| James VI of Scotland (1567-1625) was the most experienced monarch to
accede to the English throne since William the Conqueror as well as one
of the greatest of all Scottish kings. A model of the philosopher
prince, James wrote political treatises like The Trew Law of a Free
Monarchy (1598), debated theology with learned divines, and
reflected continually on the art of statecraft. He governed his poor
nation by balancing its factions of clans and by restraining the
enthusiastic leaders of its Presbyterian church. In Scotland, James was
described as pleasing to look at and pleasing to hear. He was sober in
habit, enjoyed vigorous exercise, and doted on his Danish wife, Anne,
who had borne him two male heirs.
But for all of these qualities, James I was viewed with suspicion by
his new subjects. Centuries of hostility between the two nations had
created deep enmities, and these could be seen in English descriptions
of the king. There he was characterized as hunchbacked and ugly, with a
tongue too large for his mouth and a speech impediment that obscured his
words. It was said that he drank to excess and spewed upon his filthy
clothing. It was also rumoured that he was homosexual and preyed upon
the young boys brought to service at court. This caricature, which has
long dominated the popular view of James I, was largely the work of
disappointed English office seekers whose pique clouded their
observations and the judgments of generations of historians.
In fact, James showed his abilities from the first. In the counties
through which he passed on his way to London he lavished royal bounty
upon the elites who had been starved for honours during Elizabeth's
parsimonious reign. He knighted hundreds as he went, enjoying the
bountiful entertainments that formed such a contrast with his indigent
homeland. He would never forget these first encounters with his English
subjects, "their eyes flaming nothing but sparkles of affection." On his
progress James also received a petition, putatively signed by a thousand
ministers, calling his attention to the unfinished business of church
reform.
Religious policy.
The Millenary Petition (1603) initiated a
debate over the religious establishment that James intended to defend.
The king called a number of his leading bishops to hold a formal
disputation with the reformers. The Hampton Court Conference (1604) saw
the king in his element. He took a personal role in the debate and made
clear that he hoped to find a place in his church for moderates of all
stripes. It was only extremists that he intended to "harry from the
land," those who, unlike the supporters of the Millenary Petition,
sought to tear down the established church. The king responded
favourably to the call for creating a better educated and better paid
clergy and referred several doctrinal matters to the consideration of
convocation. But only a few of the points raised by the petitioners
found their way into the revised Canons of 1604. In fact, the most
important result of the conference was the establishment of a commission
to provide an authorized English translation of the Bible, the King
James Version (1611).
Indeed, James's hope was that moderates of all persuasions, Roman
Catholic and Protestant alike, might dwell together in his church. But
his plan to find a formula to encompass Catholics within the Calvinist
English church was overthrown by the hotheadedness of Guy Fawkes, a
convert to Roman Catholicism, and his confederates, who conspired to
assassinate the king, lords, and commons by blowing up the Houses of
Parliament. The failure of the
Gunpowder Plot (1605) led to reprisals against Catholics and
prevented James from going any further than exhibiting humane leniency
toward them in the later years of his reign. Nevertheless, James's
ecumenical outlook did much to defuse religious conflict and led to 20
years of relative peace within the English church.
Finance and politics.
To a king whose annual budget in Scotland was
barely 50,000, England
looked like the land of milk and honey. But in fact, James I inherited
serious financial problems, which his own liberality quickly compounded.
Elizabeth had left a debt of more than
400,000 and James, with a
wife and two sons, had much larger household expenses than the unmarried
queen. Land and duties from customs were the major sources of royal
revenue, and it was James's good fortune that the latter increased
dramatically after the judges ruled in Bate's case (1606) that the king
could make impositions on imported commodities without the consent of
Parliament. Two years later, under the direction of James's able
minister Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, impositions were levied on an
expanded list of goods, and a revised book of rates (1608) was issued
that increased the level of duties. By these measures customs revenues
grew by 70,000 a year.
But even this windfall was not enough to stem the effects of
inflation on the one hand and James's own free spending on the other. By
1606 royal debt was more than
600,000, and the crown's
financial ministers had turned their attention to prerogative income
from wardships, purveyance, and the discovery of concealed lands (i.e.,
crown lands on which rents and dues were not being paid). The revival
and rationalization of these ancient rights created an outcry. As early
as 1604 Salisbury was examining proposals to commute these fiscal rights
into an annual sum to be raised by a land tax. By 1610 negotiations
began for the Great Contract between the king and his taxpaying subjects
that aimed to raise
200,000 a year. But at the last moment both royal officials and leaders
of the House of Commons backed away from the deal, the government
believing that the sum was too low, the leaders of the Commons that a
land tax was too unpopular. The failure of the Great Contract drove
Salisbury to squeeze even more revenue out of the king's feudal rights,
including the sale of titles. This policy violated the spirit of
principles about property and personal liberty held by the governing
classes and, along with impositions, was identified as a grievance
during James's first parliaments.
There was much suspicion that the Scottish king would not understand
the procedures and privileges of an English Parliament, and this was in
evidence at the opening of the first session of the Parliament of
1604-10. The conventional ban upon the selection of outlaws to the
Commons led to the Buckinghamshire Election Case (1604). The Commons
reversed a decision by the lord chancellor and ordered Francis Goodwin,
an outlaw, to be seated in the House. James clumsily intervened in the
proceedings, stating that the privileges of the Commons had been granted
by the grace of the monarch, a pronouncement that stirred the embers of
Elizabethan disputes over parliamentary privilege. Although a compromise
solution to the case was found, from this time forward the Commons took
an active role in scrutinizing the returns of its members. A standing
committee on elections was formed, and the freedom of members from
arrest during sessions was reasserted. Some wanted to go even further
and present the king with a defense of the ancient rights of their
House. But this so-called apology was the work of a minority and was
never accepted by the whole House or presented to the king.
