When is a Wicked Laird a would-be
pillar of the church? The answer is,
when he was the man in charge of the Abbey of Arbroath, in name at least. George Douglas, a natural son of the Earl of
Angus, was Commendator of the abbey after the Reformation, which meant that he
had control of its rich revenues. But
this lucrative post was obviously not sufficient for George. On the 25th of August, 1572 ‘sindrie
indwellers of Dundee returning from Barthilmo Fair’ were ambushed at the foot
of Cairn O’Mounth In Aberdeenshire by George Douglas and his armed gang. Five hapless men – Robert and David Jak, John
Craigtoun, Thomas Rattray and his son
- were kidnapped and brought with
all their belongings to Arbroath and kept imprisoned there for a time. The Commendator evidently saw traders and travellers
attending fairs as easy prey because, in September 1572, he waylaid a ship in
the Tay at the confluence of the River Earn and seized all its cargo (worth
five or six thousand merks) which was heading to be sold at St John’s Fair in
Perth. His men attacked various other
vessels on the river. Many people were
injured, including a man named William Gold ‘and diverse
uthers, to the effusion of their blude in grite quantity’. Provost Hallyburton of Dundee charged
Douglas with theft, but he did not show up before the Privy council to answer
the charge. His outlawing at least
allowed his predecessor as Abbot of Aberbrothock, Lord Hamilton, to step into
the post again; he had been deprived of it for an act of rebellion in 1571. But Douglas was forgiven by the authorities
and was astonishingly made ‘Bishop Geordie’ or Moray in 1574. There is a pen portrait of him during that
year, ‘mumbling on his preaching aff his paper’ during the whole course of the
winter. Evidently is heart was not geared
towards higher things. He was soon charged
by Livingstone with harassing his territory of Arbroath while he had been
Commendator, stealing money and goods, demolishing houses and taking the
pensions due to the aged monks. But no
punishment seems to have come his way.
Douglas had also allegedly had a hand in the murder of David Rizzio in
1566.
The transformation of Arbroath from a monastery to a secular possession
saw a number of strange people in charge and a few odd incidents. A large part of the fabric had been destroyed
in 1514 when Ochterlonie of Kelly Castle set the abbey on fire following an
argument with the prior. In the same
year the Abbot George Hepburn fell at the Battle of Flodden and he was
succeeded by Gavin Douglas, third son of the 5th Earl of Angus (the
infamous ‘Bell The Cat’). The poet Gavin
Douglas died of the plague in London in 1522.
Kelly Castle |
By the start of the 17th century the Abbey was in the hand of
the Hamiltons, but there were said to still be some forty ageing monks in
residence, old men with nowhere else to go.
The very last monk was Brother Turnbull, who lived in the old
tower. One night a huge evil-looking rat
entered his chamber. Thinking somehow
that this was Satan in disguise, the last monk of Arbroath fled and never
returned.
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