fbpx
Wikipedia

Siege of Haddington

The sieges of Haddington were a series of sieges staged at the Royal Burgh of Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, as part of the War of the Rough Wooing, one of the last Anglo-Scottish Wars. Following Regent Arran's defeat at the battle of Pinkie Cleugh on Saturday 10 September 1547, he captured the town of Haddington. The intention was to form a network of mutually supporting English forts in lowland Scotland. The English forces built artillery fortifications and were able to withstand an assault by the besieging French and Scots troops supported by heavy cannon in July 1548. Although the siege was scaled down after this unsuccessful attempt, the English garrison abandoned the town on 19 September 1549, after attrition by Scottish raids at night, sickness, and changing political circumstance.[1]

Sieges of Haddington
Part of Anglo-Scottish Wars
Rough Wooing

The restored Church of St. Mary the Virgin, heavily damaged during the sieges
DateJuly 1548–19 September 1549
Location
Haddington, Scotland
Result Scottish/French victory; Scots claim back Haddington
Belligerents
 Kingdom of Scotland
Kingdom of France
 Kingdom of England
Commanders and leaders
Earl of Arran
Lord Methven
Paul de Thermes
André de Montalembert
Henri Cleutin
Earl of Shrewsbury
Baron Grey of Wilton
Sir James Wilford
Sir Thomas Palmer
Thomas Gower
Strength
5000–6000 Up to 15,000
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The English dig in edit

The English commander, Grey of Wilton, captured and garrisoned Haddington and outlying villages by 23 February 1548. The garrison included 200 Albanian Stratioti who had previously fought in the French army.[2] At the end of February 1548, Regent Arran brought four cannon to besiege and take the East Lothian houses of Ormiston, Brunstane, and Saltoun which John Cockburn of Ormiston and Alexander Crichton of Brunstane held for England, and summoned the men of Stirling, Menteith, and Strathearn to the field.[3]

Grey and Thomas Palmer began to fortify the town in earnest after 24 April 1548. Wilton described how he viewed the town with Palmer, envisaging a fortification that would enclose all the "fair houses" of the town. He had cleared the ground and was entrenched against the enemy. Regent Arran brought 5,000 men to Musselburgh at the end of the month.[4] An inventory of food stored in Haddington at this time includes "oxen alive", bacon, cereal and peas, claret wine, sack, and Malmsey.[5]

The English strategy was for the siege of Haddington to consume Scottish and French resources.[6] The soldiers built the fortifications alongside labourers from England who were called 'pioneers.' Timber was brought from the woods of Broun of Colstoun. Although the site had obvious drawbacks, overlooked by the ridge of the nearby Garleton Hills and four miles from the sea, the finished ramparts were much admired.

Local landowners unwilling to collaborate had to relocate. George Seton, 6th Lord Seton and his French wife Marie Pieris moved from their home at Seton Palace to Culross Abbey.[7]

The French ambassador in London, Odet de Selve, heard from a French mercenary serving on the English side that it was almost as impregnable as Turin.[8] Somerset even showed Odet de Selve the plan, a large rectangle by the river Tyne, and said it was larger than the fortified area of Calais, and would hold 4,000 troops. Selve sent a spy to Scotland for details, who reported the walls were as yet only the earth excavated from the ditches, but stone from demolished houses would be used.[9]

The design include four corner bastions, called Bowes, Wyndham, Taylor, and Tiberio, after the commanders. Francisco Tiberio was the leader of a company of Italian mercenaries. The French ambassador was told that the tollbooth, a tall and solid stone structure, had been filled with earth to form a gun platform called a cavalier.[10] English pioneers digging the town ditch found curious ancient coins on 7 June which Grey of Wilton sent to Somerset for their strangeness.[11]

Pedro de Negro and a Spanish force attempt to join the garrison at Haddington edit

Grey of Wilton hoped to trick the French by letting a false message about reinforcements fall into their hands. He thought this would make them reluctant to attack and win him time.[12] He sent 100 Spanish soldiers with their commander Pedro de Negro to join the garrison at the end of June 1548, but they encountered the enemy and rode to safety at Berwick.[13] One English cavalry defeat at Haddington became known in Scotland as "Tuesday's Chase".[14]

