William Schaw
William Schaw (c. 1550–1602) was Master of Works to James VI of Scotland for building castles and palaces, and is claimed to have been an important figure in the development of Freemasonry in Scotland.
Biography
William Schaw was the second son of John Schaw of Broich, and grandson of Sir James Schaw of Sauchie. Broich is now called Arngomery, a place at Kippen in Stirlingshire. The Schaw family had links to the Royal Court, principally through being keepers of the King's wine cellar. The Broich family was involved in a scandal in 1560, when John Schaw was accused of murdering the servant of another laird. William's father was denounced as a rebel and his property forfeited when he and his family failed to appear at court, but the family were soon re-instated. At this time William may have been a page at the court of Mary of Guise, as a page of that name received an outfit of black mourning cloth when Mary of Guise died. William the page would have been in Edinburgh Castle with the Regent's court during the siege of Leith, while the Master of Work, William MacDowall, was strengthening the castle's defences.[1]
William first appears on his own account in the records in 1580 when he was listed by an English informant at the royal court as the "clock-keeper" amongst followers of the King's favourite Esmé Stewart, 1st Duke of Lennox.[2] He signed the negative confession whereby courtiers pledged allegiance to the Reformation. On 11 April 1581, he was given a valuable gift of rights over the lands in Kippen belonging to the Grahams of Fintry.[3] In May 1583, William Schaw was in Paris at the death of the exiled Esmé Stewart and it was said that he took Esmé's heart back to Scotland.[4]
Great Master of Work
On 21 December 1583, James VI appointed him principal Maister o' Wark (Master of Works) to the Crown of Scotland for life, with responsibility for all royal castles and palaces. Schaw had already been paid the first instalment of his salary £166-13-4 as 'grete Mr of wark in place of Sr Rbt Drummond' in November.[5] The replacement of the incumbent Robert Drummond of Carnock with Schaw, known as a Roman Catholic, may have been a reaction to the Ruthven Raid that had removed Lennox from power.[6] By the terms of his appointment, Schaw for the rest of his life was to be;
'Grit maister of wark of all and sindrie his hienes palaceis, biggingis and reparationis, – and greit oversear, directour and commander of quhatsumevir police devysit or to be devysit for our soverane lordis behuif and plessur.' or, in current words; 'Great master of work of all and sundry his highness' palaces, building works and repairs, – and great overseer, director and commander of whatsoever policy devised or to be devised for our sovereign lord's behalf and pleasure.'[7]
In November 1583 Schaw travelled on a diplomatic trip to France with Lord Seton and his son Alexander Seton, a fellow Catholic with an interest in architecture. The Seton family remained supporters of Mary, Queen of Scots who was exiled in England. Schaw returned in the winter of 1584, and became involved in building work for the Seton family.[8] In 1585 he was one of three courtiers who entertained Danish ambassadors visiting the Scottish court at Dunfermline and St Andrews.[9] In 1588 Schaw was amongst a group of Catholics ordered to appear before the Edinburgh Presbytery, and English agents reported him as being a suspected Jesuit and holding anti-English views during the 1590s.[6] In May 1596 an English paper listing reasons to suspect James VI of being himself a Roman Catholic, included the appointment of known Catholics to household offices, noting Schaw as 'Praefectum Architecturae,' his friend Alexander Seton as President of Council, and Lord Hume as the King's body guard.[10] By this time he had acquired the barony of Sauchie.
Servant of Anna of Denmark
in 1589 he was amongst the courtiers who accompanied James VI to Denmark to fetch his new queen Anna of Denmark.[11] He returned in early 1590, ahead of the rest of the party to prepare for their subsequent return. He busied himself repairing Holyrood Palace and Dunfermline Palace which had been assigned to the queen. He was also responsible for the elaborate ceremony greeting her arrival at Leith, and he subsequently became master of ceremonies to the court.
