedral at St Andrews, were mined for dressed stone to be used in local houses.[62]

Second Reformation crisis (1567)

When her husband Francis II died in 1560, Mary, now 19, elected to return to Scotland to take up the government. She gained an agreement that she would be the only person to partake legally in Catholic services and did not attempt to re-impose Catholicism on her subjects, thus angering the chief Catholic nobles. Her six-year personal reign was marred by a series of crises, largely caused by the intrigues and rivalries of the leading nobles. The murder of her secretary, David Riccio, was followed by that of her unpopular second husband Lord Darnley, father of her infant son, and her abduction by, and marriage to, the Earl of Bothwell, who was implicated in Darnley's murder.[63] Opposition to Bothwell led to the formation of a coalition of nobles, who styled themselves as the Confederate Lords.[64] Michael Lynch describes the events of 1567 as "second Reformation crisis".[65] Mary and Bothwell confronted the Lords at Carberry Hill on 15 June 1567, but their forces melted away. He fled and she was imprisoned in Loch Leven Castle. Ten days after the confrontation at Carbury Hill, the General Assembly met in Edinburgh with the aim of rooting out "superstition and idolatry". The Reformation settlement of 1567 was much more firmly Calvinist than that of 1560. The Assembly set out a programme of reform that included the ratification of the legislation of 1560, better provision of the ministry, new resources and manpower for the parishes, a purge of the teachers in the universities and schools, and a closer relationship with parliament.[66] A parliament was called in December, which allowed the acts passed by the Reformation Parliament to be ratified.[67] The subsequent religious settlement would be worked out over the 1570s against a background of civil war and unstable regencies.[66]

Reign of James VI (1567–1625)

 
James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton, who became the last regent of James VI's reign

In July 1567, Mary was forced to abdicate in favour of her 13-month-old son James VI. James was to be brought up a Protestant and the government was to be run by a series of regents, beginning with Moray, until James began to assert his independence in 1581.[68] Mary eventually escaped and attempted to regain the throne by force. After her defeat at the Battle of Langside in May 1568, by forces loyal to the King's Party, led by Moray, she took refuge in England, leaving her son in their hands. In Scotland the King's Party fought a civil war on behalf of the regency against Mary's supporters. This ended, after English intervention, with the surrender of Edinburgh Castle in May 1573.[69] In 1578 a Second Book of Discipline was adopted, which was much more clearly Presbyterian in outlook.[70]

In England, Mary became a focal point for Catholic conspirators and was eventually executed for treason in 1587 on the orders of her kinswoman Elizabeth I.[69][71] James was Calvinist in doctrine, but strongly supported episcopacy and resisted the independence, or even right to interfere in government, of the Kirk, which became associated with the followers of Andrew Melville, known as the Melvillians. He used his powers to call the General Assembly where he wished, limiting the ability of more radical clergy to attend. He paid for moderate clergy to be present, negotiated with members, and manipulated its business in order to limit the independence of the Kirk. By 1600 he had appointed three parliamentary bishops. By the end of his reign there were 11 bishops and diocesan episcopacy had been restored, although there was still strong support for Presbyterianism within the Kirk.[72]

Catholic survival

Although officially illegal, Roman Catholicism survived in parts of Scotland. The hierarchy of the Church played a relatively small role and the initiative was left to lay leaders. Where nobles or local lairds offered protection it continued to thrive, as with Clanranald on South Uist, or in the north-east where the Earl of Huntly was the most important figure. In these areas Catholic sacraments and practices were maintained with relative openness.[73] Members of the nobility were probably reluctant to pursue each other over matters of religion because of strong personal and social ties. An English report in 1600 suggested that a third of nobles and gentry were still Catholic in inclination.[74] In most of Scotland, Catholicism became an underground faith in private households, connected by ties of kinship. This reliance on the household meant that women often became important as the upholders and transmitters of the faith, such as in the case of Lady Fernihurst in the Borders. They transformed their households into centres of religious activity and offered places of safety for priests.[73]

Because the Reformation took over the existing structures and assets of the Church, any attempted recovery by the Catholic hierarchy was extremely difficult. After the collapse of Mary's cause in the civil wars in the 1570s, and any hope of a national restoration of the old faith, the hierarchy began to treat Scotland as a mission area. The leading order of the Counter-Reformation, the newly founded Jesuits, initially took relatively little interest in Scotland as a target of missionary work. Their effectiveness was limited by rivalries between different orders at Rome. The initiative was taken by a small group of Scots connected with the Crichton family, who had supplied the bishops of Dunkeld. They joined the Jesuit order and returned to attempt conversions. Their focus was mainly on the court, which led them into involvement in a series of complex political plots and entanglements. The majority of surviving Scottish lay followers were largely ignored.[73]

Impact

Education

 
Andrew Melville, credited with major reforms in Scottish universities in the sixteenth century

The humanist concern with widening education was shared by the Protestant reformers, with a desire for a godly people replacing the aim of having educated citizens. The First Book of Discipline set out a plan for a school in every parish, but this proved financially impossible.[75] In the burghs the old schools were maintained, with the song schools and a number of new foundations becoming reformed grammar schools or ordinary parish schools. Schools were supported by a combination of kirk funds, contributions from local heritors or burgh councils and parents that could pay. They were inspected by kirk sessions, who checked for the quality of teaching and doctrinal purity. There were also large number of unregulated "adventure schools", which sometimes fulfilled a local need and sometimes took pupils away from the official schools. Outside of the established burgh schools, masters often combined their positions with other employment, particularly minor posts within the Kirk, such as clerk.Todd, M. (2002), The Culture of Protestantism in Early Modern Scotland, New Haven, CT.: Yale University Press, pp. 59–62, ISBN 0-300-09234-2 At their best, the curriculum included catechism, Latin, French, Classical literature and sports.[76]

Scotland's universities underwent a series of reforms associated with Andrew Melville, who returned from Geneva to become principal of the University of Glasgow in 1574. A distinguished linguist, philosopher and poet, he had trained in Paris and studied law at Poitiers, before moving to Geneva and developing an interest in Protestant theology. Influenced by the anti-Aristotelian Petrus Ramus, he placed an emphasis on simplified logic and elevated languages and sciences to the same status as philosophy, allowing accepted ideas in all areas to be challenged.[77] He introduced new specialist teaching staff, replacing the system of "regenting", where one tutor took the students through the entire arts curriculum.[78] Metaphysics were abandoned and Greek became compulsory in the first year, followed by Aramaic, Syriac and Hebrew, launching a new fashion for ancient and biblical languages. Glasgow had probably been declining as a university before his arrival, but students now began to arrive in large numbers. He assisted in the reconstruction of Marischal College, Aberdeen, and in order to do for St Andrews what he had done for Glasgow, he was appointed Principal of St Mary's College, St Andrews, in 1580. The University of Edinburgh developed out of public lectures that were established in the town in the 1540s on law, Greek, Latin and philosophy, under the patronage of Mary of Guise. The "Tounis College" become the University of Edinburgh in 1582.[16] The results of these changes were a revitalisation of all Scottish universities, which were now producing a quality of education the equal of that offered anywhere in Europe.[77]

Literature

 
George Buchanan, playwright, poet and political theorist, by Arnold Bronckorst

Medieval Scotland probably had its own Mystery plays, often performed by craft guilds, like one described as ludi de ly haliblude and staged at Aberdeen in 1440 and 1445 and which was probably connected with the feast of Corpus Christi, but no texts are extant.[79] Legislation was enacted against folk plays in 1555, and against liturgical plays ("clerk-plays or comedies based on the canonical scriptures") in 1575 by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.[80] However, attempts to ban folk plays were more leniently applied and less successful that once assumed. They continued into the seventeenth century, with parishioners in Aberdeen reproved for parading and dancing in the street with bells at weddings and Yule in 1605, Robin Hood and May plays at Kelso in 1611 and Yuletide guising at Perth in 1634.[81] The Kirk also allowed some plays, particularly in schools, when they served their own ends for education, as in the comedy about the Prodigal Son permitted at St. Andrews in 1574.[81]

More formal plays included those of James Wedderburn, who wrote anti-Catholic tragedies and comedies in Scots around 1540, before he was forced to flee into exile. These included the Beheading of Johne the Baptist and the Historie of Dyonisius the Tyraonne, which were performed at Dundee.[82]David Lyndsay (c. 1486 –1555), diplomat and the head of the Lyon Court, was a prolific poet and dramatist. He produced an interlude at Linlithgow Palace for the king and queen thought to be a version of his play The Thrie Estaitis in 1540, which satirised the corruption of church and state, and which is the only complete play to survive from before the Reformation.[83] George Buchanan (1506–1582) was major influence on Continental theatre with plays such as Jepheths and Baptistes, which influenced Pierre Corneille and Jean Racine and through them the neo-classical tradition in French drama, but his impact in Scotland was limited by his choice of Latin as a medium.[84] The anonymous The Maner of the Cyring of ane Play (before 1568)[85] and Philotus (published in London in 1603), are isolated examples of surviving plays. The later is a vernacular Scots comedy of errors, probably designed for court performance for Mary, Queen of Scots or James VI.[86] The same system of professional companies of players and theatres that developed in England in this period was absent in Scotland, but James VI signalled his interest in drama by arranging for a company of English players to erect a playhouse and perform in 1599.[87]

The Kirk also discouraged poetry that was not devotional in nature. Nevertheless, poets from this period included Richard Maitland of Lethington (1496–1586), who produced meditative and satirical verses; John Rolland (fl. 1530–1575), who wrote allegorical satires and courtier and minister Alexander Hume (c. 1556 –1609), whose corpus of work includes nature poetry and epistolary verse. Alexander Scott's (?1520–82/3) use of short verse designed to be sung to music, opened the way for the Castalian poets of James VI's adult reign.[88]

Art

 
A rare example of stained glass that survived the Reformation, in the Magdalen Chapel, Edinburgh

Scotland's ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm, with the almost total loss of medieval stained glass and religious sculpture and paintings.[89] The only significant surviving pre-Reformation stained glass in Scotland is a window of four roundels in the Magdalen Chapel of Cowgate, Edinburgh, completed in 1544.[90] Wood carving can be seen at King's College, Aberdeen and Dunblane Cathedral.[91] In the West Highlands, where there had been a hereditary caste of monumental sculptors, the uncertainty and loss of patronage caused by the rejection of monuments in the Reformation meant that they moved into other branches of the Gaelic learned orders or took up other occupations. The lack of transfer of carving skills is noticeable in the decline in quality when gravestones were next commissioned from the start of the seventeenth century.[92]