Sieges edit

 
Sir James Wilsford
 
Nungate bridge: Haddington is bounded by the River Tyne to the south and west

Haddington's garrison of occupation was commanded by Sir James Wilford. The Master of the Scottish Artillery, Lord Methven, organised guns to be brought from the siege of Broughty Castle in June. These guns were shipped to Aberlady, the nearest haven on the Forth. The great Scottish gun 'thrawinmouth' from Dunbar Castle was also deployed.[15] and the cannons from Broughty were placed on 3 July 1548.[16] On 5 July Methven gave Mary of Guise an optimistic report of the damage caused to the English defences by his guns. His fire had demolished the Tollbooth within the town, and he had advanced trenches towards the ramparts.[17]

English chronicles report the efforts of the English commander, James Wilsford, who every night repaired the damage caused by the artillery in the day, despite the large number of casualties.[18] When Wilsford made a trip to London, Thomas Gower served in his place.[19]

July 1548 edit

French and Scottish troops began to seriously besiege the town in July 1548. On 5 July 1548 Mary of Guise held a council at nearby Elvingston or "Herdmandston", and the next day went to Clerkington, where the French and Italians were making a fortified camp and had demolished a bridge over the River Tyne. The French troops prepared ladders for an assault on the town. The English army outside the town made plans to get supplies to the defenders.[20]

An English soldier Thomas Holcroft reported that on 8 July, Pedro de Gamboa's mounted arquebusiers, commanded by another Spanish captain, Pedro de Negro, and other soldiers rode through French lines from Linton bridge to relieve the siege.[21] Negro's exploit was described in a Spanish chronicle now known as the Chronicle of Henry VIII. The chronicle relates that the Spanish and English cavalrymen rode into Haddington carrying bags of gunpowder. Rather than return to Linton through enemy lines, they slaughtered their own horses outside the town gates, and after the French and Scottish had withdrawn, Pedro de Negro buried them in three pits.[22] Odet de Selve wrote that Somerset told him about the exploit of 400 arquebusiers who carried powder into the town to relieve the shortage.[23]

Mary of Guise came to view the siege on 9 July and swooned in a faint when a cannon shot landed near her and injured some of her companions. On the other side of the country, Mary, Queen of Scots embarked with Nicolas Durand de Villegaignon at Dumbarton Castle for France.[24]

Thomas Palmer and Holcroft discovered that German gunners working with the Scots were building a platform for artillery in the church tower.[25] At this time the English inside Haddington were countermining against the French and Scottish siegeworks. A Scots force joined the French troops on 16 July to storm the town but were driven away by cannon fire.[26] Following this set-back, the French officer d'Essé ordered the heavy guns to be withdrawn on 17 July. With rumours of English reinforcement, Methven took the Scottish and French guns to Edinburgh and Leith, while d'Essé kept the camp. D'Essé made his feelings known to Arran; that an earlier decisive assault before the English had time to entrench would have been the best action.[27] The English military engineer, Thomas Pettit, Surveyor of Calais, was captured and taken to Edinburgh to be held for ransom by André de Montalembert.[28]

August 1548 edit

In August 1548 the Scots and French made a base at Clerkington, defended by ditches 14 feet across.[29] Shrewsbury arrived on 23 August with an army close in size to the English army at Pinkie. He camped for a few days Spittal Hill near Aberlady.[30] The French and Scots abandoned their siege of Haddington and retired to Edinburgh and Leith.[31] Edward VI was told that some of the departing besiegers had spoken to Captain Tiberio. They had pointed out the inadequacies of the fortifications and said all honour was due to the defenders and none to themselves. Edward also recorded a subsequent large but unsuccessful night raid against Haddington.[32]

