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SroTTlSH SEALS 

, W/i.j i RnPCRAY-BIRCHLLDFS 




. B 



H ISTORY 



() F 



SCOTTISH SEALS 



HISTORY 



OK 



SCOTTISH SBALS 

FROM THE ELEVENTH TO THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY, 

AVITH UPWARDS OF TWO HUNDREJ) ILLUSTRATIONS 

DERIVED FROM THE FINEST AND MOST 

INTERESTING EXAMPLES EXTANT. 



3Y 

WALTER DE GRAY gIRCH, LLD., F.S.A., 

LATE OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



VOL. I. 
THE ROYAL SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



Stirling : Eneas Mackay, 43 Murray Plack. 
London: T. Fisher Unwin, 11 Paternoster Buildings, E.C. 

1 905. 



PrliitiMl Mi tli<» 
HllrlliiK OI»M>r\«r Ottlco. 



CONTENTS. 



I'.V(JE 

CHAITER I. 

The Grkat Seals of the Sovereigns, - - - - J) 

(CHAPTER II. 

The Fifteenth Century : -Murdach Stuart — James I. to 

James V., ....... 53 

CHAPTER III. 

The Renaissance— Mary, Queen of Scots, and Her Successors, Ort 

( HAPTER IV. 

Seals of Queens-Consort and of Officers of Stat?:, - 86 






LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



I'AGK 

No. 1. Duncan II., King of Scots, - - - - - 97 

„ 2. Edgar, King of Scots, . . - . . 99 

„ 3. Mathildis, or Maud, of Scotland, . . . . loi 

„ 4. Alexander I., King of Scots, .... 103 

„ 5. Alexander I., King of Scots, ..... lo.") 

„ 6. William "the Lion," King of Scots, - - - 107 

„ 7. William "the Lion," King of Scots,- - - - lOf) 

„ 8. Alexander II., King of Scots, - - - - 111 

„ 9. Alexander II., King of Scots, - - - - 113 

„ 10. Alexander III., King of Scots (First Seal)^ - - 11.") 

„ 11. Alexander III., King of Scots (First Seal), - - - 117 

„ 12. Alexander III., King of Scots (Second Seal), - - 119 

„ 13. Alexander III., King of Scots (Second Seal), - - 121 
„ 14. Great Seal appointed for the Government of the Realm 

AFTER Death of King Alexander III., - - 123 
„ 15. Great Seal appointed for the Government of the Realm 

AFTER Death of King Alexander III., - - - 12.") 

„ 16. John Balliol, King of Scots, - - - - 127 

„ 17. John Balliol, King of Scots, - - - - - 129 
„ 18. Edward L, King of England (Seal for Government of 

Scotland), ----... 131 
„ 19. Edward I., King of England (Revei-se of Seal for 

Government of Scotland), - - - - - 133 

„ 20. Robert Bruce I., King of Scots (Firet Seal), - - 135 

„ 21. Robert Bruce I., King of Scots (Fii-st Seal), - - 137 

„ 22. Robert Bruce I., King of Scots (Second Seal), - - 139 



viii. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



No. 


23. 


»i 


24. 


»i 


25. 


?i 


26. 


*» 


27. 


j> 


28. 


»j 


21). 


»» 


30. 


*» 


31. 


j» 


32. 


?i 


33. 


»» 


34. 


J* 


35. 


»i 


36. 


11 


37. 


«* 


38. 


>» 


39. 


*? 


40. 


11 


41. 


'1 


42. 


i» 


43. 


*i 


44. 


<* 


45. 


»' 


46. 


M 


47. 


?» 


48. 


>» 


49. 


J» 


50. 


»» 


51. 


»* 


52. 


J» 


53. 



Robert BRrcE I., King of Scots (Secoiul Seal), - - 141 

David II., King of Scots, - - - - - 143 

David II., King of Scots, - - - - 145 

Edward Ballioi^ King of Scots, - - - - 147 

Edward Balliol, King of Scots, - - - - 149 

Robert Stiart II., King of Scots, - - - 151 

Robert Stiart II., King of Scots, . . . . i.")3 

Robert Stuart II., King of Scots, - - - 155 

Robert Stiart II., King of Scots (Liiter Seal), - - 157 

.Tames I., King of Scots, ----- ir>9 

James I., King of Scots, - - - - - KU 
Robert Sti'art, Duke of Albany, (tovernor of Scotland, etc., 163 
Robert Stlart, Duke of Albany, (Governor of Scotland, eU-., 165 

Mi'RDAcii Stuart, Regent of Scotland, eU-., - - Wu 

Mlrdach Stuart, Rp:gent of Scotland, eU-., - - 169 

Jamf:s II., King of Scots, - - - - - 171 

James 11., King of Scots, - - - - - 173 

James V., King of Scots (Seeoiul Seal), - - - 175 

James V., King of Scots (Second Seal), - - - 177 

Mary, (^ueen of Scots (Fii>»t Seal), - - - 179 

Mary, Queen of Scots (Fii^t Seal), - - - - 181 

Mary, (^ueen of Scots (Second Seal), - - - 183 

Mary, Queen of Scots (('ountei*seal of the Second Seal), - 185 

Mary, (^ueen of Scots (Third Seal), - - - 187 

Mary, Queen of Scots (CVmnteiseal of the Third Seal), - 189 

James VI., King of Scots (Seal for Scotland), - - 191 

Jamrs VI., Kincj of Scots (Seal for Scotland), - - 193 

Jamf«s I., King of (treat Britain (Seal for Scotland), - 195 

James I., King of (Jreat Britain (Seal for Sc(>tland), - 197 

Charles I., Kixc; of Great Britain (Seal fr)r Scotland), 199 

Charles L, King of Great Britain (Seal for Scotland), - 201 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



CHAPTER I. 



The Grkat Seals ov the Sovereigns. 

THE earliest history of the kings of Scotland, like that of 
kings of other countries, is involved in obscurity. One 
of the latest writers on the royal Scottish genealogy 
gives a pedigree commencing with Alpin the Scot, whose son, 
Kenneth I. — called Kenneth MacAlpin — held the reins of 
empire from a.d. 844 to 859, in which latter year he was 
succeeded by his brother, Donald I. Kenneth I. left three 
children — Constantine I., who ruled from a.d, 863 to 877 ; 
Aed, who succeeded his elder brother, a.d. 877, and gave place 
to Eocha, son of Run, the husband of a daughter, the third 
child of Kenneth I. Eocha was succeeded by Donald IL, son 









lO THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

of Constantine I., a.d. 889-900. To him succeeded Constantine 
II., son of Aed, a.d. 900-942. Malcolm I., son of Donald II., 
ruled from a.d. 942 to 954, and was followed by Indulf, son of 
Constantine II., a.d. 954-962. The next king on record is 
Dubh, eldest son of Malcolm II., a.d. 962-967; then Cuilean, 
son of Indulf, a.d. 967-971 ; Kenneth II., second son of 
Malcolm I., a.d. 971-995; Constantine III., son of Cuilean, 
A.D. 995-997; and Kenneth III., son of Dubh, a.d. 997-1005. 
To the last of these succeeded Malcolm II„ son of Kenneth II. 
He is called Malcolm Maccinaeth, King of Alban, King of 
Scotia, and by other titles. He was born in or before a.d. 
954, and became King of Scots in Alban, after defeating his 
cousin Kenneth III., in battle at Monzievaird, on the River 
Earn, about 25th March, 1005. In 1031, Scotia was invaded 
by Canute, or Cnut, King of England, and Malcolm II., with 
two powerful chieftains, submitted to him in 1031. King 
Malcolm II. died, after a reign of upwards of twenty-nine 
years, at the age of eighty or more years, at Glammys, on the 
25th November, 1034. To Malcolm II. succeeded his grandson, 
Duncan the First — known as Duncan the Wise — King of 
Scots, or King of the Cumbrians. Shakespeare calls him "the 
Gracious Duncan " in Macbeth, He was the eldest son of the 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. I I 



thegn Crinan, hereditary lay Abbot of Dunkeld, and Steward 
of the Isles, by his wife, Bethoc, eldest daughter of the previous 
monarch. After a short reign of five years and eight months, 
he was murdered by Macbeth, one of his commanders, at 
Bothnagowan, or Pitgaveny, near Elgin, on 14th August, 1040. 
To him succeeded his murderer, Macbeth, the mormaer of 
Moray, son of Finlaec, the mormaer; his mother being supposed 
to have been Donada, the second daughter of King Malcolm II. 
Macbeth met his death by the hands of his murderer, Malcolm, 
King of the Cumbrians, afterwards known as Malcolm III., 
** Ceannmor," at Lunfanan, in Mar, 15th August, a.d. 1057; 
and after the short reign of Lulach, son of Gillacomgan, 
mormaer of Moray, by his wife, Gruoch, daughter of Bodhe, 
and stepson of King Macbeth, who married Gruoch, on 
Gillacomgan s death, who was also murdered by Malcolm, at 
Essie, in Strathbogie, 17th March, 1057-8. The murderer'**' sat 
upon the throne of his victims as the ** Great Head," or Chief, 
— the last king who possessed Alban — being the eldest son 

* In H.M. Record Office there is a remarkable seal, imperfect, in brown wax, attributed 
to Malcolm III., or Canmore, King of Scots. It bears a shield of arms: a lion rampant, the 
tail curved inwards, after a peculiar manner (to be discussed hereafter), \vithin a double tressure 
flory counterflory, the Royal Arms of Scotland of a later age. This is an undoubted forgery, 



12 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

of King Duncan I. This king invaded England on several 
occasions, and on the last occasion he met his death at the 
hands of Morel of Bamborough, at Alnwick, in Northumberland, 
on i3th November, 1093, after a reign of upwards of thirty-five 
years. To him followed his younger brother, Donald Bane, 
King of Scots, or of Alban, at th© age of about sixty years, 
but after six months he was deposed by his nephew, Duncan, 
eldest son of Malcolm III., by his first wife, Ingibjorg, daughter 
of Earl Finn Arnason, and widow of Thorfinn Sigurdson, Earl 
of Orkney. In a charter, still preserved at Durham, he styles 
himself ** Dunecan, son of King Malcolumb, by hereditary right 
King of Scotia." In this kings reign the history of the Seals 
of Scotland begins. These seals have had considerable attention 
drawn to them by several writers, but no one has taken up the 
subject comprehensively. One of the earliest writers is James 
Anderson, whose Diplomatum Scotie Thesaurus^ also known 
by the title of Diplomata Scotie, published at Edinburgh, in 



prol>ably to be attributed to the notorious John Harding, whose work is seen again on another 
seal presently to be mentioned. The charter to which it has been fixed is an acknowledgment 
by Malcolm of Edward the Confessor's overlordship, and is dated 5th June, 1065. A moment*s 
glance at this seal will convince the merest beginner of its spurious diaracter. The legend, 
if ever there was one, has been conveniently chipped away. Of this seal there are two casts 
among the collections in the British Museum, descril)ed in the catalogue at p. 647. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 1 3 



folio, in 1739, gave engraved fac-similes of royal charters, and 
reproduced the seals, but he gives no description of them. 
Thomas Astle's Account of the Seals . . . of Scotland, 
1792, is a work of considerable value. Henry Laing, 
in 1850, published at Edinburgh his Descriptive Catalogue 
of Impressions from Ancient Scottish Seals . . . taken 
from Original Charters y etc,,'' and a Sjipplemental Descriptive 
Catalogue, in 1866, but his descriptions are confused 
and sometimes incorrect. In 1895, ^^e fourth volume of the 
Catalogue of Seals ifi the Department of Mantiscripts in the 
British Museum was published, the contents of which included 
technical descriptions of the largest public collection of Scottish 
and Irish seals then available to research, with numerous 
illustrations. There are short but useful articles on the Great 
Seals of Scotland by Allan Wyon, F.S.A., Chief Engraver of 
Her Majesty's Seals, \n\\\^ Journal of the British Arc hceological 
Association, Vol. XLV., for 1889. 

The Seal of King Duncan II., the earliest extant Great 
Seal, is best known from an impression, unfortunately not 
perfect, preserved among the numerous Scottish documents 
in possession of the Dean and Chapter of Durham. When 
perfect the seal measured about two inches and one-eighth. 



14 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

On it are observed the king riding on a warhorse turned to 
the right. He is attired in a kind of trellised or fretty 
hauberk or shirt of mail ; the helmet is of the conical shape 
in use generally at the time, and is furnished with a nasale, 
or projecting piece for protection of the nose. In his 
right hand the king holds a lance-flag, the pennon of which 
is of two points. In his left hand he holds the strap of a 
kite-shaped shield, but it is only seen from the interior, so that 
if the king at this early time bore any preheraldic device 
graven on his shield, this gives us no assistance in ascertaining 
what it may have been. The horse is furnished with a small 
saddle of simple form, having a high curved pommel and 
crupper, and across the breast carries the breast-band or poy- 
trail, that is, pectoral, and the head-harness. Of the legend only 
the first and last parts remain, but from Laing s suggestion for 
the full legend it may fairly be read thus — 

SIGILL[vM . DVNCANI . DEO . RECTORE . REGIS . SCOtJoRVM. 

