Ladykirk

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Ladykirk Church, the Kirk of Steill, was built by James IV
Ladykirk is a village and parish in Berwickshire, situated on the B6470 road just north of the River Tweed and the Northumberland border. The town was formerly known as Upsettlington, but King James IV renamed the town Ladykirk; the church is also known as St Mary's Church or Kirk of Steill.

Ladykirk stands directly opposite Norham Castle in Northumberland.

In history

John Balliol

The land opposite Norham Castle known as Upsettlington Green and Holywell Haugh was used for meetings during the wars of Scottish Independence. Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale, the father of Robert the Bruce, and the Competitors for the Crown of Scotland convened at Holywell Haugh on 2 June, 1291, and met Robert Burnell the Bishop of Bath and Wells. On the following day John Balliol acknowledged Edward I as his feudal superior.[1]

James IV

Nave of Ladykirk Church

James IV established his headquarters at Upsettlington on 5 August 1497 during an attack on Norham Castle. Here James played cards with the Spanish ambassador Pedro de Ayala. The approach of an English army led by the Earl of Surrey forced James to abandon the siege of Norham. Surrey marched towards Ayton Castle and by 21 August 1497 peace was negotiated and James sent orders to stop re-inforcements coming to Ayton.[2]

Soon after, James IV built a new church called Our Lady Kirk of Steill at Upsettlington. Originally, the church served two parishes, Horndene and Upsettlington.[3] It is said that James founded the new church in gratitude for his safe crossing of the River Tweed, or to commemorate the siege of Norham Castle in 1497 and its peaceful conclusion. An inscription already illegible by the late 18th-century recorded that the church was founded by James in 1500, marking the Christian jubilee year.[4] The building was first supervised by Sir Patrick Blacader from 1500 when he was allocated £40 from wool customs for the construction,[5] and then from 1504 onwards by George Ker of Samuelston, by which time the windows were being glazed.

James IV visited in August 1501, and a church organ was brought for this occasion. Payments for the Kirk were listed in the royal accounts under the same 'buildings' heading as for the king's palaces and the ships of the Royal Scots Navy.[6] A chasuble embroidered with the royal arms, with an alb, and an altar frontal of arras-work were provided in March 1505, and the building work continued.[7] In legend, the foundation of the church became associated with visits of James IV to Lady Heron of Ford, and the defeat of the Scottish army at Flodden.[8] Subsequently the church was an important meeting place on the border.

James gave the lands of Upsettlington and Holywell, with fishing rights, and the patronage of the new church to Alexander Lord Home. Lord Home had been the patron of the previous church.[9] In the 16th-century fishing rights at Holywell were disputed between Lord Home and the English Norham castle.

Later sixteenth century

East end of the church

The Earl of Angus and his allies Lord Home, Lord Livingstone and John (Red-Bag) Somerville of Cambusnethan met at the Kirk of Steill in 1521. They were leaving Scotland to avoid Regent Albany their political rival who had returned from France. Angus sent his uncle, the poet Gavin Douglas to Cardinal Wolsey from Ladykirk on 13 December 1521.[10]

The gentlemen of Selkirk, Jedburgh and Duns were summoned to meet Mary of Guise at Ladykirk on 24 November 1551, as she returned from France.[11]

The 15th-century church and village are known as the place where a treaty supplemental to the Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis was signed by the English and Scottish commissioners. The Treaty of Upsettlington, May 1559, (as it is known) was concluded within the Lady Kirk and exchanged at the church of Norham. The commissioners of Mary, Queen of Scots and Francis II of France were the Earl of Morton, Alexander, Lord Hume, Henry Sinclair, Dean of Glasgow and James MacGill of Nether Rankeillour. The English commission included the Earl of Northumberland and the Bishop of Durham.[12]

Footnotes

  1. Tytler, Patrick Fraser, History of Scotland, vol.1 (1841), pp.73-4: Rymer, Foedera, vol.2, p.551
  2. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 1 (1877), pp. clvi-clvii.
  3. There were remains of another building called the 'chapel park' north of Upsettlington in the 19th-century New Abridged Statistical Account (1857), p.198 fn. citing Fullarton's Gazetteer; this has been suggested to be the site of the earlier 'Wester Upsettlington' church, see RCAHMS Canmore
  4. R. Lambe, ed., An exact and circumstantial history of the battle of Floddon. In verse, (London 1774). p. 95 (n. 349)
  5. G. Burnett, ed., Exchequer Rolls of Scotland, vol.11 (Edinburgh 1888), p.276
  6. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 2, (1900), lxxiii-lxxxiv, 116-7, 280.
  7. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 3 (1901), 78-79.
  8. R. Lambe, ed., An exact and circumstantial history of the battle of Floddon. In verse, (London 1774). p. 95 (n. 349)
  9. Register of the Great Seal, vol. 2 (1882), p. 433 no. 2050, p. 729 no. 3406
  10. Ellis, Henry, ed., Original Letters Illustrative of English History, 3rd Series, vol.1, Richard Bentley, London (1846) 287-294.
  11. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. x, (1913), xvi, 33.
  12. Calendar of State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (1898), 212-214: Foedera, vol. 15, 520

Sources

  • Brooke, C J (2000) Safe sanctuaries: security and defence in Anglo-Scottish border churches 1290-1690, Edinburgh; Pages 10, 18-21, 31, 63, 126, 219, 306, 360-1, 365. Held at RCAHMS F.5.31.BRO

Outside links