John Lauder, Lord Fountainhall

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Engraving of Lord Fountainhall from Journals of Sir John Lauder, Lord Fountainhall.

Sir John Lauder of Fountainhall, 2nd Baronet, Lord Fountainhall (baptised 2 August 1646 – 20 September 1722) was one of Scotland's leading

Lyon Court
on 15 June 1699.

He gives his name to Fountainhall Close on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, it being the location of his Edinburgh townhouse.[1]

Life

Lauder was born in

Leyden, Holland, where he matriculated at Leiden University on 27 September 1666.[2]

Lord Fountainhall was admitted as an Advocate on 5 June 1668, and on 10 October 1681 infamously sentenced five men to death for witchcraft: Garnock, Foreman, Russel, Ferrie and Stewart. The five were executed at the Gallow Lee on Leith Walk and their bodies interred there and their heads placed on pikes at Cowgate Port. The bodies were exhumed by friends and reinterred in the West Kirk (St Cuthberts). The heads were buried in a box in a garden at Lauriston. They were removed from the garden in 1726 by the then owner Mr Shaw. They were then placed together in one coffin and interred in the north-east corner of Greyfriars Kirkyard next to the Martyrs Monument.[3]

He was counsel for the

Lord of Justiciary
, which he resigned after the Union of parliaments, which he had opposed.

He lived in buildings on the

Lawnmarket, the upper part of the Royal Mile. These were later replaced by the James Court buildings.[4]

In 1692 he was offered the post of

George Mackenzie, who had been Lord Advocate under King Charles II
, also refused to concur in this partial application of the penal laws, and his refusal (unlike Fountainhall's) led to his temporary disgrace.

Sir John was a

Haddingtonshire in 1683 and a Burgess of Edinburgh (2 November 1687). He was the Commissioner for Haddingtonshire
in Parliament (1685–86, 1690–1707), and spoke several times against the Union.

Lord Fountainhall left a large collection of legal opinions and papers, including some that record Court of Session proceedings from 1678 to 1712, which also note the transactions of the Privy Council of Scotland, and those of the Courts of Justiciary and Exchequer, works compiled with anecdotes of the times and much characteristic ingenuity of observation, to which professional lawyers still turn today.

Lord Fountainhall died at Edinburgh and was interred in the Lauder vault within Greyfriars Kirk. His Testament dated 2 December 1706 was not Proved until more than sixteen years later. He was succeeded in the baronetcy by his son Sir John Lauder, 3rd Baronet.

Family

He married twice:

  1. 21 January 1669, at the
    Lord Provost of Edinburgh and Senator of the College of Justice, (d. 1688), by his wife Janet née Craw. They had six sons (of whom Andrew Lauder, in Edinburgh, and David Lauder of Huntlywood, Berwickshire
    , were Advocates) and four daughters.
  2. 26 March 1687, at Edinburgh, Marion, daughter of the Reverend John Anderson, of Balram, Minister of Dysart. They had three sons and three daughters.

His great-grandson was Gilbert Innes of Stow.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Old Edinburgh Club: The Closes and Wynds of Edinburgh
  2. ^ Index to Leyden Students, p. 59.
  3. ^ Cassel's Old and New Edinburgh vol.5 p. 156.
  4. ^ Grants Old and New Edinburgh vol.I p. 59.

Sources

External links

Baronetage of Nova Scotia
Preceded by Baronet
(of Fountainhall)
1692–1722
Succeeded by