The part within brackets is not now existent on the seal. 
The charter to which this seal is appended is believed to be 
the earliest document of its kind relating to Scotland. It is 
dated, by internal evidence, but not specifically expressed, 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 1 5 



between the month of April and the 12th of November, 1094. 
In it the King styles himself — ** Dunecan, son of King 
Malcolumb, by hereditary right King of Scotia." Duncan was 
entrapped and betrayed to death by his half-brother, Eadmund, 
and his paternal uncle, Donald Bane, to Malpeder Macloen, 
the mormaer of the Mearns, at Monacheden, on the 12th of 
November, 1094, being then aged about thirty-four years. 

Of Donald Bane, who succeeded to the throne a second 
time, on the death of Duncan, no seal is known to exist. He 
was deposed by his nephew, Eadgar, with English assistance, 
in October, 1097, ^^^ deprived of eyesight. 

Eadgar, having deposed Donald, came to the throne of 
Scotland when about twenty-three years old. There is an 
impression, somewhat severely chipped, in the possession of the 
Dean and Chapter of Durham, which measures about two inches 
and three-eighths in diameter, and is, therefore, not much larger 
than the preceding seal of the series. Here the equestrian 
figure of the warrior-king is replaced by a representation 
of a law-giving king, enthroned on a stool or chair of 
state, designed with the legs ternjinating like the claws of 
an eagle. The king s arms are uplifted from the elbow, and 
he is attired in a loosely-shaped mantle falling down in ample 



1 6 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

folds between the knees, and fastened with a fermail, or 
brooch, over the right shoulder. The crown is indistinct, and 
of circular shape, perhaps consisting of trefoils, or fleurs-de-lis, . 
on a circlet, and finished with a cross on the top. In the right 
hand the king holds the royal septre, with the butt resting on 
his knee, emblematic of his sway over his subjects ; in the 
left hand, a sword, held, not by the usual grip, but near 
the point, with the handle resting on the left knee. This 
symbolises his intention of defending his kingdom and 
his right against all enemies. The feet rest on a dais or 
platform of restricted dimensions. The legend or inscription is 
unconventional, and, with missing letters supplied, it reads — 

IMAGO . EDGARI . SCOTTORVM . BASILEL 

Eadgars sister, the "good Queen Maud," was married to 
Henry I., King of England, at Westminster, on the* nth 
November, iioo. Her seal is of interest, but does not belong 
to the series of Scottish Royal Seals ; it is given in order to 
enable the student to compare Scottish and English seal- 
art at this remote period. This is a pointea, oval seal, 
measuring about three inches and one-eighth by two inches and 
three-sixteenths, bearing a standing figure of the Queen Consort 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 1 7 

wearing a long dress, the cloak fastened at her throat, long 
sleeves or maunches, and headdress, all component parts of the 
inartistic and apparently uncomfortable attire used by royal and 
noble personages in the twelfth century. The queen stands on 
a flat platform, or corbel, and holds, in the right hand, a sceptre, 
with open trefoiled handle, the head of which is of cruciform 
shape and surmounted with a dove, symbolical of mercy, 
clemency, and gentleness. In the left hand we see the mound 
or orb of the realm, usual emblem of royalty and rule. The 
legend, when complete, was — 

SIGILLVM . MATIIILDIS . SECVNDAE . DEI . GRATIA 

REGINAE . ANGLIAE. 

The use of the word second is probably to distinguish the 
Queen from Maud, or Mathildis, the first Queen Consort, 
wife of William the Conqueror. 

With Alexander the First, who was King from the 8th of 
January, 1106-7, to 23rd April, 11 24, a new type of Great 
Seal was initiated which has endured — with few but notable 
interruptions — to the present day. This is the duplex type, 
where the king, as king, seated on a throne, is delineated on 
the one side, and as military leader, riding to war on a charger 



1 8 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



at the head of his host, on the other. A fine but imperfect 
impression of the Great Seal of Alexander I. is extant It 
measures about two inches and five-eighths in diameter. It is 
difficult to determine whether the throne side or the rider side 
should be considered the obverse or the reverse, nor is it 
material to do so. Some of the later Great Seals, of which 
notice is given in their proper chronological order, appear to 
favour the view that the horse side is the more important of the 
two, and should, therefore, be called the obverse, while other 
seals apparently favour the opposite view, and point to the 
throne side as obverse. 

In this seal of Alexander we will call the horse side the 
obverse, or principal side. Here the king is riding to the right 
in profile. He wears the hauberk of mail, on which the 
flattened rings of metal are distinctly noticeable on the stuff 
which fits closely to the body, with a short skirt. Beneath it are 
the tunic, chaussds, or leggings, of the same style, and spur. On 
his head is a conical helmet with the nasale, already described 
in Eadgar's seal. Beneath the helmet is the hood, or coif of 
mail, attached to the hauberk, and thrown back so as to show 
the king's face. In the right hand is a gonfanon, with three 
streamers, and Mr. Wyon, in a paper on the Great Seals of 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 1 9 



Scotland, which was read at Glafegow during an Archaeological 
Congress in 1888, thinks that the almost illegible design on the 
flag may represent St. Andrew, the patron saint of the realm, 
standing in front of his cross, the head towards the lance. I 
must confess to being unable to verify this, but it may be that 
impressions found hereafter will confirm or dispel the idea. In 
the left hand the king holds a kite-shaped shield by the inner 
strap or clutch, showing the inner surface only. The trappings 
of the horse consist of a breast-band or poytraily ornamented 
with ball-fringe on hanging rings, a small saddle, the stirrup, and 
head-stalls, and, lastly, a kind of nasal projection. The legend 
when perfect reads — 

ALEXANDER . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

The reverse of this remarkable seal — remarkable as being 
the first of a long series of seals which draw their design from it 
— shows us the king enthroned in majesty. He wears a close- 
fitting, cap-shaped crown, furnished on each side with a pendent 
tie, or chin-strap, of three tufts or buttons, perhaps a trefoil 
ornament. The details of the crown are not very distinct. He 
has the tunic with tight sleeves, the mantle fastened at the 
throat and adorned with a broad bordure or orphrey, on which 



20 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



are seen circular studs, knobs, or buttons. In the king's right 
hand is a broad sword, so held that the point inclines towards 
the king s head, and in the left hand a mound, or orb, emblematic 
of royal sovereignty, topped with a long cross, as almost 
universally adopted by Christian kings and emperors. The 
throne is cushioned, its form is square, and the dais on which 
the royal feet rest is rectangular. In the field, or ground, of the 
seal, on the right hand side is a roundle, or circular plaque, 
charged with a device, perhaps a rosette or fleurette, but too 
indistinct to be defined more exactly. On the left hand side, 
which is broken away, there was probably a similar device. 
The legend is nearly similar to that above — 

ALEXANDER . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORV. 

David I., the successor of Alexander, was the ninth, and 
youngest, son of Malcolm III., being the sixth son by his 
second wife, St. Margaret, the daughter of Eadward ^Etheling. 
His youth was spent in the English Court, with his brother-in- 
law, Henry I., who married his sister, Maud, or Mathildis, of 
whose seal some notice has already occupied our attention. 
David became king 23rd April, 1 124, on the death of Alexander. 
His seal is only known by an engraving in Anderson's 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 2 1 



Diplomata ScoticCy plate xii., and a very imperfect impression 
attached to a charter in the British Museum. It is similar in 
design to that of Alexander, and is probably from the same 
matrix, with altered legend to suit the new king, but in the 
impression there is not sufficient left to prove this. 

On the death of David I., at the age of about seventy-three, 
he was succeeded by Malcolm IV., called the ** Maiden," from 
his youthful and feminine appearance. He was the eldest son 
of Henry the Earl, Prince of Scotland, and Earl of Northumber- 
land and Huntingdon, by his wife, Ada, daughter of William, 
Earl of Warenne in Normandy, and of Surrey. Earl Henry, 
the youngest son of David I., had died in the lifetime of his 
father. Laing and Wyon describe this king s seal, which, from 
the fragmentary impression among the Panmure Charters, was 
apparently similar to the two foregoing seals of Alexander I. 
and David I. Of the legend nothing can be distinguished that 
will enable us to say if it had been altered to suit the king s 
name or not. 

The next seal introduces to notice a marked improvement 
in the technique of the seal engraver s art. The middle of the 
twelfth century was undoubtedly a period of great and rapid 
advancement in all the arts and sciences which tended towards 



22 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



the improvement of human ideas, and this is reflected in the 
relics which may be still handled and inspected as undoubtedly 
belonging to that age. Seals and coins are alm9st the only 
class of antiquities — except, perhaps, dated manuscripts — which 
carry their own date with them, and their details and dissected 
parts throw light upon the manners and customs, the history, 
the heraldry, the weapons, dress, armour, language, and 
palseography of the times to which they must be referred. The 
Seal of William the Lion transcends all its forerunners by size, 
design, conception, feeling, and delicacy of technique, all of 
which stamp it as far superior to what had gone before, and as 
possessing — in a nascent and archaic way, it is true — the germs 
of what the seal engraver of the next two or three centuries 
eventually brought to the highest perfection. 

William the Lion was the brother of the preceding king, 
and the luirldom of Northumberland had been assigned to 
him by King David I., his grandfather, in 1152. He was 
consci rated King by the Bishop of St. Andrews at Scone, 
on iho J.|lh of December, 1165. After invasion of England 
and caplurr. he surrendered the independence of the kingdom 
10 llrnry II. of Kngland by the Convention of Falaise in 
NiMMuandy. Slh December, 1 174, but was subsequently released. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 23 



and his independence restored by Richard I., 5th December, 
1 1 89, and died at Stirling, 4th December, 12 14, after a long 
reign of nearly forty-nine years. 

The one side of William's seal shows the king's effigy 
riding on a horse springing to the right. He wears the conical 
helmet and nasale, the hauberk of mail, and the other details 
which we have seen on the figure of his predecessor. In his 
right hand is a long lance-flag, with three pennons or streamers 
fluttering forwards. The convex shield is furnished with a 
central spike, or umbo, and is supported before the ^king's 
breast by the strap slung over the riders neck. In the left 
hand he holds the reins. The horse's trappings resemble 
those already described, and from below the body of the horse 
is seen the scabbard of the sword hanging from the left thigh 
of the king. The inscription or legend is the same on both 
sides of the seal — 

WILLELMVS . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

On the other side of this seal we have the royal figure 
of the king, a somewhat tall and slender form, wearing a tunic 
with sleeves, a long mantle fastened at the throat and thrown 
behind, and a cap-shaped crown. In the right hand is the long 



^4 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



sword With longitudinal groove, here held nearly vertical ; in 
the left, the cross-topped mound or orb. His throne is 
cushioned, the sides slope towards the top, like the pylon of 
an Egyptian temple ; at each side of the base or plinth is a 
smaill crook-like finial, and the dais or footboard is rectangular. 

The legend is the same as on the other side, but appears to 
be wanting the initial cross, which was, strictly speaking, the 
symbol or ** little sign," described as the **sigillum" in most 
seals other than the great seals of royal personages. 

To William the Lion succeeded his only son, Alexander the 
Second, by his wife, Ermengarde, daughter of Richard, the 
Vicomte of Beaumont. He had been knighted by King John 
of England, 4th March, 121 1-2, and became king at the age of 
sixteen years. He died, aged fifty, on the 8th of July, 1249. 
He is the first King of Scots who used heraldry in his seal. 

On the one side of this seal, which is about three inches and 
a half in diameter, we see the king riding on a horse pacing or 
walking to the right. He wears the hauberk of mail ; the 
surcoat with flowing skirt, which must have trailed on the ground 
when he was on foot ; the flat-topped helmet, with vizor, which 
had replaced the conical cap and nasale of past days ; in his right 
hand is the sword, with a deep channel along the blade ; over 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 2$ 

his vest IS slung the strap of the convex shield, which here for 
the first time we find charged heraldically. It bears a lion 
rampant, not yet apparently confined within the double tressure 
flory counterflory which forms with it the royal heraldry of 
Scotlamd. It is too indistinct, on all the impressions and casts 
which I have seen, to speak of with absolute certainty, although 
Sir Archibald H. Dunbar"^ sees on the shield a tressure fleurs- 
de-lis. Nor can we here distinguish the position in which the 
lion s tail is delineated, a point of some interest, as will be shown 
hereafter. The horse-trappings are simple : the plain saddle 
with high cantle, the breast-band with five pendants, and the 
bordered saddle-cloth behind the seat, charged apparently, as 
the shield, with a Hon rampant, contournd, as heralds say, that is, 
turned facing to the sinister, or right hand, of the spectator, 
instead of to the dexter, or left hand, of the spectator, as all 
heraldic charges are drawn and depicted unless especially 
declared to be otherwise. The legend on each side of the seal 
is — 

ALEXANDER . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 



• Scottish Kings J p. 89. 



26 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



On the other side the king appears in his majesty, enthroned 
and paramount. He is attired in a tunic with girdle, and over 
it a loose mantle caught up on the right knee, laid on the 
.cushion on the left side, and hanging down behind. He has a 
small crown or cap ; the grooved sword in the right hand, with 
its point inclined towards the king s head ; the left hand holds 
the orb, or spherical mound of the world, ensigned with a long 
cross ornamented with two knops in the stem. The throne is 
cushioned, and the cover of the cushion is diapered ; the panel 
work on the front of the throne is adorned with a small arcade. 
The rectangular dais is also relieved with diaper work. At 
each extremity of the throne is a tree of elegant design, 
emblematic (as every detail in seal art is, of some prominent 
fact) of his knighting by the neighbouring king of Plantagenet 
race. Durham Cathedral Chapter possesses no less than fifteen 
impressions of the seal, attached to original charters in 
possession of the Dean and Chapter ; the British Museum, 
eight ; and other seals are preserved among the Melrose 
Charters and other repositories of Scottish diplomata. 

