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Robert
Boyd (circa. 1470)
Scottish
statesman, was a son of Sir Thomas Boyd (d. 1439), and belonged
to an old and distinguished family, one member of which, Sir Robert
Boyd, had fought with Wallace and Robert Bruce. Boyd, who was
created a peer about 1454, was one of the regents of Scotland
3uring the minority of James III., but, in 1466, with some associates
he secured the person of the young king and was appointed his
sole governor. As ruler of Scotland he was instrumental in reforming
some religious foundations; he arranged the marriage between James
III. and Margaret, daughter of Christian I., king of Denmark and
Norway, and secured the cession of the Orkney Islands by Norway.
However, when in 1467 he obtained the offices of chamberlain and
justiciary for himself, and the hand of the kings sister Mary,
with the title )f earl of Arran for his eldest son Thomas, his
enemies became too strong for him, and he was found guilty of
treason and ;entenced to death. He escaped to England, and the
date of his death is unknown. His brother and assistant, Sir Alexander
Boyd, was beheaded on the 22nd of November 1469.
Boyds son Thomas, earl of Arran, was in Denmark
when his rather was overthrown. However, he fulfilled his mission,
that Df bringing the kings bride, Margaret, to Scotland, and then,
warned by his wife, escaped to the continent of Europe. He is
mentioned very eulogistically in one of the Paston Letters, but
practically nothing is known of his subsequent history.
Lord Boyds grandson Robert (d.c. 1550), a son
of Alexander Boyd, was confirmed in the possession of the estates
and honors of his grandfather in 1549, and is generally regarded
as the 3rd Lord Boyd. His son Robert, 4th Lord Boyd (d. 590),
took a prominent part in Scottish politics during the troubled
time which followed the death of James V. in 1542. At first he
favored the reformed religion, but afterwards his views changed
and he became one of the most trusted advisers of Mary, queen
of Scots, whom he accompanied to the battle of Langside in 1568.
During the queens captivity he was often employed on diplomatic
errands; he tried to stir up insurrections in her favor, and he
was suspected iif participation in the murder of the regent Murray.
He enjoyed a high and influential position under the regent James
Douglas, earl of Morton, but was banished in 1583 for his share
in the seizure of King James VI., a plot known as the Raid of
Ruthven. He retired to France, but was soon allowed to return
to Scotland. He died on the 3rd of January 1590.
William,
8th or 9th Lord Boyd (d. 1692), was created earl of Kilmarnock
in 1661, and this noblemans grandson William, the 3rd earl (d.
1717), was a partisan of the Hanoverian kings and fought for George
I. during the rising of 1715. His son William, the 4th earl (1704-1746),
was educated in the same principles, but in 1745, owing either
to a personal affront or to the influence of his wife or to his
straitened circumstances, he deserted George II. and joined Charles
Edward, the Young Pretender. The 4th earl fought at Falkirk and
Culloden, where he was made prisoner, and was beheaded on the
18th of August 1746. The title of earl of Kilmarnock is now merged
in that of earl of Erroll.
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