Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany

Alexander
Duke of Albany
Successor John Stewart
Born c.1454
Died 7 August 1485(1485-08-07)
Paris
Spouse Lady Katherine Sinclair
Anne de la Tour d'Auvergne
Issue Alexander, Bishop of Moray
Andrew Stewart
John, Duke of Albany
Maud Stewart
Margaret Stewart (illegitimate)
House House of Stewart
Father James II of Scotland
Mother Mary of Guelders

Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany (c.1454  7 August 1485), was the second surviving son of King James II of Scotland and his wife, Mary of Gueldres.

Rise

Created Duke of Albany before 1458, Alexander also received the earldom of March, and lordships of Annandale and the Isle of Man. In 1460 he travelled to the continent, and to Guelders, the land of his maternal family. On his return in 1464 he was captured by the English.[1] He was soon released, and as he matured began to take part in the government and defence of Scotland, being appointed in quick succession Lord High Admiral of Scotland and Warden of the Marches. Some of his actions on the marches aroused suspicion, suggesting sharp practice and a policy of border violence and truce breaking against England that contravened James III's 1474 marriage alliance.[2]

Struggle with brother

In 1479, the seat of Albany's earldom of March was seized, although accounts of his imprisonment in Edinburgh Castle at this time appear to be misdated.[2] Albany fled by sea to Paris where in September 1479 he was welcomed by King Louis XI, and received royal favour by his marriage to Anne de la Tour. Louis, however, would not assist him to attack his brother the king, and crossing to England he made a treaty with King Edward IV at Fotheringhay in June 1482.[2]

By the Treaty of Fotheringhay, Albany promised to hold Scotland under English suzerainty in return for Edward's assistance[3] and to deliver the southern shires into English possession. With the Duke of Gloucester, afterwards King Richard III, he marched at the head of one of the largest English armies to be assembled after the Wars of Independence—20,000 men—to Berwick, which was seized (the last time it would change hands between England and Scotland) and then, with a smaller force, to Edinburgh.[2] Meanwhile James III was seized at Lauder Bridge as he marched to face the invasion, and was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle. It has been suggested that there was a conspiracy between Albany and a group of magnates who had been excluded from power in the 1470s, including the king's Stewart half-uncles, the earls of Atholl, Buchan and the bishop-elect of Moray, although evidence is limited.[2] Gloucester, meanwhile, seems to have been satisfied with the seizure of Berwick, and quit Edinburgh on 11 August. At that point the 'Lauder Lords' in Edinburgh Castle emerged and began working with Albany to form a new government. By early October Albany was acting lieutenant-general of the realm, had taken the earldom of Mar, and had re-acquired his former lands and offices.[2]

Albany's adoption of the earldom of Mar seems to have angered George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntly, one of the most powerful magnates in the country, who had designs on the earldom himself and came to the parliament of December 1482, at which Albany had hoped to have his lieutenant-generalship confirmed. The king meanwhile managed to persuade a number of the 'Lauder Lords' to return to loyalty to him, most notably John Stewart, Lord Darnley, keeper of Edinburgh Castle, Atholl and the Bishop of Dunkeld. Subsequently the parliament passed a number of mutually contradictory acts, and Albany fled to Dunbar between Christmas and the new year. On 2 January 1483 Albany made an abortive second attempt to seize the king. Edward IV promised the duke further aid on 11 February, and on 19 March he managed to force the king into a humiliating indenture.[2] With the death of Edward IV on 9 April 1483 Albany lost his main source of power and shortly thereafter he fled south, letting an English garrison into Dunbar Castle as he went.[2]

Last years and death

In July 1484, Albany once again invaded Scotland, this time with a small force with the long-exiled James Douglas, 9th Earl of Douglas. The Battle of Lochmaben ensued, where the invasion was defeated, Douglas was captured, while Albany fled south again. The invasion had no support from Richard III, and failed to find any Scottish support in the former estates of Albany and Douglas.[2] The author of Albany's most recent biography claims that there may have been a further attempt to return to Scotland in 1485. The persistent story of Albany's escape from Edinburgh castle, usually misdated to 1479 or 1482/3 by chroniclers, instead is claimed to have occurred in 1485. Certainly Albany's closest ally and fellow exile James Liddale of Halkerston is found imprisoned awaiting execution at this time, suggesting he had returned to Scotland with Albany, and a chronicle account that claims Albany killed the 'laird of Manerston' (a minor but trusted royal official) may be confirmed by Manerston's death before 14 October 1485. Albany fled for the last time, again to France, where he was killed shortly afterwards in a joust in Paris, allegedly by a splinter entering his eye. He was buried near the high altar in the Celestine church.[4][5]

Family and children

Albany's first wife was Lady Katherine, daughter of William Sinclair, 3rd Earl of Orkney, who bore him three sons and a daughter. This marriage was dissolved in 1478, and its issue was regarded as illegitimate.[3] Their children included:

In 1480, Albany married Anne de la Tour d'Auvergne, daughter of Bertrand VI, Count of Auvergne and of Boulogne and his wife Louise (daughter of Georges de la Trémoille). They had a son, John (1484–1536), who succeeded as Duke of Albany, and married Anne's niece, also Anne de La Tour d'Auvergne. They also had a daughter, Maud Stewart, who died young.

Albany reportedly had another daughter, Margaret Catherine Stewart, who was not born to either of his wives and was presumably illegitimate. She married Sir Patrick Hamilton of Kincavil (died 30 April 1520).

Ancestors

Further reading

1. Norman Macdougall, James III: A Political Study (Edinburgh, 1982).

2. Roland Tanner, The Late Medieval Scottish Parliament: Politics and the Three Estates 1424–1488 (East Linton, 2000).

References

  1. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography [ODNB], R. J. Tanner, "Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany"
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ODNB loc. cit
  3. 1 2 "Albany, Dukes of". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 488.
  4. Penin, Marie-Christine. "Couvent des Celestins de Paris". Tombes et Sepultures dans les cimetieres et autres lieux. Retrieved 4 December 2015., at Stuart Alexandre, duc d'Albany, and citing 'Antiquités nationales ou Monumens (sic) pour servir à l'Histoire générale et particilière... par Aubin-Louis Millin (1790)' and 'Epitaphier du vieux Paris - Tome II'. These sources were not seen or at least cited by any recent English biography of Albany, and the sources for Albany's death and burial were all secondary.
  5. Millin, Aubin-Louis (1790). ANTIQUITÉS NATIONALES, o u RECUEIL DE MONUMENS servir à l'Histoire générale et particulière de l'Empire François, vol. I. Chapter III. p. 132. Retrieved 4 December 2015. This source from 1790 is at least a source close to the time when the church was still standing, and is an exhaustive account of the burials in important French churches before the Revolution.
Military offices
Preceded by
David Lindsay
Lord High Admiral of Scotland
1482–1485
Succeeded by
Patrick Hepburn
Peerage of Scotland
New creation Duke of Albany
2nd creation
bef. 1458–1485
Succeeded by
John Stewart
Earl of March
2nd creation
1455–1485
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