October and November 1548 edit

The French troops in Edinburgh started a fight in Edinburgh in October 1548 over a culverin sent for repair and several Scots were killed on the Royal Mile.[33] D'Essé organised a night raid on Haddington to increase their popularity among their potential Scottish supporters. The raid was repulsed after the English watch shouted, "Bows and Bills", which according to John Knox was the usual alarm of the time. While the French were away from Edinburgh the townsfolk killed some of their wounded.[34] On 1 November 1548, Wilford wrote to Somerset describing the state of Haddington, with a garrison stricken by plague:

"The state of this town pities me both to see and to write it; but I hope for relief. Many are sick and a great number dead, most of the plague. On my faith there are not here this day of horse, foot, and Italians, 1000 able to go to the walls, and more like to be sick, than the sick to mend, who watch the walls every 5th night, yet the walls are un-manned."[35]

English withdraw edit

 
Maréchal Paul de Thermes, after François Clouet, 1554.

The English withdrew because they were out of supplies, many of their men had died from disease or during the Scottish night raids, and more French re-inforcements had arrived under Paul de Thermes. The English (and their mercenary forces, which included German and Spanish professional soldiers) evacuated Haddington on 19 September 1549, travelling overland to Berwick upon Tweed. Mary of Guise was triumphant.[36]

Ulpian Fulwell edit

The English writer Ulpian Fulwell included some stories that he heard from Haddington veterans including Captain Dethick in his Flower of Fame.[37] He describes a siege at Yester Castle which was garrisoned by a Scottish and Spanish force. When they surrendered they were all pardoned, except a soldier who had cursed the English leaders from the battlements. It was unclear if this man was one Newton, or a man called Hamilton, and Lord Grey of Wilton made these suspects fight a duel in the market place of Haddington. Newton won the duel, killing Hamilton, and was freed, even though the English soldiers recognised his voice. Fulwell describes various events of the siege of Haddington, and says that the cannnon that nearly injured Mary of Guise at the nunnery was called "roaring meg". Fulwell composed a verse naming the English captains.[38]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Marcus Merriman, 'Rough Wooing', An Historical Atlas of Scotland (Scottish Medievalists, 1975), p. 84.
  2. ^ Jean de Beagué, History of the Campaigns in 1548 and 1549, (1707), p.38
  3. ^ Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), pp. 150–151, 153.
  4. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 111–2 no. 228-30.
  5. ^ Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 1 (London, 1791), pp. 124-5.
  6. ^ Marcus Merriman, Rough Wooings (Tuckwell, 2000), pp. 313–314.
  7. ^ Richard Maitland, History of the House of Seytoun (Glasgow, 1829), p. 42.
  8. ^ Marcus Merriman, History of the King's Works, vol. 4 part 2 (London, 1982), 718–719.
  9. ^ Marcus Merriman, Rough Wooings (Tuckwell, 2000), p. 316: Germain Lefèvre-Pontalis, Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve (Paris, 1888), pp. 366, 376.
  10. ^ Marcus Merriman (1982), 719–721: Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve, 52, 366, 376.
  11. ^ CSP Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 117, 118.
  12. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 127 no. 259.
  13. ^ CSP Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 131–3 nos. 265-269.
  14. ^ John Graham Dalyell, Annals of Scotland: From the Yeir 1514 to the Yeir 1591, by George Marioreybanks (Edinburgh, 1814), p. 12.
  15. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), 216.
  16. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), 136.
  17. ^ Cameron, Annie, Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (Edinburgh, 1927), pp. 248–250.
  18. ^ Grafton's Chronicle: A Chronicle at Large, 1569, vol. 2 (London, 1809), p. 505.
  19. ^ Joseph Bain, Hamilton Papers, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1890), pp. 747-8.
  20. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 139 nos. 281–3.
  21. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 140 no. 284.
  22. ^ Martin Sharp Hume, Chronicle of King Henry VIII (George Bell: London, 1889), pp. 203–206.
  23. ^ Germain Lefèvre-Pontalis, Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve (Paris, 1888), p. 408.
  24. ^ Joseph Bain, Hamilton Papers, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1892), pp. 603, 616–7: Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 135, 137, 139.
  25. ^ Joseph Bain, Hamilton Papers, vol. 2 (London, 1892), p. 603 no. 445
  26. ^ Calendar of State Papers Spain, vol. 9 (London, 1912), 569–570.
  27. ^ Cameron, Annie I., ed., The Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (Edinburgh, 1927), 245, 249–251.
  28. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 150, 153–4.
  29. ^ Joseph Bain, Hamilton Papers, vol. 2 (London, 1892), p. 616 no. 453.
  30. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 162 no. 321.
  31. ^ Merriman, Marcus, Rough Wooings (Tuckwell, 2000), p. 321.
  32. ^ W. K. Jordan, The Chronicle and Political Papers of Edward VI (George Unwin & Allen, 1966), p. 10.
  33. ^ Teulet, A., Relations politiques de la France et de l'Espagne avec l'Écosse au XVIe siècle, vol. 1 (1862), 230; also in John Knox, History of the Reformation, Bk. 2.
  34. ^ Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooing (Tuckwell, 2000), p. 321: Knox, John, History of the Reformation, book 1, e.g., Lennox, Cuthbert, ed., (1905), 105–107.
  35. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), 165–166.
  36. ^ Merriman, Marcus, The Rough Wooings, Tuckwell (2000), 344–345.
  37. ^ Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings (Tuckwell, 2000), p. 368.
  38. ^ Reprinted in Thomas Park, Supplement to the Harleian Miscellany (London, 1812), pp. 368-374: Text from Oxford Text Partnership

