James IV Duke of Mar STUART, KING OF SCOTLAND HRH
Killed in the Battle at Flodden, Northumberland, on September 9, 1513 at the age of 40, having reigned 25 years. A disfigured body was displayed by the English victors, but not acknowledged by the Scots as that of their King. The body was wrapped in lead and taken south. King James IV died when he was under sentence of excommunication by the Pope for having broken a treaty of peace with King Henry VIII. Henry vainly tried to get a dispensation from the Pope to bury the body, and it was left in its lead sheath above ground at the monastery at Sheen, Richmond, Surrey. Much later the head was said to have been taken home by probing workman on the palace maintainance staff of Queen Elizabeth, and its red hair and beard were still visible. It was later buried with other bones taken from the harnel house of 'Great Saint Michael's' - the Church of Saint Michael, Wood Street, City of London. The antiquarian Stow saw the lead-wrapped body before its decapitation. Over an unnerving period of 134 years in Scottish history the throne was taken successively by minors. The youngest, Mary, was seven days old. The oldest, James IV, was 15 years of age but was already accustomed to intrigue, having been brought by the rebel lords to confront his father three times, ending in the fatal battle of Sauchieburn. James developed as a competent,v but rash king, imposing order with some energy on the Western Isles and Western Highlanders, but showing misjudgement in his policy towards England. He was duped by Perkin Warback, the young man who said he was a survivor of the assumed murder to the Princes in the Tower, and therefore King of England. James not only received him royally, subsidized him and married him to a kinswoman, but personally invaded England at Warbeck's side. Henry VII, preferring marriage-broking to war, tried to buy off James with the hand of his daughter Margaret. As a pageant, it was Scotland's grandest marriage, but it brought no lasting peace. James invaded England again, while Henry VIII was campaigning in France and winning the bloodless victory of the Battle of the Spurs. In a curious parallel to the almost simultaneous battles of Crecy and Neville's Cross in 1346, the Scottish leadership was virtually annihilated amid the unprecedented slaughter of the total defeat at Flodden on September 9, 1513. Under James IV, Scotland was very progressive. Major changes were taking place in Europe, including the end of the feudal system. James wanted his realm to take its proper place in the new world. James gave to the Scottish realm the effective power which made it a new monarchy. His reign was an expression of his own personality and its achievements were largely due to his own vigor and ability. Another university ,the third, was founded at Aberdeen, the printing press came to Scotland, architecture flourished with the remodeling of palaces at Falkirk and Stirling Castle. A navy was established and James felt great pride for the Great Michael, the largest warship ever to have been built in Scotland. He was a true prince of the Renaissance in developing the military power of his country. The people were instructed to practice archery insteadof golf and football. James was a learned man with many interests, which included sports, clothes, music, hunting, the arts, and architecture. James granted the barbers and physicians the right to form a guild and the sole right to sell whiskey which was a medicine. Each year the guild was also given the corpse of a hanged criminal in order to learn more about human anatomy. James was interested in surgery and himself extracted a tooth, set a broken leg, bled a patient. He was even interested in alchemy and financed an adventurer who thought he could find out how to produce gold. It was reported to the King of Spain that James is exceptionally clever, and can speak Latin, French, German, Flemish, Italian and the barbarian Gaelic, the native tongue of nearly all his subjects. He knows the Bible well and is conversant with most subjects. He is a good historian and reads Latin and French history, committing much to memory. He does not cut his hair or his beard. He is devout and says all his prayers. He maintains that the oath of a king should be his royal word, as was the case in bygone times. He is active and works hard, when he is not at war he hunts in the mountains. He is courageous and I have seen him undertake most dangerous things in the last wars. On such occasions he does not take the least care of himself. His Majesty King James IV will always be known for the Battle of Flodden. Flodden was a disastrous and unnecessary confrontation for Scotland. James IV of Scotland was married to the sister of England's King Henry VIII and a treaty of friendship existed between their countries. The auld alliance between Scotland and France had been recently renewed. There had been English attacks made upon Scottish ships at the time when Henry VIII, on behalf of the papacy, invaded France. James IV declared war immediately, with nothing to gain and ties to both England and France that their war neutralised. With the whole nation behind him, James amassed twenty thousand men with ease, both Highlanders and Lowlanders. His fleet set sail and his army crossed the border into Northumberland with the intention of drawing upon England's numbers in France. Norham Castle was among the places captured before confronting the English defenders, led by the Earl of Surrey and his son, west of the River Till, near Branxton, on 9 September. The Scots took the advantageous high ground. With slightly fewer numbers but superior equipment and artillery, the English moved around the Scots on their west and opened with cannon fire. They struck their target with great success, which the Scots could not match. James dropped strategic tactics and ordered all to attack. Initially gaining the upper hand, the Scots were again thwarted by England's superior equipment, the long halberd with its axe, hook and spike bloodier than the spear in hand-to-hand conflict. English losses were heavy but the dead Scots numbered between five and ten thousand. It is said that the slaughter struck every farm and household throughout lowland Scotland. There was an unusually high number of aristocracy who came down into combat that day and among the slain were dozens of lords and lairds, at least ten Earls, some Abbots, an archbishop and the body of the King himself.