According to N. Prior, the nature of the Scottish Reformation may have had wider effects, limiting the creation of a culture of public display and meaning that art was channelled into more austere forms of expression with an emphasis on private and domestic restraint.[93] The loss of ecclesiastical patronage that resulted from the Reformation, meant that native craftsmen and artists turned to secular patrons. One result of this was the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls, with large numbers of private houses of burgesses, lairds and lords gaining often highly detailed and coloured patterns and scenes, of which over a hundred examples survive.[89] These were undertaken by unnamed Scottish artists using continental pattern books that often led to the incorporation of humanist moral and philosophical symbolism, with elements that call on heraldry, piety, classical myths and allegory.[89] The earliest surviving example is at the Hamilton palace of Kinneil, West Lothian, decorated in the 1550s for the then regent the James Hamilton, Earl of Arran.[94] Other examples include the ceiling at Prestongrange House, undertaken in 1581 for Mark Kerr, Commendator of Newbattle, and the long gallery at Pinkie House, painted for Alexander Seaton, Earl of Dunfermline in 1621.[89]

Architecture

 
Burntisland Parish Kirk, its original wooden steeple now replaced by one of stone

The Reformation revolutionised church architecture in Scotland. Calvinists rejected ornamentation in places of worship, seeing no need for elaborate buildings divided up for the purpose of ritual. This resulted in the widespread destruction of Medieval church furnishings, ornaments and decoration.[95] New churches were built and existing churches adapted for reformed services, particularly by placing the pulpit centrally in the church, as preaching was at the centre of worship. Many of the earliest buildings were simple gabled rectangles, a style that continued into the seventeenth century, as at Dunnottar Castle in the 1580s, Greenock's Old West Kirk (1591) and Durness (1619).[96] These churches often have windows on the south wall (and none on the north), which became a characteristic of Reformation kirks. There were continuities with pre-Reformation materials, with some churches using rubble for walls, as at Kemback in Fife (1582). Others employed dressed stone and a few added wooden steeples, as at Burntisland (1592).[97] The church of Greyfriars, Edinburgh, built between 1602 and 1620, used a rectangular layout with a largely Gothic form, but that at Dirleton (1612), had a more sophisticated classical style.[96] A variation of the rectangular church developed in post-Reformation Scotland, and often used when adapting existing churches, was the "T"-shaped plan, which allowed the maximum number of parishioners to be near the pulpit. Examples can be seen at Kemback and Prestonpans after 1595. This plan continued to be used into the seventeenth century as at Weem (1600), Anstruther Easter, Fife (1634–1644) and New Cumnock, Ayreshire (1657). In the seventeenth century a Greek cross plan was used for churches such as Cawdor (1619) and Fenwick (1643). In most of these cases one arm of the cross would have been closed off as a laird's aisle, meaning that they were in effect "T"-plan churches.[96]

Music

 
A reprint of the 1600 cover of The Gude and Godlie Ballatis

The Reformation had a severe impact on church music. The song schools of the abbeys, cathedrals and collegiate churches were closed down, choirs disbanded, music books and manuscripts destroyed and organs removed from churches.[89] The Lutheranism that influenced the early Scottish Reformation attempted to accommodate Catholic musical traditions into worship, drawing on Latin hymns and vernacular songs. The most important product of this tradition in Scotland was The Gude and Godlie Ballatis (1567), which were spiritual satires on popular ballads that have been commonly attributed to brothers James, John and Robert Wedderburn. Never adopted by the Kirk, they nevertheless remained popular and were reprinted from the 1540s to the 1620s.[98]

Later the Calvinism that came to dominate the Scottish Reformation was much more hostile to Catholic musical tradition and popular music, placing an emphasis on what was biblical, which meant the Psalms. The Scottish Psalter of 1564 was commissioned by the Assembly of the Church. It drew on the work of French musician Clément Marot, Calvin's contributions to the Strasbourg Psalter of 1539 and English writers, particularly the 1561 edition of the Psalter produced by William Whittingham for the English congregation in Geneva. The intention was to produce individual tunes for each psalm, but of 150 psalms, 105 had proper tunes and in the seventeenth century, common tunes, which could be used for psalms with the same metre, became more frequent.[99] Because whole congregations would now all sing these psalms, unlike the trained choirs who had sung the many parts of polyphonic hymns,[98] there was a need for simplicity and most church compositions were confined to homophonic settings.[89]

During his personal reign James VI attempted to revive the song schools, with an act of parliament passed in 1579, demanding that councils of the largest burghs set up "ane sang scuill with ane maister sufficient and able for insturctioun of the yowth in the said science of musik". Five new schools were opened within four years of the act coming into force, and by 1633 there were at least twenty-five. Most of those burghs without song schools made provision within their grammar schools.[100] Polyphony was incorporated into editions of the Psalter from 1625, but in the few locations where these settings were used, the congregation sang the melody and trained singers the contra-tenor, treble and bass parts.[98] However, the triumph of the Presbyterians in the National Covenant of 1638 led to an end of polyphony, and a new psalter in common metre, without tunes, was published in 1650.[101] In 1666 The Twelve Tunes for the Church of Scotland, composed in Four Parts (which actually contained 14 tunes), designed for use with the 1650 Psalter, was first published in Aberdeen. It would go through five editions by 1720. By the late seventeenth century these two works had become the basic corpus of the psalmody sung in the Kirk.[102]

Women

 

Early modern Scotland was a patriarchal society, in which men had total authority over women.[103] From the 1560s the post-Reformation marriage service underlined this by stating that a wife "is in subjection and under governance of her husband, so long as they both continue alive".[104] In politics the theory of patriarchy was complicated by regencies led by Margaret Tudor and Mary of Guise and by the advent of a regnant queen in Mary, Queen of Scots from 1561. Concerns over this threat to male authority were exemplified by John Knox's The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women (1558), which advocated the deposition of all reigning queens. Most of the political nation took a pragmatic view of the situation, accepting Mary as queen, but the strains that this paradox created may have played a part in the later difficulties of the reign.[105]

Before the Reformation, the extensive marriage bars for kinship meant that most noble marriages necessitated a papal dispensation, which could later be used as grounds for annulment if the marriage proved politically or personally inconvenient, although there was no divorce as such.[103] Separation from bed and board was allowed in exceptional circumstances, usually adultery. Under the reformed Kirk, divorce was allowed on grounds of adultery, or of desertion. Scotland was one of the first countries to allow desertion as legal grounds for divorce and, unlike England, divorce cases were initiated relatively far down the social scale.[106]

After the Reformation the contest between the widespread belief in the limited intellectual and moral capacity of women and the desire for women to take personal moral responsibility, particularly as wives and mothers, intensified. In Protestantism this necessitated an ability to learn and understand the catechism and even to be able to independently read the Bible, but most commentators, even those that tended to encourage the education of girls, thought they should not receive the same academic education as boys. In the lower ranks of society, women benefited from the expansion of the parish schools system that took place after the Reformation, but were usually outnumbered by boys, often taught separately, for a shorter time and to a lower level. They were frequently taught reading, sewing and knitting, but not writing. Female illiteracy rates based on signatures among female servants were around 90 per cent from the late seventeenth to the early eighteenth centuries, and perhaps 85 per cent for women of all ranks by 1750, compared with 35 per cent for men.[107] Among the nobility there were many educated and cultured women, of which Queen Mary is the most obvious example.[108]

Church going played an important part in the lives of many women. Women were largely excluded from the administration of the Kirk, but when heads of households voted on the appointment of a new minister some parishes allowed women in that position to participate.[109] In the post-Reformation period there was a criminalisation of women.[110] Women were disciplined in kirk sessions and civil courts for stereotypical offences including scolding and prostitution, which were seen as deviant, rather than criminal.Kilday, A.-M. (2007), Women and Violent Crime in Enlightenment Scotland, London: Boydell & Brewer, p. 19, ISBN 978-0-86193-287-0 These changing attitudes may partly explain the witch hunts that occurred after the Reformation and in which women were the largest group of victims.[111]

Popular religion

 
The North Berwick Witches meet the Devil in the local kirkyard, from a contemporary pamphlet, Newes from Scotland

Scottish Protestantism was focused on the Bible, which was seen as infallible and the major source of moral authority. Many Bibles were large, illustrated and highly valuable objects. The Genevan translation was commonly used[112] until in 1611 the Kirk adopted the Authorised King James Version and the first Scots version was printed in Scotland in 1633, but the Geneva Bible continued to be employed into the seventeenth century.[113] Bibles often became the subject of superstitions, being used in divination.[114] Kirk discipline was fundamental to Reformed Protestantism and it probably reached a high-water mark in the seventeenth century. Kirk sessions were able to apply religious sanctions, such as excommunication and denial of baptism, to enforce godly behaviour and obedience. In more difficult cases of immoral behaviour they could work with the local magistrate, in a system modelled on that employed in Geneva.[115] Public occasions were treated with mistrust and from the later seventeenth century there were efforts by kirk sessions to stamp out activities such as well-dressing, bonfires, guising, penny weddings, and dancing.[116]

In the late Middle Ages there were a handful of prosecutions for harm done through witchcraft, but the passing of the Witchcraft Act 1563 made witchcraft, or consulting with witches, capital crimes.[117] The first major series of trials under the new act were the North Berwick witch trials, beginning in 1589, in which James VI played a major part as "victim" and investigator.[118] He became interested in witchcraft and published a defence of witch-hunting in the Daemonologie in 1597, but he appears to have become increasingly sceptical and eventually took steps to limit prosecutions. An estimated 4,000 to 6,000 people, mostly from the Scottish Lowlands, were tried for witchcraft in this period; a much higher rate than for neighbouring England. There were major series of trials in 1590–1591, 1597, 1628–1631, 1649–1650 and 1661–1662. Seventy-five per cent of the accused were women and modern estimates indicate that over 1,500 people were executed.[119]

