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19 September 2014
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±«Óãtv - History - Scottish History

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Introduction - Court and Kirk
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Palace of Holyrood House

From the 15th to the 17th century an intellectual movement known as the Renaissance transformed Scotland. Its key invention was the printing press, which brought an end to idea being cloistered up in monasteries and began to spread textual knowledge throughout Scottish society. It revolutionised Scotland’s two main institutions, the Court and the Kirk (or Church), and triggered a social and religious revolution that irreversibly swept the established order away. Historians call this time the ‘early modern’, for in a sense it was the end of the medieval world and the birth of the modern.

What was the Renaissance?
The Renaissance was the rediscovery of the knowledge of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Across Western Europe lost classical texts came to light, inspiring a movement known as Humanism which crossed all sorts of disciplines: art, architecture, philosophy, science and literature. In its essence, Renaissance Humanism put man rather than God at the centre of the world, moving away from the divine and mysterious towards the practical.

Scotland Reborn?
The Renaissance saw nation states being defined across Western Europe, and in Scotland the Stewart monarchy promoted a strong sense of Scottish identity. The state evolved rapidly, with institutions like the Scottish Parliament being created along with regular taxation and standing armed and naval forces. Also, the expansion of the state led to increased emphasis on law rather than kin as the pro-active element in society, having, perhaps, a detrimental effect on the clans.

For the Scots the Renaissance was problematic. Across Europe, even south of the border, it heralded the rebirth and emulation of the lost glories of the Roman Empire, however, the Scots knew they had never been conquered by Rome. In fact, they had been the barbarians - the dark land beyond the frontier. It is possible that in entering this new world, some Scots came to see elements of their past, in particular Gaelic culture, as somehow barbaric.

possible James I coin

When Did the Renaissance Begin?
King James I (1424-37) is seen as laying down new patterns of behaviour that over the next hundred years would flower into a fully fledged Renaissance in Scotland, although for many historians the reign of King James III (1460-88) marks the crucial turning point. Both are members of the famous Stewart dynasty of kings and queens which succeeded the Bruces after the Wars of Independence.

The Stewarts
The Stewarts could claim one of the oldest royal pedigrees in Europe. Historically they can be traced back through the Bruces to the Canmore Kings of Alba, and through Kenneth MacAlpine (842-858) to the first Gaelic King of Dál Riata, Fergus Mór mac Erc, and on through a line of mythological kings to Scotia- the Egyptian Pharaoh’s daughter. Compared to the Tudors in England, a Welsh dynasty who claimed descent from King Arthur, the Stewarts had a far longer lineage. For a Renaissance populace very much structured by status, a long lineage was important.

‘Emperors of Scotland’
One important status symbol of the Renaissance was the closed crown. Symbolic of an empire, it allowed a king to declare a far superior form of jurisdiction. The ceiling of St Machar’s Cathedral in Aberdeen displays all the imperial crowned heads of Europe with that right: The Holy Roman Emperor, The English, the French, the Corsicans and the Scots. So Scotland was in the top division of kingship. James III's coins pictured him with an imperial crown, and later kings had the spires of Scottish churches in important burghs crowned symbolically, like St Giles in Edinburgh or King’s College in Aberdeen.

James III coinSo the Stewarts had symbolic advantages, and they set out to further these advantages, politically, through marriage. James II married the daughter of one of the richest and most powerful nobles in Europe, the Duke of Burgundy, and managed to marry off his sister to the King of France. James IV (1488-1513) married Margaret Tudor, of the new English royal house - a union which placed the Stewarts in line for the English kingship if Henry VIII’s line failed. James V married into the powerful French houses of Valois and Guise, and his daughter, the famous Mary, Queen of Scots, married Francois II, heir to the French crown.

In the end, the vaulting ambitions and sheer success of the House of Stewart (or 'Stuart' after Mary went to France) brought Scotland near unification with France, and the Union of the Crowns with England in 1603.

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