First acts Throughout the 15th century, Scottish kings suffered from a lack of crown revenue, and James's reign was no exception. The Albany regency had also been constrained; Duke Robert's own governorship fees were unsettled. For the nobility, royal patronage ceased entirely following James's capture; irregular forms of political favours emerged with Albany, allowing nobles such as the earl of Douglas and his brother James to remove funds from the customs. It was against this backdrop that James's coronation took place at
Scone on 21 May 1424. The coronation parliament of the
Three Estates witnessed the king perform a knighthood ceremony for eighteen prominent nobles including Alexander Stewart, Murdoch's son; an event probably intended to foster loyalty to the crown within the political community. Called primarily to discuss issues surrounding the finance of the ransom payments, the parliament heard James underline his position and authority as monarch. He ensured the passing of legislation designed to substantially improve crown income by revoking the patronage of royal predecessors and guardians. The earls of Douglas and Mar were immediately affected by this when their ability to remove large sums from the customs was blocked. Despite this, James still depended on the nobility—especially Douglas—for its support and initially adopted a less confrontational stance. James had Walter arrested on 13 May 1424 and imprisoned on the Bass Rock—at this time, this was probably in Murdoch's interests as well as James's. It is probable that the king felt unable to move against the rest of the Albany Stewarts while Murdoch's brother,
John Stewart, Earl of Buchan, and
Archibald, 4th Earl of Douglas, were fighting the English on the Dauphinist cause in France. Buchan, a leader with an international reputation, commanded the large Scottish army but both he and Douglas fell at the
Battle of Verneuil in August 1424 and the Scottish army routed. The loss of his brother and the large fighting force left Murdoch politically exposed.
Ruthless and acquisitive Douglas's death at Verneuil was to weaken the position of his son
Archibald, the fifth earl. On 12 October 1424, the king and Archibald met at
Melrose Abbey ostensibly to agree the appointment of
John Fogo, a monk of Melrose, to the abbacy. The meeting may also have been intended as an official acceptance of Douglas, but it signalled a change in the Black Douglas predominance with respect to the crown and other nobles. Important Douglas allies died in France, and several of their heirs realigned with rival families through blood ties. Simultaneously, Douglas experienced a loosening of allegiances in the Lothians, which, with the loss of his command over Edinburgh Castle, combined to improve James's position. Despite this, James continued to retain Black Douglas support, which allowed him to begin a campaign of political alienation of Albany and his family. The reasons for this were perhaps not hard to find. James' brother David, died in Duke Robert's custody and then both Robert's and Murdoch's shared indifference towards James' release from captivity. These factors may have led James to believe that their ultimate ambition was the throne itself. Buchan's lands did not fall to the Albany Stewarts but were forfeited by the crown. Albany's father-in-law,
Duncan, Earl of Lennox, was imprisoned. In December, the duke's main ally
Alexander Stewart, 1st Earl of Mar, settled his differences with the king. Murdoch, his sons Walter and Alexander and Duncan, Earl of Lennox were at Stirling Castle for their trial on 18 May at a specially convened parliament. An assize of seven earls and fourteen lesser nobles was appointed to hear the evidence linking the prisoners to the rebellion in the Lennox. The four men were condemned, Walter on 24 May and the others on 25 May and were immediately beheaded "in front of the castle". James demonstrated a ruthless and avaricious side to his nature in the destruction of his close family, the Albany Stewarts, that yielded the three forfeited earldoms of Fife, Menteith and Lennox. An inquiry set up by James in 1424 into the dispersal of crown estates since the reign of
Robert I exposed legal defects in several transactions where the earldoms of Mar, March and Strathearn together with the Black Douglas lordships of Selkirk and Wigtown were found to be problematic. Strathearn and March were forfeited in 1427 and 1435, respectively. Mar was forfeited in 1435 upon the earl's death without heir, which also meant that the lordships of Garioch and Badenoch reverted to the crown. James sought to boost his income further through taxation and succeeded in getting parliament to pass legislation in 1424 for a tax to go towards paying off the ransom—£26,000 was raised, but only £12,000 went to England. By 1429, James stopped the ransom payments completely and used the remainder of the taxation on buying cannons and luxury goods from
Flanders.
