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James I, King of England

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James I, King of EnglandBritish, 1566 - 1625

James I, King of England (British king, 1566-1625)

Note: Only son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and her second husband, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley. King of Scotland (as James VI) from 1567 to 1625 and first Stuart king of England as James I from 1603 to 1625; he called himself “king of Great Britain.”

reign: from 1603 England (United Kingdom) (country)

reign: from 1567 Scotland (United Kingdom) (country)

LC name authority rec. n80035841

LC Heading: James I, King of England, 1566-1625

Biography:

James VI and I (1566–1625), king of Scotland, England, and Ireland, was born at Edinburgh Castle on 19 June 1566, the only son of Mary, queen of Scots (1542–1587), and her second husband, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley (1545/6–1567).

Baptism and coronation

James's birth occurred three months after the conspiracy which led to the savage murder in Mary's presence of her Italian favourite David Riccio, which she chose to believe was aimed at her own life, and that of her unborn son. She was wrong about that; no one was stupid enough to endanger the succession. But it produced the final breakdown of her marriage to the witless drunkard Darnley. Although she was careful to proclaim the child's legitimacy publicly, in the summer and autumn of 1566 she distanced herself further from his father. The last semblance of normality in a deepening political crisis was James's magnificent baptism in the Chapel Royal of Stirling Castle on 17 December, a brilliant court spectacle which showed that in at least one area of monarchy Mary did have considerable skill; but even this was marred by Darnley's highly embarrassing refusal to attend, despite being resident in the castle. Apparently when James was one day old the general assembly of the kirk had sent John Spottiswoode, superintendent of Lothian, to congratulate the queen on the birth and request a protestant baptism for the infant. Given James to hold, Spottiswoode had prayed over him, and asked him to say ‘amen’; some kind of gurgling sound from the tactful child seems to have satisfied the godly minister. However, James was baptized a Catholic, with the names Charles James—the first name after his godfather Charles IX, king of France, the second the traditional name of Stewart kings. It showed the greater importance his mother attached to the French than the Scottish monarchy, as did her adoption of the Frenchified version of the family name, Stuart. No one, it appears, agreed with her; it was by the Scottish name James that he was always called.

After the baptism there was no normality. On 14 January 1567 the queen removed herself and her son from Stirling, considered too close to territory dominated by the affinity of James's ambitious grandfather, Matthew Stewart, thirteenth or fourth earl of Lennox, to the relative safety of the palace of Holyrood in Edinburgh. The ailing Darnley, persuaded to leave his father's protection, was also brought to the outskirts of the city, but was murdered at Kirk o'Field on the night of 9–10 February. In March James was taken back to Stirling under the care of his governor, John Erskine, earl of Mar; one last meeting with his mother took place there on 21 April. On 15 May she made her fatal remarriage to the man widely believed to have murdered Darnley, James Hepburn, earl of Bothwell, an act which temporarily united the political nation against her. Having surrendered to confederate lords (including Mar) on 15 June, Mary was incarcerated at Lochleven Castle on the 16th. Under duress and prostrated by a miscarriage, she signed a deed of abdication on 24 July, whereupon James became king. He was crowned as a protestant, still only thirteen months old, on 29 July at Stirling parish church.

The minority, 1567–c.1584

Although the circumstances of James's accession were unusual in Scotland, the youthfulness of the new king was not. Every monarch since 1406 had come to the throne as a minor. James VI was the third successive monarch to have acceded in infancy: his grandfather James V had been eighteen months old when he became king in 1513; his mother Mary only a week old in 1542. The Stewart kings had a lamentable habit of dying young; the political nation had to cope with the consequences, and cope remarkably well it had done. During minorities the magnates had controlled the affairs of the kingdom. An absence of any aggressive or militant foreign policy meant that war was rare and thus that the Scottish crown did not bear down heavily on its subjects with endless demands for men and money. Hence political tensions were fewer, and at the beginning of James VI's reign the Scottish localities remained autonomous, to what was by then a highly unusual degree. Ties of kinship were still fundamental, written bonds of lordship and allegiance continued to be made, and the blood feud as a force for local stability and the resolution of crime, as well as in its more literally bloody form, was still alive and flourishing.