To Alexander H. succeeded his only son, Alexander HI., 
born of his second wife, Marie, daughter of Enquerand HI., 
Baron of Coucy. He came to the throne of the Scots on 8th 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 2^ 



July, 1249, at the early age of seven years, and was set on the 
** throne, that is, the stone," at Scone, 13th July, 1249. After a 
reign of upwards of thirty-six years, he died at Dunfermline, 
29th March, 1286. 

King Alexander III. used two separate types of Great Seal. 
The first, which measures about three inches and three-quarters 
in diameter, represents the sovereign riding on a horse turned to 
the right. He is clad in the tunic of mail, covered with the 
loose hauberk or surcoat then in use, and holds a drawn sword 
in the right hand, while the left hand sustains the convex shield, 
held up by a strap passing over the king's neck. The armorial 
bearings of the shield appear to be a lion rampant within a 
double tressure flory counterflory, which has been borne from 
that time to the present as the Royal Arms of Scotland, with a 
slight, and perhaps unimportant, variation to which notice will 
be drawn presently. The caparisons with which the charger is 
clothed bear the royal armorials above-mentioned, but reversed, 
as is usually the case where heraldic bearings are represented on 
horse furniture. On the other side of the seal the king's figure 
is shown draped with a tunic and ermine-lined mantle, and a 
broad and deeply-grooved sword. He is seated upon a throne 
of elegant design, on the front of which are two small quatrefoiled 



• ^ THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



[>anels or counter-sunk ornaments, each enclosing a leopard's or 
lion s face. The legends or inscriptions which these two sides 
bore are unfortunately wanting. An illustration of the seal is 
given by Laing in his " Supplementary Catalogue," from which 
a good general idea of the beauty of its design, made at a time 
when the art of the seal-engraver was at its best, may be 
gathered. 

Alexander III. s second Great Seal differs considerably from 
those of his father and his own first type, and marks a distinct 
era of progress in many ways. On the one side is shown the 
king, riding on a galloping horse, turned to the right. His 
attire consists of the hauberk of mail, the loose surcoat, the flat- 
topped helmet with the grated vizor and fan-plume or panache. 
In the right hand he holds a deeply-grooved broad sword. The 
convex shield has its strap slung over the rider s neck ; on the 
shield are visible the armorial bearings of a lion rampant within 
a bordure, indistinct, perhaps standing in lieu of the double 
tressure flory counterflory, which are quite manifest on the 
caparisons of the horse, which bears, in addition to its trappings, 
a fan-plume on the head. In the left hand the king holds the 
reins. The background is replenished with slipped trefoils, an 
early form of diaper work which was so favourite a device after- 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 29 



wards of the seal engravers and artists, to fill up blank spaces in 
seals, pictures, coins, and other objects. This seal should be 
compared by the student with the contemporary Great Seals of 
Kings Henry III. and Edward I. o^ England, as described in 
the British Museum Catalogue. Mr. A. Wyon draws attention 
to the resemblance also. The coins of this monarch may also be 
compared in some respect of design and treatment. The 
slipped trefoil is difficult of explanation. It may be that the 
triple lobe of leaflets alludes to the king being the third monarch 
who bore the name of Alexander, but it is only a conjecture, 
which I made in 1888 on the occasion of an exhibition of 
Scottish Great Seals at Glasgow.* It has been shown by Mr. 
Wyon that the Seal of Alexander III. is remarkable in another 
respect. It is the first in which the horses wear a caparison. 
That writer points out that at first the caparison round the hind- 
quarters of the charger is continuous, and leaves no opening for 
the tail. In subsequent seals, however, a small opening is made 
in the cloth, through which the tail passes, and the tail itself 
appears to be tightly wound round with a thread close to the 
body of the animal. 

♦ Journ. Brit, Arch. Assoc. , vol. xlv., p. 99, n. 



30 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



The side of Majesty* shows the king upon his throne. He 
wears the tunic and loose overdress, with broad sleeves dropping 
somewhat lower than the elbow. His right hand grasps the 
royal sceptre, foliated at th^ top and of considerable length. In 
the left hand he holds the cord which confines the mantle to his 
shoulders. The long hair and the moustache of the king are 
clearly depicted. The carving of the throne lends itself to much 
elaboration. The back, the rising sides, and the fronts are 
ornamented with arcadings, crestings, and quatrefoiled and 
trefoiled openings. It also has four upright standards, each 
finished off at the top with a knob and a fleur-de-lis in flower. 
The footboard carries a foot cushion, and rests on an arcaded 
bracket or corbel. Under the king*s feet are two small animals, 
perhaps intended for wyverns or lizards, facing towards each 
other, and each having its long tail terminated with a trefoil of 
the background, which is here, as on the other side of the seal, 
replenished with these heraldic symbols. The legend on each 
side of this beautiful seal is the same — 

ALEXANDER . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 



• Brit. Mus, Catal,, p. 6. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 3 1 

The historical yaj// of the period of Alexander III. and of his 
immediate successors are of much interest. The king s reign 
began on July 8th, 1249, and ended with his death, by a fall from 
his horse, near Kinghorn, in Fifeshire, March 19th, 1285-6, 
in obedience to the prophecy of Thomas the Rhymer, in Dunbar 
Castle, uttered to Patrick, seventh Earl of Dunbar, the very day 
preceding the tragic event.* The king's last son, Prince 
Alexander, had predeceased him on January 28th, 1283-4. To 
him succeeded, accordingly, Margaret, **The Maid of Norway," 
also called **The Damsel of Scotland," only child and heir of 
Eric II., Magnusson, King of Norway, by his first wife, 
Margaret, only daughter of King Alexander III. Her reign 
commenced on March 19th, 1285-6. and ended with her death, 
without marriage, in Orkney, in the presence of the Bishop 
Narve and other notables, who had followed her from Norway on 
her way to Scotland for her marriage to Edward of Caernarvon, 
eldest son of King Edvvard I. of England, on or about Septem- 
ber 26th, 1290. We know of no seal of this queen. To this 
event succeeded the ** First Interregnum," which arose by reason 
of disputes as to who was heir to the Scottish crown. A con- 



• Scotichronican, ii. 131, 1.x. cap. 43 ; Miller, Hist, of Dunbar^ 22, 23. 



32 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



vention to settle the heirship was held by King Edward I. with 
the bishops, nobles, and people of the kingdoms of Scotland and 
England, at Norham, on May loth, 1291, where the thirteen 
claimants or competitors presented their claims personally or by 
proxy, and eventually the king, as arbitrator, awarded the king- 
dom to John Balliol, in the Hall of Berwick Castle, on Novem- 
ber 17th, 1292. During this Interregnum a very beautiful seal 
had been made and used, by appointment, ** for the government 
of the realm.*' On the one side of this we observe a figure of 
St. Andrew, the Patron of the Realm, with nimbus and tunic, 
fastened on the cross saltire, with which he is ever associated. 
The background here also is formed by a regular series of 
slipped trefoils or shamrocks, to which reference has already 
been made. It may be that, notwithstanding all that has already 
been remarked, this was the national plant or flower of Scotland, 
brought from Ireland, before the adoption of the thistle, which 
first appears on seals at a later date. The legend is a rhyming 
hexameter verse of invocation — 

ANDREA , SCOTIS . DVX . ESTO . COMPATRIOTIS. 

The reverse side of this very interesting specimen of native 
goUlsmith^s art of the thirteenth century brings before us a 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 33 



shield of the Royal Arms of the realm, designed with exquisite 
skill and true heraldic feeling. The proportions of the shield 
itself; its slightly convex curve, seen in the few impressions 
which have withstood the ravages of upwards of six hundred 
years ; the well-designed lion rampant, the principal charge, 
with the tail incurved or bent inwards towards the neck of the 
animal — a detail which belongs rightly to the Scottish lion, and 
is found constantly recurrent from the day of the making of 
this seal until the present time, with exceptions arising from 
ignorance, carelessness, or indifference, on the part of those 
who have taken upon themselves the task of reproducing the 
arms ; the regular formation of the flory additions to the double 
tressure ; the semd of slipped trefoils symmetrically disposed 
around the shield, and here representing, by symbolical imagery, 
that the government was supported by the individual members 
of the nation — all these several details go to make up one of the 
most remarkable examples which the whole series of Royal 
Seals of Scotland has to show to us. The legend indicates 
the uses and application of the seal — 

SIGILLUM . SCOCIE . DEPVTATVM . REGIMINI . REGNL 

This first Interregnum, having endured for two years and 



34 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



nearly two months, ended by the accession of John Balliol 
to the throne. 

« 

King Johns reign was neither happy nor long. He was 
crowned at Scone, November 30th, 1292, and it was probably 
not long afterwards that he used the Great Seal which bears his 
name. The British Museum possesses a fine specimen attached 
to a charter without date (Cottonian Charter, v. 32), and there 
is also a fine example preserved in the General Raster House, 
Edinburgh, attached to a deed dated in 1 292. This shows the 
king on a horse galloping, or springing, to the right He wears 
the hauberk and other details of mail armour, overlaid with 
a loosely-flowing tunic. On his head is the crowned helmet 
with grated vizor, three-quarters to the front ; and in the right 
hand is a long, grooved sword, inclined towards the king s head. 
His convex shield is charged with the Royal Arms of Scotland, 
and is worn slung round his neck. The caparisons of the war- 
horse are charged with corresponding armorials, but reversed. 
It is remarkable that the hoofs of the horse were armoured with 
spiked nails. Anderson, in the ** Diplomata,'' gives a very good 
representation of this seal. On the other side we see the king 
as sovereign enthroned, with robes and apparatus not unlike the 
details which are to be observed on the seals of Alexander HI., 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 35 



his predecessor. Here the long sceptre terminates with very 
copious foliation ; the left hand is laid on the royal breast, and 
holds the cord or ribbon of the mantle. The crown is composed 
of three leaves. The long hair of the king hangs down in curls 
over the ears. The throne is elaborate, following the fashion 
found on the Great Seals of England in this respect ; the 
back, front, sides, and projecting dais, or foot-board, being 
enriched with arcadings, quatrefoiled tabernacle work, saltires, 
and four boldly-worked finials with crocketted carvings running 
up the standards. A notable feature in this seal, here attendant 
for the first time, is the introduction of a shield of arms on each 
side of the throne, in the background. That on the right hand 
bears an orle, for the family of Balliol ; that on the left hand 
bears a lion rampant, perhaps with double tail, or, as it is termed 
heraldically, queue fourchde. Mr. Wyon shows that although 
the tinctures are not very clearly defined on the shield of Balliol, 
which occupies the post of honour on the dexter side of the seal, 
they are intended to represent a field gules charged with an orle 
argent, as preserved in a window placed in the Chapter House 
of York Minster in honour of Balliols marriage with Isabel de 
Warrenne, daughter of John de Warrenne, Earl of Surrey. It 
is not clear to what the sinister shield refers. If it be intended 



36 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

4 

for the Royal Arms of Scotland, it is (as far as can be made out 
from the indistinct nature of the impression) a variant form of 
the royal arms hitherto and afterwards in use. With more pro- 
bability the arms may be referred to his wife's paternal coat. The 
legend on each side is — 

lOHANNES . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

The battle of Dunbar, which was fought between the 
English and Scots, and resulted in the defeat of the Scots 
and capture of Dunbar Castle, April 27th, 1296, paved the 
way for the kings abdication to King Edward I., by deed, 
ratified at Brechin Castle, July loth, 1296, after a reign of 
three years and nearly eight months. Of the subsequent 
misfortunes of John Balliol we need take no account. On his 
abdication, the King of England took the reins of government 
into his own hands, and treated Scotland as a conquered 
country, marching from Montrose against the unorganised 
Scotch party, through Aberdeen, Banff, and Cullen, to Elgin 
and Rothes, — the tide of war swaying, now this way, now 
that. The stirring events relating to Wallace, Bruce, Comyn, 
the two sieges of Stirling Castle, and other circumstances 
attending this period, concern the historian more closely than 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. ^J 



the Student of seals, to whom it belongs, however, to record 
the use of two very different seals. The first is that known 
by only one very imperfect impression, preserved at Paris 
among the Archives de L Empire, It was issued by John Souly, 
Custos Regni, and measured about three inches and a quarter in 
diameter when perfect. Laing attributes this, notwithstanding 
the date — February 23rd, 1 301-2 — of the deed to which it is 
attached, to the national party in Scotland. Douet d' Arcq, 
the learned writer on French collections of seals, attributes it 
to the Regency. From its general similarity to French styles, 
and its resemblance in some degree to the Great Seal of King 
Philip III., it can scarcely be doubted that it was executed by 
French goldsmiths, and in that respect it is, of course, connected 
with John, who, while still an exile in that country, retained 
the title of King of Scots. On the reverse of this unique 
impression is the seal of Sir John de Soules, Knt., Custos 
RegnL The design is a figure of the king, be it John or 
Edward, wearing royal robes, charged on the front with the 
Royal Arms of Scotland. He is seated on a throne constructed 
after the manner availing upon French Great Seals of the 
period, with the long thin necks, heads, and legs of leonine 
animals or dogs. In the right hand is a sword held obliquely 



38 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAXD. 

outwards. The field or background is diapered lozengy and 
enriched with a small quatrefml flower in each mesh or space 
formed by the intersecting lines. The legend is fragmentary — 



DEI . GRACL\ . REG. 



