Auld Alliance
The Auld Alliance (
In time of need
In the summer of 1294
The most important task before the council was to end Scotland's political and diplomatic isolation. It is not absolutely
certain who initiated the matter. The Scottish government was searching for an ally; so too was King Philip. When the Scots'
negotiators arrived in Paris they joined a party sent by
In practice, Scotland obtained very little benefit from this first alliance. The country faced a full-scale English onslaught
in the spring of 1296, beginning the Wars of Scottish Independence, with
no discernible help from the French. More seriously, after the unexpected Scots victory at the
Any residual hope that Philip would intervene in Scotland and restore John Balliol to the throne ended in 1302 after his army was routed by the Flemings at the Battle of the Golden Spurs. Philip, seriously unsettled, rushed into a definitive peace with the English. A Scots mission under Sir John Soules came to Paris to try to remind him of his obligations under the treaty of 1295, but they were almost immediately disarmed from an unexpected direction. John Balliol, taken prisoner by the English in 1296, was eventually released into papal custody, finally being allowed to settle on his ancient family estates in Picardy, part of the Kingdom of France. From here, describing himself as 'King of Scotland', he wrote to Philip-- presumably by prior arrangement-- authorising him to act on his behalf, and settle matters 'either by peace or truce', thus betraying all those who had fought so hard on his behalf since 1297.
On Edward's insistence the Scots delegates were not allowed to attend the peace talks, and Soules and his party were effectively placed under arrest. The Scots ambassadors wrote to John Comyn, Guardian of Scotland, with the news, urging him to continue the struggle, albeit alone; "For God's sake do not despair. If you have done brave deeds, do braver ones now. The swiftest runner who falls before the winning post has run in vain." It was too late. A new Treaty of Paris was concluded in 1303, which effectively gave Edward a free hand to complete the conquest of Scotland. The Franco-Scottish alliance seemed to have ended.
Endure and conquer
During the years that followed, among the most dramatic in Scottish history, the French were no more than distant observers.
Philip was certainly aware of the great political changes taking place, even writing to
Much time elapsed before King Robert turned his attention back towards the former French alliance. By 1326, the English had been cleared from Scotland. There was also a lull in the war: in 1323 Edward II agreed to a thirteen year truce, though he still refused to recognise Bruce as king, or to accept the political independence of Scotland. It seems definite that the uncertainty of his authority—and that of his dynasty—dominated Bruce's strategy. He was now nearing the end of his life, and his heir was his infant son David, only two years old. Most worrying of all there was a large party of Anglo-Scots nobles, men with political or kinship ties with the former dynasty, who refused to recognise Bruce as the rightful king of Scotland, and who had important influence at the English court. Edward Balliol, moreover, now grown to manhood, was ever ready on the wings.
It was against this background that an embassy was sent to France in the spring of 1326, headed by Thomas Randolph. The French king, now Charles IV, had good reason to welcome this overture, faced, as he was, with the prospect of a new war with England. In April the two sides concluded the Treaty of Corbeil, the first renewal of the Franco-Scots alliance in over thirty years. On the face of it, Corbeil was not particularly advantageous for the Scots; for whereas they were required to attack England in the event of a war with France, the French only promised their ally 'aid and counsel' in peace and war. But for Bruce this was an act of essential reinsurance, and the rather vague 'aid and counsel' was, in the event, to be of immeasurable importance in ensuring the political survival of Scotland as a nation.
In war and peace
Peace between Scotland and England was finally secured during 1328 by the
The speed of these events clearly took the French by surprise. Philip VI, the
first of the
When David returned to Scotland in 1341, taking full charge of affairs, the realm was largely free of English and Balliol influence. For some years he pursued a rather desultory war with the enemy along the border, but in 1346 he received a desperate appeal for more decisive action. Throughout the spring Edward had been preparing for a great invasion of France. As summer approached, there was panic in government circles in Paris. The exact purpose and direction of the English armada was unknown: by early July it looked as if the hammer was going to fall on Normandy. King Philip turned to David for help. So far his actions on the border had failed to draw off sufficient English troops. Something more decisive than a raid was required-"I beg you," Philip wrote, "I implore you with all the force I can, to remember the bonds of blood and friendship between us. Do for me what I would do for you in such a crisis and do it quickly and thoroughly as with God's help you are able." David made preparations, though France was now past saving. That August Philip's army was destroyed at the Battle of Crécy.