Relations with the church James asserted his authority not only over the nobility but also upon the Church, lamenting that King
David I's benevolence towards the Church proved costly to his successors, declaring that he was 'a sair sanct to the croun'. James also considered that the monastic institutions in particular needed improvement and that they should return to being strictly ordered communities. Part of James's solution was to create an assembly of overseeing abbots and followed this up by establishing a
Carthusian priory at Perth to provide other religious houses with an example of internal conduct. He also sought to influence Church attitudes to his policies by having his own clerics appointed to the bishoprics of Dunblane, Dunkeld, Glasgow and Moray. In March 1425, James's parliament directed that all bishops must instruct their clerics to offer up prayers for the king and his family; a year later, parliament toughened up this edict insisting that the prayers be given at every mass under the sanction of a fine and severe rebuke. This same parliament legislated that every person in Scotland should 'be governed under the king's laws and statutes of this realm only'. From this, laws were enacted in 1426 to restrict the actions of prelates, whether it was to regulate their need to travel to the
Roman Curia or their ability to purchase additional ecclesiastical positions while there. In James's parliament of July 1427, it is evident that statutes enacted had the purpose of reducing the powers of the church jurisdiction. On 25 July 1431, the general council of the Church convened in
Basel; however, the initial full meeting did not take place until 14 December, by which time Pope
Eugenius and the council were in complete disagreement. It was the council, and not the pope, who requested that James send representatives of the Scottish church. It is known that two delegates—Abbot
Thomas Livingston of
Dundrenanan and
John de Winchester, canon of
Moray and a servant of the king—were in attendance in November and December 1432. In 1433, James, this time in response to a summons by the pope, appointed two bishops, two abbots and four dignitaries to attend the council. Twenty-eight Scottish ecclesiastics attended at intervals from 1434 to 1437. The majority of the higher ranking churchmen sent proxies but Bishops
John Cameron of
Glasgow and
John de Crannach of
Brechin did attend, as did Abbot Patrick Wotherspoon of
Holyrood. Even in the midst of the Basel general council, Pope Eugenius instructed his legate, Bishop Antonio Altan of Urbino, to meet with James to raise the issue of the king's controversial
anti-barratry laws of 1426. The Bishop of Urbino arrived in Scotland in December 1436 and apparently a reconciliation between James and the papal legate had taken place by the middle of February 1437 but the events of 21 February when James was assassinated prevented the legate from completing his commission.
Problems in the Highlands In July 1428, the king convened a general council at Perth to obtain finance for an expedition to the Highlands against the semi-autonomous
Lord of the Isles. The council initially resisted granting James the funds—even with royal support from the powerful Earls of Mar and Atholl—but eventually gave in to the king's wishes. Although it seemed that an all-out attack on the Gaels of the north was not the king's intention, James had resolved to use a degree of force to strengthen royal authority. He told the assembly: The leaders of the Gaelic kindreds in the north and west were summoned by James ostensibly to a sitting of parliament in
Inverness. Of those assembled, the king arrested around 50 of them, including
Alexander, the third Lord of the Isles, and his mother,
Mariota, Countess of Ross, around 24 August. A few were executed, but the remainder, except for Alexander and his mother, were quickly released. During Alexander's captivity, James attempted to split
Clann Dòmhnall—Alexander's uncle John Mór was approached by an agent of the king to take the clan leadership, but his refusal to have any dealings with the king while his nephew was held prisoner led to John Mór's attempted arrest and death. . The king's need for allies in the west and north led him to soften his approach towards the Lord of the Isles and, hoping that Alexander would now become a loyal servant of the crown, he was given his freedom. Alexander, probably under pressure from his close kinsman Donald Balloch, John Mór's son, and Alasdair Carrach of Lochaber, led a rebellion by attacking the castle and burgh of Inverness in spring 1429. The crisis deepened when a fleet from the Lordship was dispatched to bring James the Fat back from Ulster "to convey him home that he might be king". With James's intention to form an alliance with the Ulster O'Donnells of Tyreconnell against the MacDonalds, the English became distrustful of the Scottish king's motives, and they themselves tried to bring James the Fat to England. Before he could become an active player,
