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Archibald the Grim - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Archibald the Grim

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Archibald Douglas
Lord of Galloway
Earl of Douglas

Seal of Archibald Douglas
Titles Earl of Wigtown
Lord of Bothwell
Born 1328
Birthplace Scotland
Died 1400
Place of death Threave Castle
Buried Bothwell
Predecessor James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas
Successor Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas
Issue Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas
James Douglas, 7th Earl of Douglas
Marjorie Douglas
Helen Douglas
Sir William Douglas of Nithsdale (illegitimate)
Dynasty Douglas
Father Sir James Douglas
Mother unknown

Archibald the Grim also known as Blak (Black) Archibald (c. 1328-1400), Earl of Douglas, Earl of Wigtown, Lord of Douglas, Lord of Bothwell and Lord of Galloway was a Scottish nobleman.

Archibald the Grim was a bastard son by an unknown mother of Sir James Douglas, Robert I's trusted deputy.

A cousin of William Douglas, 1st Earl of Douglas, he inherited the earldom of Douglas and its entailed estates as the third earl following the death without issue of James 2nd Earl of Douglas at the Battle of Otterburn.

Contents

[edit] Early life

He was an infant when his father went on his crusade and was killed at the Battle of Teba whilst fighting the Moors. According to Walter Bower, "He was dark and ugly more like a coco [cook-boy] than a Noble". It has been suggested that the young Archibald spent time with his cousin William at the court in exile of King David II at Château-Gaillard in Normandy.[1] From the cousins time there it can be inferred that they viewed themselves as much French as Scots, and it was only natural for them to take service with the French King.[2] This was in keeping with the spirit of the Auld Alliance.

[edit] Battle of Poitiers

Battle of Poitiers
Battle of Poitiers

Archibald's first major appearance in history is recorded in 1356 at the Battle of Poitiers where he was captured by the English. Douglas had accompanied his cousin William, 1st Earl of Douglas to serve King John II of France in his wars against the Black Prince. Edward III of England had concluded truce negotiations with the Scots lasting from the 25th March until Michaelmas, following the Burnt Candlemas of the 2nd of February. During the truce, Earl William had secured safe passage to travel to Château-Gaillard to visit David II; amongst his entourage was the 28 year old Archibald.[3] Once in France, in the chivalric spirit of the age the Douglases joined the French army, to prevent their harnesses rusting through inactivity.[4]

The Battle was a disastrous defeat for the French. It was suggested by Froissart that part of the blame lies with Earl William, for his suggestion to the French King that his Knights dismount and fight on foot.[5] Whatever the causes King John was captured along with many noblemen, amongst whom was Black Archibald. Earl William evaded capture.

Archibald's armour and harness was of fine construction and he was thought to be a valuable prisoner by his captors.

[edit] Escape

His escape from English hands was occasioned by one Sir William Ramsay of Colluthie, also a detainee. In the presence of one of the guards, Ramsay pretended to be furious with Archibald and accused him of the theft of his cousin's armour. Furthermore he stated that his cousin had been felled by an English arrow and had died as a result of his lack of protection. Ramsay than insisted that Archibald take off his boots. Archibald concurred and by the time he had removed one, Ramsay started beating him around the head with it. One of the guards intervened to stop Ramsay, insisting that Archibald was the son of a great Noble and should be respected. Ramsay retorted "Not he, I tell you, he is a scullion and a rogue", then to Archibald, "Go you rascal, and seek your master's body amongst the slain, so that we may at least give him a decent burial". Ramsay paid the fee of 40 shillings, the ransomable rate of an esquire. Ramsay cuffed Archibald round the head once more and bade him begone. Archibald made his way back to Scotland, and deprived the Black Prince's army of what would have been a considerable ransom.[6]

[edit] Rise to prominence

Bothwell Castle
Bothwell Castle

Black Archibald was appointed Constable of Edinburgh Castle in 1361, which along with the office of Sheriff of Edinburgh, he held until 1364. In that year he was appointed Warden of the Western March. This was an uneasy appointment as the English held Annandale, which formed the greater part of his new jurisdiction.

In the following years he carried out numerous raids against the English. In 1368 Douglas was appointed Lord Warden of the Marches and was successful in ousting the English from Annandale completely by 1383.

[edit] de Moravia Marriage

Archibald further increased his power by his marriage to Joanna de Moravia in 1362. Joanna's grandfather, Sir Andrew Murray, was a nephew of William Wallace. Archibald is said to have offered five English Knights battle in single combat for her hand.[7] The Lady of Bothwell and heiress to the de Moravia dynasty, Joanna brought with her large estates and Lordships throughout Scotland which Archibald claimed de jure uxoris. This included the semi-ruined Bothwell Castle, which he promptly started to rebuild. The marriage was a device of the king to ensure that the Moray inheritance would be passed into safe (and loyal) hands. Since the death of Joanna's first husband, the Lord of Bothwell, in 1361, she and her widowed mother had been wards of the court. Joanna was declared to be not only heiress of her father's unentailed lands, but also those of her first husband. The estates stretched from Aberdeenshire, Moray and Ross in the north, to Lanarkshire and Roxburghshire in the south. Although Douglas did not inherit his wife's father's Earldom of Strathearn, Douglas would be able to use his new found kindred ties to the advantage of the King in the centre of the kingdom.[8]

[edit] Embassies

Archibald was sent on two embassies to France, one in 1369 and the other in 1371. The first of these was to protest the appeal launched by the newly divorced Queen Margaret at the court in Avignon of Pope Urban V. The second embassy was to Paris, with a view to renewing the Auld Alliance. This embassy was ordered by the new Stewart king Robert II, three days after his accession. The result of this diplomacy resulted in the Treaty of Vincennes, the first ratification of the alliance since the Treaty of Corbeil, 55 years previously.

