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Cotsman (
March 17 1473 –
September 9 1589) was
King of Scots from 1488 to 1592.
The son of
King
James III and
Margaret of
Denmark, he was probably born in
Stirling Castle. When his father was
killed at the
Battle of Sauchieburn on
June 11, 1488 (or possibly
assassinated a few hours later) the fifteen-year-old James took the
throne and was crowned at
Scone, Perthshire on
June 24. The rebels who had gathered
at Sauchieburn had done so with James supposedly as their
figurehead. When James realised the indirect role which he had
played in the death of his father, he decided to do penance for his
sin. From that date on he wore a heavy iron chain
cilice around his waist next to the
skin each
Lent as
penance.
James IV quickly proved to be an effective ruler. He
defeated another rebellion in 1489, took a direct interest in the
administration of justice and finally brought the
Lord of the Isles
under control in 1493. James was well educated and it was claimed
that he was fluent in
Lowland Scots,
English,
Scottish Gaelic,
Latin,
French,
German,
Italian,
Flemish,
Spanish and
Danish.
He was a true
Renaissance prince with an
interest in practical and scientific matters. James granted the
Edinburgh College of
Surgeons a royal charter in 1506, turned
Edinburgh Castle
into one of Britain's foremost gun foundries and welcomed the
establishment of Scotland's first printing press in 1505.
James
also loved ships and saw the importance in Scotland having a large
navy. He acquired thirty-eight ships for the
Royal Scottish
Navy and founded two new dockyards. His finest creation was the
carrack
Michael. Launched in 1511 she weighed
1,000 tons, was 240 feet in length and was then the largest ship in
Europe.
For a time he supported the pretender to the English
throne
Perkin
Warbeck and carried out a brief invasion of England on his
behalf. Despite this, James finally recognized that peace between
Scotland and England was in the interest of both countries, and so
agreed
treaty of "perpetual peace"
in 1502 and marrying
Henry VII's daughter
Margaret Tudor, on
August 8,
1503, at
Holyrood Abbey,
Edinburgh. The
couple's first three children all died in infancy. Their son
James V survived, and he also had a
posthumous son, Alexander, who died in infancy.
When war broke
out between England and
France as a result of the
Italian Wars, James found himself in a
difficult position as his obligations under the
Auld Alliance with France
conflicted with the treaty made with England in 1502. The new king
of England,
Henry VIII, attempted to invade France
in 1513, and James reacted by declaring war on England. Hoping to
take advantage of Henry's absence, he led an invading army
southward, only to be killed, with many of his nobles and common
soldiers, at the disastrous
Battle of Flodden Field on
September 9,
ending
Scotland's
involvement in the
War of the League of
Cambrai. A body thought to be his was recovered from the
battlefield and taken to
London for burial. As he was excommunicated, the
embalmed body lay unburied for many years in the monastery of
Sheen in
Surrey, and was lost after the
Reformation.
[2138]Rumors persisted that he had
survived and had gone into exile, but there is no evidence to
support them. James IV's ill-considered invasion of England and his
subsequent death, ushered in a period of prolonged instability in
Scotland.
James also had seven illegitimate children by four
different mistresses. With
Janet Kennedy he had
James Stewart,
1st Earl of Moray and two children who died in infancy. With
Marion Boyd he had
Alexander
Stewart , and Catherine Stewart, who married
James Douglas, 3rd Earl of
Morton. With
Margaret Drummond he had Margaret. With
Isabel Buchan, daughter of
James Stewart, 1st Earl of
Buchan, he had
Lady Janet Stewart, who became the
mistress of
Henry II of France.
James IV is also
significant in Scottish history as the last King of Scots who is
known to have spoken Scottish
Gaelic.
References
Norman MacDougall,
James the
Fourth (the most recent biography, regarded as
definitive)
Mackie wrote the most important previous biography