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Execution
of Montrose by Richard Cavendish1650James
Graham, Marquess of Montrose, soldier, poet and one of the most romantic figures
in British history, led a campaign of dashing brilliance as Royalist captain general
in Scotland against the Covenanters and his bitter personal enemy, the Marquess
of Argyll, in the summer of 1645. With a small swift-moving force of Highlanders
and Irish, he ran audacious rings round his opponents until September, when he
was finally pinned down and defeated by superior numbers at Philiphaugh in the
Borders.
Montrose escaped to the Continent, but he was a man of action
who fretted in the safety of exile, and in 1650 he returned to the Highlands to
fight for Charles II. He failed to raise the clans in sufficient numbers and in
April he was trapped and routed at Carbisdale. After wandering in the hills with
the hue and cry out against him, so hungry that he was reduced to eating his gloves,
he took refuge at Ardvreck Castle with Neil MacLeod of Assynt, but there was a
substantial reward to be earned for him and Macleod surrendered him to the authorities.
Macleod got his money and his name has stunk in Scottish nostrils ever since.
Montrose's captors moved him south by Inverness and Dundee, preceded by a herald
who proclaimed, "Here comes James Graham, a traitor to his country". Mounted on
a carthorse, he reached Edinburgh on a cold Saturday afternoon in May, in the
presence of a huge crowd. At the Water Gate he was met by the hangman, transferred
to the hangman's cart and tied to the seat, to be taken through the streets to
the Tolbooth prison. Argyll was watching from a house on the route and the two
men's eyes are said to have met for a moment as the cart trundled by. Far from
stoning and reviling the prisoner, as had been hoped, the watching crowds were
silent, and observers sensed an air of reluctant admiration and sympathy. The
cart reached the Tolbooth prison about seven o'clock in the evening. Montrose
spent the Sunday in his cell, pestered by Presbyterian ministers, who renewed
their assault on Monday, when he was taken to the Parliament to hear the death
sentence.
On Tuesday morning Montrose rose for the last time on earth
and made himself ready. Carefully combing out his long hair, he was reproached
by one of the Puritan divines for paying so much attention to his appearance at
such a time. "My head is still my own," Montrose replied. "Tonight, when it will
be yours, treat it as you please". At two in the afternoon he was taken on foot
along the High Street to the Mercat Cross, where a gallows 30ft high had been
erected on a platform. The condemned man was dressed in his finest scarlet and
lace, with white gloves, silk stockings, ribboned shoes and his hat in his hand.
He was thirty-seven years old and, according to one observer, he looked more like
a bridegroom than a criminal. Another saw in him "a gallantry that braced the
crowd". He was not allowed to address the spectators, for fear of what he might
say. He gave the hangman some money, his arms were pinioned behind him and he
climbed the ladder. His last words were reported as "God have mercy on this afflicted
land!" Tears were running down the hangman's face as he pushed him off.
The
body was left hanging for three hours and was then cut down and dismembered for
the limbs to be sent for public display in Stirling, Aberdeen, Perth and Glasgow.
The head was cut off and fixed on a spike on the Tolbooth, where it remained rotting
for eleven years, when Argyll's head took its place. The rest of the carcass was
buried in a box on the Burgh-Moor, from where it was rescued after the restoration
of Charles II and given honourable interment in the High Kirk of St Giles, where
a noble monument marks the grave today. ©
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