Even after the news of this reached the north, David's full-scale mobilization continued, though with what precise aim is not
absolutely clear. What is certain is that when he crossed the border in October he did so as much in his own interest as that of
France, believing that he would have an easy passage, all the English army now being with Edward at
Allies in action
France and Scotland survived the disasters of 1346 because Edward III was essentially one of history's great freebooters. He
may have claimed to be the rightful king of France, but under the terms of the
For some years the alliance between the two countries went in to hibernation; but no sooner did Robert II, the first of Scotland's Stewart kings, come to the throne than it was renewed by the Treaty of Vincennes in October 1371, the first such restatement since Corbeil. The Scottish borders nevertheless remained largely peaceful until after the death of Edward III in 1377. Thereafter the impetus to war grew in intensity. In 1383 Robert entered into a fresh agreement with Charles VI, promising to renew the war in return for 40000 gold francs, 1000 suits of armour and the assistance of 1000 men-at-arms. Two years later the promised support arrived: it was the first time the allies had the opportunity for some close co-operation. It was to be far from a happy occasion.
In May 1385, some 2000 French soldiers landed at Leith, under the command of Jean de Vienne, Comte de Valentinois and Admiral of France. This was to date the largest party of Frenchmen ever to set foot in Scotland. Trouble began almost at once. There was simply nowhere to billet such a large body of men with their attendants and equipment. They had to be split up and sent to widely scattered locations. Scotland's backwardness and poverty was a shock to the French, used to much greater comfort than the country could provide.
The Scots themselves found the French uncomfortable and arrogant allies. In their own land the knights were used to
commandeering whatever they wanted, regardless of the feelings of the common people. But when they sent out foragers into the
Scottish countryside over one hundred of them were killed by the outraged peasantry. Poverty had created a kind of rough
democracy which the French found intolerable, describing Scotland as a second
The kind of hit-and-run warfare favoured by the Scots was also not to the taste of the French, and they soon proved themselves to be of little practical value. With the departure of Richard II and his English army, there was no more reason for them to stay. The French themselves, finding little glory in Scotland, were anxious to return home; but they were not allowed to do so until they had paid for the damage they had caused and the goods supplied. The allies, rarely comfortable with each other at close quarters, parted on very poor terms. It is even suggested by Jean Froissart, the chronicler, that the French expressed the wish that England and France would make peace so that their kings could join together and come to Scotland "utterly to destroy that realm for ever." In spite of these mutual dislikes, the French were to call on their allies not many years later, at what was to be one of the lowest points in their nation's history.
Scotland in France
In 1413
Charles' greatest need was for soldiers, and for these he looked to Scotland. In the period from 1419 to 1424 it is estimated
that as many as 15000 came to France; and by the summer of 1420 the 'Army of Scotland' was a distinct element in the French royal
service. They were quick to make a difference, defeating an English force at the Battle of
Bauge in the spring of 1421. As it marked the turning point of the Hundred Years War, the significance of this battle was
great, and apparently caused
As so often early hope was pursued by quick despair; and in 1423 many of the victors of Bauge were killed at the
Battle of Cravant. Fresh contingents followed under the
- Behold us through the frosty air begging, in
- rags, the scanty dole.
- For all is gone. The hungry Scot, and haughty
- Spaniard, in their turn,
- have stripped us to the skin, God wot!, and left
- us to lament and moan.