Previous monarchs had inherited on the death of a king, but Mary remained alive to cause trouble and present a grievous political problem for a further twenty years. This was compounded by the immense problem of religious reformation, new in the minority of Mary but still evolving in that of her son. A nobility, itself divided over religion, had to find a solution to religious crisis, and following the success of the protestant party in 1559–60, increasingly had to do so in the context of a confusion of traditional foreign policy. Many of the Scottish élite became less interested in ties to the ‘auld allie’, France, as the cornerstone of that policy and began to develop at least a veneer of friendship with the ‘auld inemie’, England.

In his early years James was very much a background figure, secure in his nursery and schoolroom. The choice of his principal tutor, appointed when he was four, was obvious: George Buchanan, noted European humanist, exponent of resistance theory, and slanderer of his mother, to which attributes could be added a fair degree of sadism; beating ‘the Lord's Anointed’ was not just a matter of discipline but of satisfaction. At the end of his life the king still had nightmares about Buchanan, although by that time, with Buchanan long dead, he could also express pride in having a tutor of great academic distinction, as he did when complimented by an English courtier on his pronunciation of Latin and Greek. But his tuition was leavened by the presence of his other tutor, the much gentler Peter Young, who later accompanied James to England, and whose son Patrick Young, a leading Greek scholar, became keeper of the king's library. By 1583 James already had a substantial library, based partly on the remnants of Mary's, and partly on the books his tutors bought for him (though Buchanan was apparently too mean to contribute free copies of his own works); it was heavily classical, but also included history, political theory, theology, languages, geography, mathematics—and also, for lighter reading and for sport, romances, bows and arrows, golf clubs, and hunting gloves. Not quite, then, all work and no play, although James's daily educational routine was formidable, producing his famous remark that ‘they gar me speik Latin ar I could speik Scotis’ (G. F. Warner and J. P. Gilson, Catalogue of Western Manuscripts in the Old Royal and King's Collections, 1921, p. xxviii). It was an ordered existence, which despite all its harshness inculcated a love of learning which marked him out in later life as a phenomenon who went well beyond the norm of highly educated early modern kings. His passion for scholarship was utterly natural and deep-rooted.

That ordered existence was in stark contrast to the lack of order in the world outside. The united front against Mary in summer 1567 had dissolved by the end of the year. She escaped from Lochleven in May 1568; but her defeat by her half-brother James Stewart, earl of Moray, at Langside and her lunatic flight to England, which she apparently believed would inspire Elizabeth to restore her to her Scottish throne, left her supporters leaderless. Moray had become regent in 1567; and initially both sides appealed to Elizabeth, in two conferences, at York and Westminster in 1568–9. The astonishing outcome was that although Moray, with great reluctance, produced the casket letters—those letters written, or alleged to have been written, by Mary to Bothwell, making clear her involvement in the Darnley murder—Elizabeth pronounced that nothing had been proved prejudicial to Mary's honour. But it was Moray who went back to Scotland, with £5000 of English money. It was no doubt a realistic assessment of the Scottish political situation, even if it meant Elizabeth paying for her own ambiguity. Moray himself was assassinated in January 1570, and Scotland lurched into a slogging and low-key civil war which dragged on until 1573, when Edinburgh Castle finally fell to the king's party. By then two more of James's regents, his grandfather the earl of Lennox (elected in July 1570) and John Erskine, earl of Mar (elected in September 1571), were dead—Lennox, like Moray, by violence; the fourth regent, James Douglas, fourth earl of Morton, came to office in November 1572.

The 1570s saw rather more political stability, and a switch away from the problem of Mary to the growing division between those who favoured an episcopal reformed church and those who, led by Andrew Melville, utterly rejected any notion of royal supremacy and episcopacy, which was to live on as the major political as well as religious issue of the 1580s and 1590s. Melville himself returned from Geneva in 1574 primarily as an educational reformer, transforming the three universities. But an educational fighter can equally be a religious fighter, and that was what, by 1578, Melville had become, picking up on the strongly anti-Erastian stance of John Knox and his fellow reformers of the 1560s, and going beyond them with his championing of presbyterianism. The struggle was in its infancy under the pro-English Morton, but it was there. Morton himself lost the regency in March 1578, in a messy coup d'état led by Colin Campbell, sixth earl of Argyll, and John Stewart, fourth earl of Atholl, with the king as its figurehead, although not in his own estimation; for James, three months short of his twelfth birthday, cheerfully announced his capacity to rule, and followed this up with a spectacular entry into Edinburgh in 1579, in which God and Bacchus both featured prominently, as they would throughout King James's life. It was in September this year that his cousin Esmé Stuart came over from France, to become the king's first ‘favourite’. Elevated to the earldom of Lennox (the existing holder of the title, Robert Stewart, bishop of Caithness, having yielded to royal pressure to resign it) in 1580 and then raised to a dukedom in 1581, Lennox was loathed as a pro-French Catholic who enjoyed all too much of the king's favour.

