James IV '', the largest ship in the world when launched in 1511 James IV put the naval enterprise on a new footing, founding a harbour at
Newhaven in May 1504, and two years later ordered
Andrew Aytoun to construct a dockyard at the Pools of
Airth. The upper reaches of the Forth were protected by new fortifications on
Inchgarvie. Scottish ships had some success against privateers, accompanied the king in his expeditions in the islands and intervened in conflicts in
Scandinavia and the
Baltic Sea. Expeditions to the Highlands to Islands to curb the power of the
MacDonald Lord of the Isles were largely ineffective until in 1504 the king accompanied a squadron under Wood heavily armed with artillery, which battered the MacDonald strongholds into submission. Since some of these island fortresses could only be attacked from seaward, naval historian N. A. M. Rodger has suggested this may have marked the end of medieval naval warfare in the
British Isles, ushering in a new tradition of
artillery warfare. James IV acquired a total of 38 ships for the Royal Scots Navy, including
Margaret, and the
carrack Michael or
Great Michael, the largest warship of its time (1511). The latter, built at great expense at Newhaven and launched in 1511, was in length, weighed 1,000 tons, had 24 cannon, and was, at that time, the largest ship in
Europe. It marked a shift in design as it was designed specifically to carry a main armament of heavy artillery.
Privateers Scots privateers and pirates preyed upon shipping in the North Sea and off the Atlantic coast of France. Scotland's
Admiralty court judged whether a captured ship was a lawful prize and dealt with the recovery of goods. As the court was entitled to a tenth of the value of a prize, it was a profitable business for the admiral. The privateers Andrew and Robert Barton were still using their letters of reprisal of 1506 against the Portuguese in 1561. The Bartons operated down the east coast of Britain from Leven and the Firth of Forth, while others used the French Channel ports such as Rouen and Dieppe or the Atlantic port of Brest as bases. In 1507 Robert Barton with
Lion took a Portuguese ship, but was detained by the Dutch authorities at
Veere for piracy. James IV managed to engineer his release, but in 1509 John Barton with
Lion took a Portuguese vessel that was carrying Portuguese and English goods. In 1511 Andrew Barton headed south with
Jennet Purwyn and another ship to continue the private war, and took prizes that he claimed were Portuguese, but contained English goods. He was intercepted in the
English Downs by
Lord Thomas Howard and
Sir Edward Howard. Barton was killed and his two ships captured and transferred to the English navy.
James V '', in the English
Anthony Roll James V entered his majority in 1524. He did not share his father's interest in developing a navy, relying on French gifts such as
Salamander, or captured ships like the English
Mary Willoughby. Scotland's shipbuilding remained largely at the level of boat building and ship repairs and fell behind the Low Countries which led the way into semi-industrialised shipbuilding. James V built a new harbour at
Burntisland in 1542, called 'Our Lady Port' or 'New Haven,' described in 1544 as having three blockhouses with guns and a pier for great ships to lie in a dock. The chief employment of naval power in his reign was in a series of expeditions to the Isles and France. In 1536 the king circumnavigated the Isles, embarking at
Pittenweem in
Fife and landing
Whithorn in
Galloway. Later in the year he sailed from
Kirkcaldy with six ships including the 600 ton
Mary Willoughby, and arrived at
Dieppe to begin his courtship of his first wife
Madeleine of Valois. After his marriage he sailed from
Le Havre in
Mary Willoughby to Leith with four great Scottish ships and ten French. After the death of Queen Madeleine, John Barton, in
Salamander returned to France in 1538 to pick up the new queen,
Mary of Guise, with
Moriset and
Mary Willoughby. In 1538 James V embarked on the newly equipped
Salamander at Leith and accompanied by
Mary Willoughby,
Great Unicorn,
Little Unicorn,
Lion and twelve other ships sailed to
Kirkwall on
Orkney. Then he went to
Lewis in the West, perhaps using the newly compiled charts from his first voyage known as Alexander Lindsay's
Rutter.
Rough Wooing , by
Olaus Magnus. During the Rough Wooing, the attempt to force a marriage between James V's heir
Mary, Queen of Scots and
Henry VIII's son, the future
Edward VI, in 1542,
Mary Willoughby,
Lion, and
Salamander under the command of John Barton, son of Robert Barton, attacked merchants and fishermen off
Whitby. They later blockaded a London merchant ship called
Antony of Bruges in a creek on the coast of Brittany. In 1544 Edinburgh was attacked by an
English marine force and burnt.
Salamander and the Scottish-built
Unicorn were captured at Leith. The Scots still had two royal naval vessels and numerous smaller private vessels. When, as a result of the series of international treaties,
Charles V declared war upon Scotland in 1544, the Scots were able to engage in a highly profitable campaign of privateering that lasted six years and the gains of which probably outweighed the losses in trade with the
Habsburg Netherlands. by Sir
Andrew Dudley, brother of the
Duke of Northumberland.
