is the work of Nicolas Roy and his companions. Nicolas Roy is particularly associated with the renaissance style carvings at Falkland Palace. One wage payment calls Roy the principal stonemason at
Falkland Palace, in Latin;
Nicholio Roy, Gallico, latimo principali in palatio de Falkland. His name appears in the records for building Falkland Palace from June 1539 onwards. He was paid 21 shillings weekly and his three colleagues or "servitours" received the same. There is also a payment in the ''
Treasurer's Accounts'' for the wages of the "French maister maison in Falkland" since his arrival in Scotland on 20 April 1539 to the end of August 1540. At this time, James V was building and converting his father's lodgings at Falkland into a palace in French renaissance style. The palace effectively belonged to Mary of Guise as part of her
jointure. The accounts do not specify exactly what work Nicolas Roy and his workshop undertook, but they may have carved the portrait medallions or roundels that decorate the internal façades of the courtyard. A sculptor known as Peter Flemishman made the statues of saints for the niches on the entrance façade. During the works at Falkland, the French masons made two excursions to
St Andrews to advise on the building of a new college under the patronage of
Cardinal David Beaton. Another French stonemason, Moyse or Mogin Martin, first employed at
Dunbar Castle by the
Duke of Albany, worked at Falkland until his death in March 1538. His son also called Moyse Martin continued to work at Falkland. The elder Moyse Martin travelled to France with James V in 1536 and perhaps gained inspiration for the royal works in Scotland at this time. ==References==