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The Scottish Political Community and the Parliament of 1563*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Extract
When Mary queen of Scots met her first Parliament, she encountered an institution that had long played an influential part in Scottish history. The Scottish Parliament was important for its legislation and taxation, but it was even more important as the forum in which the political community assembled to take major decisions about how the government should be configured. This article uses a newly-discovered list of those attending the Parliament of 1563 as the starting-point for an investigation of the political community in Mary's reign.
Although our understanding of sixteenth-century politics has been much enhanced by studies focused on “kingship,” many crucial issues concern relationships among people other than the king. For more than half of the century there was no adult monarch present, and government had to be carried on by consensus between a regent and the nobility. Adult monarchs usually had more power than temporary regents, but they, too, had to seek consensus if they were to rule successfully.
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Footnotes
I am grateful to Professor Michael Lynch for his comments on an earlier version of this article.
References
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15 The provosts and commissioners' names have been identified from a variety of sources, but see Young, Parliaments, under the listed names. I am also grateful for the advice of Alan R. MacDonald.
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27 Oliphant was an elderly Catholic who had not attended the Reformation Parliament but who remained active politically. Sempill was a prominent Catholic who had been in arms against the insurgent Protestants in 1559–60 and had not attended the Reformation Parliament. He was also at feud with the earl of Glencairn, a stalwart of the Protestant regime.
28 This concludes the analysis of secular lords. But we should note the possibility that there were lairds present in parliament, as there had been in 1560 and would be again (though the evidence is incomplete) in several parliaments and conventions of estates before their position was regularized in 1587. See Goodare, Julian, “The Admission of Lairds to the Scottish Parliament,” English Historical Review 116 (2001): 1103–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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49 Known attendance figures for other parliaments of the period: 1558 sixty-four; 1560 eighty-one (plus, unusually, about a hundred lairds); April 1567 fifty-nine; December 1567 eighty-three; 1568 fifty-three; 1569 sixteen. For these figures see APS, 2:503–04 and 525–26, 546; 3:3–4 and 46, 57. Attendances tended to decline thereafter as a period of factional conflict set in. There is a full list of parliaments and conventions, with attendance figures where known, in Goodare, Julian, “Parliament and Society in Scotland, 1560–1603” (Ph.D. thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1989), appendix AGoogle Scholar.
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62 Dunblane had two bishops of that name between 1561 and 1564, the younger being coadjutor to the elder but being known as bishop. The younger may be a more likely attender: Watt, Donald E. R., ed., Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae Medii Aevi ad Annum 1638 (2nd ed.; Scottish Record Society, 1969), p. 78Google Scholar.
63 Morton omitted himself from his own list, but his presence is attested by several other sources, and the Diurnal establishes his membership of the Articles.
64 “Cha'skynall” in manuscript, an unusual but not impossible spelling.
65 These two monasteries are listed separately, and both are scored out.
66 Also treasurer: see below under Officers of State.
67 Added to list in a different hand. The same hand has written “1,“ “2,” “3,“ and “4” opposite Arbroath, Kelso, Holyrood, and Coldingham respectively. The significance of these numbers is un-clear, though it is noticeable that Holyrood, Coldingham, and Portmoak were among the lords of the articles.
68 Inserted in the second hand at this point.
69 Morton's lists refer carefully to a “commissioner” from Perth rather than a “provost.” The provost was Lord Ruthven, who attended Parliament as a member of the noble estate. The burgh had sent two other representatives to a convention in 1561: Ruthven's cousin and client, Patrick Murray of Tibbermuir, and George Johnson, craftsman bailie. Murray, unlike Johnson, later represented Perth in at least one more Parliament and one convention of estates, and has been tentatively named here. The sending of a craftsman alone would have rekindled bitter controversy over the crafts' political position. Verschuur, Mary, “Merchants and Craftsmen in Sixteenth-Century Perth,” in Lynch, , Early Modern Town, pp. 49–50Google Scholar; Young, , Parliaments, 2:533Google Scholar.
70 This and remaining burghs added from Morton's first list. There is no indication of their commissioners' identity.
71 To these officers could be added Morton as chancellor; he has instead been included with the earls.
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