Edward 1., King of England, during the second Interregnum, 
loth July, 1296, to 27th March, 1306, used a very beautiful 
seal, which appears to have been made not long after the 
b^inning of this period. On the one side, the king appears 
to have presented his effigy in a way not very unlike that given 
in his Great Seal for England, but with a few variations. In 
this, which appears to be of purely English art, the king sits 
in majesty, enthroned, and vested in a very similar manner to 
the design of the Great Seal for England. The orb with cross 
is, however, here omitted, the small lions leaping up towards 
the king at the sides of the throne are also removed, and some 
of the details of the sceptre-top and carved work varied, but 
enough is left to show the hand of the master-design. 

The legend is — 

SIGILLVM . EDWARDI . DEI . GRACIA . REGIS . 
ANGLIE . DNI . HIBERNIE. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 39 



The reverse, although it only consists of a shield of arms of 
England, is remarkably beautiful for the absolute perfection of 
its proportions. 1 1 is the despair of modern heraldic designers 
whose work invariably falls short of the production of this 
mediaeval period, where their work is not a copy from an ancient 
original. This is shown by the heraldry we see and so often 
shudder at on flags and shields which are displayed to mark 
passing political or historical events. It was different in the 
old times, when art was practised for its own sake. The 
legend continues the sentence from the other side — 

ET . DVCIS . AQUITANIE . AD . REGIMEN . REGNI . SCOCIE . DEPVTATVAL 

The accession of Robert Brus, Earl of Carrick, in Ayrshire, 
to the throne as King of Scots, terminated the second Inter- 
regnum. He was the eldest son of Robert Brus, Earl of Carrick 
and Lord Annandale, by his first wife, Martha, who was 
Countess of Carrick in her own right. Robert had been chosen 
one of the guardians of the kingdom in council at Peebles in 
1299, and became king at the age of thirty-one years. He was, 
we are told by the historians, crowned with a golden coronet 
which was set on his head by the Countess of Buchan, in the 
presence, and with the assent, of four bishops, five earls, and the 



40 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



people of the country, at Scone, on March 27, 1306. This king 
used two seals. The first, like that of preceding use, resembles, 
on the side where the king sits in majesty, that of Edward I. of 
England. In his right hand he holds a long sceptre fleur-de-lis 
at the top, and in the left hand an orb with a long cross. The 
king s feet rest on two long-tailed animals of uncertain form, 
perhaps dragons or lizards. 

ROBERTVS . DEC . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

The carving of the throne shown in the seal indicates progress 
in the art of the seal engraver. It is more elaborate and of 
bolder design. 

On the other side we are shown the figure of the king on 
horselvick. g;Uloping to the right hand, with hauberk and 
chaussos of uKiil, long and flowing surcoat, crown of three fleurs 
or Icaxt^ on u gmttnl helmet The Royal Arms of Scotland are 
\M) iho iihirKl uml surcoiit In the one hand is a broad-sword, 
jVi^rtly jjrvx>vt\l The horse is adorned with a fleur-de-lis plume 
\M\ lis h<\ul Ami the ca|xirisons charged with armorial bearings as 
alnw^. I lore a^^uin the progress of art is manifested, and the 
strikiujj \Ush and mpid movement of the horse rushing to war is 
^uhuivAWy rcprt^sonttxl. The legend is a repetition of that 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 4 1 

which is given on the other side.* There is an example 
of this seal in the British Museum, attached to a document 
dated in a.d. 1316. In 1326 we find Robert Bruce using a 
seal of different design, and somewhat larger diameter. The 
side where the king sits in majesty as a sovereign manifests 
French influence, and here we see the king enthroned, and 
clad with ample vestments. In his right hand he holds 
a long sceptre of authority, with two knops on its stem, 
and an elegantly foliated top. The left hand rests on his breast, 
the first and second fingers extended, holding the cords on the 
mantle, which just appears on the shoulders. The long curled 
hair, the crown of three leaves or fleurs, the throne composed of 
two long recurved necks and heads of dogs, or dragons, on each 
side, are worthy of observation. Over the throne is thrown, in 
ample folds, a cloth of state, diapered and ornamented with an 
embroidered bordering. The footboard is supported on an 
elegantly carved bracket, adorned with foliage and flowers. 

The other side of this fine seal represents the king in his 

* It is worthy of note that the stops employed in the legends of this seal are slipped trefoils, 
and they point to a survival of the use of this emblem, whatever its signiBcation may be, first 
introduced by King Alexander IIL, to which the attention of the reader has already been 
directed. 

C 



42 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

military capacity. He is riding on a horse galloping to the 
right, and wears a hauberk of mail and a short surcoat, on which 
may be distinguished the Royal Arms of Scotland, a reversed 
lion to the sinister, the proper manner of representing the royal 
charge on this apparel. His broad-sword has a deep groove ; 
the shield of arms, as described above, hangs from the neck, the 
helmet is crowned. The caparisons of the horse are embroidered 
with the royal arms. . Each side of this seal bears the same 
legend — 

ROBERTVS . DEO . RECTORE . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

According to one authority* the matrix of this seal was made 
in 13 18. Parts of the impression are rather indistinct. But 
there is a second impression in the British Museum, showing 
marks of the studs used in the matrix to fix the wax securely, 
and in it the top part of the crown, and the top part of the 
helmet, showing the flower of conventional design, which has the 
appearance of a thistle, are clearly shown. This representation 
of the thistle seems to be the earliest example of the national 
flower as depicted on seals. It is worthy of notice as super- 
seding the slipped trefoil which occurs on the first seal, in use a 

* Vetusta Monumenia, vol. iii. p. 6. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 43 



few years previously, and then for the last time in the series. 
The date of the document to which this latter impression is 
attached is Berwick, 26 November, twenty-first year, i.e,, 1326. 

The king died at Cardross, in Dumbartonshire, on the 7th of 
June, 1329, within a few days of completing the fifty-fifth year of 
his age, after a reign of a little more than twenty-three years, and 
was buried in the choir in front of the high altar of the Abbey 
Church at Dunfermline. He was succeeded by David the 
Second, his elder son by his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter of 
Richard de Burgo, or Burgh, second Earl of Ulster. Having 
been born on 5th March, 1323-4, he was but an infant of a few 
years of age when he succeeded to the throne ; and during his 
extended period of rule — nearly forty-two years — he used only 
one Great Seal. This bears on the side of majesty a 
representation of David as a king enthroned. The design is 
not unlike that of his father's seal, which has been already 
described as indicating French influence. The king's feet are 
placed on two wyverns or heraldic lizards addorsed, that is, back 
to back, with their tails nowed or knotted together. The long 
necks of the nondescript animals, two at each side of the throne 
or fald-stool, are very curious, and the heads are looking upwards. 
In the field, on the left of the kings head, is the royal initial 



44 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

letter D, exactly underneath the same letter which begins the 
legend — 

DAVID . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

Laing describes a specimen of this seal among the Melrose 
Charters. 

The equestrian side of the king's Great Seal shows the pro- 
gress which the seal-engraver was making in the art at the 
beginning of the fourteenth century. Here the king is on a 
horse galloping to the right, not unlike the design of the seal of 
the previous king ; the helmet is full-face ; the surcoat, with the 
lion of the royal arms, is turned to the dexter, as in the shield ; 
on the right shoulder is a rectangular ai/ette, charged with the 
Royal Arms of Scotland reversed. The genouillieres^ or knee- 
pieces, are indistinct. The legend is the same as that on the 
other side, but without the additional D in the field. 

We have already shewn that the king only used one seal : 
impressions of it are extant, attached to documents dated in 1359, • 
after the king had reigned thirty years. There is, however, a 
Hnmlltir seal, chipped and imperfect, believed to be deposited in 
thti Public Record Office, a cast of which is in the possession of the 
Hrilish Museum. Laing, in a manuscript belonging to the same 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 45 



institution, shows that it is a forgery by the well-known John 
Harding. It has also been thought that it may be a seal of one 
of the Royal Burghs, and may be compared with that of Had- 
dington. On the one side we observe a figure of the king 
enthroned, with mantle, cape or tippet, crown, and sceptre 
terminating in a foliated ornament of three leaves. The throne 
consists of carved tabernacle work, with four standards or foliated 
finials. The footboard rests on a corbel, but has no cushion. 
In the field at each side of the throne is a tree, or branch of thin 
foliage. The workmanship is very inferior and coarsely cut. 
On the reverse is contained a shield of the Royal Arms of Scot- 
land, on a diapered or hatched background. A cusped panel of 
ten points includes the whole design. Each side bears the same 
legend — 

SIGILLVM . DAVID . DEI . GRACIA . REGIS . SCOTTOR. 

This seal is unworthy of a place in the series of Royal Seals 
of Scotland, but it must be mentioned here because of the 
prominence which some have given to it as of regal use. 

The king died in Edinburgh Castle on the 22nd February, 
1 3 70- 1, and, leaving no issue, was succeeded by Robert the 
Second, a Stewart, or High Steward, the first king of the 



46 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



Dynasty of Stewart or Stuart, which was destined to rule the 
fortunes, or misfortunes, of the kingdom for three hundred years. 
He was the only son of Walter, the sixth High Steward of 
Scotland, by his first wife, Margeria, or Marjorie Brus, the only 
child of the first marriage of Robert I. Brus, King of Scots. He 
was born on 2nd March, 1315-16, and, therefore, at his accession 
in February, 13 70-1, was well advanced in years. Before pro- 
ceeding to describe the seal of this king we must take cognisance 
of Edward Balliol, who had been crowned King of the Scots by 
the English and his own adherents, at Scone, on the 24th 
September, 1332. 

Edward's Seal marks another epoch in the art. He discards 
the French proclivities of David, and reverts to more English 
styles ; and although it cannot be said that the seal is so well 
designed as those of his contemporary. King Edward III. of 
England, still there is some approach towards the feeling which 
the seals of that king possess. 

On the side of Majesty is shown a figure of the king 
enthroned, with long curled hair, crowned, and draped in a 
loose vestment girt at the waist ; his mantle is fastened on the 
breast with a brooch ; in the right hand he holds a sceptre with 
foliated summit ; in the other he holds an orb, without cross, 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 47 



on the cushion, which is small. The throne consists of carved 
tabernacle work, adorned with crocketted pinnacles, the two 
nearest to the head of the king having a dove perched on 
top, facing one another. The footboard is on a carved corbel, 
ornamented with roses. In the field on each side we observe 
a small shield of arms ; that on the dexter a lion rampant, for 
Scotland; that on the sinister an orle, for Balliol. Edward in 
this respect reverses the position of the shields as given in the 
seal of John Balliol, his predecessor. On the baronial or 
equestrian side of the Great Seal is shown the king riding on 
a horse galloping to the right. His hauberk is of mail; his 
surcoat short, charged with the Royal Arms of Scotland ; he 
is crowned, and his helmet is furnished with a grated vizor ; 
in the right hand is a broad-sword with channelled blade, 
fastened by a chain from the king's shoulder to the handle. 
The shield of the royal arms is in the left hand. The horse s 
trappings are embroidered with the royal arms, with the 
charges reversed. The fan-plume should be noticed for its 
early appearance on the Royal Seals of Scotland. 

There is a fine impression, unfortunately not quite perfect, 
of this rare seal preserved in the Chapter House of Westminster. 
The period of its use cannot have been very long, for Edward 



48 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

fled from Annan, in Dumfriesshire, with "one leg booted and 
the other naked," within three months after his coronation, and 
took refuge in England on the i6th December, 1332. He 
died, without issue, in 1 363, but appears to have dropped out of 
history after his hasty flight from the kingdom. 

We may now resume the main stream of the royal succession, 
in examining the Seal of Robert II., of which there is a fine 
impression preserved among the Melrose Charters. The obverse 
of this beautiful work resembles in many respects that of the 
sixth Great Seal of Edward III. of England. The king here 
sits enthroned, with crown fleury of five leaves ; his sceptre is 
furnished with a foliated top, and the left hand of the king is 
placed upon his breast. Above is placed a richly-carved triple 
gothic canopy ; the central part is enriched with a hexagonal 
turret, embattled. Each of the side canopies is finished with a 
crocketted pinnacle. At each side is a niche or screen of 
tabernacle work on a bracket of tracery, containing an arch 
of five cusps, in which is placed an eagle or falcon rising with 
open wings, designed so as to show in full face, foreshortened, 
and somewhat difficult to distinguish at first sight, so much so 
that these birds, so skeleton-like in their appearance, have been 
mistaken by some writers on seals for grotesque animals or 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 49 

figures. The bird supports before it a shield of the Royal 
Arms of Scotland. Over the embattled cresting of the screen 
on each side is a watchman, or man-at-arms, in armour, 
cap'd'pie, leaning forward. In base, below the support of the 
footboard, is the representation of a cloud, hills, or rocks, 
resembling, in turn, the reverse of the sixth seal of his 
contemporary, Edward III. of England. Here we have an 
effigy of the king, in his military or baronial character, riding 
a warhorse galloping to the right. His hauberk, or coat of mail, 
has the short sleeve of the period ; above it is xh^jtipon, or short 
surcoat of thin linen material, embroidered heraldically with the 
Royal Arms of Scotland. The equipment comprehends also the 
vambrace and gauntlet of plate armour, and the crested helmet, 
bearing a lion statant guardant with long queue extended in a 
wavy form. This crest differs somewhat from the lion of later 
date for a crest, which is seen in seals about to be described, as 
being sejant affronts. Slung to the king s neck by a strap or 
enarme is the shield of the Royal Arms of Scotland. In his 
right hand he holds a long sword, turned obliquely towards his 
head. The charger is springing or galloping, on wavy, 
undulating ground, to the right. Its caparisons are charged 
with the same royal armorials which are seen borne by the king 



50 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



himself, but reversed, as is the right, and usual, manner of 
depicting heraldry on horse-trappings. The poy trail, or breast- 
leather of the horse's gear, is ornamented with roundles. The 
legend is similar on each side. It reads — 

ROBERTVS . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

This seal is of elegant conception, and contrasts well with royal 
seals of England and other kingdoms of contemporary date. 