National identity

The Kirk that developed after 1560 came to represent all of Scotland. It became the subject of national pride, and was often compared with the less clearly reformed church in neighbouring England. Jane Dawson suggests that the loss of national standing in the contest for dominance of Britain between England and France suffered by the Scots, may have led them to stress their religious achievements.[120] A theology developed that saw the kingdom as in a covenant relationship with God. Many Scots saw their country as a new Israel and themselves as a holy people engaged in a struggle between the forces of Christ and Antichrist, the latter being identified with the resurgent papacy and the Roman Catholic Church. This view was reinforced by events elsewhere that demonstrated that Reformed religion was under threat, such as the 1572 Massacre of St Bartholomew in France and the Spanish Armada in 1588.[120] These views were popularised through the first Protestant histories, such as Knox's History of the Reformation and George Buchanan's Rerum Scoticarum Historia.[121] This period also saw a growth of a patriotic literature facilitated by the rise of popular printing. Published editions of medieval poetry by John Barbour and Robert Henryson and the plays of David Lyndsay all gained a new audience.[122]

See also

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Further reading

  • Brown, K. M. (1989), "In Search of the Godly Magistrate in Reformation Scotland", Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 40 (1): 553–581, doi:10.1017/S0022046900059017, S2CID 159787456

External links

  • The Reformation at BBC.co.uk

scottish, reformation, process, which, scotland, broke, with, papacy, developed, predominantly, calvinist, national, kirk, church, which, strongly, presbyterian, outlook, part, wider, european, protestant, reformation, that, took, place, from, sixteenth, centu. The Scottish Reformation was the process by which Scotland broke with the Papacy and developed a predominantly Calvinist national Kirk church which was strongly Presbyterian in its outlook It was part of the wider European Protestant Reformation that took place from the sixteenth century Statue of John Knox a leading figure of the Scottish Reformation From the late fifteenth century the ideas of Renaissance humanism critical of aspects of the established Catholic Church began to reach Scotland particularly through contacts between Scottish and continental scholars In the earlier part of the sixteenth century the teachings of Martin Luther began to influence Scotland Particularly important was the work of the Lutheran Scot Patrick Hamilton who was executed in 1528 Unlike his uncle Henry VIII in England James V avoided major structural and theological changes to the church and used it as a source of income and for appointments for his illegitimate children and favourites His death in 1542 left the infant Mary Queen of Scots as his heir allowing a series of English invasions later known as the Rough Wooing The English supplied books and distributed Bibles and Protestant literature in the Lowlands when they invaded in 1547 The execution of the Zwingli influenced George Wishart in 1546 who was burnt at the stake on the orders of Cardinal David Beaton stimulated the growth of these ideas in reaction Wishart s supporters who included a number of Fife lairds assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St Andrews Castle which they held for a year before they were defeated with the help of French forces The survivors including chaplain John Knox were condemned to serve as galley slaves Their martyrdom stirred resentment of the French and inspired additional martyrs for the Protestant cause In 1549 the defeat of the English with French support led to the marriage of Mary to Francis II of France the French dauphin and a regency over Scotland for the queen s mother Mary of Guise Limited toleration and the influence of exiled Scots and Protestants in other countries led to the expansion of Protestantism with a group of lairds declaring themselves Lords of the Congregation in 1557 and representing Protestant interests politically The collapse of the French alliance and the death of the regent followed by English intervention in 1560 meant that a relatively small but highly influential group of Protestants had the power to impose reform on the Scottish church The Scottish Reformation Parliament of 1560 approved a Protestant confession of faith rejecting papal jurisdiction and the Mass Knox having escaped the galleys and having spent time in Geneva where he became a follower of Calvin emerged as the most significant figure The Calvinism of the reformers led by Knox resulted in a settlement which adopted a Presbyterian system and rejected most of the elaborate trappings of the Medieval church When Francis II died in 1560 the Catholic Mary returned to Scotland to take up the government Her six year personal reign was marred by a series of crises largely caused by the intrigues and rivalries of the leading nobles Opposition to her third husband James Hepburn 4th Earl of Bothwell led to the formation of a coalition of nobles who captured Mary and forced her abdication in favour of her son who came to the throne as James VI in 1567 James was brought up a Protestant but resisted Presbyterianism and the independence of the Kirk The Reformation resulted in major changes in Scottish society These included a desire to plant a school in every parish and major reforms of the university system The Kirk discouraged many forms of plays as well as poetry that was not devotional in nature however significant playwrights and poets did nevertheless emerge such as George Buchanan and the Castalian Band of James VI s reign Scotland s ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm Native craftsmen and artists turned to secular patrons resulting in the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls The Reformation revolutionised church architecture with new churches built and existing churches adapted for reformed services particularly by placing the pulpit centrally in the church as preaching was at the centre of worship The Reformation also had a severe impact on church music with song schools closed down choirs disbanded music books and manuscripts destroyed and organs removed from churches These were replaced by the congregational singing of psalms despite attempts of James VI to refound the song schools and choral singing Women gained new educational possibilities and religion played a major part in the lives of many women but women were treated as criminals through prosecutions for scolding prostitution and witchcraft Scottish Protestantism was focused on the Bible and starting in the later seventeenth century there would be efforts to stamp out popular activities viewed as superstitious or frivolous The Kirk became the subject of national pride and many Scots saw their country as a new Israel Contents 1 Pre Reformation Scotland 1 1 Pre Reformation Church 1 1 1 Structure 1 1 2 Medieval popular religion 2 Pressure to reform 2 1 Humanism 2 2 Lutheranism 3 Political background 1528 1559 3 1 James V 3 2 Rough Wooing 3 3 Regency of Mary of Guise 3 4 Reforming Councils 3 5 Expansion of Protestantism 4 Reformation crisis 1559 1560 5 Reformation Parliament 6 First Book of Discipline 7 Post Reformation church 7 1 Confession of faith 7 2 Liturgy and worship 7 3 Church polity 7 4 Continued reformation 8 Second Reformation crisis 1567 9 Reign of James VI 1567 1625 10 Catholic survival 11 Impact 11 1 Education 11 2 Literature 11 3 Art 11 4 Architecture 11 5 Music 11 6 Women 11 7 Popular religion 11 8 National identity 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Primary sources 13 2 Secondary sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksPre Reformation Scotland EditPre Reformation Church Edit Main article Christianity in Medieval Scotland Henry Wardlaw died 1440 Bishop of St Andrews royal tutor and adviser founder of The University of St Andrews and key figure in fighting Lollardy Structure Edit Christianity spread in Scotland from the sixth century with evangelisation by Irish Scots missionaries and to a lesser extent those from Rome and England 1 The church in Scotland attained clear independence from England after the Papal Bull of Celestine III Cum universi 1192 by which all Scottish bishoprics except Galloway became formally independent of York and Canterbury The whole Ecclesia Scoticana with individual Scottish bishoprics except Whithorn Galloway became the special daughter of the see of Rome 2 It was run by special councils made up of all the Scottish bishops with the bishop of St Andrews emerging as the most important figure 2 The administration of parishes was often given over to local monastic institutions in a process known as appropriation By the time of the Reformation in the mid sixteenth century 80 per cent of Scottish parishes were appropriated leaving few resources for the parish clergy 3 In 1472 St Andrews became the first archbishopric in the Scottish church to be followed by Glasgow in 1492 2 The collapse of papal authority in the Papal Schism 1378 1418 allowed the Scottish Crown to gain effective control of major ecclesiastical appointments within the kingdom This de facto authority over appointments was formally recognised by the Papacy in 1487 The Crown placed clients and relatives of the king in key positions including James IV s r 1488 1513 illegitimate son Alexander Stewart who was nominated as Archbishop of St Andrews at the age of 11 This practice strengthened royal influence but it also made the Church vulnerable to criticisms of venality and nepotism 4 Relationships between the Scottish Crown and the Papacy were generally good with James IV receiving tokens of papal favour 2 Medieval popular religion Edit Main article History of popular religion in Scotland Traditional Protestant historiography tended to stress the corruption and unpopularity of the late Medieval Scottish church Since the late twentieth century research has indicated the ways in which it met the spiritual needs of different social groups 5 6 Historians have discerned a decline of monastic life in this period with many religious houses maintaining smaller numbers of monks Those remaining often abandoned communal living for a more individual and secular lifestyle The rate of new monastic endowments from the nobility also declined in the fifteenth century 5 7 In contrast the burghs saw the flourishing of mendicant orders of friars in the later fifteenth century who unlike the older monastic orders placed an emphasis on preaching and ministering to the population The order of Observant Friars were organised as a Scottish province from 1467 and the older Franciscans and the Dominicans were recognised as separate provinces in the 1480s 4 A mid 16th century oak panel carving from a house in Dundee In most Scottish burghs there was usually only one parish church in contrast to English towns where churches and parishes tended to proliferate 2 As the doctrine of Purgatory gained importance in the late Middle Ages the number of chapelries priests and masses for the dead prayed within them designed to speed the passage of souls to Heaven grew rapidly 8 The number of altars dedicated to saints who could intercede in this process also increased dramatically St Mary s in Dundee had perhaps 48 such altars and St Giles in Edinburgh more than 50 2 The number of saints celebrated in Scotland also proliferated with about 90 being added to the missal used in St Nicholas church in Aberdeen 9 New cults of devotion related to Jesus and the Virgin Mary began to reach Scotland in the fifteenth century including the Five Wounds the Holy Blood and the Holy Name of Jesus New religious feasts arose including celebrations of the Presentation the Visitation and Mary of the Snows 2 9 In the early fourteenth century the Papacy managed to minimise the problem of clerical pluralism by which clerics held two or more livings which elsewhere resulted in parish churches being without priests or served by poorly trained and paid vicars and clerks However the number of poor clerical livings and a general shortage of clergy in Scotland particularly after the Black Death meant that in the fifteenth century the problem intensified 10 As a result parish clergy were largely drawn from the lower ranks of the profession leading to frequent