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See also: king of Scotland, eldest son of
See also: James III., was
See also: born on the 17th of See also: March 1473
.
He was nominally the
See also: leader of the rebels who defeated the troops of James III. at the Sauchieburn in See also: June 1488, and became king when his See also: father was killed
.
As he adopted an entirely different policy with the nobles from that of his father, and, moreover, showed See also: great affability towards the See also: lower class of his subjects, among whom he delighted to wander incognito, few if any of the See also: kings of Scotland have won such general popularity, or passed a reign so untroubled by See also: intestine strife
.
Crowned at Scone a few days after his accession, James began at once to take an active See also: part in the business of See also: government
.
A slight insurrection was easily suppressed, and a See also: plot formed by some nobles to See also: hand him over to the See also: English king, See also: Henry VII., came to nothing
.
In spite of this proceeding Henry wished to live at
See also: peace with his See also: northern neighbour, and soon contemplated marrying his daughter to James, but the Scottish king was not equally pacific
.
When, in 1495, Perkin See also: Warbeck, pretending to be the duke of See also: York, See also: Edward IV.'s younger son, came to Scotland, James bestowed upon him both an income and a bride, and prepared to invade See also: England in his interests
.
For various reasons the war was confined to a few border forays
.
After Warbeck See also: left Scotland in 1497, the See also: Spanish ambassador negotiated a peace, and in 1502 a See also: marriage was definitely arranged between James and Henry's daughter See also: Margaret (1489-1541)
.
The See also: wedding took place at Holyrood in See also: August 1503, and it was this union which led to the accession of the See also: Stewart dynasty to the English
See also: throne
.
About the same See also: time James crushed a See also: rebellion in the western isles, into which he had previously led expeditions, and parliamerit took See also: measures to strengthen the royal authority therein
.
At this date too, or a little earlier, the king of Scotland began to treat as an equal with the powerful princes of See also: Europe, See also: Maximilian I., See also: Louis XII.,and others; sending assistance to his
See also: uncle Hans, king of See also: Denmark, and receiving See also: special marks of favour from See also: Pope See also: Julius II., anxious to obtain his support
.
But his position was weakened when Henry VIII. followed Henry VII. on the English throne in 1509
.
Causes of See also: quarrel already existed, and other causes, both public and private, soon arose between the two kings; See also: sea-fights took place between their See also: ships, while war was brought nearer by the treaty of See also: alliance which James concluded with Louis XII. in 1512
.
Henry made a vain effort to prevent, or to postpone, the outbreak of hostilities; but urged on by his French ally and his See also: queen, James declared for war, in spite of the counsels of some of his advisers, and (it is said) of the warning of an apparition
.
Gathering a large and well-armed force, he took Norham and other castles in August 1513, spending some time at See also: Ford See also: Castle, where, according to report, he was en-gaged in an amorous intrigue with the wife of its owner, 'her,
he moved out to fight the advancing English army under See also: Thomas
See also: Howard, See also: earl of Surrey
.
The See also: battle, which took place at See also: Flodden, or more correctly, at the See also: foot of Brankston See also: Hill, on Friday the 9th of
See also: September 1513, is among the most famous and disastrous, if not among the most momentous, in the See also: history of Scotland
.
Having led his troops from their position of vantage, the king himself was killed while fighting on foot, together with nearly all his nobles; there was no foundation for the rumour that he had escaped from the carnage
.
He left one legitimate See also: child, his successor James V., but as his gallantries were numerous he had many illegitimate See also: children, among them (by Marion See also: Boyd) See also: Alexander Stewart, archbishop of St Andrews and chancellor of Scotland, who was killed at Flodden, and (by
See also: Janet See also: Kennedy) James Stewart, earl of See also: Moray (d
.
1544)
.
One of his other mistresses was Margaret See also: Drummond (d
.
1501)
.
James appears to have been a brave and generous See also: man, and a wise and energetic king
.
According to one account, he was possessed of considerable learning; during his reign the ScottishSee also: court attained some degree of refinement, and Scotland counted in See also: European politics as she had never done before
.
Literature flourished under the royal patronage, See also: education was encouraged, and the material condition of the country improved enormously
.
Prominent both as an See also: administrator and as a lawgiver, the king by his vigorous See also: rule did much to destroy the tendencies to independence which existed in the See also: Highlands and Islands; but, on the other hand, his rash conduct at Flodden brought much misery upon his See also: kingdom
.
He was specially interested in his See also: navy
.
The tournaments which took place under his auspices were worthy of the best days of chivalry in See also: France and England
.
James shared to the full in the superstitions of the age which was quickly passing away
.
He is said to have worn an iron See also: belt as penance for his share in his father's See also: death; and by his frequent visits to shrines, and his benefactions to religious See also: foundations, he won a reputation for piety
.
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