James Scrimgeour (died 1612) Scottish landowner and Constable of Dundee.
He was the son of John Scrymgeour and Margaret Campbell. In his father's lifetime he was known as feuar of Dudhope. He became Constable and Provost of Dundee.
Career
Scrimgeour was patron of an altar in Dundee Parish Kirk dedicated to Saint Margaret of Scotland, and even after the Scottish Reformation was able to present candidates to this church position, in January 1580 he wrote to John Erskine of Dun recommending Robert Gray, a son of the laird of Ballegerno, who would be able to use the income to fund his studies at school and university.[1]
According to David Hume of Godscroft, Scrimgeour escorted the Earl of Angus, an exile from court, northwards in 1583. He pretended the Earl was his son-in-law, the "Laird of Inshmartin".[2] Scrimgeour was a supporter of the Earl of Angus in April 1584 and was one of those commanded to surrender Stirling Castle and Mar's Wark.[3]
Scrimgeour's role in the royal proxy marriage was celebrated in a Latin poem by the Edinburgh schoolmaster Hercules Rollock, which describes him swallowing a huge gulp of red wine while toasting Christian IV, and also alludes to his exile in Denmark in the 1580s during the ascendency of James Stewart, Earl of Arran.[9] In April 1585, a rumour had reached England that Scrimgeour had been poisoned at a banquet in Denmark.[10]
Scrimgeour had a law suit against the Laird of Lawis involving a "brieve of idiotry" and the Graham family.[12]
In January 1591 he owed an Edinburgh tailor, William Hoppringle, £1,400 Scots. The money may have been for clothes, or a sum lent to Scrimgeour. Hoppringle transferred the debt to Andrew Kinnaird, a burgess of Dundee, thinking to get quicker payment, but Kinnaird did not oblige.[13]
On 15 December 1612 Scrimgeour wrote to the Privy Council to apologise for not attending to discuss a riot in Dundee caused by the Laird of Ruthven. He sent a note from his doctor describing his "hemoroids" which prevented him from riding his horse.[16]
He died in December 1612 at Holyrood Palace in the lodging of Christian Lindsay, poet and baker, and wife of William Murray, Master of the carriage.[17]
Marriages and children
He married firstly, in 1565, Margaret Carnegie, youngest daughter of Robert Carnegie of Kinnaird and Margaret Guthrie.[18] Their children included:
^David Reid, David Hume of Godscroft's History of the House of Angus, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 2005), p. 293.
^David Masson, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland: 1578-1585, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1880), p. 657.
^HMC 3rd Report: John Webster (London, 1872), p. 420.
^Alexander Nisbet, A System of Heraldry, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1722), Appendix p. 8.
^Miles Kerr-Peterson, A Protestant Lord in James VI's Scotland: George Keith, Fifth Earl Marischal (Boydell, 2019), pp. 47-9: Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 103, 123.
^A. H. Millar, Wedderburne Compt Buik (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. xxi, 91: Pamela Giles, 'Lindsay, Christian', Elizabeth Ewan, Siân Reynolds, Rose Pipes, Jane Rendall, Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (Edinburgh, 2018), p. 246.
^William Fraser, History of the Carnegies, Earls of Southesk, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1867), p. 44.