Married: 8 AUG 1503 in Holyrood House, Edinburgh, Scotland Note: Married at Holyrood on August 8, 1503, when he was 30 and she was 14, Margaret Tudor, eldest daughter of King Henry VII of England. She survived him, and in 1514 married Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus, whom she divorced in 1526. But her daughter Margaret, born of this union, was the mother of Lord Darnley and grandmother of King James VI and I, making James the direct descendant of Henry VII through both his father and mother. In 1526 Margaret married Henry Stewart, Lord Methven. She died in 1541.
Reigned from 1513 to 1542. Source includes, but is not limited to; Bloodline of The Holy Grail, Descent to Charles Edward Stuart,Mary, Queen of Scots Lineage, by Laurence Gardner (1996). Page 444. Element BooksLtd. ISBN 1-85230-870-2. After James IV died at Flodden, his son, James V, was just 17 months old when he was crowned. By the Will of James IV, his wife, Margaret Tudor was to be the Regent so long as she remained unwed. Margaret had remarried in 1514 to Archibald Douglas, the 6th Earl of Angus. Angus took control over the boy king and the realm until James V was old enough to run him out of Scotland. He was an oppressive man and not loved by James V. The Scottish nobles gave the governorship to John Stuart, the Duke of Albany who had traveled from France. He was very much opposed by Margaret Tudor. However, to his credit he made no effort to supplant young James V and tried to preserve order. He expelled Margaret Tudor who could no longer be considered Regent since she had remarried. When he returned to France in 1522, Henry VIII sent troops to burn and plunder the Borders. Albany returned with French troops and drove the English out but returned again to France and fighting broke out among the Scottish nobles. James IV's mother, his step-father, the Duke of Albany, and finally a group of nobles ruled Scotland for him. He was virtually a prisoner of his step-father until he was 14 years old. The Douglases used their power for personal profit for themselves and their friends and kept James V at Falkland Palace until he finally escaped and rode all night, disguised as a groom, to Stirling Castle. Thus, at age 17 he began his rule. The first thing he did as king was to avenge himself against the Douglases for his confinement. He confiscated their lands, took away all their powers, and declared them to be outlaws. He executed the Master of Forbes, a brother-in-law of Angus, and burned his sister, Lady Glamis, on the Castle Hill of Edinburgh on a charge of witchcraft. He was then ready to gain control over his kingdom. As a note of interest, his mother and the Earl of Angus had a child, named Margaret. Lord Darnley was the son of this Margaret. James V's mother, Margaret, divorced Angus in 1526 and married Henry Stuart (Lord Methven). James started with the Borders, where once again there was conflict, along with the Highlands and the Western Isles. The Armstrongs were a powerful Border clan who had burned many (52) churches in Scotland and plundered wealth from English nobles who lived south of the Borders. James V was determined to make an example of the Armstrongs and their lawlessness and led an army of men to conquer them. He put to death all the Armstrongs who had rebelled against him. He executed reivers whose fates are immortalized in the Border Ballads and imprisoned, although only for a time, Bothwell, Home, Maxwell and Johnston. Next came the Highlands where he executed more troublesome cla leaders. He restored order by doing this and by befriending the rest of the chiefs, but he had alienated some of his best fighting men. The Court of Sessions in Edinburgh was established by James V. This has endured as the seat of Scottish law to the present day. The Council and Session had already existed, but he reorganized the court. He made it more effective by using professional judges, who were properly paid. James V was suspicious of the nobility but had much sympathy for his subjects. Sometimes he went about among the people incognito, which