In August 1424 Douglas and Buchan were killed at the
Margaret and Joan
In July 1428 a distinguished French embassy came to Scotland to appeal directly to
Not long after the Battle of the Herrings, a seventeen-year old girl dressed in armour entered Orleans, now the key to the
whole campaign on the Loire. Her name was
From this point forward France made a steady and sustained recovery, so much so that Charles no longer needed the troops asked
for in the marriage agreement of 1428. The wedding still went ahead, though, largely to forestall any possible
rapprochement between James and the English. The twelve-year-old Princess Margaret finally sailed from Scotland on
Alliance in transition
In 1453 the Hundred Years War finally ended. The alliance between Scotland and France was no longer bound up in the
life-and-death issue of national survival. Although never entirely free of the manipulation and cynicism that tend to accompany
international politics, these were to become ever more apparent as the years passed. Louis XI, who succeeded Charles VII in 1461,
had no compunction in using the Scots in an openly self-serving fashion. During the minority of
In growing to manhood King James, fully aware just how treacherous and faithless Louis could be. The Bishop of Glasgow had received information that during negotiations with the English in 1463 Louis
had openly said that he had no great regard for the Scots, and once he had reached agreement with
The reign of James IV was marked at the outset by a firm move away from the policies of the previous reign. In 1491 the Auld
Alliance was renewed and James pursued desultory and largely unproductive warfare along the border. But this was a sterile
policy, with little to show by way of gain; and in the end James turned the whole thing on its head. In 1502 he concluded the
Treaty of Perpetual Peace with
James was a popular and authoritative king, who had proved himself as a warrior. It was because of this that he had been able to bring about a revolution in Scotland's traditional policies, whereas his father had been ruined in a similar attempt. But he was not prepared to cast off all the chains of the past. In the negotiations leading up to the treaty of 1502 Henry had asked James to break the league with France; the most he was willing to concede was that any renewal would not be 'prejudicial' to England.
The Treaty of Perpetual Peace was an imperfect document: for one thing, the question of Berwick was ignored; and for another the old claim to feudal superiority was passed over in silence.
Neither of these were insurmountable problems. Scotland was never again to make a serious attempt to recover Berwick. Feudal
supremacy was a more troubling issue; but Henry VII never took this issue seriously: it was not until the following reign that it
emerged out of the political crypt. Undoubtedly, the most serious weakness was the existence of the Auld Alliance. In other
words, the peace was only 'perpetual' for as long as England and France enjoyed good relations, which they did during the latter
part of Henry's reign. However, if this tripartite relationship ever broke down Scotland would be forced to choose between one
side or the other. In the end, the treaty proved to be no more than a personal understanding between Henry VII and James. In 1509
in the person of Henry VIII England had an aggressive young monarch with
Continental ambitions. Bit by bit James was drawn towards the precipice: in 1513 at the request of
Decline
Flodden, it is sometimes suggested, marks the birth of a new cynicism towards the Auld Alliance on the part of Scotland. It
would be truer to say that this attitude was created by the self-interested politics and the blatant disregard for Scottish
interests demonstrated by Louis and his successor, Francis I, in the years
immediately after the battle. France's growing rivalry with
- That sen the said king of Scotland togiddir witht mony of his noblis and lieges war slane and distroyit in batell now in northumbirland be the Inglish principally in the quarell of France it wald pleis and lyke the said maist Cristian king to send the duke of Albany with his help and municions and all maner of necessrs foe weir in the Realme of Scotland for the defence of the zoung king of Scotland the queyn his said Realm and noblis.
However, without consulting the Scots, Louis made peace with Henry in the summer of 1514. Although Scotland was included, it was on the most offensive terms imaginable: if the Scots raided England, her inclusion would be void, although there was no compensating provision for English raids into Scotland. Acting under English pressure, and despite promises to the contrary, Louis kept the Duke of Albany in France. Considering the terrible sacrifice that Scotland had made for France this was an astonishing betrayal. Cardinal Bernard Bibenna said of the peace: "that the king of France has not refrained from making a shameful agreement with the king of England, renouncing his protection for Scotland and leaving that realm to the government of the king of England."