complaints about their standards of education or abilities Although there is little clear evidence that standards were declining this was expressed as one of the major grievances of the Reformation 4 Heresy in the form of Lollardry began to reach Scotland from England and Bohemia in the early fifteenth century Lollards were followers of John Wycliffe c 1330 84 and later Jan Hus c 1369 1415 who called for reform of the Church and rejected its doctrine on the Eucharist Despite evidence of the burning of heretics and some popular support for its anti sacramental elements it probably remained a small movement 11 Pressure to reform EditHumanism Edit Main article Renaissance in Scotland Portrait of Hector Boece 1465 1536 a major figure in European humanism who returned to be the first principal of the University of Aberdeen From the fifteenth century Renaissance humanism encouraged critical theological reflection and calls for ecclesiastical renewal in Scotland As early as 1495 some Scots were in contact with Desiderius Erasmus 1466 1536 the Netherlands born leading figure in the northern humanist movement They were also in contact with Jacques Lefevre d Etaples c 1455 1536 a French humanist and scholar who like Erasmus argued strongly for reform of the Catholic Church by the elimination of corruption and abuses 12 Scottish scholars often studied on the Continent and at English universities 13 Humanist scholars trained on the Continent were recruited to the new Scottish universities founded at St Andrews Glasgow and Aberdeen 14 These international contacts helped integrate Scotland into a wider European scholarly world and were one of the most important ways in which the new ideas of humanism entered Scottish intellectual life 14 By 1497 the humanist and historian Hector Boece who was born in Dundee and studied at Paris returned to become the first principal at the new university of Aberdeen 13 The continued movement of scholars to other universities resulted in a school of Scottish nominalists at Paris by the early sixteenth century the most important of whom was John Mair generally described as a scholastic His Latin History of Greater Britain 1521 was sympathetic to the humanist social agenda In 1518 he returned to become Principal of the University of Glasgow 15 Another major figure was Archibald Whitelaw who taught at St Andrews and Cologne becoming a tutor to the young James III and royal secretary in 1462 1493 Robert Reid Abbot of Kinloss and later Bishop of Orkney was responsible in the 1520s and 1530s for bringing the Italian humanist Giovanni Ferrario to teach at Kinloss Abbey Ferrario established an impressive library and wrote works of Scottish history and biography 16 Reid was to leave sufficient endowment in his will for the foundation of Edinburgh University James McGoldrick suggests that there was a circle of Erasmian type scholar reformers at the royal court in the first decade of the sixteenth century 13 Lutheranism Edit Main article Lutheranism The Martyrs Monument at Saint Andrews commemorates Protestants executed before the Reformation including Patrick Hamilton and George Wishart From the 1520s the ideas of Martin Luther began to have influence in Scotland with Lutheran literature circulating in the east coast burghs In 1525 Parliament banned their importation 17 In 1527 the English ambassador at Antwerp noted that Scottish merchants were taking William Tyndale s New Testament to Edinburgh and St Andrews 18 In 1528 the nobleman Patrick Hamilton who had been influenced by Lutheran theology while at the universities of Wittenberg and Marburg became the first Protestant martyr in Scotland he was burned at the stake for heresy outside St Salvator s College at Saint Andrews 19 Hamilton s execution inspired more interest in the new ideas The Archbishop of St Andrews was warned against any further such public executions as the reek smoke of Maister Patrik Hammyltoun has infected as many as it blew upon 20 Political background 1528 1559 EditJames V Edit Main article James V of Scotland After entering his personal reign in 1528 James V avoided pursuing the major structural and theological changes to the church undertaken by his contemporary Henry VIII in England In exchange for his loyalty to Rome he was able to appoint his many illegitimate children and favourites to office in the Church particularly David Beaton citation needed who became a Cardinal in 1538 and Archbishop of Saint Andrews in 1539 James increased crown revenues by heavily taxing the church taking 72 000 in four years The results of such appointments and taxation undermined both the status and finances of the Church 21 The Church was also divided by jurisdictional disputes between Gavin Dunbar Archbishop of Glasgow and James Beaton Archbishop of St Andrews until his death in 1539 As a result in 1536 the first provincial church council called since 1470 failed to achieve major reforms or a united front against heresy 22 After the execution of Patrick Hamilton the Crown prosecuted some men and a small number of executions followed in the 1530s and 1540s but there was no systematic persecution as the king was not interested in wide scale bloodletting An increasing number of lairds and nobles began to favour reform particularly in Angus the Mearns Fife and within the University of St Andrews 23 Leading figures included Alexander Cunningham 5th Earl of Glencairn and John Erskine of Dun 24 In 1541 Parliament passed legislation to protect the honour of the Mass prayer to the Virgin Mary images of the saints and the authority of the pope 25 Rough Wooing Edit Main article Rough Wooing Cardinal Beaton defender of the old faith and leader of the pro French faction James V died in 1542 leaving the infant Mary Queen of Scots as his heir with the prospect of a long minority At the beginning of the Mary s reign the Scottish political nation was divided between a pro French faction led by Cardinal Beaton and by the Queen s mother Mary of Guise and a pro English faction headed by Mary s prospective heir James Hamilton Earl of Arran 26 Initially Arran became Regent backed by the small evangelical party at court who favoured religious reform The Parliamentary Act of 1543 removed the prohibition against reading the Bible in the vernacular 27 A planned marriage between Mary and Edward the son of Henry VIII of England which had been agreed under the Treaty of Greenwich 1543 led to a backlash in Scotland and a coup led by Cardinal Beaton He repudiated the reforming policies and all consideration of an English marriage for the Queen angering the English 28 They invaded in order to enforce the match an action later known as the rough wooing which devastated south east Scotland 28 In 1546 George Wishart a preacher who had come under the influence of Swiss reformer Huldrych Zwingli was arrested and burnt at the stake in St Andrews on the orders of Cardinal Beaton Wishart s supporters who included a number of Fife lairds assassinated Beaton soon after and seized St Andrews Castle which they held for a year while under siege before they were defeated with the help of French forces The survivors including chaplain John Knox were condemned to be galley slaves helping to create resentment of the French and martyrs for the Protestant cause 29 In 1547 the English under Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset renewed their invasion and defeated the Scots at Pinkie occupied south east Scotland with forts at Lauder Haddington and an outpost at Dundee This occupation 1547 1549 encouraged the reforming cause the English supplied books and distributed Bibles and Protestant literature in the Lowlands 30 Several earls pledged themselves to cause the word of God to be taught and preached 31 To counter the English the Scots secured French help the price of which was the betrothal of the infant Queen to the French dauphin the future Francis II she departed to France in 1548 where she was to be raised and educated At this point the policy of Henry VIII had failed completely 32 French ascendancy was made absolute over the next decade In 1554 Arran was given the title Duke du Chatellerault and removed from the regency in favour of Mary of Guise the Queen Mother 32 Regency of Mary of Guise Edit Main article Mary of Guise Arms of Mary of Guise in the Magdalen Chapel Edinburgh During her regency 1554 1560 the Queen s mother ensured the predominance of France in Scottish affairs She put Frenchmen in charge of the treasury and the Great Seal and the French ambassador Henri Cleutin sometimes attended the Privy Council 33 At first Mary of Guise cultivated a policy of limited toleration of Protestants hoping to gain their support for her pro French policies and against England which from 1553 was under the rule of the Catholic Mary Tudor who married the future Philip II of Spain in 1554 34 Hopes for reform of the existing church helped keep the political nation unified 35 But the marriage of Mary Queen of Scots to the dauphin in 1558 heightened fears that Scotland would become a French province Reformers were given hope by the accession in England of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth in 1558 which created a confessional frontier in Great Britain 36 Reforming Councils Edit The Church responded to some of the criticisms being made against it John Hamilton Archbishop of St Andrews instigated a series of provincial councils in 1549 1552 probably in 1556 and in 1559 modelled on the contemporaneous Council of Trent 37 These blamed the advance of the Protestant heresies on the corruption of morals and the profane lewdness of life in churchmen of all ranks together with crass ignorance of literature and of the liberal arts In 1548 attempts were made to eliminate concubinage clerical pluralism clerical trading and non residence and to prohibit unqualified people from holding church offices Further the clergy were enjoined to scriptural reflection and bishops and parsons instructed to preach at least four times a year Monks were to be sent to university and theologians appointed for each monastery college and cathedral But in 1552 it was acknowledged that little had been accomplished Attendance at Mass was still sparse and the inferior clergy of this realm and the prelates have not for the most part attained such proficiency in the knowledge of the Holy Scriptures as to be able by their own efforts rightly to instruct the people in the Catholic faith and other things necessary to salvation or to convert the erring 38 Expansion of Protestantism Edit Lord James Stewart later the 1st Earl of Moray one of the nobles whose change of sides in 1559 helped precipitate the Reformation crisis Protestantism continued to expand in this period and became more distinct from those who wanted reform within the existing church Originally organised as conventicles that consisted of members of a laird s family or kin group and social networks who continued to attend the Catholic Church Protestants began to develop a series of privy kirks secret churches whose members increasingly turned away from existing church structures Their organisation was sufficient in 1555 for Knox to return to Scotland He administered a Protestant communion and carried out a preaching tour of the privy kirks He urged the members to reject Nicodemism by which they held Protestant convictions but attended Catholic services Despite being offered protection by the Earl of Argyll he returned to Geneva in 1556 39 In the absence of a leading clerical figure the leadership of the movement was taken by the few nobles who had embraced Protestantism and a new generation that included Argyll s son Lord Lorne the illegitimate son of the late King James V Lord James Stewart later the Earl of Moray and Lord John Erskine 40 In 1557 a first bond was signed by Argyll Glencairn Morton Lorne and Erskine for mutual support against Sathan and all wicked power that does intend tyranny and truble against the foresaid congregation This group which eventually became known as the Lords of the Congregation was a direct challenge to the existing regime 41 Reformation crisis 1559 1560 EditOn 1 January 1559 the anonymous Beggars Summons was posted on the doors of friaries threatening friars with eviction on the grounds that their property belonged to the genuine poor This was calculated to appeal to the passions of the populace of towns who appeared to have particular complaints against friars 42 42 Knox returned