Robert the Second died at the Castle of Dundonald, in Ayr- 
shire, on the 19th April, 1390, at the age of seventy-four years 
and nearly two months. He was buried before the high altar in 
the Abbey at Scone on the 1 3th August in the same year, after a 
reign of upwards of nineteen years, and was succeeded by his 
eldest son, Robert III., Earl of Carrick, by his first wife, 
Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Adam Mure of Rowallan, whose age 
was about fifty-three years at the time of his accession. He was 
styled Robert III., instead of John, his baptismal name, with 
consent of the Estates of the Realm, on and after the 14th 
August, 1390, the day following the funeral obsequies of his 
father. His death occurred, when he was about sixty-nine years 
of age, at Dundonald, on the 4th April, 1406, and he was buried 
in front of the high altar in the Abbey Church at Paisley, after 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 5 1 



reigning for nearly sixteen years. His Great Seal generally 
resembles that of his father, the previous monarch, but with 
certain additions, for the purpose of distinguishing the seals from 
each other, to avoid confusion in documents where the numeral 
after the king's name was not inserted. The principal point of 
difference is that the background of Robert III.'s seal is 
replenished with wavy branches of the vine, elegantly designed 
in a bold, freehand style of drawing, with foliage and tendrils. 
Over the king s crest on his helmet is placed a small mullet, or 
star of five points, pierced with a circular opening. The legend 
is not absolutely ascertained, because the best known example — 
attached to a document preserved among the Melrose Charters 
— is very imperfect at the edge, but from what remains it 
would seem to have resembled that employed on the Great 
Seal of Robert II. 

Mr. Wyon remarks, on the occurrence of the field of Robert 
III. s seal being ornamented with this flowing floral device, that 
it is after the Italian style of seal engraving, which is a peculiarity 
not found in the Great Seals of England, nor in those of Scotland 
at any earlier period. That writer thinks there can be little 
doubt that its presence here must be attributed to two Florentine 
engravers, Moulakyn or Malekyn, and Bonagius, who are 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



recorded to have worked in the Scottish Mint about 1364, and 
were at work here in 1377, and possibly longer. After they left 
the Mint they may very likely have remained resident in Scot- 
land, and perhaps have left pupils or imitators after them. 

As in the case of King David II., so here also, a smaller seal 
is extant of Robert III., casts of which are in the British 
Museum, where it is recorded that the original is a fine impression 
formerly preserved in the Chapter House, Westminster. The 
diameter of this is three inches. The design on the obverse 
resembles in a general way that of the uncertain seal of David 
II., but the nondescript animals or lizards beneath the king's 
feet are omitted, the sceptre is lleury at the top, the left hand 
is on the breast, and the corbel in base is ornamented with a 
kind of lozengy pattern. The design is enclosed within a 
panel of seven cusps not very regularly formed. The reverse 
shows the king galloping on a horse to the right, upon a ground 
covered with herbage. The armour is of plate. He wears the 
crown, and holds sword and shield of the royal arms. But the 
caparisons of the horse are without the armorials. The enclosing 
frame or panel on this side is of nine cusps irregularly made. 
The legend on each side is — 

SIGILLVM . ROBERTI . DEI . GRACLV . REGLS . SCOTTOR. 




CHAPTER II. 

The Fifteenth Cen-turv: — Murdach Stuart — James 1. to 
James V. 

WE now come to the fifteenth century Royal Seals of the 
Jameses. The first of this name was the third and only 
surviving son of King Robert III., by Annabella, 
daughter of Sir James Drummond of Stobhall. He was born at 
Dunfermline in December, 1394, and during the lifetime of his 
father was styled The Steward of Scotland, and the Earl of 
Carrick. At the time of his accession to the throne of Scotland 
he was but eleven years and three months old, a captive in the 
Tower of London, and in the power of King Henry IV. of 
England. His release was not carried out until the lapse of 
eighteen 'years, when, on giving hostages for the payment of 
forty thousand pounds, alleged to have been expended on his 
maintenance, he was liberated in April, 1424, and was crowned 



54 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



at Scone on the 21st of May in that year. The seal used by 
this monarch is principally known from an imperfect and indistinct 
impression preserved among the charters of Lord Panmure, 
attached to a deed of 1436. The obverse resembles that of 
Kings Robert II. and Robert III., being closely like that of the 
latter, but with some few variations of detail. The crown is 
somewhat larger, the dress of the left arm of the king is fuller, 
the sceptre is fleur-de-lize, and on each side of the king's feet, 
within the niche, is a small lion sejant affronts. In the back- 
ground of the seal, over the crocketted spire or pinnacle on the 
left hand side, just beneath the letter c of the vtord Jacobus, is a 
small mullet, probably for a cadency-mark. • The reverse 
resembles the reverse of the Great Seal of King Robert III., but 
there are several departures from strict imitation, chiefly in the 
position given to the shield of arms, the king's left hand holding 
the reins, and the foliage and other little ornamentations of the 
background being differently treated. 

m 

The legend, when perfect, appears to have been — 

JACOBVS . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

The period of absence from the kingdom during his imprison- 
ment gave opportunity for the employment of a very remarkable 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 55 



seal by Robert Stuart or Stewart, first Duke of Albany, and 
Murdach Stuart, eldest son of Robert, the Regent of 
Scotland, second Duke of Albany, Regent of Scotland, Earl of 
Lennox, and Justiciary of Scotland ** benorth the Forth." 
Robert, Duke of Albany, had been appointed Governor of the 
kingdom by ordinance of the Council assembled at Perth in 
June, 1406 ; after his death Murdach assumed the position of 
Governor of the realm, in September, 1420. His period of 
power was but brief. His eldest surviving son, Sir Walter 
Stewart, was beheaded, for treason, in front of Stirling Castle on 
the 24th May, 1425, and on the following day Murdach, the late 
Governor, with his son. Sir Alexander Stuart, and Duncan, Earl 
of Lennox, were decapitated on the same spot, 25th May, 1425. 
• One of the best notices of this personage is that given by 
Sir William Eraser, in his work on The Dukes of Albany and 
their Castle of Doune, Edinburgh, 1881. From it we gather 
many obscure points in Murdach s remarkable career. Owing 
to the long life of his father, the first Duke, Murdach did not 
succeed to any of the Earldoms until he had attained the some- 
what advanced age of fifty-eight, and then enjoyed them for only 
a few years before the headsman's axe parted him from them for 
ever. He was appointed to the honourable office of Justiciar 



S6 THE SKALS OF SCOTLAND. 



north of the Forth by the Parliament at Holyrood, 2nd April, 
1389. On 1 6th Jul^, 1390, King Robert III. appointed him to 
be one of the conservators of a truce between England and 
Scotland, who were to watch over the maintenance of its 
provisions. His career, prosperous as it had shortly afterwards 
become, was, however, checked by his capture at Homildon on 
14th September, 1402, when the Earl of Douglas was defeated 
by Percy, and he himself, with many other Scottish nobles, 
taken prisoner. 

His liberation was unable to be procured until after much 
n<;gotiation, in 141 5, upon a ransom of ten thousand pounds. 
On the way to the north, in care of two guardians appointed by 
th^! Kin^ of lingland, he made his escape, but was recaptured, 
and probably placed in one of the castles in the north of 
ICngland, under the charge of the Earl of Westmoreland, until 
th*: resumption of the negotiations in the close of the year, 
which brought the matter to a successful conclusion by the 
nrstoration of Henry Percy by way of exchange. On his return 
to Scotland, Sir Murdach Stewart assisted his father, now 
u[)wards of seventy years old, in the government of the country. 
On the death of the Duke he succeeded to the office of 
(iovcrnor of Scotland. ** It has been said that he assumed this 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 57 

office as if to carry on the alleged usurpation of the Government 
by his father ; but there is no ground for the assertion, and the 
evidence is all the other way. It is far more probable that he 
was placed in it by the Parliament/' His government appears 
to date from about i6th November, and not before 26th 
October, 1420. With his proceedings as Governor we are not 
concerned here ; the King's tyranny appears to have moved 
the Duke's family against his royal rule, and this culminated 
in the execution of Murdachs eldest surviving son, Walter 
Stewart, being tried and executed at Stirling before the King in 
May, 1425, followed by the similar treatment of Duke Murdach, 
his son, Sir Alexander, and the aged Earl of Lennox. ** They 
shared the same fate, and with like haste ; and to add to the 
ghastly spectacle, on the same day five of those who had been 
with James Stewart, another of Murdach s sons, at the burning 
of Dumbarton, who had been taken and brought before the 
King on the 8th May, were drawn asunder by horses, and their 
bodies suspended on gibbets." The scene of their execution 
was an eminence to the north of the Castle, called the Gowling- 
hill, or Heading-hill, as it was afterwards called from this 
sanguinary scene. The event itself was one which drew from 
those who witnessed it expressions of deep regret and 

D 



58 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

compassion. Duke Murdach and his two sons were men of 
gigantic stature. 

Fraser, in the work already mentioned, discusses at length the 
probable reasons for these executions ; Sir Walter s crime being 
probably that de roborea or spoliation of crown lands, but no record 
has been preserved of the crimes of which they were accused. 
Other reasons have been alleged, but the king evidently sought 
to annihilate the house of Albany, and cared little for putting 
forward any reason for this policy. A fine illustration of the 
Great Seal of Robert, Dul^e of Albany, as Governor of 
Scotland, is given by Fraser, as well as a woodcut of the 
Armorial Seal of the Duke as Earl of Fife and Menteith. 
The Great Seal resembles that of King James I., but 
with some slight variations and omissions, and bears the 
legend — 

SIGILLVM . ROBERTI . DVCIS . ALBANIE . GVBERNATORIS . SCOCIE 

No description of it is given in Fraser, and no mention is 
made of Murdach's very similar seal. 

Murdach had used during his regency a seal which is known 
from a very imperfect impression in white wax appended to a 
deed dated 1423, preserved in the Public Record Office. This 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 59 

is an imhation of the Seal of James I., King of Scots. The 
heraldic display on it is of much interest. Unfortunately the 
shield of arms in the niche on the dexter side has been broken 
away, but that on the sinister side remains. The shield is 
quarterly, 1.4. the Royal Arms of Scotland ; 2.3. a fess chequy 
and label of three points for Stuart. The sceptre in the hand of 
James I. is here exchanged for a sword. The reverse is similar 
to that of the Great Seal of King James I., which has been 
already described. The legend is wanting. It would almost 
seem to have been purposely broken off. 

Mr. Wyon observes that the charters which were issued 
during the rule of Murdach, when the estates belonging to the 
Crown were freely bestowed upon the partisans of the regents, 
did not run in the king s name, as was the custom during other 
regencies, but solely in the regent's name ; and the seals 
appended to those deeds, although at first sight apparently 
similar to the Great Seals of recent Scottish kings, bore no 
effigy of, or reference to, the lawful king, but bore, on the other 
hand, the name, arms, and effigy of the regent. We see in 
this a determined attempt to supersede the king, and pave the 
way for the regent s assumption of full regal power and dignity, 
and do not wonder that throughout the whole of this period 



6o THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



the kingdom was full of strife and conflict. Murdach's seal, 
which is here reproduced, may be compared with the Great 
Seal of James I., and its differences noted. Its employment, 
no doubt, formed a powerful cause of the train of events which 
culminated in his downfall and death. 

The seal of James I., as we are told by the same writer, 
is remarkable for the fact that it was in use for a longer period 
than any other Great Seal ever was in this country. It was 
made for James I. about 14 14, and used by his four immediate 
successors of the same name as late as July, 1540, by James V. 
Thus it can be shown to have been in use for upwards of one 
hundred and twenty-five years, and this outvies the long period 
of use of the celebrated English seal known as the Bretigny 
Seal, which was employed for a hundred and eleven years. 

James II. became King on the death of his father, 21st 
February, 1436-7, and met his death by the bursting of a 
cannon at the siege of Roxburgh, 3rd August, 1460, after a 
reign of nearly thirty years. During the whole period of this 
monarch's reign the seal of James I. was used, a difference 
being introduced by the addition of two small annulets between 
the feet of the king and the lions, and a similar number in the 
background above the crocketted pinnacles at the sides of the 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 6 1 



kings canopy. The reverse side has also been augmented 
with the addition of four other annulets, one above and one 
beneath the neck of the horse, and two on the caparison of the 
hinder part of the horse, below the lion of the royal arms, and 
a small crown. By the use of these small differential emblems, 
the coinage of Scotland, which was in a very difficult 
and inaccurate condition of arrangement by numismatists, 
has been recently satisfactorily settled. The legend of a good 
impression of the Great Seal of James II., appended to a 
document bearing date of 1441, preserved among the Morton 
Charters, reads as follows on each side — 

L\C015US . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTTORVM. 

