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James VI of Scotland and James I of England,
James Stuart (June 19, 1566 - March 27, 1625) was the
first king of both England and Scotland, an event known as the
Union of the Crowns. He reigned in Scotland from July 24, 1567, and in England and Ireland from March 24, 1603,
until his death on March 27, 1625.
James succeeded Elizabeth I as the closest living
relative of the unmarried childless English monarch, through his descent from Henry VIII's sister Margaret Tudor. He was a popular monarch, but less skilled at governing than Elizabeth I had been. His
taste for political absolutism, his mismanagement of the
kingdom's funds, and his cultivation of unpopular favourites laid much of the groundwork that would lead to the deposition and
execution of his son Charles I during the English Civil War. During James' own life, however, the government of the
kingdom was relatively stable.
King of Scotland
James became king of Scots on July 24, 1567,
at the age of 13 months, after his mother Mary, Queen of Scots
was forced to abdicate. She fled to England, where she was imprisoned for the next 19 years. His father, Lord Darnley, was assassinated under mysterious circumstances shortly after James
was born. James was formally crowned at the Church of the Holy Rood, Stirling on
July 29, 1567. In deference to the religious
proclivities of most of the Scots ruling class, he was brought up as a member of the Scottish protestant Kirk and educated by men with Presbyterian
sympathies, though his mother was a Roman Catholic.
Marriage
James married Anne of Denmark by proxy on August 20, 1589, and in person on November 23, 1589 and again in person in
January 21, 1590. They had eight
children, of whom seven survived long enough to be named; and only three lived beyond infancy:
- Henry, Prince of Wales- (February 19, 1594 - November 6, 1612).
- Elizabeth Stuart - (August 19, 1596 - February
13, 1662).
- Margaret Stuart - (December 24, 1598 - March, 1600).
- King Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland - (November 19, 1600 - January
30, 1649).
- Robert Bruce Stuart, Duke of Kintyre and Lorne - (January 18, 1602 - May 27,
1602).
- Mary Stuart - (April 8, 1605 - September 16, 1607).
- Sophia Stuart - (June 22, 1606 - June 23, 1606).
King of England
The eldest, Henry Stuart, became Prince of Wales when James VI was invited to take the English throne following the death of
Queen Elizabeth I in 1603. One of his first acts was to end England's involvement in the
Eighty Years' War, with the signing of the Treaty of London in 1604.
James established a residence at Royston a town at which he stayed on his progress
to London.
Rosicrucianism
Henry died in 1612, during the preparations for the marriage of James's daughter, Elizabeth Stuart (1596-1662) to Frederick V, Elector Palatine. This wedding was negotiated at Royston, and has been connected
to the rise of Rosicrucianism, which was a secret society in support of
protestant illumination across Germany and Bohemia. Prince Henry had been at the head of the war party at the court of King James, but his death
dissolved their power. Frederick V became embroiled in the election of the new Holy Roman Emperor by claiming the throne of Bohemia. However he was opposed by Archduke Ferdinand who duly succeeded as
Emperor. After the Battle of White Mountain, the
couple went into exile and were known as the "Winter King" and "Winter Queen", taking up residence in The Hague. Germany was then sunk in the Thirty
Years War, while the new union of England and Scotland developed its maritime empire.
Relations with Parliament
James had enormous difficulties in coping with parliamentary criticism. The structure of English government made it impossible
to raise sufficient revenue without parliaments, but his belief in the Divine Right of Kings made him unwilling to listen to criticism of his unpopular diplomatic schemes.
His 1622 parliament was dissolved because of parliamentary criticisms of the Spanish Match, the proposal to marry his son prince Charles to Princess
Maria Anna of Spain.
Intellectual Interests
Along with Alfred the Great, King James is considered to have
been one of the most intellectual and learned individuals ever to sit on any English, Scottish or British throne, and as a
partial result, much of the cultural flourishing of Elizabethan
England continued. James himself was talented scholar, and published several books in Latin. He is also remembered for authorising the production of the King James Version of the Bible, the highly popular English
translation from Greek and Hebrew. Beyond that, he wrote several works himself, including Daemonologie (1597, on witchcraft), Basilikon Doron (1599) and
A
Counterblast to Tobacco (1604). However, he lacked Elizabeth's business skills. His expenditures always outran his
revenue, and after the death of the capable Earl of Salisbury
there were no real attempts to put the government on a sound financial footing.