to Scotland and preached at the church of St John the Baptist s at Perth on 11 May on Christ cleansing the temple The congregation responded by stripping the shrines images and altars of the church and then sacked the local friaries and Carthusian house The regent responded by sending troops to restore order and Glencairn led a force to defend the town s new Protestant status A royal delegation including Argyll and James Stuart persuaded the burgh to open its gates but the heavy handed treatment by the regent s forces led to a breakdown in negotiations Argyll and Stuart changed sides and the Lords of the Congregation now began raising their followers for an armed conflict 43 Map of the Siege of Leith dated 7 May 1560 from Petworth House A series of local reformations followed with Protestant minorities gaining control of various regions and burghs often with the support of local lairds and using intimidation while avoiding the creation of Catholic martyrs to carry out a cleansing of friaries and churches followed by the appointment of Protestant preachers Such reformations occurred in conservative Aberdeen and the ecclesiastical capital of St Andrews together with other eastern ports In June Mary of Guise responded by dispatching a French army to St Andrews to restore control but it was halted by superior numbers at Cupar Muir and forced to retreat 44 Edinburgh fell to the Lords in July and Mary moved her base to Dunbar However the arrival of French reinforcements of 1 800 men forced the Lords onto the defensive and they abandoned the capital 45 The Lords appealed for help from England and Mary from France English agents managed the safe return of Earl of Arran the eldest son and heir of Chatelherault allowing him to accept the leadership of the Lords 45 In October the regent was declared suspended and replaced by a great council of the realm 46 However Mary of Guise s forces continued to advance once again threatening St Andrews The situation was transformed by the arrival of the English fleet in the Firth of Forth in January 1560 and the French retreated to the stronghold of Leith near Edinburgh 47 The English and the Lords agreed further support by the Treaty of Berwick in February 1560 and an English army crossed the border to lay siege to the French in Leith Mary of Guise fell ill and died in June With no sign of reinforcements the French opened negotiations Under the Treaty of Edinburgh 5 July 1560 both the French and English removed their troops from Scotland leaving the Protestant Lords in control of the country The Lords accepted Mary Queen of Scots and her husband now Francis II of France as monarchs and were given permission to hold a parliament although it was not to touch the issue of religion 47 Reformation Parliament EditMain article Scottish Reformation Parliament Mary and Francis II 1559 in whose names the Reformation Parliament was called The Scottish Parliament met in Edinburgh 1 August 1560 46 Fourteen earls six bishops nineteen lords twenty one abbots twenty two burgh commissioners and over a hundred lairds claimed the right to sit 48 Ignoring the provisions of the Treaty of Edinburgh on 17 August Parliament approved a Reformed Confession of Faith the Scots Confession and on 24 August it passed three Acts that abolished the old faith in Scotland Under these all previous acts not in conformity with the Reformed Confession were annulled the sacraments were reduced to two Baptism and Communion to be performed by reformed preachers alone the celebration of the Mass was made punishable by a series of penalties ultimately death and Papal jurisdiction in Scotland was repudiated 49 The Queen declined to endorse the acts that Parliament had passed and the new kirk existed in a state of legal uncertainty 50 First Book of Discipline EditMain article First Book of Discipline The Lords had intended Parliament to consider a Book of Reformation which they had commissioned and was largely the work of Knox However they were unhappy with the document and established a committee of six Johns including Knox John Winram John Spottiswood John Willock John Douglas and John Row to produce a revised version The result of the delay was that the document known as the First Book of Discipline was considered not by the full Parliament but only by a thinly attended convention of nobles and about 30 lairds in January 1561 and then only approved individually and not collectively 48 The Book proposed a programme of parish based reformation that would use the resources of the old Church to pay for a network of ministers a parish based school system university education and poor relief However this proposal for the use of church wealth was rejected Instead an Act of Council kept two thirds of the Church s assets in the hands of its existing holders while the remaining third was divided between the Crown and the reformist measures The educational programme was abandoned ministers remained poorly paid and the Church was underfunded 51 Post Reformation church EditConfession of faith Edit Main article Scots Confession A later edition of the Scots Confession The Scots Confession was produced by Knox and five colleagues in four days Its structure parallels that of the Apostles Creed with 25 chapters based around themes of the Father Son Church and Consummation It remained the standard of the Kirk until it was replaced by the Westminster Confession negotiated with English Parliamentary allies during the English Civil War and adopted by the Kirk in 1647 52 The Confession was strongly Calvinist in tone It emphasised the inscrutable providence of God who had determined all things It stressed the extreme depravity of mankind who deserved eternal damnation and the mercy of God in selecting a portion of humanity for salvation through grace alone 53 It denied transubstantiation but retained the real presence in the Eucharist It largely avoided negative emotive condemnations of Catholicism focusing on setting out the new faith in simple language It saw the Kirk as a catholik community of the elect of all nations realms nations tongues Jews and Gentiles 54 In 1581 as part of a reaction to the perceived threat of Catholicism the court signed a King s or Negative Confession probably commissioned by James VI that much more harshly denounced Catholicism 55 Liturgy and worship Edit The Reformation saw a complete transformation of religious observance In the place of the many holy days and festivals of the Catholic Church and the occasional observance of the Mass the single surviving holy day was Sunday and regular attendance and participation was required of the laity Latin was abandoned in favour of the vernacular Congregational psalm singing replaced the elaborate polyphony of trained choirs An emphasis was put on the Bible and the sermon which was often longer than an hour although many parishes which had no minister would have had only a readers service of psalms prayers and Bible readings The Geneva Bible was widely adopted 56 Protestant preachers fleeing Marian persecutions in England had brought with them Edward VI s second Book of Common Prayer of 1552 which was commended by the Lords of the Congregation Knox too initially supported it however before leaving Geneva and with the encouragement of Calvin he had written his own Book of Common Order and it was this that was printed and approved by the General Assembly of 1562 Enlarged it was reprinted with the Confession and the Psalms in metre in 1564 and it remained the standard until replaced with the Westminster Directory in 1643 57 A Gaelic translation of the Book of Common Order was produced in 1563 the first book printed in Gaelic but there would be no Gaelic Bible until the eighteenth century 56 Church polity Edit Main article Presbyterian polity The ruins of St Andrews Cathedral the stone was taken and reused in many of the surrounding houses The First Book of Discipline envisaged the establishment of reformed ministers in each of approximately 1 080 parishes By the end of 1561 240 of these places had been filled By 1567 there were about 850 clergy and by 1574 there were just over 1 000 These were mainly concentrated in the south and east In the Highlands there were shortages and very few spoke the Gaelic of the local population The universities were unable supply sufficient trained ministers over a generation and many over three quarters in 1574 were holders of the junior post of readers rather than qualified ministers The bulk of these were former Catholic clergy 58 The untidy system of thirteen medieval dioceses was to be replaced by ten more rational districts each to be overseen by a superintendent This plan was complicated by the conversion of three bishops to Protestantism who were allowed to remain in their posts Few superintendents were appointed and temporary commissioners were nominated to fill the gaps In 1576 when the General Assembly considered the structure of the Kirk it recognised five offices archbishops bishops superintendents commissioners and visitors 58 Beside these posts was a system of church courts of kirk sessions and presbyteries which dealt with discipline and administration Some local sessions had existed before 1560 moderators emerged in 1563 but the presbytery not until 1580 By the 1590s Scotland was organized into about fifty presbyteries with about twenty ministers in each Above them stood a dozen or so synods and at the apex the general assembly 59 The system of kirk sessions gave considerable power within the new kirk to local lairds who were able to take on the dignity and authority of an elder 60 Continued reformation Edit Mary Queen of Scots depicted with her son James VI and I in reality Mary saw her son for the last time when he was ten months old In the 1560s the majority of the population was probably still Catholic in persuasion and the Kirk would find it difficult to penetrate the Highlands and Islands but began a gradual process of conversion and consolidation that compared with reformations elsewhere was conducted with little persecution The monasteries were not dissolved but allowed to die out with their monks and before 1573 no holders of benefices were turned out even for refusing to conform 61 The focus on the parish church as the centre of worship meant the abandonment of much of the complex religious provision of chapelries monasteries and cathedrals many of which were allowed to decay or like the Cathedral at St Andrews were mined for dressed stone to be used in local houses 62 Second Reformation crisis 1567 EditMain article Mary Queen of Scots When her husband Francis II died in 1560 Mary now 19 elected to return to Scotland to take up the government She gained an agreement that she would be the only person to partake legally in Catholic services and did not attempt to re impose Catholicism on her subjects thus angering the chief Catholic nobles Her six year personal reign was marred by a series of crises largely caused by the intrigues and rivalries of the leading nobles The murder of her secretary David Riccio was followed by that of her unpopular second husband Lord Darnley father of her infant son and her abduction by and marriage to the Earl of Bothwell who was implicated in Darnley s murder 63 Opposition to Bothwell led to the formation of a coalition of nobles who styled themselves as the Confederate Lords 64 Michael Lynch describes the events of 1567 as second Reformation crisis 65 Mary and Bothwell confronted the Lords at Carberry Hill on 15 June 1567 but their forces melted away He fled and she was imprisoned in Loch Leven Castle Ten days after the confrontation at Carbury Hill the General Assembly met in Edinburgh with the aim of rooting out superstition and idolatry The Reformation settlement of 1567 was much more firmly Calvinist than that of 1560 The Assembly set out a programme of reform that included the ratification of the legislation of 1560 better provision of the ministry new resources and manpower for the parishes a purge of the teachers in the universities and schools and a closer relationship with parliament 66 A parliament was called in December which allowed the acts passed by the Reformation Parliament to be ratified 67 The subsequent religious settlement would be worked out over the 1570s against a background of civil war and unstable regencies 66 Reign of James VI 1567 1625 EditMain article James VI and I James Douglas 4th Earl of Morton who became the last regent of James