David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay
David Stewart | |
---|---|
Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Atholl & Carrick | |
Born | 24 October 1378 |
Died | 26 March 1402 Falkland Palace | (aged 23)
Spouse | Marjorie Douglas |
House | Stewart |
Father | Robert III of Scotland |
Mother | Anabella Drummond |
David Stewart (24 October 1378 – 26 March 1402) was
Life
David Stewart, was born to
Marriage contracts
In 1395 David was betrothed to Elizabeth de Dunbar, daughter of George Dunbar, 10th Earl of March. This was a strong political alliance because the Earl of March was one of the most powerful and influential men of his time, rivaled only by Archibald Douglas, 3rd Earl of Douglas. A Papal mandate for the marriage was approved but the couple had not wanted to wait and were married before the mandate arrived in August 1395. As a result they were censured. After applying for absolution for not waiting, the Pope issued a dispensation to the couple dated 10 March 1397 granting that they could ‘remarry’ after a period of separation.
Archibald Douglas "The Grim" influenced King Robert, and instead of remarrying Elizabeth, his wife of almost 2 years, David was betrothed to and married Marjorie Douglas, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Douglas instead. Understandably, the Dunbar family were more than upset. They had lost an important political alliance to their greatest rival, Elizabeth's honor and marriage prospects were sullied and the entire family insulted. George Dunbar, Earl of March did not react favorably. As a result of the broken betrothal he left Scotland entirely and joined King Henry IV of England. This was potentially very dangerous for Scotland.
Lieutenant of Scotland
At a meeting of the
David appears to have had an ally in his mother, the Queen, who had worked to strengthen her son's hand, arranging the great tournament of 1398 in Edinburgh when he was knighted[5] and being present, along with the king, in that same year when David was created Duke of Rothesay, in the same ceremony, performed by Walter Trail, Archbishop of St Andrews, which also created the title Duke of Albany for his uncle. But both the Queen and Archbishop were dead by 1401. His father, the King, appears to have had little ability by that date to influence events effectively.
Death
In late February 1402, while travelling officially to St Andrews, David was arrested just outside the city at Strathtyrum in a sting operation which had been arranged by Albany, at that time in complicit alliance with David's brother-in-law, Archibald, the fourth Earl of Douglas, who was offended with Rothesay for his unfaithfulness to his wife, the sister of Douglas. (David's father-in-law, the highly influential third Earl, had died two years before, in 1400.) The pretext for David's arrest was that the three-year period of his lieutenancy had expired. He was initially held captive in St Andrews Castle, and soon afterwards taken to Falkland Palace, Albany's residence in Fife. According to Bower, the prince spent the journey hooded, gagged, bound and mounted backwards on a mule. At Falkland David remained a prisoner and shortly died there, reputedly of starvation.
He was buried at Lindores Abbey. The King founded a chaplaincy in the parish church of Dundee to pray for his soul, and daily masses were to be said at Deer Abbey and Culross.[6] A few weeks after the funeral, in May 1402, a public enquiry into the circumstances of David's death exonerated Albany of all blame.[7][8]
Four years later, in 1406, David's younger brother, James Stewart, succeeded Robert III as king (although at that time remaining uncrowned and in captivity in England) while Albany secured himself as de facto ruler of Scotland.
Fictional portrayals
David is the subject of an anonymous full-length 18th century verse drama, The Duke of Rothsay, a tragedy
Notes
- doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/54172. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- ^ Tytler 1887, page 5.
- Burnett, ed. (1878). Rotuli scaccarii regum Scotorum = The Exchequer Rolls of Scotland. Edinburgh: H.M. General Register House. p. 402.
- ^ The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, K.M. Brown et al eds (St Andrews, 2007-2019), 1399/1/3. Date accessed: 3 October 2019
- ISBN 9781788851848.
- ^ George Burnett, Exchequer Rolls of Scotland: 1379-1406, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1880), pp. xcii, 549, 626, 631.
- ^ Tytler 1887, page 21.
- ^ citing Dalrymple, David (1773). Remarks on the History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Balfour & Smellie. p. 278.
- ^ The Duke of Rothesay, a tragedy, Edinburgh: printed for J. Wood. Sold by C. Elliot; and by A. Donaldson, at his shops in London and Edinburgh, 1780 National Library of Australia. Thomson Gale, 2003. Eighteenth century collections online. Mode of access: World Wide Web. Access restricted to subscribers.
Sources
Tytler, Patrick Fraser (1887). The history of Scotland from the accession of Alexander III. to the union. Vol. II. Edinburgh: W. P. Nimmo.