Sources edit

  • Fullwell, Ulpian, The Flower of Fame, with a discourse of the worthie service that was done at Haddington in Scotlande the second yere of the raigne of King Edward the Sixe, William Hoskins, London (1575), 49r-59r.
  • Merriman, Marcus H., The History of the King's Works, vol. 4 (1982), ed. H. M. Colvin, part iv, 'The Scottish Border', 607–726.
  • Merriman, Marcus H., The Rough Wooings, Tuckwell (2000)
  • Phillips, Gervase, The Anglo-Scots Wars, Woodbridge (1999)
  • Phillips, Gervase, 'In the Shadow of Flodden', Scottish military tactics, 1513–1550, Scottish Historical Review, 77 (1998), 162–182.

External links edit

  • The Siege of Haddington 1548-49: Research Project supported by Haddington's History Society
  • Chris Upton, "The Story of Scotland’s Longest Siege", Historic Environment Scotland
  • British Library, (Hamilton Papers) Add MS 32657, ff. 4–6. Letter from Sir James Wilsford, Governor of Haddington, to Grey of Wilton, 2 July 1548, in cipher with decipher document

55°57′18″N 2°46′55″W / 55.955°N 2.782°W / 55.955; -2.782

siege, haddington, sieges, haddington, were, series, sieges, staged, royal, burgh, haddington, east, lothian, scotland, part, rough, wooing, last, anglo, scottish, wars, following, regent, arran, defeat, battle, pinkie, cleugh, saturday, september, 1547, captu. The sieges of Haddington were a series of sieges staged at the Royal Burgh of Haddington East Lothian Scotland as part of the War of the Rough Wooing one of the last Anglo Scottish Wars Following Regent Arran s defeat at the battle of Pinkie Cleugh on Saturday 10 September 1547 he captured the town of Haddington The intention was to form a network of mutually supporting English forts in lowland Scotland The English forces built artillery fortifications and were able to withstand an assault by the besieging French and Scots troops supported by heavy cannon in July 1548 Although the siege was scaled down after this unsuccessful attempt the English garrison abandoned the town on 19 September 1549 after attrition by Scottish raids at night sickness and changing political circumstance 1 Sieges of HaddingtonPart of Anglo Scottish WarsRough WooingThe restored Church of St Mary the Virgin heavily damaged during the siegesDateJuly 1548 19 September 1549LocationHaddington ScotlandResultScottish French victory Scots claim back HaddingtonBelligerents Kingdom of Scotland Kingdom of France Kingdom of EnglandCommanders and leadersEarl of ArranLord Methven Paul de ThermesAndre de MontalembertHenri CleutinEarl of ShrewsburyBaron Grey of WiltonSir James WilfordSir Thomas PalmerThomas GowerStrength5000 6000Up to 15 000Casualties and lossesUnknownUnknown Contents 1 The English dig in 1 1 Pedro de Negro and a Spanish force attempt to join the garrison at Haddington 2 Sieges 2 1 July 1548 2 2 August 1548 2 3 October and November 1548 3 English withdraw 4 Ulpian Fulwell 5 Footnotes 6 Sources 7 External linksThe English dig in editThe English commander Grey of Wilton captured and garrisoned Haddington and outlying villages by 23 February 1548 The garrison included 200 Albanian Stratioti who had previously fought in the French army 2 At the end of February 1548 Regent Arran brought four cannon to besiege and take the East Lothian houses of Ormiston Brunstane and Saltoun which John Cockburn of Ormiston and Alexander Crichton of Brunstane held for England and summoned the men of Stirling Menteith and Strathearn to the field 3 Grey and Thomas Palmer began to fortify the town in earnest after 24 April 1548 Wilton described how he viewed the town with Palmer envisaging a fortification that would enclose all the fair houses of the town He had cleared the ground and was entrenched against the enemy Regent Arran brought 5 000 men to Musselburgh at the end of the month 4 An inventory of food stored in Haddington at this time includes oxen alive bacon cereal and peas claret wine sack and Malmsey 5 The English strategy was for the siege of Haddington to consume Scottish and French resources 6 The soldiers built the fortifications alongside labourers from England who were called pioneers Timber was brought from the woods of Broun of Colstoun