VI s reign In July 1567 Mary was forced to abdicate in favour of her 13 month old son James VI James was to be brought up a Protestant and the government was to be run by a series of regents beginning with Moray until James began to assert his independence in 1581 68 Mary eventually escaped and attempted to regain the throne by force After her defeat at the Battle of Langside in May 1568 by forces loyal to the King s Party led by Moray she took refuge in England leaving her son in their hands In Scotland the King s Party fought a civil war on behalf of the regency against Mary s supporters This ended after English intervention with the surrender of Edinburgh Castle in May 1573 69 In 1578 a Second Book of Discipline was adopted which was much more clearly Presbyterian in outlook 70 In England Mary became a focal point for Catholic conspirators and was eventually executed for treason in 1587 on the orders of her kinswoman Elizabeth I 69 71 James was Calvinist in doctrine but strongly supported episcopacy and resisted the independence or even right to interfere in government of the Kirk which became associated with the followers of Andrew Melville known as the Melvillians He used his powers to call the General Assembly where he wished limiting the ability of more radical clergy to attend He paid for moderate clergy to be present negotiated with members and manipulated its business in order to limit the independence of the Kirk By 1600 he had appointed three parliamentary bishops By the end of his reign there were 11 bishops and diocesan episcopacy had been restored although there was still strong support for Presbyterianism within the Kirk 72 Catholic survival EditMain article Roman Catholicism in Scotland Although officially illegal Roman Catholicism survived in parts of Scotland The hierarchy of the Church played a relatively small role and the initiative was left to lay leaders Where nobles or local lairds offered protection it continued to thrive as with Clanranald on South Uist or in the north east where the Earl of Huntly was the most important figure In these areas Catholic sacraments and practices were maintained with relative openness 73 Members of the nobility were probably reluctant to pursue each other over matters of religion because of strong personal and social ties An English report in 1600 suggested that a third of nobles and gentry were still Catholic in inclination 74 In most of Scotland Catholicism became an underground faith in private households connected by ties of kinship This reliance on the household meant that women often became important as the upholders and transmitters of the faith such as in the case of Lady Fernihurst in the Borders They transformed their households into centres of religious activity and offered places of safety for priests 73 Because the Reformation took over the existing structures and assets of the Church any attempted recovery by the Catholic hierarchy was extremely difficult After the collapse of Mary s cause in the civil wars in the 1570s and any hope of a national restoration of the old faith the hierarchy began to treat Scotland as a mission area The leading order of the Counter Reformation the newly founded Jesuits initially took relatively little interest in Scotland as a target of missionary work Their effectiveness was limited by rivalries between different orders at Rome The initiative was taken by a small group of Scots connected with the Crichton family who had supplied the bishops of Dunkeld They joined the Jesuit order and returned to attempt conversions Their focus was mainly on the court which led them into involvement in a series of complex political plots and entanglements The majority of surviving Scottish lay followers were largely ignored 73 Impact EditEducation Edit Main article Education in early modern Scotland Andrew Melville credited with major reforms in Scottish universities in the sixteenth century The humanist concern with widening education was shared by the Protestant reformers with a desire for a godly people replacing the aim of having educated citizens The First Book of Discipline set out a plan for a school in every parish but this proved financially impossible 75 In the burghs the old schools were maintained with the song schools and a number of new foundations becoming reformed grammar schools or ordinary parish schools Schools were supported by a combination of kirk funds contributions from local heritors or burgh councils and parents that could pay They were inspected by kirk sessions who checked for the quality of teaching and doctrinal purity There were also large number of unregulated adventure schools which sometimes fulfilled a local need and sometimes took pupils away from the official schools Outside of the established burgh schools masters often combined their positions with other employment particularly minor posts within the Kirk such as clerk Todd M 2002 The Culture of Protestantism in Early Modern Scotland New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 59 62 ISBN 0 300 09234 2 At their best the curriculum included catechism Latin French Classical literature and sports 76 Scotland s universities underwent a series of reforms associated with Andrew Melville who returned from Geneva to become principal of the University of Glasgow in 1574 A distinguished linguist philosopher and poet he had trained in Paris and studied law at Poitiers before moving to Geneva and developing an interest in Protestant theology Influenced by the anti Aristotelian Petrus Ramus he placed an emphasis on simplified logic and elevated languages and sciences to the same status as philosophy allowing accepted ideas in all areas to be challenged 77 He introduced new specialist teaching staff replacing the system of regenting where one tutor took the students through the entire arts curriculum 78 Metaphysics were abandoned and Greek became compulsory in the first year followed by Aramaic Syriac and Hebrew launching a new fashion for ancient and biblical languages Glasgow had probably been declining as a university before his arrival but students now began to arrive in large numbers He assisted in the reconstruction of Marischal College Aberdeen and in order to do for St Andrews what he had done for Glasgow he was appointed Principal of St Mary s College St Andrews in 1580 The University of Edinburgh developed out of public lectures that were established in the town in the 1540s on law Greek Latin and philosophy under the patronage of Mary of Guise The Tounis College become the University of Edinburgh in 1582 16 The results of these changes were a revitalisation of all Scottish universities which were now producing a quality of education the equal of that offered anywhere in Europe 77 Literature Edit Main article Literature in early modern Scotland George Buchanan playwright poet and political theorist by Arnold Bronckorst Medieval Scotland probably had its own Mystery plays often performed by craft guilds like one described as ludi de ly haliblude and staged at Aberdeen in 1440 and 1445 and which was probably connected with the feast of Corpus Christi but no texts are extant 79 Legislation was enacted against folk plays in 1555 and against liturgical plays clerk plays or comedies based on the canonical scriptures in 1575 by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 80 However attempts to ban folk plays were more leniently applied and less successful that once assumed They continued into the seventeenth century with parishioners in Aberdeen reproved for parading and dancing in the street with bells at weddings and Yule in 1605 Robin Hood and May plays at Kelso in 1611 and Yuletide guising at Perth in 1634 81 The Kirk also allowed some plays particularly in schools when they served their own ends for education as in the comedy about the Prodigal Son permitted at St Andrews in 1574 81 More formal plays included those of James Wedderburn who wrote anti Catholic tragedies and comedies in Scots around 1540 before he was forced to flee into exile These included the Beheading of Johne the Baptist and the Historie of Dyonisius the Tyraonne which were performed at Dundee 82 David Lyndsay c 1486 1555 diplomat and the head of the Lyon Court was a prolific poet and dramatist He produced an interlude at Linlithgow Palace for the king and queen thought to be a version of his play The Thrie Estaitis in 1540 which satirised the corruption of church and state and which is the only complete play to survive from before the Reformation 83 George Buchanan 1506 1582 was major influence on Continental theatre with plays such as Jepheths and Baptistes which influenced Pierre Corneille and Jean Racine and through them the neo classical tradition in French drama but his impact in Scotland was limited by his choice of Latin as a medium 84 The anonymous The Maner of the Cyring of ane Play before 1568 85 and Philotus published in London in 1603 are isolated examples of surviving plays The later is a vernacular Scots comedy of errors probably designed for court performance for Mary Queen of Scots or James VI 86 The same system of professional companies of players and theatres that developed in England in this period was absent in Scotland but James VI signalled his interest in drama by arranging for a company of English players to erect a playhouse and perform in 1599 87 The Kirk also discouraged poetry that was not devotional in nature Nevertheless poets from this period included Richard Maitland of Lethington 1496 1586 who produced meditative and satirical verses John Rolland fl 1530 1575 who wrote allegorical satires and courtier and minister Alexander Hume c 1556 1609 whose corpus of work includes nature poetry and epistolary verse Alexander Scott s 1520 82 3 use of short verse designed to be sung to music opened the way for the Castalian poets of James VI s adult reign 88 Art Edit See also Art in early modern Scotland A rare example of stained glass that survived the Reformation in the Magdalen Chapel Edinburgh Scotland s ecclesiastical art paid a heavy toll as a result of Reformation iconoclasm with the almost total loss of medieval stained glass and religious sculpture and paintings 89 The only significant surviving pre Reformation stained glass in Scotland is a window of four roundels in the Magdalen Chapel of Cowgate Edinburgh completed in 1544 90 Wood carving can be seen at King s College Aberdeen and Dunblane Cathedral 91 In the West Highlands where there had been a hereditary caste of monumental sculptors the uncertainty and loss of patronage caused by the rejection of monuments in the Reformation meant that they moved into other branches of the Gaelic learned orders or took up other occupations The lack of transfer of carving skills is noticeable in the decline in quality when gravestones were next commissioned from the start of the seventeenth century 92 According to N Prior the nature of the Scottish Reformation may have had wider effects limiting the creation of a culture of public display and meaning that art was channelled into more austere forms of expression with an emphasis on private and domestic restraint 93 The loss of ecclesiastical patronage that resulted from the Reformation meant that native craftsmen and artists turned to secular patrons One result of this was the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls with large numbers of private houses of burgesses lairds and lords gaining often highly detailed and coloured patterns and scenes of which over a hundred examples survive 89 These were undertaken by unnamed Scottish artists using continental pattern books that often led to the incorporation of humanist moral and philosophical symbolism with elements that call on heraldry piety classical myths and allegory 89 The earliest surviving example is at the Hamilton palace of Kinneil West Lothian decorated in the 1550s for the then regent the James Hamilton Earl of Arran 94 Other examples include the ceiling at Prestongrange House undertaken in 1581 for Mark Kerr Commendator of Newbattle and the long gallery at Pinkie House painted for Alexander Seaton Earl of Dunfermline in 1621 89 Architecture Edit Main article Architecture in early modern Scotland Burntisland Parish Kirk its original wooden steeple now replaced by one of stoneThe Reformation revolutionised church architecture in Scotland Calvinists rejected ornamentation in places of worship seeing no need for elaborate buildings divided