By 1593 he was appointed as Chamberlain to the Lordship of Dunfermline, which was an office of the household of Queen Anna,[11] where he worked closely with Alexander Seton and William Fowler. This involved receipting accounts for jewels the Queen bought from the son of the jeweller George Heriot in 1598.,[12] and collecting rents 'feumaills' from her lands.[13]
James VI and Anna built a new Chapel Royal at Stirling Castle in 1594, which has no documented association with Schaw, but was probably built under his direction. The Italianate building was used for the christening of James' and Anna's son.[14] The Queen gave him a hat badge in the form of a golden salamander at New Year 1594-5. The badge was supplied by the jeweller Thomas Foulis.[15] In March 1598 he was tasked with giving the Queen's brother, Ulrik, Duke of Holstein a tour of Scotland with Esmé's son, Ludovic, Duke of Lennox, taking him to Fife, Dundee, Stirling Castle, and on a trip to the Bass Rock.[16]
On 8 July 1601, James VI sent William to consult with Master John Gordon on the construction of a monument to the King's rescue from the Gowrie House conspiracy the previous year. James VI wrote to Gordon that William would "conferre with yow thairanent, that ye maye agree upon the forme, devyse, and superscriptionis."[17]
Family and feud
His niece married Robert Mowbray, a grandson of the treasurer Robert Barton, and following his death she married James Colville of East Wemyss in 1601, which caused a family feud between Francis Mowbray, Robert's brother, and Schaw and Colville.[18] Mowbray, an erstwhile English agent, wounded Schaw with a rapier in a quarrel, was subsequently arrested for plotting against the king, and died following an escape attempt from Edinburgh Castle.[19] Another niece, Elizabeth Schaw of Broich, married John Murray of Lochmaben who became Earl of Annandale.
Schaw died in 1602. He was succeeded as King's Master of Works by David Cunninghame of Robertland.[20] His tomb in Dunfermline Abbey was constructed at the expense of his friend Alexander Seton and Queen Anne,[21] and survives with a lengthy Latin inscription recording Schaw's intellectual skills and achievements.[22] The tomb inscription remains the most valuable source of biographic information, and was composed by Alexander Seton, translated it reads:
This humble structure of stones covers a man of excellent skill, notable probity, singular integrity of life, adorned with the greatest of virtues – William Schaw, Master of the King's Works, President of the Sacred Ceremonies, and the Queen's Chamberlain. He died 18th April, 1602.Among the living he dwelt fifty-two years; he had travelled in France and many other Kingdoms, for the improvement of his mind; he wanted no liberal training; was most skilful in architecture; was early recommended to great persons for the singular gifts of his mind; and was not only unwearied and indefatigable in labours and business, but constantly active and vigorous, and was most dear to every good man who knew him. He was born to do good offices, and thereby to gain the hearts of men; now he lives eternally with God.
Queen Anne ordered this monument to be erected to the memory of this most excellent and most upright man, lest his virtues, worthy of eternal commendation, should pass away with the death of his body."
Masonic Statutes
First Schaw Statutes
On 28 December 1598 Schaw, in his capacity of Master of Works and General Warden of the master stonemasons, issued "The Statutis and ordinananceis to be obseruit by all the maister maoissounis within this realme."[23] The preamble states that the statutes were issued with the consent of a craft convention, simply specified as all the master masons gathered that day. Schaw's first statutes root themselves in the Old Charges, with additional material to describe a hierarchy of wardens, deacons and masters. This structure would ensure that masons did not take on work which they were not competent to complete, and ensured a lodge warden would be elected by the master masons, through whom the general warden could keep in touch with each particular lodge. Master masons were only permitted to take on three apprentices during their lifetime (without special dispensation), and they would be bound to their masters for seven years. A further seven years would have to elapse before they could be taken into the craft, and a book-keeping arrangement was set up to keep track of this. Six master masons and two entered apprentices had to be present for a master or fellow of the craft to be admitted. Various other rules were laid out for the running of the lodge, supervision of work, and fines for non-attendance at lodge meetings.