Although the site had obvious drawbacks overlooked by the ridge of the nearby Garleton Hills and four miles from the sea the finished ramparts were much admired Local landowners unwilling to collaborate had to relocate George Seton 6th Lord Seton and his French wife Marie Pieris moved from their home at Seton Palace to Culross Abbey 7 The French ambassador in London Odet de Selve heard from a French mercenary serving on the English side that it was almost as impregnable as Turin 8 Somerset even showed Odet de Selve the plan a large rectangle by the river Tyne and said it was larger than the fortified area of Calais and would hold 4 000 troops Selve sent a spy to Scotland for details who reported the walls were as yet only the earth excavated from the ditches but stone from demolished houses would be used 9 The design include four corner bastions called Bowes Wyndham Taylor and Tiberio after the commanders Francisco Tiberio was the leader of a company of Italian mercenaries The French ambassador was told that the tollbooth a tall and solid stone structure had been filled with earth to form a gun platform called a cavalier 10 English pioneers digging the town ditch found curious ancient coins on 7 June which Grey of Wilton sent to Somerset for their strangeness 11 Pedro de Negro and a Spanish force attempt to join the garrison at Haddington edit Grey of Wilton hoped to trick the French by letting a false message about reinforcements fall into their hands He thought this would make them reluctant to attack and win him time 12 He sent 100 Spanish soldiers with their commander Pedro de Negro to join the garrison at the end of June 1548 but they encountered the enemy and rode to safety at Berwick 13 One English cavalry defeat at Haddington became known in Scotland as Tuesday s Chase 14 Sieges edit nbsp Sir James Wilsford nbsp Nungate bridge Haddington is bounded by the River Tyne to the south and westHaddington s garrison of occupation was commanded by Sir James Wilford The Master of the Scottish Artillery Lord Methven organised guns to be brought from the siege of Broughty Castle in June These guns were shipped to Aberlady the nearest haven on the Forth The great Scottish gun thrawinmouth from Dunbar Castle was also deployed 15 and the cannons from Broughty were placed on 3 July 1548 16 On 5 July Methven gave Mary of Guise an optimistic report of the damage caused to the English defences by his guns His fire had demolished the Tollbooth within the town and he had advanced trenches towards the ramparts 17 English chronicles report the efforts of the English commander James Wilsford who every night repaired the damage caused by the artillery in the day despite the large number of casualties 18 When Wilsford made a trip to London Thomas Gower served in his place 19 July 1548 edit French and Scottish troops began to seriously besiege the town in July 1548 On 5 July 1548 Mary of Guise held a council at nearby Elvingston or Herdmandston and the next day went to Clerkington where the French and Italians were making a fortified camp and had demolished a bridge over the River Tyne The French troops prepared ladders for an assault on the town The English army outside the town made plans to get supplies to the defenders 20 An English soldier Thomas Holcroft reported that on 8 July Pedro de Gamboa s mounted arquebusiers commanded by another Spanish captain Pedro de Negro and other soldiers rode through French lines from Linton bridge to relieve the siege 21 Negro s exploit was described in a Spanish chronicle now known as the Chronicle of Henry VIII The chronicle relates that the Spanish and English cavalrymen rode into Haddington carrying bags of gunpowder Rather than return to Linton through enemy lines they slaughtered their own horses outside the town gates and after the French and Scottish had withdrawn Pedro de Negro buried them in three pits 22 Odet de Selve wrote that Somerset told him about the exploit of 400 arquebusiers who carried powder into the town to relieve the shortage 23 Mary of Guise came to view the siege on 9 July and swooned in a faint when a cannon shot landed near her and injured some of her companions On the