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The Earls of Glencairn
Alexander
Cunningham, the 1st earl of Glencairn, was son of Sir Robert Cunningham
of Kilmaurs in Ayrshire. Made a lord of the Scottish parliament
as Lord Kilmaurs not later than 1469, Cunningham was treated earl
of Glencairn in 1488; and a few weeks later he was killed at the
battle of Sauchieburn whilst fighting for King James III. against
his rebellious son, afterwards James IV.
His
son and successor, Robert (d. C. 1490), was deprived of his earldom
by James IV., but before 1505 this had been revived in favour
of Robert’s son, Cuthbert (d. C. 1540), who became 3rd earl
of Glencairn, and whose son William (c. 1490—1547) was the
4th earl. This noble, an early adherent of the Reformation, was
during his public life frequently in the pay and service of England,
although he fought on the Scottish, side at the battle of Solway
Moss (1542), where he was taken prisoner. Upon his release early
in 1543 he promised to adhere to Henry VIII., who was anxious
to bring Scotland under his rule, and in 1544 he entered into
other engagements with Henry, undertaking to deliver Mary queen
of Scots to the English king. However, he was defeated by James
Hamilton, earl of Arran, and the project failed; Glencairn then
deserted his fellow-conspirator, Matthew Stewart, earl of Lennox,
and came to terms with the queen-mother, Mary of Guise, and her
party.
William’s
son, ALEXANDER, the 5th earl (d. 1574), was a more pronounced
reformer than his father, whose English sympathies he shared,
and was among the intimate friends of John Knox. In March 1557
he signed the letter asking Knox to return to Scotland; in the
following December he subscribed the first “band”
of the Scottish reformers; and he anticipated Lord James Stewart,
afterwards the regent Murray, in taking up arms against the regent,
Mary of Guise, in 1558. Then, joined by Stewart and the lords
of the congregation, he fought. against the regent, and took part
in the attendant negotiations with Elizabeth of England, whom
he visited in London in December 1560. When in August 1561 Mary
queen of Scots returned to Scotland, Glencairn was made a member
of her council; he remained loyal to her after she had been deserted
by Murray, but in a few weeks rejoined Murray and the other Protestant
lords, returning to Mary’s side in 1566. After the queen
had married the earl of Bothwell she was again forsaken by Glencairn,
who fought against her at Carberry Hill and at Langside. The earl,
who was always to the fore in destroying churches, abbeys and
other “monuments of idolatry,” died on the 23rd of
November 1574.
James,
the 7th earl (d. C. 1622), took part in the seizure of James VI.,
called the raid of Ruthven in 1582. William, the 9th earl (c.
1610—1664), a somewhat lukewarm Royalist during the Civil
War, was a party to the “engagement” between the king
and the Scots in 1647; for this proceeding the Scottish parliament
deprived him of his office as lord justice-general, and nominally
of his earldom. In March 1653 Charles II. commissioned the earl
to command the Royalist forces in Scotland, pending the arrival
of General John Middleton, and the insurrection of this year is
generally known as Glencairn’s rising. After its failure
he was betrayed and imprisoned, but although excepted from pardon
he was not executed; and when Charles II was restored he became
lord chancellor of Scotland. After a dispute with his former friend,
James Sharp, archbishop of St Andrews, he died at Belton in Haddingtonshire
on the 30th of May 1664.
This
earl’s son John (d. 1703), who followed his brother Alexander
as 11th earl in 1670, was a supporter of the Revolution of 1688.
His descendant, James, the 14th earl (1749—1791), is known
as the friend and patron of Robert Burns. He performed several
useful services for the poet; and when he died on the 30th of
January 1791 Burns wrote a Lament beginning, “The wind blew
hollow frae the hills,” and ending with the lines, “But
I’ll remember thee, Glencairn, and a’ that thou hast
done for me.” The 14th earl was never married, and when
his brother and successor, John, died childless in September 1796
the earldom became extinct, although it was claimed by Sir Adam
Fergusson, Bart., a descendant of the 10th earl.
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