The British Museum possesses a fragmentary impression 
attached to a deed of one year later, 1442, containing only the 
bust of the king on the one side, and part of the body of the 
horse on the other side, which has been conjectured to be an 
impression of the so-called *' Quarter-Seal.'' 

King James III. began his reign over Scotland on the 3rd 
of August, 1460, and, after a reign of nearly twenty-eight years, 
was murdered, after losing the battle of Sauchieburn (which was 
fought between the king s forces and the confederated lords, who 



62 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



had been plotting against him, conducting these proceedings in 
the name of James, Duke of Rothesay, heir-apparent to the 
throne, whose person they had secured), in a cottage at Milton, 
near Bannockburn, in Stirlingshire, on the nth of June, 1488, 
at the early age of not quite thirty-seven years. He lies buried 
near his queen, Margaret, daughter of Christiern I., King of 
Denmark, in the royal Abbey of Cambuskenneth, co. Stirling, 
where he was laid to rest on the 25th of June following the 
tragedy of the previous fortnight. His Great Seal is known by 
a few examples only. There are two in the British Museum 
collection, attached to original documents. The first, dated 
1475, is light brown or uncoloured, and very indistinct, but it 
bears impressions or marks of the pins and studs of the matrix. 
The matrix is the same as that of his father, James H., with the 
addition of a small mullet added over the pinnacle which stands 
on the right side of the right hand annulet. The legend does 
not appear to have been altered, nor was it necessary that any 
alteration should be made. The reverse, also, is from the same 
matrix as that used by his father, with the further addition of a 
small fleur-de-lis set below the fetlock of the right foreleg of the 
charger, and with the same legend as described for the previous 
seal. The second original impression preserved in our national 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 63 

archives at the British Museum — archives which contain a vast 
number of unpublished* documents relating to Scotland of the 
highest political and social importance — is appended to a deed 
dated in 1478, very imperfect and indistinct. Laing records a 
good impression belonging to Sir William Gordon Gumming 
Gordon, of Altyre and Gordonstoun, Bart. This specimen 
possesses the little differential additions set to distinguish the 
son's seal from the fathers and grandfathers, very clearly 
shown. 

On the murder of James III., his eldest son, James, born 17th 
March, 1472-3, succeeded to the throne, aged a little above 
fifteen years. He had been present with the rebel lords against 
his father at the fatal battle of Sauchieburn, nth June, 1488, 
and was crowned as James IV. at Scone on or about 26th June 
in the same year. Among the many interesting events in his 
reign may be remembered the arrival at Stirling, on 20th 
November, 1495, of the impostor, Perkin Warbeck, who asserted 
that he was Richard, Duke of York. This personage married, 

* A calendar of all the documents relating to Scotland, up to the time of his decease, was 
prepared for the late Marquess of Bute with a view to publication. We may hope that this will 
some day be brought to a useful issue, and thus supply a valuable help to illustrate many an 
obscure event in the history of the northern kingdom. 



64 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

in January of the following year, the Lady Catherine Gordon, 
called, for her beauty, ** The White Rose,*' and accompanied the 
Scottish king in an invasion of England on the 19th September, 
1496. The king fell, slain, on the field of Flodden, in 
Northumberland, on the 9th September, 1 5 1 3, at an age a little 
over forty years, after a restless rule of twenty-five years. The 
place of his burial has not been with absolute certainty identified, 
but it is supposed that he lies in the Monastery of Sheen, near 
Richmond, in Surrey. Two impressions of the seal of this king 
are known. The first is appended to a document dated 1495, in 
the British Museum. Its colour is creamy- white, and is partly 
opaque, and, though fairly good, is indistinct in some of its parts. 
This, too, shows the marks made by the pins or lugs of the 
matrix. The obverse of the impression appears to bear the 
same design as that of his father s, at least, if there be any added 
marks they have escaped notice ; but on the reverse the annulet 
beneath the neck of the king's horse has apparently been altered 
into a slipped trefoil leaf or knot of three loops. The legend 
remains the same as heretofore. There is also the second, a 
good impression, among the Morton Charters, appended to a 
deed dated 1 506. 

This king used a so-called ** Quarter Seal," of which there 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 65 

is an imperfect and indistinct impression still preserved in H.M. 
Record Office. The design appears to be constructed from the 
upper half parts of a seal copied from the Great Seal described 
above, poorly executed and in many parts wrongly cut. The 
annulets and other marks of difference, which enable us to 
attribute the seal to the proper king who used it, are, however, 
omitted. 

James IV. was succeeded by his third son, borne to him by 
his wife, Margaret Tudor, the daughter of Henry VII., and 
sister of Henry VIII. of England, at Linlithgow, loth April, 

15 1 2. He was but one year and four months of age when he 
ascended the throne, being crowned at Stirling in September, 

1 5 13. After a period of upwards of twenty-nine years* rule, 
he died at Falkland on the 14th December, 1542.* This king 
used two seals during his reign. The first is appended to a 
deed of the year 1523, preserved in the British Museum 
collections. The design is apparently similar to that of the 
previous seal of King James IV., but it is not improbable that 
this very imperfect specimen contained some marks of difference 
which had been added into parts now wanting. The type 

* Some historians, tabulated by Sir Archibald Dunbar, give a somewhat different date of 
the death. 



66 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

appears to have escaped the notice of Laing and others. The 
king's second seal is known from a fine impression — with the 
edge unfortunately chipped — preserved in the Chapter House, 
Westminster. The diameter is four inches. Its design is a 
poorly-executed copy of the first seal, with omission of the 
lions set near the legs of the king, and of the annulets, which 
we have noticed as having been inserted by former sovereigns. 
The crown is smaller, and the king s body is badly shaped. 
The details of clouds and hills which fill up the base or fore- 
ground of the seal are replenished with slipped trefoils, and 
there are other insignificant changes of detail. The legend is — 

lACOBVS . DEI . GRACIA . REX . SCOTORVM. 

The reverse, also, omits the small difference-marks of crown, 
annulets, fleur-de-lis, and trefoil. The crest is enlarged, and 
the foliage which spreads over the background or field of the 
seal is here converted from quatrefoils into trefoils — the trefoil 
evidently having a peculiar interest for the Scotch seal- 
engravers from an early period, as we have observed in treating 
of the seal of the Interregnum. The legend here is similar to 
that on the obverse. It is curious to notice that an impression 
of this seal of King James V., which was only used for a few 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 67 

months, has been attached to a document attributed to James I., 
now preserved in H.M. Record Office, dated at Melrose, 3rd 
of April, 1424. How this has been affected one is at a loss to 
conjecture. 



?&H**^ 





CHAPTER III. 

The Renaissance — Mary, Queen of Scots, and Her 

Successors. 

THE death of King James V. without a male heir 
brings us to one of the most momentous and important 
passages in the history of the kings of Scotland. Mary 
Stewart, the only surviving child of the king by his second wife, 
Mary of Lorraine, daughter of Claude I. de Guise de Lorraine, 
Due d' Aumale, and widow of Louis IL of Orleans, .Due de 
Longueville. was his sole heir. She was born at Linlithgow, 
in December, 1542, and but seven days old when the death of 
her father elevated her to the royal dignity. This is not the 
place to discuss the political events of her life, which are known 
all the world over, and to none so well as to the Scotch 
themselves, to whom she is a cardinal point and guiding star 
in their memories and regrets. The queen used several seals 
during her reign, which lasted for upwards of twenty-four years. 




THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 69 



One seal, probably the first, is of great interest, because it 
introduces a new fashion in design. The Gothic style is aban- 
doned, making way for that known as the Italian or Renaissance 
style. In this we see the queen, attired in a mantle, and 
wearing a crown ; holding the sceptre fleur-de-lize ; and seated on 
a throne enriched with carving and elaborate ornamentation 
after the method of the then new fashion which had just sup- 
planted the Gothic modus. This throne is furnished with a 
projecting daiSy or footboard, and there are two ornamental 
columns in front supporting a kind of canopy or tester over the 
queens head. The legend, seen on a fine example in pos- 
session of Cosmo Innes, when Laing noticed it, is — 

MARIA . DEI . GRACIA . REGINA . SCOTORV. 

It follows the fashion of size if not of design, having a diameter 
of four inches. The reverse of this interesting relic bears a shield 
of Royal Arms of Scotland encircled, as to the lower half, with 
the collar of the Order of the Thistle ; over the shield is the 
crown of three fleurs-de-lis, with other details. The supporters 
are two unicorns segreant, each gorged with a coronet, chained, 
the tail flory, holding a lance-flag charged with the saltire cross 



JO THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

raguly of Scotland, enfiled with a crown (that on the dexter flag 
uncertain). In base, on the mount, with herbage, on which the 
supporters are standing, is a St Andrew's Cross, raguly, of which 
only the lower half is shown, the rest passing behind the shield. 
From this mount spring two thistle-flowers, leaved, passing to the 
right and left below the collar. In the background on each side 
is another thistle-flower, slipped and leaved, ensigned with a 
crown. The words of the legend, which is preceded with a 
crowned thistle, are — 

SALVVM . FAC . POPVLVM . TVVM . DOMINE, 

taken from Psalm xxvii. verse 9. Anderson, in engraving this 
seal on his plate Ixxxviii., has been negligent of accuracy in 
several points of detail. 

The second Seal of the Queen is of French character. 
There is a chipped and indistinct impression of this type among 
the Morton Charters, attached to a document bearing date in the 
year 1554. On the obverse is shown the sovereign enthroned 
in majesty, wearing a long mantle ; a sceptre in each hand. The 
form of the throne is worthy of examination. It is shaped like a 
lyre, with carved scroll-top ends. Behind is a canopy with a 
valance cut in scollops and a long curtain caught up in a festoon 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 7 1 

at each side, the dimensions of which are so ample as to fill up 
the background of the seal. The legend reads — 

MARIA . DEI . GRACIA . REGINA . SCOTORVM. 

The reverse, like that of the Royal Seals of France at the time, 
is of much smaller dimensions, measuring only one inch and 
three quarters. The design which it bears is the shield of the 
Royal Arms of her Kingdom of Scotland, ensigned, that is, 
topped or surmounted, with an open arched crown of two trefoil 
leaves between three small crosses and two half fleurs-de-lis at 
the sides, six bands in all meeting in the centre at the top. At 
each side of the design is a wavy scroll of elegantly-drawn 
foliage. There is no legend on this side. It is remarkable 
that Laing, in describing this seal, read Rex instead of Regina 
in the legend. Can it be that there was a seal bearing Rex 
which was withdrawn when the error was observed, but not 
before some impressions had been issued ? The queen's third 
seal is that which she employed for Scottish matters after her 
marriage with Francis II. of France, to whom, while Dauphin, 
she had been married in the Cathedral of Notre Dame, in Paris, 
on the 24th of April, 1558. Francis was the son of King 
Henri II., by his wife. Queen Catherine de Medici. After the 



72 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

death of Mary I., Queen of England, daughter of Henry VIII., 
Mary, the Queen of Scots, and her husband styled themselves 
** Francis and Mary, by the grace of God, of Scotland, England, 
and Ireland, King and Queen,*' at Paris, on the i6th January, 
1558-9. This use of the style of Queen of England gave, as 
may naturally be expected, great offence to Queen Elizabeth, 
and it is not improbable that it operated very strongly among 
the many causes which led to the downfall and death of the 
Scottish queen. There is a good but somewhat indistinct 
impression of this third seal attached to a document preserved in 
the British Museum, with date of 1 561-2. Its diameter is about 
four inches and a quarter. On the obverse is depicted a design 
somewhat resembling that shown on the obverse of the second 
seal. The queen's head turns slightly to the left. The dress is 
ornamented with broderie, the sceptres are longer, that in the 
right hand being fleur-de-lize, and that in the left hand bears on its 
top the hand of justice, a not unusual finial of royal sceptres, and 
found at a much earlier period than that of Queen Mary. The 
throne is of the bench pattern, with carved ends. The canopy 
overhead has a knob or bunching at the top, and the legend is — 

MARIA . DEI . GRATIA . SCOTORVM . REGINA. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. J 2> 

For the motif of the reverse recourse was had again to French 
styles. It is small, with a diameter of about two inches. It bears 
a shield of arms per pale, dexter, Modern France, i.e.y three 
fleurs-de-lis two and one, dimidiated with the Royal Arms of 
Scotland. It is ensigned with a crown composed of three 
fleurs-de-lis with two crosses patties with pearls at the ends of 
top and arms, and having four bands meeting at the summit in a 
jewel. There is no legend, but the border is carved. This seal 
appears to have eluded the attention of Anderson and of Laing. 
Wyon calls it the fourth seal, but the reason is that this writer 
takes into consideration as the queen s third seal that which is really 
her seal as Queen of France, and therefore not strictly belonging 
to the series of seals of Scottish sovereigns. We may, however, 
digress for a moment to pass it in review as bearing on the 
history of the Queen. Mary had become Queen of France on 
the accession of her consort, Francis II., on the death of his 
father, Henri II., which took place on the loth of July, 1559. 
** Here the youthful sovereigns,*' writes Mr. Wyon, **sit on 
one seat, each holding two sceptres. Both are crowned and 
clothed in robes of state. Francis wears a collar and badge of 
some Order, which M. Luce, Chief of the Historical Section of 
the Archives Nationales, thinks may represent the Order of St. 
e 



9 , , 

I . 



