Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus
Archibald Douglas | |
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Earl of Angus | |
Tenure | 1513–1557 |
Predecessor | Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Angus |
Successor | David Douglas, 7th Earl of Angus |
Born | c. 1489 Douglasdale, Lanarkshire, Scotland |
Died | 22 January 1557 Tantallon Castle, Scotland |
Buried | Abernethy |
Nationality | Scottish |
Offices | Lord Chancellor of Scotland |
Spouse(s) | Margaret or Mary Hepburn Margaret Maxwell |
Issue |
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Parents |
Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus (c. 1489 – 22 January 1557) was a
Through his daughter,
Marriage to Margaret Tudor
In 1509, Douglas married Margaret Hepburn, daughter of the
Angus withdrew to his estates in
Margaret avenged his neglect by refusing to support his claims for power and by secretly trying through Albany to get a divorce. In Edinburgh, Angus held his own against the attempts of the Earl of Arran, to dislodge him. But the return of Albany in 1521, with whom Margaret now sided against her husband, deprived him of power. The regent took the government into his own hands, Angus was charged with high treason in December and in March 1522 was sent practically a prisoner to France, whence he succeeded in escaping to London in 1524.[1]
Lord of the Articles
He returned to Scotland in November with promises of support from
He now organized a large party of nobles against Margaret with the support of Henry VIII, and, in February 1525, they entered Edinburgh and called a parliament. Angus was made a
Treaty of Berwick (1526)
Angus was appointed
The terms of the treaty included abstinence from war, safe-conducts for legitimate travellers, redress for cross-border robbery and rendition of criminals. Trade by sea was assured according to the
King's keeper
In July 1526 the guardianship of the King James V was entrusted to him for a fixed period till 1 November, but he refused at its close to retire, and advancing to Linlithgow put to flight Margaret and his opponents.[1]
He now with his followers engrossed all the power, succeeded in gaining over some of his antagonists, including Arran and the
Counsel of King James
The young king
On 11 March 1528, Margaret succeeded in obtaining her divorce from Angus, and about the end of the month she and her lover, Henry Stewart, were besieged at Stirling. A few weeks later, however, James escaped from Angus's custody, took refuge with Margaret and Arran at Stirling, and immediately took revenge by proscribing Angus and all the Douglases, forbidding them to come within seven miles of his person.[1]
This did not include his half-sister, Margaret, who James, even at sixteen, could see was innocent and was allowed to be with them - though, as she was in England, the twosome would never actually meet.[citation needed]
Alliance with and exile in England

Angus, having fortified Tantallon, was attainted and his lands confiscated. Repeated attempts by James to subdue the fortress by siege failed, and on one occasion Angus's men captured the royal artillery. Angus based himself at Coldingham Priory.[4] At length, Tantallon was given up as a condition of a truce between England and Scotland, and in May 1529, he sought refuge with his brother-in-law, Henry VIII in England. He obtained a pension and took an oath of allegiance, with Henry's promise to make his restoration a condition of peace.[1]
Angus had been largely guided in his intrigues with England by his brother, Sir George Douglas of Pittendreich, Master of Angus, (died 1552), a far more clever diplomat than himself. George's life and lands were also declared forfeit, as were those of his uncle, Archibald Douglas of Kilspindie (died 1535), known by the nickname of Greysteil, who had been a friend of King James. These men fled into exile.[1]
James avenged himself on such Douglases remaining in Scotland as he could. Angus's third sister
Angus remained in England until 1542, joining in the attacks upon his countrymen on the border, while James refused all demands from Henry VIII for his restoration, and kept firm to his policy of suppressing the Douglas faction.[7] However, despite his remaining in England and the fact that he was her father, Henry VIII kept guardianship of Douglas's daughter, Margaret, who was raised in the royal household.