his daughter adopted but with less success. He was sometimes called the poor man's king because he would travel the countryside disguised as a poor farmer. The people were grateful for his restoring peace to the land. He had ability and personal charm but he was fortunate. He had the unhesitating support of the Church. The Church, fearful that James would follow the example of his uncle, Henry, for Reformation, denied him nothing. His was fortunate in foreign affairs also. England and France were allied for a while because France needed English help and Henry needed French support for his divorce of Catherine of Aragon. Thus, because of Scotland's alliance with France, James V was courted by both countries (for atime). He was sought after for marriage alliances. He almost married Catherine de Medici by arrangements obtained through Albany but this didn't come about. He went to France to marry Marie de Bourbon, but found after he arrived that he preferred Madeleine, the third daughter of the French King. They were married at Notre Dame with great ceremony. Unfortunately, she died within six months of the marriage of what could possibly have been tuberculosis. She was well like in Scotland, having knelt upon her arrival and kissed Scottish soil, and upon her death, public mourning was worn in Scotland for the first time. A year after her death, he married his second wife, Mary of Guise, the mother of Mary Queen of Scots. This was a second marriage for Mary of Guise, and by choosing her, James declared his alliance to France and not to England. Henry the VIII was furious because Mary had been on his list of women. Lucky for her that she married James first before Henry VIII could command a marriage to him. A story is told that Henry VIII declared that he was big in person and needed a big wife. Mary cannily replied that through her stature was large, her neck was little. James and Mary of Guise had two sons but they died in infancy before Mary, Queen of Scot's birth at Linlithgow Palace. James V supported France against Henry VIII. Protestant England and Catholic Scotland fought at the battle of Solway Moss in 1542. The news that his army had been defeated destroyed the health of the king. His daughter, Mary, was born a week before his death. The king said, It came with a lass (Marjorie Bruce), it will pass with a lass. James was gifted in many ways, but he lacked persistence and calculation to be a great King. When he was on a prosperous course, he did well, but when things turned against him, he did not hold up. His death presented Henry VIII with an opportunity which he had long sought. The baby girl who was now the ruler of Scotland had for her nearest male kinsman the King of England (her great-uncle). He had a son of marriageable age and the little Queen was betrothed to the Prince of Wales. History had repeated itself. On the death of Alexander III, the nearest male kinsman of the Maid of Norway had been Edward I, Longshanks, who had a marriageable son and who knew how to exploit such a situation. Henry overplayed his hand acting as if he were already king of Scotland. The Scottish reaction was prompt. The Scottish Parliament denounced a treaty with England (the Greenwich Treaties). Henry then loosed his troops upon Scotland with instructions to kill, burn and spoil. English aggression thus drove Scotland to ally with France once again.
He married Margaret Tudor 8 Aug 1503 at Holyrood House, Edinburgh, Scotland . Margaret Tudor was born at Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England 29 Nov 1489 daughter of Henry VII King of England Tudor, King of England and Elizabeth York Plantagenet, Queen of EnglandHRH .
They were the parents of 4
children:
Margaret Jane Jean Stuart, Princess of Scotland Hrh
born 1497.
V James V of Scots Stuart, King of Scotland Hrh
born 10 Apr 1512.
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James IV Duke of Mar Stuart, King of Scotland Hrh died 9 Sep 1513 at Battle of Flodden, Northumberland, England .
Margaret Tudor died 24 Nov 1541 at Methven Castle, Perthshire, Scotland .