« 



t 



' A 



t 
f 

* 



* 

i 

■ 



r. 



74 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



Michael, an Order which in those days was highly esteemed, 
though subsequently it fell into disrepute. The legend on this 
seal is more remarkable for its assumption of titles. The 
sovereigns were not content with calling themselves King 
and Queen of the French and of the Scots, which they were 
in fact, but added England and Ireland to their titles, which 
belonged to them only by a fiction of the imagination." The 
queen became a widow, and Dowager Queen of France, on 
the death of King Francis at Orleans on the 5th December, 
1560, without issue. There is a seal of Francis II. and Mary 
bearing the legend — ** R . R . Scotorum . Delph . Delphi . Vien . " 
?. — which was used during the period between the marriage, 

\ when Francis was styled the ** Dauphin King," in 1558, and his 

accession to the French throne in 1559, but this, also, belongs 
to the series of French, and not of Scottish, seals of sovereigns. 
The queens fourth seal is that which she employed as 
Dowager after the death of Francis. Two impressions of it 
are extant. That in the British Museum, which is appended to 
a document dated 1564-5, is in uncoloured and partly opaque 
wax, and the left side is wanting. It measured when perfect 
nearly four inches and a half. The second is a good impression 
among the Morton Charters, attached to a deed of the date of 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 75 



1 564. The obverse is a copy of, but slightly larger than, the design 
of the third seal. The sceptre, with the hand of justice, held in 
the right hand of the sovereign, is not so long ; that in the left 
hand is topped with a fleur-de-lis. Sprigs of trefoiled leaves 
are introduced in some places, and the valance of the throne's 
drapery is enriched with heads of cherubs. The legend is — 

MARIA . DEI . GRATIA . REGINA . SCOTORVM . DOTARIA . 

FRAN'CIE. 

The reverse of this rare seal bears an ornamental shield of 

the arms of the two kingdoms impaled, viz., of France (modern, 

i.e.y three fleurs-de-lis only) and Scotland, dimidiated. The 

crown is placed over it. There is the collar of S.S. and thistles, 

for that of the Order of the Thistle, and its pendant badge. 

The supporters are two unicorns, segreant, ducally gorged, and 

chained, each one holding a long lance set in a rest on the 

mount or ground below the shield, with a flag to each lance, 

charged with the saltire cross for St. Andrew, the national 

saint, enfiled with a crown. Here again, wavy sprigs of foliage, 

* 

elegantly drawn, fill up the background with a pleasing 
arabesque effect. The legend here reproduces a favourite 



76 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

motto, often employed by Scottish sovereigns on their coinage 
as well as on their seals — 

SALVVM . FAC . POPVLVM . TVVM . DOMINE. 

This seal probably owes its design to a French artist. 

The study of the Great Seals of the monarchy of Scotland 
brings the reader now, at length, to the examination of the 
seals of the last ruler of the country as a separate and indepen- 
dent kingdom. James VI., the only son of the unfortunate 
Queen, by her second husband, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, 
was born in Edinburgh Castle on the 19th June, 1566, and 
christened at Stirling on the 1 7th September of the same year. 
He became King on the abdication of the Queen, 24th July, 
1567, at the age of but thirteen months and four days, and was 
crowned in the Parish Kirk of Stirling on the 29th July, 1567. 
The first seal used by James was in use very soon afterwards, 
for there is an impression preserved among the Cottonian 
Charters in the British Museum, dated in 1572, and another in 
the following year. It was in use certainly as late as 1592, 
for the same national institute possesses a specimen attached to 
a deed among the Additional Charters. A better impression 
occurs among the Morton Charters, dated 1583. On the 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. "]"] 



obverse is shown the king in plate armour, fluted and engraved, 
with a helmet adorned with five feathers in a plume ; a drawn 
sword held aloft in the right hand. The head of the charger is 
also ornamented with a plume of ostrich feathers. The horse's 
caparisons are embroidered in front with a large thistle, slipped 
and leaved, within an ornamental border, and behind with a 
shield of the Royal Arms of Scotland ensigned with a crown, 
set between wavy branches of arabesque foliage and in an 
ornamental border. The background here, as in the seal 
previously described, is replenished with elegant sprays and 
curving branches of foliage. The legend, when perfect, reads — 

lACOBVS . SEXTVS . DEI . GRATIA . REX . SCOTORVM. 

The reverse bears the shield of the royal arms, suspended by 
straps from a helmet affronts, with ornamental mantling of 
thistle-leaf work, the royal crown, the royal crest, and a label 
inscribed with the motto — 

IN . DEFENS. 

The supporters are, as before, two unicorns, each gorged with a 
crown, chained, and ringed, with two lance-flags, one of which 
bears the saltire of St. Andrew crowned, the other the Royal 



78 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

Arms of Scotland. Round the lower half of the shield passes 
the collar of the Order of the Thistle, with its proper pendant. 
The legend is that already used by Mar)% to whith attention has 
been drawn — 

SALVVM . FAC . POPVLVM . TVVM . DOMINE. 

After accession to the throne of England, on the death of Queen 
Elizabeth, 24th March, 1602-3, at Richmond, James VI. was, on 
the same day, proclaimed as ** James I., King of England, Scot- 
land» France, and Ireland," at Whitehall and at the Cross of 
London, and at the Cross of Edinburgh on the 31st March, 1603. 
This necessitated the provision of a new seal, which was accord- 
ingly made. There is a fine impression preserved among the 
muniments belonging to the Duke of Sutherland at Dunrobin 
Castle. It is of larger diameter than any yet noticed, and 
measures about five inches and a half. Here the armorial design 
occupies the obverse, and the equestrian figure of the king is 
relegated to the reverse. Upon a mount, and sustained by two 
lances set saltire-wise, each bearing a flag, the one charged with 
the saltire of St. Andrew of Scotland, the other with the cross of 
St. George of England, is the shield of the Royal Arms of Scot- 
land in combination with the newly-acquired kingdoms henceforth 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 79 



and for ever to be ruled by one and the same sovereign. The 
shield is quarterly ; in the first and fourth quarters, Scotland 
(but the tail of the lion is, by inadvertence, turned outwards) ; 
in the second, France modern and England quarterly; in the 
third, Ireland. The shield is adorned below with the collar of 
the Order of the Thistle and its pendant badge of St. Andrew in 
an oval frame or panel. Outside this is the garter of the Order 
of the Garter, inscribed with its appropriate motto of world-wide 
renown. The pendant George hangs from the end of the Garter. 
The shield is ensigned with the Royal Crown of Scotland, a 
jewelled circlet and cap ornamented with frilled or crocketted 
hoops. The supporters also symbolise the merging of the two 
countries under one rule. The dexter is an unicorn of Scotland, 
crowned, gorged, and chained, the tail downwards ; the sinister 
is a lion rampant of England, also crowned. The legend of this 
interesting seal is — 

lACOBUS . D.G . MAG . BRIT . FRAN . ET . HIB . REX. 

which, it will be noticed, is not the same style as that used in 
the Royal Proclamation on the Accession. It is also worthy of 
remark that the phrase, **Magnae Britanniae,'' was abandoned on 
some occasions by later sovereigns, who reverted to the older 



8o THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

formula of ** Angliae Franciae, et Hiberniae/' as, for example, was 
done by Charles I., Charles II., William and Mary, and others. 

The reverse of this seal contains the representation of the 
king on a horse springing to the right upon a hilly mount, 
possibly intended for a landscape of the city of Edinburgh and 
its environs. The rider is crowned, and he wears a breast-plate, 
plate armour, and long boots. The right hand, which is 
uplifted, wears a gauntlet, and holds a broad-sword with deeply- 
grooved blade, not shown to its full length, but stopping abruptly 
at the edge of the delineation. The caparisons of the horse 
consist of the saddle ; a breast cloth embroidered with the 
national flower, slipped and leaved, within a border ; the clothing 
of the flanks is also bordered, and shows a rose of England en 
soleiL In the background or field of the seal are set two of the 
badges hitherto belonging to the kings of England — a fleur-de- 
lis of France over the head of the horse ; a Tudor portcullis, 
chained and ringed, over the flanks. 

The legend, following an already established precedent, is a 
quotation from the Scriptures — 

DEVS . IVDICIVM . TVVM . REGI . DA. 

(Psalm Ixxiu 1 ). 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 8 1 



The four badges thus depicted on this side of the seal attest 
the bringing together under one sovereign of the several houses 
and kingdoms which they symbolize. 

We now arrive at the last seal of the series used by Scottish 
sovereigns of which it is reserved for us to take cognizance, that 
of Charles I., whose birth took place at Dunfermline on the 19th 
November, 1600, and whose accession to the kingship of 
England, Scotland, France, and Ireland dates from the day of 
King James I.*s death, at the mansion or palace of Theobalds, in 
Hertfordshire, on the 27th March, 1625, after a reign of upwards 
of thirty-five years over the kingdom of Great Britain, and 
upwards of fifty-seven over Scotland. Charles I. adapted the 
second seal for Scotland which had been employed, as we have 
seen, by his father, merely altering the name on the obverse. 
But the reverse, although a copy, differs considerably in measure- 
ments, proportion of details, and numerous little peculiarities of 
style and shape, from that by which it was inspired. Here the 
shield of arms, as already described, is ensigned with a crown, 
and encircled with the collar of the Order of the Thistle, with 
pendant badge, and the Garter with its proper pendant, the 
George and Dragon. The lance-flags of St. Andrew and St. 
George, the unicorn supporters, and other attributes, make up 



82 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



the sum of the emblems of sovereignty exhibited by this seal, 
which represents the last stage of pure Scottish seal art The 
l^end, indeed, passes over the name of Scodand in silence, as 
the kingdom had merged into that of Great Britain — 

CAROLVS . D.G . MAG . BRIT . FRAN . ET . HIB . REX. 

Charles I. employed a second Great Seal for Scodand, designed 
to accord with the national taste. The British Museum 
possesses two examples, dated respectively in 1630 and 1632. 
The earlier is known by a cast from a good impression recorded 
by Laing as being in possession of Mr. \V. E. Ayton, of 
Edinburgh ; the latter is an original in green wax, among the 
Additional Charters. In the obverse of this we observe the king 
seated on a horse springing to the left hand on rough foreground 
enriched with plants, and having in the background a shadowy 
and distant prospect of the City of Edinburgh, taken from the 
north, and including the outline of Arthur's Seat. The king 
is encased in plate armour of the conventional kind, with oval 
shield, long sword, feather plume, and other military symbols. 
The legend, after the Scottish motive, reads — 

IVSTITLV . ET . VERITAS. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 83 

The reverse is a copy of that of the first seal, with proportions 
of details varying from those seen on that reverse. Here, for 
some obscure reason, which no one has explained, the phrase, 
** Magnai Britannice," gives way to the older form, and the 
legend is — 

CAROLVS . D . G . SCOTLK . ANGLLE . FRAN . ET . HIBERNLK . 

REX . FIDEI . DEFENSOR. 

It is foreign to the scope of this work to pursue the series of 
Great Seals of sovereigns of the kingdom which had now ceased 
to have a separate existence. The succeeding rulers employed 
seals for matters connected with the public business of the 
country, but they were of English design and workmanship, and 
to the Scottish antiquary and historical student possess little 
genuine interest. 

Connected with the foregoing are the Privy Seals, Secreta, 
or Secret Seals, and Signets of Scottish sovereigns. They are 
simple in design, but attractive and of interest. Among them 
may be mentioned that of Alexander III., used about 1260, 
bearing on the one side an effigy of the king, on the other a 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



triangular shield of arms of the kingdom of Scotland, with the 
Biblical legend on each side of — 

ESTO . PRVDENS . VT . SERPENS . ET . SIMPLEX . SICVT , COLVMBA . 

(Matt. X. 16). 
John Balliol and Robert Bruce I. use the royal shield of arms, 
on their Secretum. David II. has the design of two arms, 
vested with long maunches or sleeves, sustaining the royal 
shield. Edward Balliol hangs his royal shield on a tree of three 
branches. Robert II. places his shield within a carved rosette 
of elegant tracery, and ensigns it with a crown. James I. adds 
to the heraldry of the Secretum two lions 3S supporters, and 
introduces the cinquefoil and quatrefoil differentials which the 
sovereigns of this name also are shown to have placed on their 
Great Seals.* James II. still uses the two lions as supporters, 
and adds differences of trefoils and annulets. James IV. adds, 
for differences, the mullet, the mascle, the crescent, and the 
saltire, in his Secretum ; in his Privy Seal, which has been 
thought to exhibit French influence, a copy of the figure of the 
king in majesty, as on the Great Seal, is given. This curious 

* Mt. John Ctuickdianks, In his Artntrial Eitsigiu of Iht Rtyat Burgk ef Abtrdttm, 
iSSS, p. 3g, gives a good illustialion of Ihe Privy Seal of James I. appeoded lo a deed dated 
35lh March, 1424 ; it is in belter preservatioD than that recorded by Laing for the year 1429. 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 



85 



seal is known as having been set in the silver butt of a knife, at 
one time in possession of the late Mr. Edward Hawkins, keeper 
of the antiquities of the British Museum. Mary still uses the 
two lions to support the royal arms, and introduces, as difference- 
marks, the triple tail for the lions, the annulet, mascle, saltire, 
cross, and thistle. The signet of this queen bears, above the 
armorial design, the motto, in defens, and the royal initial 
letters, M. R. James VI. keeps the design of shield and 
supporters which his predecessors have employed. 