Factions and favourites.
As in the previous reign, court politics were
factionalized around noble groups tied together by kinship and interest.
James had promoted members of the Howard family to places of leadership
in his government; Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, adeptly led a
family group that included Thomas Howard, Earl of Suffolk, and Thomas
Howard, Earl of Arundel. All managed to enrich themselves at the expense
of the king, whose debts reached
900,000 by 1618. A stink
of corruption pervaded the court during these years. The Howards formed
the core of a pro-Spanish faction that desired better relations with
Spain and better treatment of English Catholics. They also played upon
the king's desire for peace in Europe.
The Howards were opposed by an anti-Spanish group that included the
queen, George Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, and William Herbert, Earl
of Pembroke. This group wished to pursue an aggressively Protestant
foreign policy and, after the opening of the Thirty Years' War, to
support James's son-in-law, the elector Frederick of the Palatinate. It
was the anti-Spanish group that introduced the king to George Villiers,
reputedly one of the handsomest men in Europe. Through Villiers they
sought a conduit to power.
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| George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham; engraving by
William Pasaeus, 1625 |
| Mary Evans Picture Library |
Even at the time it was thought unseemly that a lover should be provided
for the king at the connivance of the queen and the archbishop. But
Villiers was nobody's fool, and, while he succeeded spectacularly in
gaining James's confidence, he refused to be a cipher for those who had
advanced him. Soon he had risen to the pinnacle of the aristocracy.
First knighted in 1615, he was created duke of Buckingham in 1623, the
first nonroyal duke in half a century. Buckingham proved an able
politician. He supported the movement for fiscal reform that led to the
disgrace of Lord Treasurer Suffolk and the promotion of Lionel
Cranfield, later Earl of Middlesex. Cranfield, a skilled London
merchant, took the royal accounts in hand and made the unpopular
economies that kept government afloat.
Buckingham, whose power rested upon his relationship with the king,
wholeheartedly supported James's desire to reestablish peace in Europe.
For years James had angled to marry his son Charles to a Spanish
princess. There were many obstacles to this plan, not the least of which
was the insistence of the pope that the marriage lead to the
reconversion of England to Roman Catholicism. When negotiations remained
inconclusive, James, in 1621, called his third Parliament with the
intention of asking for money to support the Protestant cause. By this
means he hoped to bully Philip IV of Spain into concluding the marriage
negotiations and into using his influence to put an end to the German
war.
Parliament, believing that James intended to initiate a trade war
with Spain, readily granted the king's request for subsidies. But some
members mistakenly also believed that the king wished their advice on
military matters and on the prince's marriage. When James learned that
foreign policy was being debated in the lower House, he rebuked the
members for their temerity in breaching the royal prerogative. Stunned,
both because they thought that they were following the king's wishes and
because they believed in their freedom to discuss such matters, members
of the Commons prepared the Protestation of 1621, exculpating their
conduct and setting forth a statement of the liberties of the House.
James sent for the Commons journal and personally ripped the
protestation from it. He reiterated his claim that royal marriages and
foreign policy were beyond the ken of Parliament and dryly noted that
less than a third of the elected members of the House had been present
when the protestation was passed.
The Parliament of 1621 was a failure at all levels. No legislation
other than the subsidy bill was passed; a simple misunderstanding among
the members had led to a dramatic confrontation with the king; and
judicial impeachments were revived, costing the king the services of
Lord Chancellor Bacon. James, moreover, was unable to make any progress
with the Spaniards, and supporting the European Protestants drained his
revenue. By 1624 royal indebtedness had reached
1 million. The old king was
clearly at the end of his power and influence. His health was visibly
deteriorating, and his policies were openly derided in court and
country. Prince Charles and Buckingham decided to take matters into
their own hands. In 1623 they traveled incognito to Madrid.
Their gambit created as much consternation in England as it did in
Spain. James wept inconsolably, believing that his son would be killed
or imprisoned. The Spaniards saw the end of their purposely drawn-out
negotiations. Every effort was made to keep Charles away from the
infanta, and he only managed to catch two fleeting glimpses of the
heavily veiled princess. Nevertheless, he confided in Buckingham that he
was hopelessly in love. Buckingham and John Digby, Earl of Bristol, the
ambassador to Spain, were almost powerless to prevent the most damaging
concessions. Charles even confessed himself willing to be instructed in
the Catholic faith. Yet the more the prince conceded, the more
embarrassed the Spaniards became. Nothing short of an ultimate Catholic
reestablishment in England would be satisfactory, and they began to
raise obviously artificial barriers. Even the lovesick prince realized
that he was being humiliated. Shame turned to rage as he and Buckingham
journeyed home.
There they persuaded the bedridden king to call another Parliament
for the purpose of declaring war on Spain. The Parliament of 1624 was
given free rein. All manner of legislation was passed; subsidies for a
trade war with Spain were voted; and issues of foreign policy were
openly discussed. Firmly in control of political decision-making,
Charles and Buckingham worked to stave off attacks upon James's fiscal
policies, especially the granting of monopolies to royal favourites. The
last Parliament of James's reign was his most successful. On March 27,
1625, the old king died.
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