Much has been made of James as the lonely teenager desperate for affection, and no doubt this played a part. But what we are seeing here is the start of a pattern which was repeated in the case of James's other three great favourites: George Gordon, earl of Huntly; and, in England, Robert Carr, earl of Somerset, and George Villiers, duke of Buckingham. James had asserted his kingship, not his loneliness; his authority, not his dependence. Lennox, like his successors, appeared on the scene and demonstrated his usefulness, in this case in the factional struggles surrounding the king, notably in his part in Morton's final downfall. Young though James still was, there were those who were already becoming worryingly aware that the Scottish king might well be an unpredictable force to be reckoned with. In 1578 Elizabeth had had her first unpalatable taste of James's refusal to be browbeaten by the middle-aged and experienced monarch. His response to her furious support of Morton was a letter fulsome in its phraseology, and determined in its refusal to do what she wished. He did promise the queen that the former regent would not be executed, but he did nothing to prevent that eventuality when it occurred in June 1581. It was not Lennox's supposed dominance which provoked Elizabeth's impassioned outburst against ‘that false Scots urchin’ and his double-dealing (CSP Spain, 1580–86, 207–8), nor the comments of her ambassadors Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon, and Thomas Randolph about his perspicacity, fair speeches, and talent for dissimulation, ‘wherein he is in his tender years more practised than others forty years older than he’ (CSP Scot., 1581–3, 26). No wonder. Earlier that year that Mary, queen of Scots, had once more made a bid for a return to the political limelight with her proposal for an association where she should rule Scotland as joint monarch with James. Nothing would have suited Elizabeth more than to have the scandalous and discredited queen out of England with the additional advantage of re-creating political instability in Scotland that the proposal for divided sovereignty seemed to promise. James, by contrast, saw no need for guidance from his surrogate mother of England or his real mother of Scotland; he made some personal statements of affection, and stopped decisively there. He interviewed secretly some of the Spanish agents intriguing on Mary's behalf but gave neither help nor encouragement.

There was one final desperate effort to contain James's burgeoning assertion of kingship with the Ruthven raid of 1582. On 28 August a group of hardline presbyterian nobles under William Ruthven, first earl of Gowrie, kidnapped the king and placed him under house arrest in Ruthven Castle. Lennox fled to France, where he died the following May, and for ten months power was exercised by the ‘raiders’, with the approval of Elizabeth and support from the city of Edinburgh and the general assembly of the kirk. But in June 1583 James escaped and declared his intention to be a ‘universal king’, above faction (CSP Scot., 1581–3, 523). With conservatives and moderates at his back and with James Stewart, earl of Arran, emerging as the leader of an administration committed to following an independent middle way, James then showed what that meant by turning savagely on Gowrie, who was executed on 2 May 1584. There was nothing here of his mother's inability to control those who rebelled against her nor the ditherings of Elizabeth over the execution of Thomas Howard, duke of Norfolk, after the rising of the northern earls in 1569 and even the Ridolfi plot of 1571. The circumstances of James's accession, the continuing existence of his mother, the interference by Elizabeth, the religious and political tensions within Scotland: all these had posed serious and novel threats to the prestige and authority of the Scottish crown. None seems seriously to have worried King James. The minority ended on a high note of royal confidence. Arran became chancellor on 15 May and three days later John Maitland of Thirlstane became secretary; important legislation to enhance royal power soon followed. Although Arran fell from office in November 1585 with the return from exile of some of Gowrie's supporters, much of his administration and its outlook survived.