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CHAPTER IV. 



Seals of Queens-Consort anu of Officers of State. 



VE R Y few seals of the consorts of the sovereigns of 
Scotland have been preserved. That of Ermengard, 
the wife of King William the Lion, exists among the 
Tweeddale Charters, attached to a deed dated about r220, but 
it is imperfect. Like all seals of noble ladies of the early 
thirteenth century, it is oval. The queen is shown standing, 
and draped in a tightly-fitting dress, embroidered with a pattern 
called by the heralds diapered lozengy, with a trefoil in each 
interstice, and she wears also a loose mantle. In the right 
hand the queen holds a flower of conventional design, consisting, 
it would seem, of three fleurs-de-lis set on one stem. Euphemia. 
Countess of Moray, the daughter of Hugh. Earl of Ross, and 
consort of King Robert II., used a seal, in 1375, attached to a 
deed among the Glammis Charters, where she is depicted as 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 87 

■ 

Standing full length, with long curling hair, a dress of tight 
proportions, a fur mantle, and a crown of three flowers. In her 
right hand is set the sceptre, with top of three leaves, the left 
hand lies on her breast and holds the sovereign emblem, the 
orb or mound, unless, perhaps, the object, which is somewhat 
indistinct, is part of her attire. Here we observe that adjunct 
of the niche, with traceried panels of Gothic architecture and a 
carved canopy enriched with crocketted finials. The seal also 
bears the shield of the Royal Arms of Scotland, on the dexter 
side of honour ; on the sinister side the shield bears three 
lions rampant, two and one, for the family of Ross. Queen 
Joan Beaufort, daughter of John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset, 
and wife of King James I., used a seal, in 1439, which shows 
a lozenge-shaped shield of arms of Scotland, France, and 
England, set within a bordure compony, ingeniously added by 
the heralds, to signify the family coat of Beaufort. Her signet 
bears the same heraldic composition. Mary of Gueldres, the 
Queen of James H., in 1459 employed a seal of much beauty 
and of original design, probably inspired by a French or 
Belgian taste. The device shows an angel in a seated posture, 
turned slightly towards the left, with hair long and flowing, and 
large wings upraised and expanded, with the inner side 



HH THE SEALS OF SCCfTLASlX, 






Umnfih the view; draped widi a loog mande, or vest- 
mftni, arranged in conventional [Jeats or tMs at the base of 
ih<; f»i;;i), and supporting in front a shield of arms, held up also 
\py th<? iitra() passing over the left shoulder of the celestial figure. 
Thit annorial bearings are : — per pale, dexter, the Royal Arms 
of Sm)T|.ani>, for the baron \ sinister, per pale, dexter, a lion 
r4»np;iiU, contournci, queue fourchee, crowned, for the Duchy 
of (lUi^jiKKS ; sinister, a lion rampant, for the Duchy of 
JniJiM^i, for the feme. Above the shield is an open crown, 
roinpoMf^d of hIx (Icurs-de-lis, or leaves, with interspersed pearls. 
1 1 U niriouN that the border or panel in which this interesting 
ilr^Niyn In t^iuiloHod is crested and cusped on the right side only. 
'I lin Iryrntl in as follows — 



; M , MAMII'! . lUClUNK . SaU'IK . KILIE . DUCIS . GELREN . ET . V S 



\ \ \A\\^ ha« linuinl this in his Catalogue of Seals. This same 

i|Ut'«in ixUw uHrd a Srcrt*tum, or privy-seal, in a.d. 1462, of which 
; a ttiilpluir tahI is pivsorvod in the British Museum. It bears the 

1 It^^tMul oi 

I st\ HMIM . MAKIK . REC.INE . SCOCIE. 



M<M|j<M'ti of Ivn^Uml vlaughtcr of King Henry VII., Queen 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 89 

Consort of King James IV., used three seals, which are still 
extant among the British Museum collection of casts formerly 
in the possession of Laing. These are : — i, a letter seal ; 2, a 
signet ; and 3, a small signet or ring seal. The letter seal is 
particularly attractive. It measures only seven-eighths of an 
inch, and represents the queen, crowned, and vested in ample, 
flowing drapery; her face is slightly turned to the left, and before 
her is a favourite bracket, or lap-dog, leaping up to its mistress. 
In the background, on each side, is a rose branch, slipped and 
leaved, doubtless in allusion to the union of the rival roses of 
York and Lancaster, of which she was the living representative. 
Her signet exists in a fine impression among the Philliphaugh 
Charters. It is of armorial design, and bears the arms of her 
royal spouse, impaling her paternal coat, viz. : dexter, Scotland ; 
sinister, the Royal Arms of Henry VII., quarterly, i, 4, Modern 
France ; 2, 3, England. Above the shield is a Queen Consort s 
crown of fleurs-de-lis, crosses, and pearls, an'd the inscribed label, 
which completes the design, bears the motto — 

IN . god . LS . MI . TRAIST. 

The small signet of this queen resembles the foregoing, and 

F 



90 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

bears a shield of arms, ensigned with a crown, and flanked on 
each side with a wavy sprig of foli^e 

An uncertain signet seal is preserved among the British 
Museum casts, which has been attributed by some to Queen 
Mary, and by others to Queen Mat^;areL It bears a shield of 
arms, per pale, dexter, Scotland ; sinister, party per fess, in 
chief three fleurs-de-lis, one and two, for Franxe ; in base, 
E^'GLAND. Th^ shield Is ensigned with a crown composed of 
two crosses set between three fleurs-de-lis ; and at the sides are 
the initial letters, M.R. It is remarkable that Mary, Queen of 
Scots, used similar armorial bearings to these, but in reversed 
position, setting the arms of Scotland in the sinister, and those 
of France and England in the dexter side of the shield in the 
counterseal of arms attached to the Great Seal of Francis and 
Mary, as King and Queen of France. Unfortunately there is 
no clue to enable us to attribute this seal to either queen in 
preference to the other. 

Anne of Denmark, Queen-Consort of James VI., has left 
three seals, also in existence among the national collections. 
The flrst is a signet, impressed on an original document among 
the Egerton Charters of the British Museum, dated in a.d. 1603. 
It bears a shield of arms, per pale, dexter, Scotland ; sinister, 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 9 1 



a modification of the Royal Arms of Denmark, all ensigned with 
a crown ; and at the sides of the shield are the queen s initials, 
A.R., each crowned. The second and smaller signet bears simply 
the monogram of A.R., ensigned with a crown. There is much 
doubt if this signet is properly to be attributed to this queen. 
The third seal belongs to the year 1615, and measures three 
inches and three-eighths. It was used for the queen's royal 
demesne of Dunfermline, and the impression is preserved 
among the Mar documents, from which Laing obtained it. 
On the one side it bears a fine large shield of arms, per 
pale, dexter, Scotland, but with a dimidiated tressure ; sinister, 
a very intricate armorial arrangement of royal and other coats 
for Denmark, Norway, Ancient Sweden, Gothes or Gothland, 
the Vandal Ensign, Schleswick, Holstein, Stormerk, Ditmarsh, 
Delmenhorst, and Oldenburg ; representing, in fact, the Royal 
Arms of Denmark as borne by the queen's dynasty. The 
crown, which covers this shield, bears a cross, and there 
are two supporters : that for Scotland being a unicorn, gorged 
with a coronet, chained and ringed, on the dexter side ; 
that for Denmark, a wild man, wreathed about the loins, and 
holding a club, on the sinister side. Below is the collar and 
badge of the Order of the Thistle. The legend is imperfect. 



92 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

The reverse bears a shield of arms : a cross flory between five 
martlets for Dunfermline, in Fifeshire. This is, in point of fact, 
the shield of arms of Edward the Confessor, King of England, 
as assigned to that monarch by the heralds of the middle ages. 
Probably this is owing to the sainted Scottish queen, Margaret, 
great-niece of King Edward, being the patroness of the Regality 
of Dunfermline. Her effigy, and the shield of Edward the 
Confessor s arms, appear on the Regality Seal of this ancient 
town, the brass matrix of which seal is still preserved in the 
Advocates' Library, Edinburgh. 

Very few early seals of Scottish courts are extant. One that 
may be mentioned here is that for the Office of King's Justice 
for the lands north of the Forth, found by Laing attached to a 
document bearing the date of a.d. 1392. The design is a shield 
(of arms ?) charged with the royal initial letter, R, for Robertas 
III. Rex, within a tressure flory counter-flory, derived from that 
contained in the Royal Arms of Scotland. Above the shield 
appear the head and neck of a falcon or eagle, supporting the 
shield in front with its talons, "an idea,*' we are told in the 
British Museum Catalogue, ** not improbably derived from the 
eagle supporting the shield of royal arms seen in the side-niches 
of the Great Seals of Scotland, as, for example, that of Robert 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 93 

Stuart II." (See the illustration No. 28. The legend of this seal 
is apparently — 

S . OFFIC . lUSTIC . EX . PARTE . BOREALI . AQUE . DE . FORTH. 

The corresponding seal for the Office of King's Justice for 
the lands south of the Forth is later ; it seems to have been 
made in the fifteenth century, and an impression is known to be 
attached to a document dated in 1590. This bears a shield of 
arms of Scotland, with the tail of the lion turned (as is not 
infrequently the case in Scottish heraldry) inwardly towards the 
back of the beast. The legend corresponds with that given 
above, but the phrase, ex parte australi, takes the place of ex 
parte boreali in the foregoing. 

Two interesting Admiralty Seals of Scotland may be 
appropriately mentioned in this place. The first is that of 
Patrick Hepburn, third Earl of Bothwell, Lord High Admiral 
of Scotland in a.d. 1515. Here the family arms are combined 
with an anchor in the base part of the shield, to designate the 
admirals office. The legend is — 

S . PATRICII . HEPBURN . ADMIRAL . SCOT, 

The second seal is that of James Hepburn, fifth Earl of- 



94 THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 

Bothwell, Great Admiral of Scotland, and afterwards Duke of 
Albany, a man historically pre-eminent as the husband of Mary, 
Queen of Scots. The impression of this seal belongs to a deed 
dated in 1558. The Admiralty device of the anchor re-appears 
here, also charged with a shield of the family arms of De Vaux 
and Hepburn quarterly. The motto here is : keip tryst ; and 
the legend reads — 

SIGILLUM . JACOBI . COMITIS . DE . BOITHVILE . DNI . 

HALIS . ADMIRAL. 

We have now gone through the most notable seals of the 
classes appertaining to the royal family and the Crown officers 
of Scotland. Taken together, they form a very interesting and 
instructive series, whether looked at from the standpoint of 
history or that of art. It has frequently been said that the 
history of a nation is reflected on its seals and its coins, and 
Scotland is no exception to this rule. The archaic period of 
the seals exhibits the simplicity and severity of the manner and 
customs prevalent at early times in the country, The nascent 
and gradually awakening spirit of beauty, which inspired so 
many wonderful examples of architecture throughout the 
: kingdom, reached the seal designers and engravers in their 



THE SEALS OF SCOTLAND. 95 



endeavours to produce work worthy of the artistic times in 
which they lived. The culminating era of so-called Gothic 
styles found a ready response in the seal to the challenge which 
the ecclesiastical or monastic edifice offered to it; then came 
the rejection of the Gothic, and preference for Italian and 
Renaissance designs, which in turn were adopted by the national 
art workers ; and finally the post-Palladian — which practically 
crushed all native creative talent in order to make room for 
incongruous, piecemeal imitations, culled at haphazard from 
the ruin of multifarious styles — invaded the domain of the seal 
designers, and strangled, we fear, for ever the native Caledonian 
feeling and taste which might, under more favourable conditions, 
have found a congenial medium on the seals of the country. 
We shall observe the same influences affecting in turn the seals 
of churches and monasteries, cities and towns, nobles and arms- 
bearing families, and in this way it is shown to be true that the 
glory of Scotland is inscribed on the seals of her rulers and her 
children. 







^_ 




No, 3. M.tliU;.. or M.uJ. o( Scotl.i.a. 




No. 4. AlixanJer I.. King ol ScoB. 



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No. 6. Willian. "the Lion." Kini ol Scot.. 





No. 7. Willi™ ■'th. Lion." King ol Scott. 



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B No. IS. Gi.atS,.!. 

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ppointeJ for the Government of the Rea 

Bth of King Alexander 111. 

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No. 18. EdwarJ I.. King o( EngUna. 




No. 19. HdwarJ 1.. King of England. 





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No. 21. Kcb«B™„I..Ki„g„fSc.,.. 

(f'nt Stal.) 


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9 
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No. 30. Robert Slu.rt II.. King ol Scots. 




No. 35. Robert Stuart. Duke of Albany, Governor of Scotland. 



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No. 37. Murdacli Stuart, Regent of Scotland, etc. 



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No. 45. Mvy, Queen of Scott. 
(CoHnUrmal of a« Second Seed.) 




No. 47. Mary, Queen o( Scots. 

(CoiiittertetU of the Third Heul.) 



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No. 50, 


James I 

(,■.■„,/ 


. King of Great Britain. 


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No. 52. Charles 1.. King of Great Britain. 



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^H No. 53. Cbarlu I.. Kinj of Gnat Britam. 

^B i^'OV 7 19)7 





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