James the Fat died suddenly, releasing James to prepare for decisive action against the Lordship. The armies met on 21 June in Lochaber, and Alexander, suffering the defection of Clan Chattan (the MacKintoshes) and Clan Cameron, was heavily defeated. Alexander escaped, probably to
Islay, but James continued his assault on the Lordship by taking the strongholds of Dingwall and Urquhart castles in July. The king pushed home his advantage when an army reinforced with artillery was dispatched to the Isles. Alexander probably realised that his position was hopeless and tried to negotiate terms of surrender, but James demanded and received his total submission. From August 1429, the king delegated royal authority to Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar, to restore peace in the north and west. The Islesmen rose again in September 1431 and inflicted two important defeats on the king's men—Mar's army was beaten at
Inverlochy and Angus Moray's in a fierce battle near
Tongue in Caithness. This was a serious setback for James and his credibility was adversely affected. In 1431, before the September uprising, the king had arrested two of his nephews, John Kennedy of Carrick and Archibald, Earl of Douglas possibly as a result of a conflict between John and his uncle, Thomas Kennedy in which Douglas may have become involved. Douglas's arrest had raised tensions in the country and James acted to reduce the unrest by freeing the earl on 29 September—it was quite likely that the king made the earl's release conditional on support at the forthcoming parliament at Perth at which James intended to push for further funding for the campaign against the Lordship. The rules parliament attached to the taxation indicated a robust stand against further conflict in the north and probably led to the turnaround that took place on 22 October when the king 'forgave the offence of each earl, namely Douglas and Ross [i.e. Alexander]'. For Douglas, this was a formal acknowledgement of his having already been freed three weeks earlier, but for Alexander, this was a total reversal of crown policy towards the Lordship. Four summer campaigns against the Lordship were now officially at an end with James's wishes having effectively been blocked by parliament. The only substantive matters of contention between the two kingdoms were the payments due under the terms of James's release, and the renewal of the truce expiring in 1430. In 1428 after setbacks on the battlefield
Charles VII of France sent his ambassador Regnault of Chartres,
Archbishop of Rheims to Scotland to persuade James to renew the
Auld Alliance—the terms were to include the marriage of the princess
Margaret to Louis, the
dauphin of France, and a gift of the province of
Saintonge to James. The ratification of the treaty by Charles took place in October 1428, and James, now with the intended marriage of his daughter into the French royal family and the possession of French lands, had his political importance in Europe boosted. , which James failed to win back from the English The effectiveness of the alliance with France had virtually ceased after Verneuil, and its renewal in 1428 did not alter that. James adopted a much more non-aligned position with England, France and Burgundy while at the same time opening up diplomatic contacts with Aragon, Austria, Castile, Denmark, Milan, Naples and the Vatican. Generally, Scotto–English relations were relatively amicable and an extension of the truce until 1436 helped the English cause in France. The promises made in 1428 of a Scottish army to help
Charles VII, and the marriage of James's eldest daughter to the French king's son
Louis were unrealised. James had to balance his European responses carefully, because England's key ally, the Duke of Burgundy, was also in possession of the
Low Countries, a major trading partner of Scotland, therefore muting James's support for France. The truce with England expired in May 1436, but James’s view of the Anglo‑French conflict shifted after a realignment of the combatants. The collapse of Anglo‑French negotiations in 1435 brought Burgundy into alliance with France, in turn prompting a French request for renewed Scottish involvement in the war and for the fulfilment of the promised marriage between Princess Margaret and the
Dauphin. In the spring of 1436, Princess Margaret sailed to France, and in August Scotland entered the war with James leading a large army to lay siege to the English enclave of
Roxburgh Castle. == Assassination ==