Return to Scotland
On James V's death in 1542, Angus returned to Scotland, with instructions from Henry to negotiate a marriage between
In 1543, he successfully negotiated a peace treaty and the marriage, and the same year he married Margaret, daughter of Robert Maxwell, 5th Lord Maxwell. Shortly afterwards, a struggle between Angus and the regent Arran broke out, and in April 1544 Angus was captured and imprisoned in Blackness Castle.[8]
Break with England
The same year
He still corresponded with Henry VIII, but nevertheless signed in 1546 the act cancelling the marriage and peace treaty, and on 10 September 1547 commanded the van in the great defeat of Scotland at Pinkie, when he again won fame.[7] Early in October 1547, Angus tried to recapture the island of Inchcolm from the English with five ships.[10] However, he kept up a secret correspondence with Andrew Dudley, the English commander at Broughty Castle, and wrote that he had made excuses to Regent Arran and prevented his retainers from joining the siege of Broughty.[11]
In February 1548 an attempt to capture him and punish him for his duplicity failed. His son-in-law, the Earl of Lennox, and the English border warden Thomas Wharton marched from Dumfries to intercept Angus at Drumlanrig Castle. Angus surprised and cut off a part of the force led by Wharton's son Henry while they were burning Durisdeer. Wharton claimed that when his forces were reunited they killed 500 men, some drowned in the Nith. Meanwhile, his stores at Dumfries were robbed and spoiled, and he was driven back to Annan and back to Carlisle.[12]
Angus escaped his English would-be captors again after the capture of Dalkeith Palace by Grey of Wilton in June 1548. He sailed from Tantallon Castle to Edinburgh, while George Douglas of Pittendreich escaped by a secret way with only a single companion.[13]
Death
Under the regency of queen Mary of Guise his restless and ambitious character and the number of his retainers gave cause for frequent alarms to the government. On 31 August 1547 he resigned his earldom, obtaining a re-grant, sibi et suis haeredibus masculis et suis assignatis quibuscumque ("to him and his male heirs and their assignees").[7]
His career was a long struggle for power and for the interests of his family, to which national considerations were completely subordinate.[7] He died in January 1557 at Tantallon Castle, Scotland, from erysipelas. He was buried at Abernethy, Perthshire, Scotland.
Children and royal grandchild
By Margaret Tudor he had
Angus outlived his illegitimate daughter Janet Douglas who died around 1552. Janet had married Patrick Ruthven, 3rd Lord Ruthven and produced several children and the main Ruthven line. Angus also had an illegitimate son George Douglas, who became Bishop of Moray.
Since his only legitimate son, James Douglas, by his wife Margaret Maxwell died young, he was succeeded by his nephew David, the son of George Douglas of Pittendreich.
In popular culture
- Angus is the subject of the ballad, Archibald Douglas, written by Theodor Fontane in 1854, and most famously sung by Carl Loewe.[14]
- He is played by Andrew Rothney in the TV miniseries "The Spanish Princess."
Ancestry
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References
Citations
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Chisholm 1911, p. 43.
- ISBN 978-0-306-80989-7.
- ISBN 978-0-901824-58-5.
- ^ State Papers Henry Eighth, vol. 4 part 4 (London, 1836), pp. 521–3.
- ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 43–44.
- ^ Laing, David (1846). The Works of John Knox. Bannatyne Society. p. 120.
- ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911, p. 44.
- ^ David Laing, The Works of John Knox, vol. 1 (Edinburgh: Bannatyne Society, 1846) p. 120.
- ^ Fraser, William, Sir (1816–1898) (1885). The Douglas Book, vol ii. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 272–273.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Bain (1898, p. 20)
- ^ Bain (1898, p. 48), no. 102
- ^ Bain (1898, p. 81–2)
- ^ Bain (1898, p. 115), no. 118
- ^ "Archibald Douglas – Oxford Reference". Oxfordreference.com. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
- ^ Neil D. Thompson and Charles M. Hansen, The Ancestry of Charles II, King of England (American Society of Genealogists, 2012).
Sources
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Angus, Earls of s.v. Archibald Douglas, the 6th earl". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–44. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
- Bain, Joseph (1898). Calendar of the State Papers relating to Scotland and Mary, Queen of Scots 1547–1603, Vol. I A.D. 1547–1563.