Mary Willoughby and
Great Spaniard were blockading Dieppe and Le Havre in April 1547 when
Mary Willoughby was recaptured by
Lord Hertford. In 1547
Edward Clinton's invasion fleet of 60 ships, 35 of them warships, supported the English advance into Scotland. The naval superiority of the English fleet was demonstrated when the
Mary Willoughby was recaptured, along with
Bosse and an English prize,
Anthony of Newcastle, without opposition off
Blackness. In successive campaigns, the Scots had lost all four of their royal ships. They would have to rely on privateers until the re-establishment of a royal fleet in the 1620s. However, as the English fleet retreated for winter, the remaining Scots ships began to pick off stragglers and unwary English merchantmen. In June 1548 the situation was transformed by the arrival of a French squadron of three warships, 16 galleys and transports carrying 6,000 men. The English lost
Pansy in an engagement with the galley fleet and their strategic situation began to deteriorate on land and sea, and the
Treaty of Boulogne (1550) marked the end of the Rough Wooing and opened up a period of French dominance of Scottish affairs.
Battles on Orkney and Shetland The Scots operated in the
West Indies from the 1540s, joining the French in the capture of
Burburuta in 1567. English and Scottish naval warfare and privateering broke out sporadically in the 1550s. The re-fitted
Mary Willoughby sailed with 11 other ships against Scotland in August 1557, landing troops and six field guns on
Orkney to attack
Kirkwall Castle,
St Magnus Cathedral and the
Bishop's Palace. The English were repulsed by a Scottish force numbering 3000, and the English vice-admiral Sir
John Clere of
Ormesby was killed, but none of the English ships were lost. In July 1558, two Scottish warships from Aberdeen, owned by Thomas Nicholson, the
Meikle Swallow and
Little Swallow, attacked an English fleet off Shetland. The Scottish sailors took cattle and other goods belonging to
Olave Sinclair on
Mousa. Sinclair claimed compensation in the Edinburgh courts.
Reformation crisis When the Protestant
Elizabeth I came to the throne of England in 1558, the English party and the Protestants found their positions aligned and the Protestants asked for English military support to expel the French. In 1559, English captain
William Winter was sent north with 34 ships and dispersed and captured the Scottish and French fleets, leading to the siege of the French forces in
Leith, the eventual evacuation of the French from Scotland, and a successful coup of the Protestant
Lords of the Congregation. Scottish and English interests were re-aligned and naval conflict subsided.
Marian Civil War After
Mary, Queen of Scots was captured at the
Battle of Carberry Hill, the
Earl of Bothwell took ship to Shetland. The
Privy Council sent
William Kirkcaldy of Grange and
William Murray of Tullibardine in pursuit in August 1567. Some of their ships came from Dundee, including
James,
Primrose, and
Robert. They encountered Bothwell in
Bressay Sound near
Lerwick. Four of Bothwell's ships in the Sound set sail north to
Unst, where Bothwell was negotiating with German captains to hire more ships. Kirkcaldy's flagship,
Lion, chased one of Bothwell's ships, and both ships were damaged on a submerged rock. Bothwell sent his treasure ship to
Scalloway, and fought a three-hour-long sea battle off the
Port of Unst, where the mast of one of Bothwell's ships was shot away. Subsequently, a storm forced him to sail towards Norway. When Mary's supporters, led by Kirkcaldy, held
Edinburgh Castle in April 1573, prolonging civil war in Scotland, the guns from
Stirling Castle were brought to Leith in four boats.
Regent Morton hired two ships in Leith with their masters John Cockburn and William Downy and 80 men for eight days. These masters of Leith sailed to
Berwick upon Tweed to meet and convoy the English ships carrying the guns to bombard Edinburgh Castle.
James VI goes to Denmark James VI hired ships for his ambassadors and other uses, and in 1588
James Royall of
Ayr, belonging to
Robert Jameson, was fitted out for Sir
William Stewart of
Carstairs to pursue the rebel
Lord Maxwell with 120 musketeers or "hagbutters". In October 1589 James VI decided to sail to Norway to meet his bride
Anne of Denmark. His courtiers, led by the
Chancellor of Scotland John Maitland of
Thirlestane equipped a fleet of six ships.
Patrick Vans of Barnbarroch hired
Falcon of Leith from John Gibson, described as a little ship. Maitland's expenses detail the preparation of
James Royall, which was equipped with cannon by the Comptroller of Ordinance
John Chisholm for the use of the royal gunner James Rocknow, usually based at Edinburgh Castle. The guns were probably intended for firing salutes. The sails of
James were decorated with red taffeta. James VI sent Robert Dog from Denmark to
Lübeck to buy gunpowder which he shipped to Edinburgh castle. James VI sent orders from Denmark to the town of Edinburgh requesting the council hire a ship for his return. They chose the
Angel of Kirkcaldy, belonging to David Hucheson, and this ship was painted by
James Warkman. When Captain Robert Jameson died in January 1608
James was at Ayr, unrigged and stripped of its furniture. ==Seventeenth century==