The Scottish personal rule: money and marriage, c.1584–1603

It used to be thought that James's main problem lay in the need to restrain a nobility who for two centuries had enjoyed an unusual level of political control and was far too powerful. But even the peculiarly difficult minority of James VI did not alter the pattern of the minorities. In every case factions such as the Ruthvens grabbed control of the king's person; in every case their efforts were short-lived, and they came to grief. Moreover, the very nature of Scottish society meant that faction-fighting was largely confined to the centre, and did not spill over into the localities. In every reign there were individual aristocratic rogue elephants. James had four: William Ruthven, first earl of Gowrie; his sons John Ruthven, the third earl, and Alexander Ruthven, master of Ruthven, who had the starring parts in the mysterious Gowrie conspiracy of 1600 (see below); and the erratic and unpredictable Francis Stewart, fifth earl of Bothwell, in some ways the equivalent of the second earl of Essex in England, even to the extent of bursting in on his monarch when the latter was still undressed in the bedchamber. But what the history of the Scottish monarchy in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries shows is that strong nobles wanted strong kings with whom they could link their fortunes and from whom they could receive the rewards obtainable from the greatest patron in the land. This is evocatively manifest in the remarkable custom, which came into existence in the mid-fifteenth century in the second of the minorities, that of James II, whereby kings when they reached majority issued acts of revocation cancelling all minority grants on the ground that they should not be bound by such grants made in their name but over which they had no control. James's own view of the matter is seen in the extent of his appointments of aristocrats to major offices of state, such as John Graham, third earl of Montrose, who became chancellor in 1599, after a period as treasurer beginning in 1584.

The major problems of the reign of James VI were very different. There was a rapid development in Scottish central government. Scotland in 1603 was a very different place from the Scotland of 1580. What is open to debate, though, is how far this was inspired by as well as presided over by the king. It may be that James, with an eye to his English future, wanted a more ‘modern’, more centralized kingdom from which to launch his English kingship. But that is probably to read back too much from that endlessly misunderstood, decontextualized, and over-quoted phrase plucked from his speech to his English parliament in 1607, ‘here I sit and governe it [Scotland] with my Pen, I write and it is done’ (James VI and I: Political Writings, 173). This had some truth, in that inevitably absentee government involved government by post, but as a claim to power it would have been nonsense even if made by the most mighty of early modern kings, and it makes no sense at all as a description of how James had ruled his Scottish kingdom before 1603.

There is only one area, indeed, where James's responsibility for the change cannot be doubted: taxation. Scotland suffered as much as England would later do from his hopeless extravagance: any money James had—and it must be admitted that, given the depleted revenues of the Scottish crown, that was not much—he spent. Inevitably there was a sudden increase in expenditure as James emerged from the austere confines of the schoolroom, but the reorganization of the royal household by Lennox (who like later favourites was generously rewarded by the king) in 1580–81 entailed both a substantial increase in staff (to twenty-four gentlemen of the chamber and a guard of sixty men-at-arms) and a pursuit of recreation and pleasure that scandalized Lennox's enemies in the kirk. In the same period regular taxation was introduced into Scotland for the first time: at a meeting of the convention of estates in February 1581 it was resolved that £40,000 Scots be raised for the country's defence. Years of political instability were in themselves expensive, but also encouraged a hand-to-mouth attitude to running the royal household which was inimical to prudent budgeting. Once stability came the attitude proved difficult to shed and new financial commitments appeared which easily swallowed up the annual pension of £4000 advanced by Elizabeth from 1586. A royal marriage promised a useful dowry but provided the occasion for conspicuous expenditure in the short and longer term.

The idea of a Danish match for James was being discussed from 1581, and a series of negotiations took place between 1585 and 1589. Another possibility, introduced in 1587, was Henri of Navarre's sister Catherine de Bourbon, but the future Henri IV wanted military support in his struggle for the French throne, which James could not or would not give, especially as Henri could not afford a generous dowry. The better choice remained a daughter of the Danish king Frederick II, and James married his younger daughter Anne (Anna) of Denmark (1574–1619)—with a more acceptable dowry, if one cut down from the outrageous Scottish demand for £1 million Scots to £150,000 Scots. However, this was counterbalanced by the £100,000 Scots levied within Scotland to pay for attendant festivities. With a dash of real romance, James emulated his grandfather James V, who had had a splendid nine-month holiday in France when claiming his bride, François I's daughter Madeleine. When storms prevented Anne coming to Scotland in 1589 following her proxy marriage to him on 20 August, he sailed to Oslo, and had an equally enjoyable if rather shorter holiday, between November 1589 and April 1590, celebrating the marriage ceremony in church on 23 November, travelling about, having intellectual discussions with leading Scandinavian theologians and scientists, and falling in love with his new wife.