Things change, and Albany was eventually allowed to come to Scotland; but he found a nation in a sombre and uncooperative
mood. In 1517, he had managed to negotiate the
In 1522 and again in 1523 Albany managed to prod reluctant and bad tempered Scottish armies towards the border, but that was
as much as he could accomplish. In 1522 the nobles refused to die purely, as they saw it, in the service of France, ignoring all
of the Regent's appeals to honour. Hoping to put them in a more accommodating mood he managed to secure the help of a French army
for the campaigning season of 1523:4000 footmen, many armed with the arquebus, a primitive
musket, and 500 horse, along with artillery, money and other supplies. This was the largest French force ever to appear in
Scotland, at least twice the size of that of 1385; but it made little difference to the sullen mood of the Scots. Discontent
spread alarmingly among the troops, so much so that many simply refused to march beyond Melrose. With considerable difficulty, Albany managed to persuade the army, like so many stubborn
sheep, to accompany him along the northern bank of the Tweed towards Wark Castle. On
Greater Britain
Albany's credibility was destroyed. With the pro-English party growing in influence, he decided to leave Scotland in May 1524,
promising to return in September. He never came back. An able man, he had done his best in difficult circumstances; but in the
end he had simply been unable to bridge the impossible gap between his duty to France and the needs of Scotland. He had come to
Scotland in the period after Flodden when the country still held to a war policy with England and an unshakeable attachment to
France. After a few years a numbness descended on the mind of the national community, a growing conviction that Flodden had been
a disaster brought on by the alliance, and an increasing willingness to consider co-operation rather than conflict with England.
If Blind Harry's Wallace had defined attitudes towards England in the late fifteenth century, then the new mood found
expression in
Marriages and wars
James V finally took control of affairs in 1528. By this time a complex political picture was made even more so by the onset
of the
By far the greatest reconfirmation of the Franco-Scottish alliance came in January 1537, when James married Francis' daughter,
For James the new war on the border was even more disastrous than that pursued by his father. The war of 1513 had been a
tragedy; the war of 1542 turned out to be a farce. The king, in declining health, did not accompany his army to the border, and
was at least spared the indignity of seeing it implode at
For Henry this was an unlooked for opportunity: Scotland had an infant queen, England had a
- Assuringe your lordships that as farre as I can see, the whole bodye of the realme is inclyned to Fraunce, for they do consider and saye that Fraunce requireth nothinge of them but frendeship...And Fraunce they saye hath alwayes ayded theim with money and munytion...whereas on thother syde, Englonde they saye seketh nothinge els but to bringe theim to subjection, and to have superiorite and domynion over theim; while unoversally they doo so deteste and abhorre, as in my poore opinion they will never be brought unto it but by force.
Force was Henry's only remaining option; and thus began what in time would come to be known as the 'Rough Wooing', a
particularly brutal campaign of destruction and retribution that continued even after Henry's death in January 1547. However, as
in the past, the more brutal the English were the more determined the Scots became. Even after the disastrous defeat at the
Battle of Pinkie in the summer of 1547 they refused to honour the Greenwich
Treaty, and Mary was sent not to England and Edward but to France, to be betrothed to the
Mary of France
In April 1558, Mary and Francis were married in Paris, in what was to be the apogee of the Auld Alliance. The following
November the Scottish Parliament agreed that Francis should be offered the
- Because the Most Christian King of France has granted a letter of naturality for him and his successors to all and sundray (sicsic) Scotsmen being in the realm of France or shall happen to be in the same in any times to come, making them able to enjoy lands, heritages, offices, dignities and benefices and the disposal thereupon, and their heirs to succeed to their lands and heritages, like as the said letter of naturality, registered in the Parliament of Paris, in the Greater Council and in the Chamber of Accounts, in itself at more length proports, THEREFORE, the Queens Grace, Dowger and Regent of this realm, and of the estates of the same, think it good and agreeable that the like letter of naturality be given and granted by the King and Queen of Scotland, Dauphin and Dauphiness of Vienne, to all and sundray of the said Most Christain King of France's subjects being or shall happen to be in the realm of Scotland in any times to come with suchlike privileges and faculties as is given by the said Most Christain King of France to the subjects of this realm...