The statute was agreed by all the master masons present, and arrangements were made to send a copy to every lodge in Scotland. The statute indicates a significant advance in the organisation of the craft, with shires constituting an intermediate level of organisation. These "territorial" lodges ran parallel to another set of civic organisations, incorporations, often linking masons with other workers in the building trades, such as wrights. While in some places (Stirling and Dundee), the lodges and incorporations became indistinguishable, in other places the incorporation linked the trade to the burgh, and became a mechanism whereby the merchants exercised some control over the wages of the building trades. In places like Edinburgh, where the proliferation of wooden buildings meant a predominance of wrights, the territorial lodge offered a form of craft self-governance distinct from the incorporation. Also, the masons and wrights used differing ceremonial motifs, at the respective events. The role of deacon provided a link between these incorporations and the lodges.
Copies of the statute (along with the Second Shaw Statute) were written into the minutes of the Lodges of Edinburgh and Aitchison's Haven, near Prestonpans.[24][25]
Second Schaw Statutes
The Second Schaw Statutes were signed on 28 December 1599, at Holyroodhouse and consisted of fourteen separate statutes. Some of these were addressed specifically to Lodge Mother Kilwinning, others to the lodges of Scotland in general. Kilwinning Lodge was given regional authority for west Scotland, its previous practices were confirmed, various administrative functions were specified and the officials of the lodge were enjoined to ensure that all craft fellows and apprentices "tak tryall of the art of memorie". More generally, rules were laid down for proper record keeping of the lodges, with specific fees being laid down.
The statutes state that Kilwinning was the head and second lodge in Scotland. This seems to relate to the fact that Kilwinning claimed predence as the first lodge in Scotland, but that in Schaw's scheme of things, the Edinburgh Lodge would be most important followed by Kilwinning and then Stirling. David Stevenson argues that the Second Schaw statutes dealt with the response from within the craft to his first statutes, whereby various traditions were mobilised against his innovations, particularly from Kilwinning.[26]
The reference to the art of memory may be taken as a direct reference to renaissance esotericism. William Fowler, who had been a colleague of Schaw both in his trip to Denmark and at Dunfermline, had instructed Queen Anne of Denmark in the technique. Indeed, Fowler had met Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno at the house of Michel de Castelnau in London in the 1580s. The art of memory constituted an important element of Bruno's magical system.
The statutes also address practical matters like health & safety concerns while working at heights. In his eighteenth article Schaw recommended that;
All masters or "interprisaris of warkis be verray cairfull to see thair skaffaldis and fute-gangis (platforms) surelie sett and placeit, to the effect that throw thair negligence and sleuth (laziness), na hurt or skaith cum unto persons that works at the said work, under the pain of discharging of thame thairafter to work as masters havand charge of ane work."[27]
The Sinclair Statutes
Two letters were drawn up in 1600 and 1601 and involved the lodges of Dunfermline, St Andrews, Edinburgh, Aitchison's Haven and Haddington, and were signed by Schaw himself in his capacity of Master of Works (but not General Warden). They are known as the First Sinclair Statutes as they supposedly confirm the role of the lairds of Roslin as patrons and protectors of the craft. Once again it would suggest that Schaw's proposed reorganisation of the craft had encountered some problems. Indeed, it presaged an ongoing struggle between the Master of Works and the Sinclairs, which Schaw's successors in the post continued, following his death in 1602.[28]
External links
References
- ↑ Stevenson, David, The Origins of Freemasonry: Scotland's century 1590 – 1710, Cambridge University Press, 1988, p. 27: Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland, 1556–67, vol. i, HMSO (1957) no. 810, 811: Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol.11, HMSO (1916), 23
- ↑ John Strype, Annals of the Reformation, (1824), Vol. II part II, 325
- ↑ Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, vol. 8, HMSO, (1982), 35, no. 210, non-entry of Irnecumrie, composition £60.