up for the purpose of ritual This resulted in the widespread destruction of Medieval church furnishings ornaments and decoration 95 New churches were built and existing churches adapted for reformed services particularly by placing the pulpit centrally in the church as preaching was at the centre of worship Many of the earliest buildings were simple gabled rectangles a style that continued into the seventeenth century as at Dunnottar Castle in the 1580s Greenock s Old West Kirk 1591 and Durness 1619 96 These churches often have windows on the south wall and none on the north which became a characteristic of Reformation kirks There were continuities with pre Reformation materials with some churches using rubble for walls as at Kemback in Fife 1582 Others employed dressed stone and a few added wooden steeples as at Burntisland 1592 97 The church of Greyfriars Edinburgh built between 1602 and 1620 used a rectangular layout with a largely Gothic form but that at Dirleton 1612 had a more sophisticated classical style 96 A variation of the rectangular church developed in post Reformation Scotland and often used when adapting existing churches was the T shaped plan which allowed the maximum number of parishioners to be near the pulpit Examples can be seen at Kemback and Prestonpans after 1595 This plan continued to be used into the seventeenth century as at Weem 1600 Anstruther Easter Fife 1634 1644 and New Cumnock Ayreshire 1657 In the seventeenth century a Greek cross plan was used for churches such as Cawdor 1619 and Fenwick 1643 In most of these cases one arm of the cross would have been closed off as a laird s aisle meaning that they were in effect T plan churches 96 Music Edit Main article Music in early modern Scotland A reprint of the 1600 cover of The Gude and Godlie Ballatis The Reformation had a severe impact on church music The song schools of the abbeys cathedrals and collegiate churches were closed down choirs disbanded music books and manuscripts destroyed and organs removed from churches 89 The Lutheranism that influenced the early Scottish Reformation attempted to accommodate Catholic musical traditions into worship drawing on Latin hymns and vernacular songs The most important product of this tradition in Scotland was The Gude and Godlie Ballatis 1567 which were spiritual satires on popular ballads that have been commonly attributed to brothers James John and Robert Wedderburn Never adopted by the Kirk they nevertheless remained popular and were reprinted from the 1540s to the 1620s 98 Later the Calvinism that came to dominate the Scottish Reformation was much more hostile to Catholic musical tradition and popular music placing an emphasis on what was biblical which meant the Psalms The Scottish Psalter of 1564 was commissioned by the Assembly of the Church It drew on the work of French musician Clement Marot Calvin s contributions to the Strasbourg Psalter of 1539 and English writers particularly the 1561 edition of the Psalter produced by William Whittingham for the English congregation in Geneva The intention was to produce individual tunes for each psalm but of 150 psalms 105 had proper tunes and in the seventeenth century common tunes which could be used for psalms with the same metre became more frequent 99 Because whole congregations would now all sing these psalms unlike the trained choirs who had sung the many parts of polyphonic hymns 98 there was a need for simplicity and most church compositions were confined to homophonic settings 89 During his personal reign James VI attempted to revive the song schools with an act of parliament passed in 1579 demanding that councils of the largest burghs set up ane sang scuill with ane maister sufficient and able for insturctioun of the yowth in the said science of musik Five new schools were opened within four years of the act coming into force and by 1633 there were at least twenty five Most of those burghs without song schools made provision within their grammar schools 100 Polyphony was incorporated into editions of the Psalter from 1625 but in the few locations where these settings were used the congregation sang the melody and trained singers the contra tenor treble and bass parts 98 However the triumph of the Presbyterians in the National Covenant of 1638 led to an end of polyphony and a new psalter in common metre without tunes was published in 1650 101 In 1666 The Twelve Tunes for the Church of Scotland composed in Four Parts which actually contained 14 tunes designed for use with the 1650 Psalter was first published in Aberdeen It would go through five editions by 1720 By the late seventeenth century these two works had become the basic corpus of the psalmody sung in the Kirk 102 Women Edit Main article Women in early modern Scotland Agnes Douglas Countess of Argyll 1574 1607 attributed to Adrian Vanson Early modern Scotland was a patriarchal society in which men had total authority over women 103 From the 1560s the post Reformation marriage service underlined this by stating that a wife is in subjection and under governance of her husband so long as they both continue alive 104 In politics the theory of patriarchy was complicated by regencies led by Margaret Tudor and Mary of Guise and by the advent of a regnant queen in Mary Queen of Scots from 1561 Concerns over this threat to male authority were exemplified by John Knox s The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of Women 1558 which advocated the deposition of all reigning queens Most of the political nation took a pragmatic view of the situation accepting Mary as queen but the strains that this paradox created may have played a part in the later difficulties of the reign 105 Before the Reformation the extensive marriage bars for kinship meant that most noble marriages necessitated a papal dispensation which could later be used as grounds for annulment if the marriage proved politically or personally inconvenient although there was no divorce as such 103 Separation from bed and board was allowed in exceptional circumstances usually adultery Under the reformed Kirk divorce was allowed on grounds of adultery or of desertion Scotland was one of the first countries to allow desertion as legal grounds for divorce and unlike England divorce cases were initiated relatively far down the social scale 106 After the Reformation the contest between the widespread belief in the limited intellectual and moral capacity of women and the desire for women to take personal moral responsibility particularly as wives and mothers intensified In Protestantism this necessitated an ability to learn and understand the catechism and even to be able to independently read the Bible but most commentators even those that tended to encourage the education of girls thought they should not receive the same academic education as boys In the lower ranks of society women benefited from the expansion of the parish schools system that took place after the Reformation but were usually outnumbered by boys often taught separately for a shorter time and to a lower level They were frequently taught reading sewing and knitting but not writing Female illiteracy rates based on signatures among female servants were around 90 per cent from the late seventeenth to the early eighteenth centuries and perhaps 85 per cent for women of all ranks by 1750 compared with 35 per cent for men 107 Among the nobility there were many educated and cultured women of which Queen Mary is the most obvious example 108 Church going played an important part in the lives of many women Women were largely excluded from the administration of the Kirk but when heads of households voted on the appointment of a new minister some parishes allowed women in that position to participate 109 In the post Reformation period there was a criminalisation of women 110 Women were disciplined in kirk sessions and civil courts for stereotypical offences including scolding and prostitution which were seen as deviant rather than criminal Kilday A M 2007 Women and Violent Crime in Enlightenment Scotland London Boydell amp Brewer p 19 ISBN 978 0 86193 287 0 These changing attitudes may partly explain the witch hunts that occurred after the Reformation and in which women were the largest group of victims 111 Popular religion Edit Main article History of popular religion in Scotland The North Berwick Witches meet the Devil in the local kirkyard from a contemporary pamphlet Newes from Scotland Scottish Protestantism was focused on the Bible which was seen as infallible and the major source of moral authority Many Bibles were large illustrated and highly valuable objects The Genevan translation was commonly used 112 until in 1611 the Kirk adopted the Authorised King James Version and the first Scots version was printed in Scotland in 1633 but the Geneva Bible continued to be employed into the seventeenth century 113 Bibles often became the subject of superstitions being used in divination 114 Kirk discipline was fundamental to Reformed Protestantism and it probably reached a high water mark in the seventeenth century Kirk sessions were able to apply religious sanctions such as excommunication and denial of baptism to enforce godly behaviour and obedience In more difficult cases of immoral behaviour they could work with the local magistrate in a system modelled on that employed in Geneva 115 Public occasions were treated with mistrust and from the later seventeenth century there were efforts by kirk sessions to stamp out activities such as well dressing bonfires guising penny weddings and dancing 116 In the late Middle Ages there were a handful of prosecutions for harm done through witchcraft but the passing of the Witchcraft Act 1563 made witchcraft or consulting with witches capital crimes 117 The first major series of trials under the new act were the North Berwick witch trials beginning in 1589 in which James VI played a major part as victim and investigator 118 He became interested in witchcraft and published a defence of witch hunting in the Daemonologie in 1597 but he appears to have become increasingly sceptical and eventually took steps to limit prosecutions An estimated 4 000 to 6 000 people mostly from the Scottish Lowlands were tried for witchcraft in this period a much higher rate than for neighbouring England There were major series of trials in 1590 1591 1597 1628 1631 1649 1650 and 1661 1662 Seventy five per cent of the accused were women and modern estimates indicate that over 1 500 people were executed 119 National identity Edit Main article Scottish national identity The Kirk that developed after 1560 came to represent all of Scotland It became the subject of national pride and was often compared with the less clearly reformed church in neighbouring England Jane Dawson suggests that the loss of national standing in the contest for dominance of Britain between England and France suffered by the Scots may have led them to stress their religious achievements 120 A theology developed that saw the kingdom as in a covenant relationship with God Many Scots saw their country as a new Israel and themselves as a holy people engaged in a struggle between the forces of Christ and Antichrist the latter being identified with the resurgent papacy and the Roman Catholic Church This view was reinforced by events elsewhere that demonstrated that Reformed religion was under threat such as the 1572 Massacre of St Bartholomew in France and the Spanish Armada in 1588 120 These views were popularised through the first Protestant histories such as Knox s History of the Reformation and George Buchanan s Rerum Scoticarum Historia 121 This period also saw a growth of a patriotic literature facilitated by the rise of popular printing Published editions of medieval poetry by John Barbour and Robert Henryson and the plays of David Lyndsay all gained a new audience 122 See also Edit Calvinism portalEnglish Reformation History of Christianity in Scotland History of ScotlandReferences Edit Fletcher 1999 pp 231 233 a b c d e f g Bawcutt amp Williams 2006 pp 26 29 Macquarrie 2004 pp 109 117 a b c Wormald 1991 pp 75 87 a b Wormald 1991 pp 76 87 Palliser 2000 pp 349 350 Barrell 2000 p 246 Barrell 2000 p 254 a b Peters 2004 p 147 Barrell 2000 pp 244 245 Barrell 2000 p 257 McGoldrick 1989 p 28 a b c Webster 1997 pp 124 125 a b Wormald 1991 pp 68 72 Mason 2005 p 100 a b Thomas 2012 pp 196 197 Wormald 1991 p 91 Wormald 1991 p 104 Dawson 2007 pp 164 166 Mackie Lenman