Neither the French nor the Scottish provisions conferred citizenship as such-as is sometimes maintained-for the simple reason that citizenship as a legal and political concept did not exist at this time. Rather the right to property and office in both realms was now guaranteed by law, rather than by an arbitrary act of official will, the situation prevailing prior to this.
The same kinds of concerns were expressed in Scotland as in the past when her fate was tied to a larger and more influential
power. For many it looked as if the country was set to become a province of France, in much the same way as the ancient duchy of
- Mary, Queen of Scots...has said and declared that, in the event of her decease without heirs begotten of her body...she has given and by these presents gives, by pure and free gift, to take effect on her death, to the King of France who is or shall be, the kingdom of Scotland according to what it consists and comprises, beside all such rights to the kingdom of England as can or shall belong and pertain to her now and in time to come...
This last clause was to have important short term implications. In the same month that Francis became king of Scotland the
Catholic
Endgame
Throughout the 1550s, Protestantism had been gaining ground in Scotland. The Queen Regent, aware of the strength of the movement, particularly among sections of the nobility, had initially pursued an even handed policy, attempting to balance all interests. But by the late 1550s more and more Frenchmen, both soldiers and officials, were arriving in Scotland. Resentment grew, expressed in a new kind of Protestant nationalism, represented most particularly in a group known as the Lords of the Congregation. For these men it was France and not England that now represented the chief threat to Scottish liberty. In May 1559 John Knox returned to Scotland from the Calvinist stronghold of Geneva. Before long the Scottish Reformation was underway, as an attack on the Auld Religion on the one hand and the Auld Alliance on the other. But against a modern French army, secure in the fortifications of Leith and elsewhere, the rag-taggle army of the Congregation could make little progress. With the Reformation in danger of being strangled at birth, the Protestant lords called on the assistance of the ancient enemy. History was about to stand on its head.
Elizabeth I was a deeply conservative monarch. Few things were more repellent to her than subjects rebelling against their lawful prince. Even so, she could not ignore a challenge to her own position. It was not the struggles of the Congregation that ended French rule in Scotland, but the pretence of Francis and Mary to the English royal title. The defeat of the Protestant lords in Scotland would have been a threat to both England’s security and Elizabeth’s legitimacy. Urged on by William Cecil, her chief minister, she entered into an alliance with the Protestants at Berwick in February 1560. The object of the treaty, it was expressly stated, was not to undermine the authority of Mary and Francis, but to safeguard Scotland's independence against the French or "the just freedom of the Crown of Scotland from conquest."
On
References
- Barbe, L. A., Margaret of Scotland and the Dauphin Louis, 1917.
- Cassavetti, E., The Lion and the Lilies, 1977.
- Donaldson, G., The Auld Alliance, 1985.
- Flodden Papers. Diplomatic Correspondence between the Courts of France and Scotland, 1507-1517, ed. M. Wood, 1933.
- Forbes-Leith, W., The Scots Men-at-Arms and Lifeguards in France, 1882.
- Macdougall, N., Scotland's Foreign Relations-England and France, in Scottish Society in the Fifteenth Century, ed. J. M. Brown, 1977.
- Macdougall, N., An Antidote to the English: The Auld Alliance, 1295-1560, 2001. ISBN 1-86232-145-0
- Mackie, J. D., The Auld Alliance and the Battle of Flodden, in Transactions of the Franco-Scottish Society, vol. 8, 1935.
- Marshall, R. K. Mary of Guise, 1977.
- Pluscarden, The Book of, ed. F. H. Skene, 1880.
- Sadler, Ralph, The State Papers and Letters of Sir Ralph Sadler, ed. A. Clifford, 1809.
- Stuart, W. M., The Scot who was a Frenchman, 1940.
See also
Duke of Aubigny - Duke of Lennox
- List of treaties
Entente cordiale (Anglo-French agreement 1904)Anglo-Portuguese alliance
External links
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