Volume I Part 59 (1/2)

[845] In MS. G, ”The brute heirof.”

[846] In the MS. ”alarmezand.”

[847] Knox in this place not only disclaims any share in the destruction of the Abbey; but he expressly states he exerted himself for its preservation. According to ”The Chronicle of Perth,” the burning of Scone, took place ”on Tuysday efter Midsomer day, the 27th of Junij 1660 zeiris;” and the same authority says, ”the Reformation of the Charter House and Freiris beside Perth,” was on the 10th of May 1660, (pp. 2, 3.

Edinb. 1831, 4to.)

[848] In MS. G, ”messingers.” Vautr. edit. has ”message.”

[849] In MS. G, ”in armour.” Vautr. edit. has ”in armes.”

[850] In Vautr. edit. ”of our religion.”

[851] ”Estates” omitted in the orig. MS., and supplied from Vautr. edit.

It is ”Statis” in MS. G.

[852] Vautr. edit. reads, ”have violently intermitted withtaken, and yet withholdes the irones of our counsell house:” see subsequent note.

[853] In MS. G, ”numbers of Lions (alias called Hardheids) prented;”

that is, a particular kind of coin struck. Some explanation will be given in a subsequent note of the coins here mentioned, which were in ordinary circulation.

[854] Irons, or instruments made use of in coining money.

[855] John Wishart of Pittaro, and William Cunningham of Cunninghamhead, in the parish of Dreghorn, Ayrs.h.i.+re. Respecting the latter, it may be mentioned, that he sat in the Parliament, August 1560; and that his name occurs in the proceedings of the General a.s.sembly, June 1565, and August 1570.--(Booke of the Universall Kirk, vol. i. pp. 38, 60, 200.)

[856] In the MS. ”bonds.”

[857] In MS. G, ”dutifull;” in Vautr. edit. ”dutiefull.”

[858] Sir John b.e.l.l.e.n.den of Anchinoul, Justice-Clerk: see note 838.

[859] In MS. G, ”the Kirk.” Vautr. edit. has ”the Church there.”

[860] In MS. G, ”it was thought expedient and necessarie.” Vautr. edit.

is the same as the text, but omits ”to thame,” before the word ”pertaining.”

[861] A reference to the History of France will explain Knox's allusion to the treacherous conduct of Henry the Second, in the arrestment and execution of two of his councillors who had avowed their attachment to the Protestant faith. The death of the French King, which followed almost immediately after, was occasioned in a tournament held in honour of the marriage of his daughter with the King of Spain. In jousting with the Count de Montgomery, a splinter of his lance inflicted a deep wound over the King's left eye, and after lingering for twelve days, he expired on the 10th July 1559. His son the Dauphin, and husband of Mary Queen of Scots, was only sixteen years of age when he succeeded to the throne, under the name of Francis the Second.

[862] Mr. Robert Richardson, according to one of the most accurate of our Antiquarian Genealogists, ”was descended of a stock of ancient and opulent burgesses of Edinburgh, where they had long remained in reputation and respect;” and he being ”a person of great wealth and credit, was upon the fame of his integrity preferred to the Treasurer's place by the Queen Regent, on the death of the Earl of Cussilis, anno 1558, and made also General of the Mint. When Mr.Richardson came first to the office, he designs himself _Burgense de Edinburgh_; but soon after that, having got the Commendatory of St. Mary Isle, which was a cell of Holyroodhouse Abbay, from that he henceforth took his t.i.tle.”--(Crawfurd's Officers of State, p. 383.)

Richardson's name occurs as one of the Auditors of the Treasurer's Accounts, 1551, 1552; and as connected with the Mint, in 1554-5. As Clerk of the Treasury, he rendered the Accounts of the late Gilbert Earl of Ca.s.sillis on the 24th March 1558-9, that n.o.bleman having died in France, on the 14th November 1558, (Register of Conf. Testaments, Feb.

24, 1575,) and not on the 28th of that month, as stated at page 263.

Richardson continued to officiate in the room of the High Treasurer, until his own appointment to the office 5th March 1560-1. He also held more than one lucrative ecclesiastical situation. On the 10th February 1555-6, a charter under the Great Seal, of the lands of Nether Gogar, in the county of Edinburgh, was granted to Mr. Robert Richardson, _Vicar of Exfurde_. On the last of March 1558-9, he obtained a gift of the Priory of St. Mary's Isle of Trail, near Kirkcudbright (Reg. Secr. Sig.): this dignity ent.i.tled him to sit as a Lord and member of Parliament. At a later date, (in 1567,) we find him styled Archdeacon of Teviotdale. He died in 1571: and William Lord Ruthven, on the 24th June 1571, was appointed High Treasurer, the office being vacant by the death of the Commendator of St. Mary's Isle. Sir John Scott says, that Richardson had ”conquest a great estate.” This is very evident, from the various charters he had of lands in the counties of Edinburgh and East Lothian; and his estates were apportioned to his two sons, Sir James Richardson of Smeaton, and Sir Robert Richardson of Pencaitland, Baronet: see Crawfurd, _ut supra_, and Scott's Staggering State, p. 27.

[863] A _bawbee_, the vulgar name for a halfpenny. In the reign of Queen Mary, it was equivalent to three pennies Scotish money, but was afterwards raised to six pennies. The particular coins so designated, were billon or copper, and are described in Lindsay's ”Coinage of Scotland,” p. 183. Cork, 1844, 4to.

[864] Robert Logan of Restalrig, in the vicinity of Edinburgh, and parish of South Leith. This ancient family possessed considerable influence, from their connexion with Leith, of which they held the superiority; as will be more fully detailed in a subsequent note.

[865] In MS. G, ”and yit, notwithstanding.”