- ↑ Calendar of State Papers Foreign, Elizabeth: January–June 1583 and addenda, vol. 17 (1913), no. 362, 9 June 1583
- ↑ National Archives of Scotland E22/6 Treasurer's Accounts f133v
- 1 2 Stevenson, p. 28
- ↑ Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland, 1581–1584, vol. 8 (1982), 276–277 no. 1676.
- ↑ Scott, Walter ed., James Somerville, author, Memorie of the Somervilles, Edinburgh (1815), 460.
- ↑ Thomson, Thomas ed., Sir James Melville, Memoirs of My own Life, Edinburgh (1827)
- ↑ CSP. Scotland, vol. 12, (HMSO, Edinburgh, 1952), pp.227–8
- 1 2 Campbell, Ian; Mackenzie, Aonghus (2011). "The 'Great Temple of Solomon' at Stirling Castle". Architectural History 54: 94 – via – via JSTOR (subscription required) .
- ↑ See National Archives of Scotland Records of George Heriot's Trust GD421/1/3/11 (information from on-line catalogue)
- ↑ National Records of Scotland, GD224/906/26 no. 40 (on-line catalogue).
- ↑ Glendinning, Miles, and McKechnie, Aonghus, Scottish Architecture, Thames & Hudson, 2004, p.61
- ↑ National Archives of Scotland E30/14 Thomas Foulis / English Subsidy Account: cited Caledonian Mercury 24 December 2010
- ↑ Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol.13 part 1, (1969), p.181: NAS E21 Scottish royal accounts 1598 March f50, May f71
- ↑ Fraser, William, ed., Sutherland Book, vol.2 (1892), p.10-11 no.13
- ↑ Reid-Baxter, Jamie, 'Politics, Passion and Poetry in the Court of James VI: John Burel and his surviving works', in Mapstone, S, Houwen, L.A.J.R., and MacDonald, A.A. (eds.) A Palace in the Wind: Essays on Vernacular Culture and Humanism in Late-Medieval and Renaissance, Peeters, 2000, p199-200
- ↑ Chalmers, Robert Domestic Annals of Scotland: Reign of James VI. 1591 – 1603 Part H, 1874 pub. – accessed 30 May 2007
- ↑ McKean, Charles (2001). The Scottish Chateau. Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-7509-2323-7. P. 158.
- ↑ Church Monuments Society Feb. 2011
- ↑ RCAHMS Inventory Fife: David Stevenson, Origins of Freemasonry (1988)
- ↑ Fraser ed., Montgomerie Memorials. vol. 2 (Edinburgh 1849), pp. 239–40
- ↑ For Aitchison's Haven see Blaeu (1654)
- ↑ These Minutes are now the property of the Grand Lodge of Antient Free and Accepted Masons of Scotland
- ↑ Stevenson, p48- 49
- ↑ HMC Earl of Eglington, (1885), 29–30, see external links
- ↑ These 'statutes' are now the property of the Grand Lodge of Antient, Free and Accepted Masons of Scotland
Bibliography
- Chalmers, Robert (1874). "Domestic Annals of Scotland: Reign of James VI. 1591 – 1603 Part H". Electric Scotland. Retrieved 30 May 2007.
- Glendinning, Miles, and McKechnie, Aonghus, Scottish Architecture, Thames & Hudson, 2004.
- Reid-Baxter, Jamie "Politics, Passion and Poetry in the Court of James VI: John Burel and his surviving works", in: Mapstone, S, Houwen, L.A.J.R., and MacDonald, A.A. (eds.) A Palace in the Wind: Essays on Vernacular Culture and Humanism in Late-Medieval and Renaissance, Peeters, 2000.
- Stevenson, David The Origins of Freemasonry: Scotland's century 1590 – 1710, Cambridge University Press, 1988.
- Williamson, Arthur H., 'Number & National Consciousness', in: Mason, Roger A., ed., Scots & Britons, Folger / CUP, (1994), pp. 187–212.
Preceded by Robert Drummond of Carnock |
Master of Work to the Crown of Scotland 1583–1602 |
Succeeded by David Cunninghame of Robertland |