Everything about David Beaton totally explained
David Beaton (c.
1494 –
29 May 1546) was
Archbishop of St Andrews and the last
Scottish Cardinal prior to the
Reformation.
He was a younger son of John Beaton of Balfour in the county of
Fife, and is said to have been born in 1494. He was educated at the universities of
St Andrews and
Glasgow, and in his sixteenth year was sent to Paris, where he studied civil and
canon law. He began his political career at the French court. He was
Rector and
Prebendary at
Cambuslang from 1520. He became Commendator of
Arbroath in 1524,
bishop of Mirepoix in
Languedoc in December 1537 on the recommendation of
King Francis I, and in 1538 he was appointed a cardinal by
Pope Paul III, under the title of St Stephen in the
Caelian Hill. He was the only Scotsman named to that office by an undisputed right,
Cardinal Wardlaw, Bishop of Glasgow, having received his appointment from the
Antipope Clement VII. On the death in 1539 of Archbishop
James Beaton, his uncle and patron who had given him the prebend of
Cambuslang, the cardinal became Archbishop of St. Andrews. In 1544, he was made
Papal legate in Scotland.
Between 1533 and 1542 he acted several times as King
James V of Scotland's ambassador to France. He took a leading part in the negotiations connected with the King's marriages, first with Madeleine of France, and afterwards with
Mary of Guise. He was naturalised a French subject.
Politically, Beaton was preoccupied with the maintenance of the Franco-Scottish alliance, and opposing Anglophile political attitudes, which were associated with the clamour for Protestant reform in Scotland ('the whole pollution and plague of Anglican impiety' as he called it). He was afraid that James V might follow
Henry VIII's policy of appropriating monastic revenues. On the death of James in December 1542, Beaton attempted to assume office as one of the regents for the infant sovereign
Mary, founding his claim on an alleged will of the late king; but the will was generally regarded as forged, and
James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran, heir presumptive to the throne, was declared regent. The cardinal, blamed by many for the war policy that led to the defeat at
Solway Moss, was, by order of the regent, committed to the custody of Lord Seton. With Beaton out of power, the Anglophile party persuaded Arran to make a marriage treaty with England on behalf of the infant queen, and to appoint a number of Protestant preachers. In 1543 Beaton regained power, cancelled the treaty and proceeded to prosecute a number of those whom he saw as heretics. Two English invasions followed - and for these many blamed Beaton.
In March 1546, perhaps to divert attention from these criticisms, Beaton arranged for the arrest, trial and
execution by burning of
George Wishart, who was prosecuted by Beaton's Private Secretary,
John Lauder. Wishart, though, had many sympathisers, and this led to the assassination of the Cardinal soon afterwards. The conspirators, led by Norman Leslie, master of Rothes, and
William Kirkcaldy of Grange, managed to obtain admission at daybreak of
29 May 1546, and murdered the cardinal in his own
castle of St Andrews. At the time it was widely believed that his death was in the interests of Henry VIII of England, who regarded Beaton as the chief obstacle to his policy in Scotland.
The murder of Beaton was certainly a significant point in the eventual triumph of Protestantism in Scotland, and yet even at the time it wasn't necessarily condoned even among his opponents. His contemporary Sir
David Lyndsay, statesman, poet and strong critic of Beaton's, wrote soon after
The Tragedie of the Cardinal, which concluded:
» As for the Cardinal, I grant,
He was the man we weel could want' » And we’ll forget him soon!
And yet I think, the sooth to say, » Although the loon is well away,
The deed was foully done.
Beaton was little interested in Church reform, living, like many pre-Reformation prelates, in open concubinage, providing lavishly for his children from ecclesiastical property. Certainly, he was an able statesman, and some saw his stance against Henry VIII as patriotic, but others, recalling his assets and interests in France called him 'the best Frenchman' in Scotland.
He was succeeded as Archbishop of Saint Andrews by John Hamilton
His illegitimate daughter married David Lindsay, 10th Earl of Crawford.
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