[edit] Lord of Galloway

Threave Castle
Threave Castle

In 1369, Archibald had been appointed Lord of Galloway by King David, "becaus he tuke git trawell to purge the cuntrey of Englis blude".[9] Galloway was a difficult fiefdom to rule. Prior to his assumption of the title, it had been the patrimony of the Balliols, both the ousted King John and his pretender son Edward Balliol. The Balliols had inherited it through King John's grandmother Dervorguilla of Galloway, daughter and heiress of Alan, Lord of Galloway, the last of the Norse-Gaelic Kings of Galloway. The Galwegians had distinctive laws and customs and, as with the Kingdom of the Isles, did not feel subservient to the Scottish crown, but rather to their ancient Kings of which they viewed the Balliols as representing. In 1353 Earl William had succeeded in bringing the eastern part of the fiefdom under the control of the Scottish crown. By 1371 after reaffirming control in the east, Archibald acquired the Earldom of Wigtown from Thomas Fleming, Earl of Wigtown, thus consolidating his power over the whole of Galloway, the first time under one man since 1234. Archibald's conquest of Galloway was depicted on his seal, which depicts two "wild men" holding up his arms.

In 1378 Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie, a nephew of Archibald Douglas, took Berwick by surprise with 50 men, and was immediately besieged by the town's governor Thomas De Musgrave. Douglas and Lord Lyndsay of the Byres massed a relief army at Haddington, little more than 500 in number, but marched anyway hoping to collect more men on the way. When Archibald's army approached Berwick his scouts informed him that the English army around the castle numbered around 10,000, with archers, siege engines, heavy horse and ships blockading the river. Douglas then retreated to Melrose, followed by the English army. Just short of Melrose, Musgrave attacked. Fortunately Archibald's army had now been reinforced. During the ensuing Battle of Melrose, Musgrave was unhorsed and forced to yield for ransom. With Musgrave and other leaders captured, the remaining English not already slain fled back to Berwick with news of their defeat.

It is around this time that Archibald started work on his fortalice at Threave Castle, and endowed Sweetheart Abbey, near Dumfries, with an hospital. Rather than taking over Buittle, traditional seat of the Balliols during the construction of Threave, he took up residence at Kirkcudbright, traditional seat of the earlier Lords.

In territorial possessions alone Archibald, Lord of Galloway appeared now to have reached if not overtaken his cousin William, 1st Earl of Douglas.

[edit] Earl of Douglas

In 1384, William the first Earl of Douglas died of a seizure at Douglas, and was succeeded by his son James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas, who was killed during his victorious Battle of Otterburn four years later in 1388. Archibald inherited his nephew's earldom and all the entailed Douglas lands making him the most powerful magnate in Scotland.

During the intervals of war with the English he imposed feudal law on the border chieftains, drawing up a special code for the marches. The power of the Black Douglas overshadowed the crown under the weak rule of Robert III. Archibald appeared to have strengthened his line's connection with that of the Royal Stewarts, when in 1390 he arranged the marriage of his son and heir William 4th Earl of Douglas to Princess Margaret of Scotland, and in 1399 his daughter Marjorie to David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay; both of these spouses were children of Robert III, Rothesay being the heir apparent to the throne. Rothesay was already contracted to marry Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of George I, Earl of March, who had paid a large sum for the honour. March, alienated from his allegiance by this breach of faith on the king's part, now joined the English forces.

The Earl of Douglas died at Threave Castle, around Christmas 1400, and was buried at Bothwell.


[edit] Marriage and issue

Around 1362 Douglas married Joanna de Moravia, daughter of Maurice de Moravia, 1st Earl of Strathearn. They had four children.

Earl Archibald had a Bastard son:

Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
James Douglas

Earl of Douglas

1388-1400
Succeeded by
Archibald Douglas

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ MacDougall,p 55
  2. ^ ibidem
  3. ^ Maxwell, Vol I p80, p115
  4. ^ ibidem
  5. ^ MacDougall, p44
  6. ^ Maxwell Vol I, p115-6
  7. ^ ibidem p118
  8. ^ Brown, p.58-9
  9. ^ Maxwell, p117
  10. ^ Smith, p.251 where it states that the "first laird of Haltoun was Sir George de Lawedre who married a sister of Lord Douglas.
    Crawfurd, p.91. gives the wife of Sir George Lauder of Haltoun (d.c1430), as Helen, sister to Lord Douglas.

[edit] Primary Sources

  • Brown, Michael, The Black Douglases, Tuckwell Press, East Linton, 1998
  • MacDougall, Norman, An Antidote to the English - the Auld Alliance 1295-1560, Tuckwell Press, East Linton, 2001
  • Maxwell, Sir Herbert. A History of the House of Douglas (2 vols), Freemantle & Co., London 1902
  • Smith, J Stewart-, The Grange of St Giles. Edinburgh, 1898
  • Crawfurd's Peerage, 1776

[edit] Secondary Sources

Persondata
NAME Archibald Douglas
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Archibald the Grim
SHORT DESCRIPTION 3rd Earl of Douglas
DATE OF BIRTH 1328
PLACE OF BIRTH Douglas, South Lanarkshire
DATE OF DEATH 1400
PLACE OF DEATH Threave Castle


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