Fifteen-year-old Anna, as she was known in Scotland, received a gilded welcome in her new country and a splendid coronation at Holyrood Abbey on 17 May 1590. Subsequently her developed artistic, dramatic, and musical tastes and her dynastic success—five royal children born in Scotland, of whom two sons and a daughter survived to accompany their parents to England—contributed to continuing high expenditure. The baptism of Prince Henry Frederick (1594–1612) was celebrated with banquets, masques, and tilts and occasioned a levy of £100,000 Scots (an increase of 800 per cent on that levied for James's own baptism). The prince's removal from his mother and placing in the care of the earl of Mar, though well precedented, set a pattern of parallel royal households as well as causing unfortunate friction between Anne and James. His younger sister Elizabeth (1596–1662) and younger brother Charles (1600–1649) were also fostered.

Attempts to increase income met with limited success. Debasement of the coinage between 1583 and 1596 through reduction of its silver content produced a paper profit but exacerbated the inflation which depressed the real income of all European rulers at this period. Improved customs revenues and more efficient collection of fines constituted a drop in the ocean. Various efforts were made by harassed royal officials to control the king and thus address expenditure. Thus in December 1591 the response to his bad-tempered suggestion that his exchequer officials had more care for themselves than for his interests produced by return of post six furious pages in which his shortcomings were clearly laid out. Their fury was entirely understandable: as they complained, for example, the answer to James's naïve question about whether the royal palace of Linlithgow was his wife's or the lord justice clerk's was that thanks to his muddling it was both. A gentler, but equally ineffective, attempt was made in 1596. In a carefully stage-managed piece of play acting his queen (not a lightweight, as traditionally viewed, but a significant player in the factional politics of the decade) presented him with a bag of gold coins at new year. Asked by an astonished king how she had amassed it, she explained that it was a matter of careful household management. James promptly took over her household officials, the eight Octavians. They lasted for less than a year. As the earl of Salisbury and Lionel Cranfield later found, the king had periods of genuine good intentions, but they did not last, caught as he was between the necessity of fiscal control and the demands made on his patronage, for stinginess was a notably unacceptable royal attribute. Hence his request for regular subsidies. The effect was that the government was now pressing on the governed in a new way, and was thus beginning to alter the traditional relationship between centre and locality.

The Scottish personal rule: administration and parliament, c.1584–1603

Beyond this, however, factors other than King James were creating the pressures transforming Scottish central government. One such pressure came from the increasingly literate and ambitious lairds, with their demands for place in court and government, made all the more compelling when the kirk in 1584 pulled its ministers firmly out of state service. The demand was not new. One of James's greatest officials from the lay élite was John Maitland of Thirlestane, secretary and then chancellor, son of Richard Maitland of Lethington, poet and keeper of the privy seal, and brother of Mary's brilliant secretary William Maitland of Lethington. It was a family which can be likened to the Cecils in England, moving in from its local base to make its fortune in crown service, and being rewarded by a peerage and a new level of prestige back in the locality. The Maitlands, Alexander Seton of Fyvie, George Home of Spott, Thomas Hamilton of Binning: these and others like them became prominent in the king's government before 1603, and after 1603 found that James's removal to England meant that an aristocratically minded king now raised them to the peerage, giving them the dignity and status in the political nation traditionally associated with the landed aristocracy, and in effect creating a noblesse de robe which would govern Scotland in his name. Yet the king's attitude to such a change was not entirely clear-cut. Thus after the death of Maitland on 3 October 1595 he removed himself firmly from his capital, going off to Linlithgow to escape the demands of the ‘faccaneres’ or ‘faccioners’ at court (CSP Scot., 12.6), with their intriguing and their incessant fascination with the subject of Maitland's successor; and at the same time he was deeply concerned that the death of the earl of Atholl without heirs would leave Perthshire without its natural means of control. This was a highly traditional view of how power in the Scottish state should work. And his solution to the pressure of the factionists, which was to keep the office of chancellor vacant until January 1599, hardly suggests a king primarily interested in the institutional workings of central government. It was, after all, not so much the monarch as his new nobles and the rising breed of professional lawyers whose view of the kingdom of Scotland no longer regarded as acceptable the bonds of lordship and service—maintenance and manrent—and the justice of the feud, in relation either to their Scottish aspirations or, after 1603, to their involvement with James's new kingdom of England which had long rejected both.