other side of the country Mary Queen of Scots embarked with Nicolas Durand de Villegaignon at Dumbarton Castle for France 24 Thomas Palmer and Holcroft discovered that German gunners working with the Scots were building a platform for artillery in the church tower 25 At this time the English inside Haddington were countermining against the French and Scottish siegeworks A Scots force joined the French troops on 16 July to storm the town but were driven away by cannon fire 26 Following this set back the French officer d Esse ordered the heavy guns to be withdrawn on 17 July With rumours of English reinforcement Methven took the Scottish and French guns to Edinburgh and Leith while d Esse kept the camp D Esse made his feelings known to Arran that an earlier decisive assault before the English had time to entrench would have been the best action 27 The English military engineer Thomas Pettit Surveyor of Calais was captured and taken to Edinburgh to be held for ransom by Andre de Montalembert 28 August 1548 edit In August 1548 the Scots and French made a base at Clerkington defended by ditches 14 feet across 29 Shrewsbury arrived on 23 August with an army close in size to the English army at Pinkie He camped for a few days Spittal Hill near Aberlady 30 The French and Scots abandoned their siege of Haddington and retired to Edinburgh and Leith 31 Edward VI was told that some of the departing besiegers had spoken to Captain Tiberio They had pointed out the inadequacies of the fortifications and said all honour was due to the defenders and none to themselves Edward also recorded a subsequent large but unsuccessful night raid against Haddington 32 October and November 1548 editThe French troops in Edinburgh started a fight in Edinburgh in October 1548 over a culverin sent for repair and several Scots were killed on the Royal Mile 33 D Esse organised a night raid on Haddington to increase their popularity among their potential Scottish supporters The raid was repulsed after the English watch shouted Bows and Bills which according to John Knox was the usual alarm of the time While the French were away from Edinburgh the townsfolk killed some of their wounded 34 On 1 November 1548 Wilford wrote to Somerset describing the state of Haddington with a garrison stricken by plague The state of this town pities me both to see and to write it but I hope for relief Many are sick and a great number dead most of the plague On my faith there are not here this day of horse foot and Italians 1000 able to go to the walls and more like to be sick than the sick to mend who watch the walls every 5th night yet the walls are un manned 35 English withdraw edit nbsp Marechal Paul de Thermes after Francois Clouet 1554 The English withdrew because they were out of supplies many of their men had died from disease or during the Scottish night raids and more French re inforcements had arrived under Paul de Thermes The English and their mercenary forces which included German and Spanish professional soldiers evacuated Haddington on 19 September 1549 travelling overland to Berwick upon Tweed Mary of Guise was triumphant 36 Ulpian Fulwell editThe English writer Ulpian Fulwell included some stories that he heard from Haddington veterans including Captain Dethick in his Flower of Fame 37 He describes a siege at Yester Castle which was garrisoned by a Scottish and Spanish force When they surrendered they were all pardoned except a soldier who had cursed the English leaders from the battlements It was unclear if this man was one Newton or a man called Hamilton and Lord Grey of Wilton made these suspects fight a duel in the market place of Haddington Newton won the duel killing Hamilton and was freed even though the English soldiers recognised his voice Fulwell describes various events of the siege of Haddington and says that the cannnon that nearly injured Mary of Guise at the nunnery was called roaring meg Fulwell composed a verse naming the English captains 38 Footnotes edit Marcus Merriman Rough Wooing An Historical Atlas of Scotland Scottish Medievalists 1975 p 84 Jean de Beague History of the Campaigns in 1548 and 1549 1707 p 38 Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland vol 9 Edinburgh 1911 pp 150 151 153 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 111 2 no 228 30 Edmund Lodge Illustrations of British History vol 1 London 1791 pp 124 5 Marcus Merriman Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 pp 313 314 Richard Maitland History of the House of Seytoun Glasgow 1829 p 42 Marcus Merriman History of the King s Works vol 4 part 2 London 1982 718 719 Marcus Merriman Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 p 316 Germain Lefevre Pontalis Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve Paris 1888 pp 366 376 Marcus Merriman 1982 719 721 Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve 52 366 376 CSP Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 117 118 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 p 127 no 259 CSP Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 131 3 nos 265 269 John Graham Dalyell Annals of Scotland From the Yeir 1514 to the Yeir 1591 by George Marioreybanks Edinburgh 1814 p 12 Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland vol 9 Edinburgh 1911 216 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 136 Cameron Annie Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine Edinburgh 1927 pp 248 250 Grafton s Chronicle A Chronicle at Large 1569 vol 2 London 1809 p 505 Joseph Bain Hamilton Papers vol 2 Edinburgh 1890 pp 747 8 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 p 139 nos 281 3 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 p 140 no 284 Martin Sharp Hume Chronicle of King Henry VIII George Bell London 1889 pp 203 206 Germain Lefevre Pontalis Correspondance politique de Odet de Selve Paris 1888 p 408 Joseph Bain Hamilton Papers vol 2 Edinburgh 1892 pp 603 616 7 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 135 137 139 Joseph Bain Hamilton Papers vol 2 London 1892 p 603 no 445 Calendar of State Papers Spain vol 9 London 1912 569 570 Cameron Annie I ed The Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine Edinburgh 1927 245 249 251 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 150 153 4 Joseph Bain Hamilton Papers vol 2 London 1892 p 616 no 453 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 p 162 no 321 Merriman Marcus Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 p 321 W K Jordan The Chronicle and Political Papers of Edward VI George Unwin amp Allen 1966 p 10 Teulet A Relations politiques de la France et de l Espagne avec l Ecosse au XVIe siecle vol 1 1862 230 also in John Knox History of the Reformation Bk 2 Marcus Merriman The Rough Wooing Tuckwell 2000 p 321 Knox John History of the Reformation book 1 e g Lennox Cuthbert ed 1905 105 107 Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 165 166 Merriman Marcus The Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 344 345 Marcus Merriman The Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 p 368 Reprinted in Thomas Park Supplement to the Harleian Miscellany London 1812 pp 368 374 Text from Oxford Text PartnershipSources editFullwell Ulpian The Flower of Fame with a discourse of the worthie service that was done at Haddington in Scotlande the second yere of the raigne of King Edward the Sixe William Hoskins London 1575 49r 59r Merriman Marcus H The History of the King s Works vol 4 1982 ed H M Colvin part iv The Scottish Border 607 726 Merriman Marcus H The Rough Wooings Tuckwell 2000 Phillips Gervase The Anglo Scots Wars Woodbridge 1999 Phillips Gervase In the Shadow of Flodden Scottish military tactics 1513 1550 Scottish Historical Review 77 1998 162 182 External links editThe Siege of Haddington 1548 49 Research Project supported by Haddington s History Society Chris Upton The Story of Scotland s Longest Siege Historic Environment Scotland British Library Hamilton Papers Add MS 32657 ff 4 6 Letter from Sir James Wilsford Governor of Haddington to Grey of Wilton 2 July 1548 in cipher with decipher document55 57 18 N 2 46 55 W 55 955 N 2 782 W 55 955 2 782 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siege of Haddington amp oldid 1185943164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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