Miscellaneous
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He also held the title of King of France, as had all his predecessors on the English
throne since October 21, 1422 although by
his time the title didn't imply an active claim for that throne. His successors continued to use the title until the Act of Union 1800.
James was responsible for the building of the Banqueting House at the Palace of Whitehall.
On April 12, 1606 the original Union Flag (then simply known as the British flag, rather than the Union Flag / Union
Jack), combining the red cross of St. George of England and the saltire of St. Andrew of Scotland, was created for James.
In the 1590s, he attended the North Berwick Witch
Trial in which several people were accused of having created a storm in an attempt to sink the ship on which James and Anne
had been travelling back from Denmark. This made him very concerned about the threat that witches and witchcraft were posing to
himself and the country. He wrote the aforementioned treatise on demonology. In 1604, the first year of James's reign, he
broadened Elizabeth's Witchcraft Act to bring the penalty of death
without benefit of clergy to any one who invoked evil spirits or communed with familiar spirits.
'Queen James'
One area of James VI/I's life that for many years remained clouded in controversy were allegations that James was in fact
homosexual. While his close relationships with a number of men were
noted, earlier historians questioned their sexual nature.
Few modern historians cast any doubt on the King's homosexuality and the fact that his sexuality and choice of male partners
both as King of Scotland then later in London as King of England were the subject of gossip from the taverns to the Privy Council. His relationship as a
teenager with Esmé Stuart, Seigneur d'Aubigny, Earl of Lennox was criticised by Scottish church leaders, who were part of a
conspiracy to keep the young King and the French courtier apart. Lennox, facing
threats of death, was forced to leave Scotland. In the 1580s, King James openly kissed Francis Stewart Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell. Contemporary sources clearly hinted their relationship
as sexual. When James inherited the English throne from Queen Elizabeth I in 1603, it was openly joked of the new English monarch in London that Rex fuit Elizabeth: nunc
est regina Jacobus (Elizabeth was King: now James is Queen.)
Historians have debated whether
James was unwise in his choice of male partners, from page-boy-turned-Gentleman-of-the-Bedchamber Robert Carr (made Earl of Somerset) to royal-cupbearer-turned-Earl-of-Buckingham, George Villiers, whose relationship with the King was discussed at the Privy
Council (James called Villiers his 'wife' and he Villiers' 'husband'.) Buckingham in particular came to play a major part in the
governance of the English kingdom, though historians differ on whether Buckingham's impact was positive or negative.
Death
James VI/I died in 1625 of gout and senility and is buried in the Henry VII chapel in
Westminster Abbey. When on 23 August 1628 Buckingham was assassinated, he was buried in a tomb to King
James' right in the Henry VII chapel. Another of James' male favourites was buried in a tomb on the King's left.
James's second son, Charles, succeeded James on the throne as King Charles I, in 1625.
Quotes
- "Monarchy is the greatest thing on earth. Kings are rightly called gods since just like God they have power of life and death
over all their subjects in all things. They are accountable to God only ... so it is a crime for anyone to argue about what a
king can do" [1]
- "Kings...have power of raising and casting down, of life and death, judges over all their subjects...and yet accountable to
none but God only."
- "A Scotch Presbytery agreeth as well with monarchy as God with the devil. Then Jack and Tom and Will and Dick
shall meet, and at their pleasure censure me and my council...Until you find that I grow lazy, let that alone..."
Additional Reading
- Fraser, Antonia. King James VI of Scotland and James I of England (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1974)
- Lee, Maurice. England's Solomon: James VI and I in his Three Kingdoms (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
1990)
- G.P.V. (ed.). Letters of King James VI & I. (Berkeley : University of California Press, 1984)
- Young, Michael B. King James and the History of Homosexuality. (New York : New York University Press,
2000)
- Rictor Norton, "Queen James and His Courtiers", The Great Queens of History, updated 8 Jan. 2000 http://www.infopt.demon.co.uk/jamesi.htm.
External links
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