Equally the major institutions of government in state and church, parliament and the new and formidable national court of the kirk, the general assembly, forced on the crown a degree of management never before necessary. Scottish parliaments had always been vocal and often highly critical. However, James had to deal with protestants who might be of varying persuasions, but who could all remember the heady days of 1560, when the Reformation Parliament, acting in defiance of the Catholic monarch, brought down the old church. This memory was all the more menacing because of the parliament's astonishing ability to concentrate on the essentials. By contrast with the seven years and numerous acts of Henry VIII's Reformation Parliament, its Scottish equivalent took three weeks and three acts to achieve its aims, leaving the details to be filled in later. As James was later to say, understandably, English parliaments were too long, Scottish parliaments too short. But he undoubtedly understood the significance of the institution. The idea that James I did not know how to manage parliaments makes very little sense when James VI's record is considered. He had one considerable advantage. The Scottish parliament, like European national assemblies, was a joint meeting of the three estates, and the king could be present in person. Moreover, the detailed work on legislation was done by the lords of the articles, an elected committee from the representatives of the three estates. The full parliament assembled and elected the lords of the articles, who settled down to the donkey work; and then the full parliament returned. It used to be thought that this made the Scottish parliament an easy body to manipulate. This is not a mistake which King James ever made; the intrusion of the officers of state as a fourth ‘estate’, begun in 1567 and increasingly imposed by the king, was a deliberate attempt to impose control, however difficult to sustain in the face of parliamentary criticism and efforts at curtailment. Moreover, the disappearance of the clerical estate, with the de facto disappearance of the episcopate between 1592 and 1600, denied the crown much-needed allies in the face of parliamentary support for presbyterian activists within the kirk.

Hence the 1580s and 1590s saw a series of acts which sought to strengthen royal control. The Reformation Parliament of 1560 had seen an unprecedented rush of over 100 lairds to attend, claiming their right under the wholly moribund Shire Election Act of 1428. After 1560 the unchallenged presence of such lairds who chose to turn up, in unpredictable numbers, was an unacceptable headache for the government; and in 1587 the Shire Election Act was duly re-enacted. In 1594 there was a determined onslaught on parliamentary business. Four members of each estate were to meet twenty days before parliament assembled, to receive articles and supplications and sift out frivolous material; only the king was exempt from the twenty-days rule. A long day's work was imposed on them in time of parliament; they were to sit each day from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. And in the same year, according to the highly critical presbyterian minister David Calderwood, the king asserted his right to vote with the articles. Moreover, while James might casually leave the office of chancellor vacant in the mid-1590s, he had already empowered the chancellor in 1584 to use the sceptre for the ratification of acts, a measure which would have its full relevance after 1603.

Yet this was by no means the whole story. Another indication of James's high sense of his own kingship as early as 1581, when he was fifteen, is that it was in this year that parliament passed his first, admittedly limited, revocations and followed this up with another limited act in 1584; the full general act came in 1587, when he was twenty-one. The 1584 parliament thundered out its endorsement of the king's authority over church and state, and its condemnation of slanderers of the king and—significantly—his parents and progenitors, and specifically attacked the offensive works of Buchanan. At the same time this future divine-right monarch, who was to tantalize and infuriate his English parliament on the subject of king or king-in-parliament as law maker, cheerfully underwrote ‘the lawis and actis of parliament (be quhilkis all men ar governit)’ (APS, 3.293). And in 1587 the king further emphasized the importance and dignity of parliament, in the acts which laid out the rules for the ‘riding of parliament’ from the palace of Holyroodhouse to the parliament house, and empowered James to design the appropriate robes for each estate. It is not to deny the tensions within the Scottish kingdom to say that, while the records of parliament make them all too clear, they also reflect a certain appealing rumbustiousness with which the king was undoubtedly relaxed, cheerful, and at ease because he was in control without having to assert his royalty too aggressively.

The king and the kirk

Rumbustiousness is not, on the other hand, the most notable feature of James's dealings with his kirk, and in particular with its mos

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