In 1559,
John Knox returned to Scotland, marking a new effort in his battle to reform the nation. Scottish
Protestants in the 1520s and 1530s were
Lutherans such as
Patrick Hamilton and
George Wishart, who translated the
First Helvetic Confession written by Heinrich Bullinger, marking the impact of the Swiss Reformation. With the return of Knox from
Geneva Scottish
Protestants rallied around him and the Scottish
Reformation continued to be characterised by the example of
John Calvin in Geneva.
Queen dowager Mary of Guise, acting as
regent for her daughter
Mary, Queen of Scots, viewed the Protestants as a serious threat and felt the use of force would be necessary against them.
Civil war appeared imminent. Knox at once became the clerical leader of the reformers. He preached against "
idolatry" with the greatest boldness, with the result that what he later called the "rascal multitude" began the "purging" of churches and the destruction of monasteries and nunneries. Armed conflict became centred at the
siege of Leith and in
Fife. Mary of Guise died on 11 June 1560, and a peace was concluded in July by the
Treaty of Edinburgh. The youthful Mary Queen of Scots, then resident in
France, gave permission, through her husband,
Francis II, for Parliament to meet in her absence, but religious questions were specifically to be submitted to the "intention and pleasure" of the king and queen. Still, in August 1560 the 'Reformation Parliament' abolished the
jurisdiction of the
Roman Catholic Church in Scotland with the Papal Jurisdiction Act. ==Course==