Everything about Privy Council Of Scotland totally explained
The
Privy Council of
Scotland was a body that advised the
King.
In the range of its functions the council was often more important than the
Parliament of Scotland in the running of Scotland. Its registers include a wide range of material on the political, administrative, economic and social affairs of Scotland. The council supervised the administration of the law, regulated trade and shipping, took emergency measures against the plague, granted licences to travel, administered oaths of allegiance, banished beggars and Gypsies, dealt with witches, recusants,
Covenanters and
Jacobites and tackled the problem of lawlessness in the
Highlands and the Borders.
Like the Parliament, the Council was a development of the King's Council. The King's Council, or
curia regis, was the court of the monarch surrounded by his royal officers and others upon whom he relied for advice. It is known to have existed in the thirteenth century, if not earlier, but has left little trace of its activities.
By the later fifteenth century the council had advisory, executive and judicial functions though surviving records are mainly confined to the last. It is at this period that the 'secret' or privy council makes its formal appearance when, in February 1490, parliament elected 2 bishops, an abbot or prior, 6 barons and 8 royal officers to form the king's council
for the ostensioun and forthputting of the King's authorite in the administracioun of justice.
The
Lords of Secret Council, as they were known, were part of the general body of Lords of Council, like the Lords of Session and Lords Auditors of Exchequer. After 1532 much of the judicial business was transferred to the newly founded College of Justice, the later
Court of Session. The council met regularly and was particularly active during periods of a monarch's minority. A separate register of the privy council appears in 1545 and probably marks the point at which the secret council split off from its parent body.
After 1603
James VI was able to boast to the English Parliament that he governed Scotland
with my pen. The council received his written instructions and executed his will. This style of government, continued by his grandsons
Charles II and
James VII, was disrupted during the reign of Charles I, the Covenanters and the Cromwellian occupation. There are gaps in the register during the
upheavals of 1638-41 when the council was largely displaced by an alternative administration set up by the
Covenanters and during the
Cromwellian period, the council ceased to act at all.
After the
restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II nominated his own privy councillors and set up a council in London through which he directed affairs in Edinburgh, a situation that continued after the
Glorious Revolution of 1688-9. The council survived the Act of Union but for one year only. It was abolished on
1 May 1708.
Until 1707, The Privy Council met in what is now the West Drawing Room at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh. It was called the Council Chamber in the 17th Century
The Register of the Privy Council of Scotland (1545 - 1689) was edited and published between 1877 and 1970 by
John Hill Burton,
David Masson,
Peter Hume Brown and Henry Macleod Paton.
Lord President of the Privy Council
The President of the Privy Council was one of the
Great Officers of State in Scotland. The
Lord Chancellor presided over the Council ex officio, but in 1610 James VI decreed that the President of the College of Justice should preside in the Chancellor's absence, and by 1619 the additional title of President of the Privy Council had been added. The two presidencies were separated in 1626 as part of
Charles I's reoganisation of the Privy Council and Court of Session. The Lord President of the Council was accorded precedence as one of the King's chief officers in 1661, but appeared in Parliament only intermittently.
- 1625 John Graham, 4th Earl of Montrose
- 1649 John Campbell, 1st Earl of Loudoun
- 1660 John Leslie, 1st Duke of Rothes
- 1663 John Hay, 2nd Earl of Tweeddale
- 1672 John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale
- 1681 Sir George Gordon of Haddo, later Earl of Aberdeen
- 1682 James Graham, 3rd Marquess of Montrose
- 1686 William Douglas, 1st Duke of Queensberry (questioned)
- 1689 William Lindsay, 18th Earl of Crawford
- 1692 William Johnstone, 1st Marquess of Annandale
- 1695 George Melville, 1st Earl of Melville
- 1702 William Johnstone, 1st Marquess of Annandale
- 1704 James Graham, 1st Duke of Montrose
- 1705 William Johnstone, 1st Marquess of Annandale
- 1706 James Graham, 1st Duke of Montrose
office abolished
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