Supervised by
Archibald Johnston and
Alexander Henderson, in February 1638 representatives from all sections of Scottish society agreed to a
National Covenant, pledging resistance to liturgical "innovations". Covenanters believed they were preserving a divinely ordained form of religion which Charles was seeking to alter, although debate as to what exactly that meant persisted until finally settled in 1690. While the National Covenant said nothing about bishops, they were expelled from the kirk when the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland met in
Glasgow in December 1638. Support for the Covenant was widespread except in
Aberdeenshire and
Banff, centre of Episcopalian resistance for the next 60 years.
The Marquess of Argyll and six other members of the
Scottish Privy Council had backed the Covenant; Charles tried to impose his authority in the 1639 and 1640
Bishop's Wars, with his defeat leaving the Covenanters in control of Scotland. When the
First English Civil War began in 1642, the Scots remained neutral at first but sent troops to
Ulster to support their co-religionists in the
Irish Rebellion; the bitterness of this conflict radicalised views in Scotland and Ireland. Since Calvinists believed a "well-ordered" monarchy was part of God's plan, the Covenanters committed to "defend the king's person and authority with our goods, bodies, and lives". The idea of government without a king was inconceivable. This view was generally shared by English
Parliamentarians, who wanted to control Charles, not remove him, but both they and their
Royalist opponents were further divided over religious
doctrine. In Scotland, near unanimous agreement on doctrine meant differences centred on who held ultimate authority in clerical affairs. Royalists tended to be "traditionalist" in religion and politics but there were various factors, including nationalist allegiance to the Kirk. Individual motives were very complex, and many fought on both sides, including
Montrose, a Covenanter general in 1639 and 1640 who nearly
restored Royalist rule in Scotland in 1645. , Lord General of the Covenanter Army during the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms The Covenanter faction led by Argyll saw religious union with England as the best way to preserve a Presbyterian Kirk and in October 1643, the
Solemn League and Covenant agreed a Presbyterian Union in return for Scottish military support. Royalists and moderates in both Scotland and England opposed this on nationalist grounds, while religious
Independents like
Oliver Cromwell claimed he would fight, rather than agree to it. The Covenanters and their English Presbyterian allies gradually came to see the Independents who dominated the
New Model Army as a bigger threat than the Royalists and when Charles surrendered in 1646, they began negotiations to restore him to the English throne. In December 1647, Charles agreed to impose
Presbyterianism in England for three years and suppress the Independents but his refusal to take the Covenant himself split the Covenanters into
Engagers and Kirk Party fundamentalists or
Whiggamores. Defeat in the
Second English Civil War resulted in the execution of Charles in January 1649 and the Kirk Party taking control of the General Assembly. In February 1649, the Scots proclaimed
Charles II "King of Great Britain". Under the terms of the
Treaty of Breda, the Kirk Party agreed to restore him to the English throne and in return he accepted the Covenant. Defeats at
Dunbar and
Worcester resulted with Scotland being incorporated into the
Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1652. ==Under the Commonwealth==