Robert Stewart was brought up in the Scottish royal household. He was given a suit of black clothes with a
doublet in December 1538 and April 1541. In 1543, Matthew Stewart Robert Stewart came to oppose the rule of
Regent Arran and
Mary of Guise in Scotland. After the
battle of Glasgow, in April 1543 Robert crossed the
Clyde from
Dumbarton Castle and rode to England, where he was regarded as a 'pledge' or hostage for Lennox. As the war of the
Rough Wooing continued, Robert Stewart briefly occupied Dumbarton Castle against the Scottish Government of
Regent Arran. Robert came from England in May 1546 with the support of
Henry VIII; he sailed from
Chester with around 20 followers in the
Katherine Goodman accompanied by a pinnace. Having borrowed the artillery of the
Earl of Argyle, Arran successfully besieged the castle, which surrendered after 20 days. The siege at Dumbarton delayed Arran's action at the
siege of St Andrews Castle on the east coast of Scotland. Rehabilitated in Scotland, Robert continued to pursue legal action with
Alexander Gordon over their competition for church appointments. At the end of the war, in 1550, Robert sought permission from Arran and Guise to return to university in France, he was 28.
John Elder, a Scottish writer who had settled in England, wrote a description of the wedding of
Mary I of England and
Philip II of Spain for Robert Stewart as a New Year's gift for 1555. Elder's letter was published, addressed to his good friend Lord Robert 'Stuarde' Bishop of Caithness and Provost of Dumbarton College. On 6 January 1579 Lord Lennox married
Elizabeth Stewart, daughter of
John Stewart, 4th Earl of Atholl and widow of
Hugh Fraser, 5th Lord Lovat. They were divorced 19 May 1581 and she married
James Stewart, Earl of Arran shortly afterwards. ==References==