amp Parker 1991 p 151 Mason 2005 p 102 Dawson 2007 p 129 Dawson 2007 pp 144 145 Wormald 1991 p 107 Ryrie 2006 p 42 Wormald 1991 p 100 Dawson 2007 p 159 a b Grant amp Stringer 1995 pp 115 116 Graham 2000 p 414 Wormald 1991 pp 102 104 Kirk 1989 p 11 a b Mackie Lenman amp Parker 1991 p 144 Mackie Lenman amp Parker 1991 p 139 Wormald 1991 p 102 Dawson 2007 p 185 Dawson 2007 pp 200 201 Dawson 2007 p 186 Kirk 1993 p 696 Dawson 2007 pp 188 189 Dawson 2007 pp 194 195 Dawson 2007 p 195 a b Burleigh 1960 p 143 Dawson 2007 pp 204 205 Dawson 2007 pp 205 206 a b Dawson 2007 p 209 a b Wormald 1991 p 117 a b Dawson 2007 p 211 a b Lynch 1992 p 197 Mackie Lenman amp Parker 1991 p 153 Brown amp MacDonald 2010 p 48 Mackie Lenman amp Parker 1991 pp 154 155 J Rogers Presbyterian Creeds A Guide to the Book of Confessions Westminster John Knox Press 1985 ISBN 0 664 25496 9 pp 79 80 Brown 2012 p 80 Wormald 1991 pp 120 121 Reid 2013 p 96 a b Dawson 2007 pp 227 229 Burleigh 1960 pp 160 163 a b Lynch 1992 pp 198 199 McNeill amp MacQueen 1996 pp 390 391 Wormald 1991 p 138 Wormald 1991 pp 121 133 Dawson 2007 pp 217 218 Mitchison 2002 pp 129 133 Lynch 1992 p 218 Lynch 1992 p 196 a b Lynch 1992 pp 200 201 Dawson 2007 p 268 Willson 1963 p 19 a b Wormald 1991 p 183 D K McKim and D F Wright Encyclopedia of the Reformed Faith Westminster John Knox Press 1992 ISBN 0 664 21882 2 p 103 Dawson 2007 pp 316 317 Wormald 1991 pp 128 129 a b c Dawson 2007 p 232 Wormald 1991 p 133 Houston 2002 p 5 Wormald 1991 pp 182 183 a b Wormald 1991 pp 183 184 J Kirk Melvillian reform and the Scottish universities in A A MacDonald and M Lynch eds The Renaissance in Scotland Studies in Literature Religion History and Culture Offered to John Durkhan BRILL 1994 ISBN 90 04 10097 0 p 280 Davidson 2007 p 57 Hartnoll 1993 p 745 a b Carpenter 2011 p 20 Brown 2013 p 84 Brown et al 2007 pp 256 257 Brown 2011 pp 1 3 Van Heijnsbergen 2001 pp 127 128 Carpenter 2011 p 15 Carpenter 2011 p 21 Van Heijnsbergen 2001 pp 129 130 a b c d e f Thomas 2012 pp 198 199 T W West Discovering Scottish Architecture Botley Osprey 1985 ISBN 0 85263 748 9 p 55 Scott 1993 p 208 Dawson 2007 p 131 N Prior Museums and Modernity Art Galleries and the Making of Modern Culture Berg 2002 ISBN 1 85973 508 8 p 102 Dawson 2007 p 290 Royal Institute of British Architects Kirks throughout the ages architecture com archived from the original on 14 October 2007 retrieved 13 January 2010 a b c Spicer 2000 p 517 Spicer 2007 pp 53 57 a b c Wormald 1991 pp 187 190 Duguid T 2014 Metrical Psalmody in Print and Practice English Singing Psalms and Scottish Psalm Buiks 1547 1640 Ashgate pp 85 90 173 179 201 228 ISBN 9781409468929 Munro G 2010 Sang schools and music schools music education in Scotland 1560 1650 in Weiss S F Murray R E Jr Jr Cyrus C J eds Music Education in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Indiana University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 253 00455 0 Baxter J R 2001 Music ecclesiastical in Lynch M ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press pp 431 432 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 Spinks B D 2009 A Communion Sunday in Scotland ca 1780 Liturgies and Sermons Scarecrow Press pp 143 144 ISBN 978 0 8108 6981 3 a b Dawson 2007 pp 62 63 Dennison 2001 pp 645 646 Dawson 2007 p 243 Ewen 2012 p 273 Houston 2002 pp 63 68 Brown 2004 p 187 Glover 2011 p 135 Mitchison 1983 pp 86 88 Mitchison 1983 pp 88 89 Henderson 2011 pp 1 4 Wormald 1991 pp 192 193 Henderson 2011 p 12 Houston amp Whyte 2005 p 30 Houston amp Whyte 2005 p 34 Edwards 2010 p 32 J Keay and J Keay Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland London Harper Collins 1994 ISBN 0 00 255082 2 p 556 Brown 2012 p 81 a b Dawson 2007 pp 232 233 Erskine 2013 p 636 Lynch 1992 p 184 Primary sources Edit Bain Joseph ed 1898 Calendar of the State Papers relating to Scotland and Mary Queen of Scots 1547 1603 vol 1 H M General Register House EdinburghSecondary sources Edit Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 online short scholarly biographies of all the major people Barrell A D M 2000 Medieval Scotland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 58602 X Bawcutt P J Williams J H 2006 A Companion to Medieval Scottish Poetry Woodbridge Brewer ISBN 1 84384 096 0 Baxter J R 2001 Music ecclesiastical in Lynch M ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211696 7 Brown I 2013 Scottish Theatre Diversity Language Continuity Rodopi ISBN 978 94 012 0994 6 Brown I 2011 Introduction a lively tradition and collective amnesia in Brown I ed The Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Drama Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 4107 9 Brown I Clancy T Manning S Pittock M eds 2007 The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Enlightenment Britain and Empire 1707 1918 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2481 2 Brown K M 2004 Noble Society in Scotland Wealth Family and Culture from the Reformation to the Revolutions Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1299 8 Brown K M MacDonald A R eds 2010 Parliament in Context 1235 1707 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1486 8 Brown S J 2012 Religion and society to c 1900 in Devine T M Wormald J eds The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956369 2 Burleigh J H S 1960 A Church History of Scotland Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 213921 5 Carpenter S 2011 Scottish drama until 1650 in Brown I ed The Edinburgh Companion to Scottish Drama Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 4107 9 Cross F L Livingstone E A eds 1997 Scotland The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1471 1473 ISBN 0 19 211655 X Davidson C 2007 Festivals and Plays in Late Medieval Britain Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6052 1 Dawson J E A 2007 Scotland Re Formed 1488 1587 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1455 4 Dennison E P 2001 Women 1 to 1700 in Lynch M ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211696 7 Duguid T 2014 Metrical Psalmody in Print and Practice English Singing Psalms and Scottish Psalm Buiks 1547 1640 Ashgate ISBN 9781409468929 Edwards K A 2010 Witchcraft in Tudor and Stuart Scotland in Cartwright K ed A Companion to Tudor Literature Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture Oxford John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 5477 2 Erskine C 2013 John Knox George Buccanan and Scots prose in Hadfield A ed The Oxford Handbook of English Prose 1500 1640 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958068 2 Ewen E 2012 The early modern family in Devine T M Wormald J eds The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956369 2 Fletcher R A 1999 The Barbarian Conversion From Paganism to Christianity University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21859 0 Glover K 2011 Elite Women and Polite Society in Eighteenth Century Scotland Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 681 0 Graham M F 2000 Scotland in Pettegree A ed The Reformation World London Routledge ISBN 0 415 16357 9 Grant A Stringer K J 1995 Uniting the Kingdom the Making of British History Psychology Press ISBN 3 03910 948 0 Hartnoll P ed 1993 The Oxford Companion to the Theatre Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 282574 7 Van Heijnsbergen T 2001 Culture 9 Renaissance and Reformation poetry to 1603 in Lynch M ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211696 7 Henderson G D 2011 Religious Life in Seventeenth Century Scotland Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24877 8 Houston R A 2002 Scottish Literacy and the Scottish Identity Illiteracy and Society in Scotland and Northern England 1600 1800 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 89088 8 Houston R A Whyte I D 2005 Introduction in Houston R A Whyte I D eds Scottish Society 1500 1800 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 89167 1 Kellar C 2003 Scotland England amp the Reformation 1534 61 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 926670 0 Kilday A M 2007 Women and Violent Crime in Enlightenment Scotland London Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 0 86193 287 0 Kirk J 1989 Patterns of Reform Continuity and Change in the Reformation Kirk Edinburgh T amp T Clark ISBN 0 567 09505 3 Kirk J 1993 Reformation Scottish in de S Cameron Nigel M Wright D F Lachman D C Meek D E eds Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark ISBN 0 8308 1407 8 Kyle R G 1991 The Christian Commonwealth John Knox s Vision for Scotland Journal of Religious History 16 3 247 259 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 1991 tb00667 x Lamont S 1991 The Swordbearer John Knox and the European Reformation London Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 0 340 55240 9 Lynch M 1992 Scotland A New History London Pimlico ISBN 0 7126 9893 0 Lynch M 2001 Reformation in Lynch M ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 211696 7 MacDonald I R 1998 The Jacobean Kirk 1567 1625 Sovereignty Liturgy and Polity Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 1 85928 373 X Mackie J D Lenman B Parker G 1991 A History of Scotland London Penguin ISBN 0 14 013649 5 Mason R 2005 Renaissance and Reformation the sixteenth century in Wormald J ed Scotland A History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 162243 5 McGoldrick J E 1989 Luther s Scottish Connection Associated University Press ISBN 0 8386 3357 9 McGovern M ed Chambers Biographical Dictionary 7th 2002 ed Edinburgh Chambers ISBN 0 550 10051 2 McNeill P G B MacQueen H L eds 1996 Atlas of Scottish History to 1707 Edinburgh The Scottish Medievalists ISBN 0 9503904 1 0 Macquarrie A 2004 Medieval Scotland Kinship and Nation Thrupp Sutton ISBN 0 7509 2977 4 Mitchison R 1983 Lordship to Patronage Scotland 1603 1745 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0233 X Mitchison R 2002 A History of Scotland 3rd ed London Routledge ISBN 0 415 27880 5 Mullan D G 2000 Scottish Puritanism 1590 1638 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 826997 8 Munro G 2010 Sang schools and music schools music education in Scotland 1560 1650 in Weiss S F Murray R E Jr Jr Cyrus C J eds Music Education in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 00455 0 Palliser D M 2000 The Cambridge Urban History of Britain 600 1540 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 44461 6 Park J E 2013 John Knox s Doctrine of Predestination and Its Practical Application for His Ecclesiology Puritan Reformed Journal 5 2 65 90 Peters C 2004 Women in Early Modern Britain 1450 1640 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 333 63358 X Reid S J 2013 Humanism and Calvinism Andrew Melville and the Universities of Scotland 1560 1625 Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 1 4094 8202 4 Ryrie A 2006 The Origins of the Scottish Reformation Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 7105 4 Scott H ed 1993 Scotland A Concise Cultural History Mainstream ISBN 1 85158 581 8 Spicer A 2000 Architecture in Pettegree A ed The Reformation World London Routledge ISBN 0 415 16357 9 Spicer A 2007 Calvinist Churches in Early Modern Europe Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 5487 7 Spinks B D 2009 A Communion Sunday in Scotland ca 1780 Liturgies and Sermons Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6981 3 Thomas A 2012 The Renaissance in Devine T M Wormald J eds The Oxford Handbook of Modern Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 956369 2 Todd M 2002 The Culture of Protestantism in Early Modern Scotland New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09234 2 Webster B 1997 Medieval Scotland the Making of an Identity New York NY St Martin s Press ISBN 0 333 56761 7 Willson D H 1963 1956 King James VI amp I London Jonathan Cape Ltd ISBN 0 224 60572 0 Wormald J 1991 Court Kirk and Community Scotland 1470 1625 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 0276 3 Wormald J 2001 Mary Queen of Scots Politics Passion and a Kingdom Lost Tauris Parke Paperbacks ISBN 1 86064 588 7Further reading EditBrown K M 1989 In Search of the Godly Magistrate in Reformation Scotland Journal of Ecclesiastical History 40 1 553 581 doi 10 1017 S0022046900059017 S2CID 159787456External links EditThe Reformation at BBC co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish Reformation amp oldid 1127215585, 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