Henry Wardlaw of Pitreavie (1565–1637) was a Scottish courtier and administrator.
Background
He was the son of Cuthbert Wardlaw of Balmule and Katherine Dalgleish, and a grandson of Henry Wardlaw of Torrie.[1]
Career
Wardlaw was administrator of the Dunfermline estates of Anne of Denmark, wife of James VI
His predecessor as the queen's chamberlain was William Schaw.[2] The queen's property (as settled in 1593) included the Lordship of Dunfermline, the Earldom of Ross, and Lordships of Ardmannoch and Etrrick Forest, and Wardlaw compiled accounts of the queen's revenue.[3] In 1596, the financial administrators known as the Octavians appointed Wardlaw as Receiver General, responsible for the income of the Comptrollery and the New Augmentations (duties paid from former church lands) and mint.[4]
He was knighted at Royston on 22 October 1613.[11] Wardlaw acquired the "superiority" of the lands of Pitreavie from the burgh of Edinburgh in May 1614.[12]
After the death of Anne of Denmark in 1619, Wardlaw continused to administer the Dunfermline estates for Prince Charles, and his accounts for this period survive in the National Archives of Scotland. After the death of James VI and I, John Auchmoutie, John Livingston and John Murray continued to draw salaries as grooms of his bedchamber of in Scotland. Henry Wardlaw and other officers of crown rents in Scotland were given directions to pay them.[14]
King Charles is said to have sent him a bible with an embroidered crimson velvet cover for his services, and gave him a pair of gloves, perhaps in 1633. These are now kept by the University of St Andrews.[15]
^Claire Robinson, 'A Pair of Early Seventeenth-Century Gauntlet Gloves given by King Charles I to Sir Henry Wardlaw', Costume, 49:1 (2015).
^Marguerite Wood, Extracts from the Burgh Records of Edinburgh, 1604-1626 (Edinburgh, 1931), p. 116.
^David Masson, Register of the Privy Council, 1616-1619 (Edinburgh, 1894), pp. xiii, 6-7, 45, 64-5, 84, 90-1, 113.
^Charles Rogers, Earl of Stirling's Register of Royal Letters, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1885), p. 34.
^Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), pp. 270-1: Claire Robinson, 'A Pair of Early Seventeenth-Century Gauntlet Gloves given by King Charles I to Sir Henry Wardlaw', Costume, 49:1 (2015).
^George Ritchie Kinloch, Reliquiae Antiquae Scoticae (Edinburgh, 1848), p. 149.
^John Imrie & John Dunbar, Accounts of the Masters of Works, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1982), pp. 259, 275, 293.
^HMC Mar & Kellie at Alloa House (London, 1904), p. 150: NRS GD124/10/326.
^Charles McKean, Scottish Chateau (Sutton, 2001), pp. 203-4.
^Claire Robinson, 'A Pair of Early Seventeenth-Century Gauntlet Gloves given by King Charles I to Sir Henry Wardlaw', Costume, 49:1 (2015).
^Peter Chalmers, Historical and Statistical Account of Dunfermline, vol. 1, p. 304.
^Charles McKean, Scottish Chateau (Sutton, 2001), pp. 203-4.
^Peter Chalmers, Historical and Statistical Account of Dunfermline, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1844), p. 304.