Thomas McCalzean, Lord Cliftonhall (pronounced and sometimes spelled McCalyeane, Macalzean or Macallyean) (c. 1520 – 1581) was a 16th-century Scottish judge, rising to be a Senator of the College of Justice and a local politician who was briefly Provost of Edinburgh in 1562 at the personal request of Mary Queen of Scots who sought a moderate influence during these troubled times.[1]
Career
He lived at Clifton Hall, west of Edinburgh. He trained as a lawyer and became a judge.
In June 1556, in his role as City Assessor, he was temporarily suspended from his job for evil and foul language against the Queen Regent, Mary of Guise.[4] He was restored to the job around two months later. He was a staunch supporter of the Reformation and happily moved to Protestantism.[5]
In 1562 he was chosen by Mary, Queen of Scots to replace Archibald Douglas of Kilspindie, as a more moderate politician, and he was endorsed by Thomas Ewyn.[6] However, the Queen's authority to do this was later challenged, and Archibald Douglas returned to his elected role within a year.[7][8]
In 1563 he was appointed advocate to the Kirk in Edinburgh.[9]
In 1570 he was involved in a famous Scottish court case: Ruthven v. McCalzean. This was between Thomas McCalzean and Archibald Ruthven, brother of William Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie. The crux of the case is a breach of promise, relating to a marriage proposal between his daughter Eupham, and Ruthven.[11]
McCalzean worked for Agnes Keith, Countess of Moray. On 17 May 1575 he enjoyed a banquet with Robert Scott and the Dean of Moray, in Scott's house in Edinburgh, where wine and sugar confections called "scorchattis" were served. The celebration was for completing an inventory of evidence, a compilation of the countess' property charters.[15]
In 1587 his only child and heir, Euphame MacCalzean, was sole but absentee owner of The White House, on the south side of Edinburgh (on the site of St Margaret's Convent) when the house is proposed as a remote hospice for plague victims. The Edinburgh magistrates usurped the empty building for this use without consulting her and she had a long court battle to retrieve possession.[17]
^Gordon Donaldson, Register of the Privy Seal: 1567-1574, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1963), p. 303 no. 1586.
^Bruce Lenman, 'Jacobean Goldsmith-Jewellers as Credit-Creators: The Cases of James Mossman, James Cockie and George Heriot', Scottish Historical Review, 74:198 part (October 1995), p. 162.
^John Hill Burton, Register of the Privy Council, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1878), p. 249.