NameJoan Beaufort
Death1445
MotherMargaret Holland (~1383-1439)
Spouses
Birth1394, Dunfermline, Scotland
Death1437
ChildrenJames II (1430-1460)
Notes for Joan Beaufort
1. John STEWART, Earl of Atholl
2. James STEWART, Earl of Buchan
3. Andrew STEWART, Bishop of Moray
Notes for James I (Spouse 1)
James I, King of Scotland
Family: Joan BEAUFORT
NOTES: Reign: 1406-37; In 1406, shortly before the death of his father, James was sent to France for safety from rebellious Scottish nobles. The ship was seized by the English, and James was kept a prisoner until 1423. The following year having inherited the Scottish throne in 1406, James returned to Scotland and was crowned. James, however, had antagonized the Scottish nobles by forfeiting their estates, and he was assassinated in 1437. He was succeeded by his son James II.


193Famous Scots
- King James I (1394-1437)
James was born at Dunfermline in July, 1394. But the failing health of James' father, King Robert III, undermined his authority. Power was therefore transferred to the king's brother the Duke of Albany and his eldest son, the Duke of Rothesay. However, Albany imprisoned the Duke of Rothesay in Falkland Palace where he died of starvation in 1402.

The King then sent his younger son, James, to France in 1406 but after he had been captured by pirates off Flamborogh Head, he became a prisoner of the English King Henry IV. King Robert III died some months later.

While James was nominally the king, during his captivity in England, the Duke of Albany (Robert III's brother) and then (in 1420) the Duke's son, Murdoch, acted as Regents. During this time some of the nobles extended their power, including the Macdonald Lord of the Isles who sacked Aberdeen.

James, 12-years-old when captured, was held in the Tower of London but was given a good education. After the death of King Henry V of England in 1422, James was eventually released under the Treaty of London for a sizeable ransom and after a marriage had been arranged, on 12 February, 1424, to Jane Beaufort, daughter of the duke of Somerset. James then returned to be crowned at Scone on 2 May, 1424.

James then set about establishing his rule - the Regent Murdoch and his two sons were beheaded and the Lord of the Isles was imprisoned for a spell.

James had a reputation as a man of culture who wrote poetry - two of his works have survived - "The Kingis Quair" (King's Book) and "Good Counsel".

His marriage resulted in one son, James II and six daughters, one of whom became the wife of King Louis XI of France.

James was keen on renewing the "Auld Alliance" with France but his attempts to dominate the nobility resulted in a conspiracy by them and he was murdered in Perth on 20 February, 1437. His son was only seven years old, plunging Scotland once again into a period of power-hungry regents.

The illustration above is a monument to James I in the grounds of Dryburgh Abbey in the Scottish Borders.
Notes for James (Spouse 2)
1. John STEWART, Earl of Atholl
2. James STEWART, Earl of Buchan
3. Andrew STEWART, Bishop of Moray
Last Modified 15 Dec 2001Created 8 Mar 2016 using Reunion for Macintosh