Everything about Malcolm Iv Of Scotland totally explained
Malcolm IV (
Mediaeval Gaelic:
Máel Coluim mac Eanric; Modern Gaelic:
Maol Chaluim mac Eanraig), nicknamed
Virgo, "the Maiden" (
April 23 x
May 24,
1141–
9 December,
1165),
King of Scots, was the eldest son of
Earl Henry (d. 1152) and
Ada de Warenne. The original
Malcolm Canmore, a name now associated with his great-grandfather
Malcolm III (Máel Coluim mac Donnchada), he succeeded his grandfather
David I, and shared David's
Anglo-Norman tastes.
Called
Malcolm the Maiden by later chroniclers, a name which may incorrectly suggest weakness or effeminacy to modern readers, he was noted for his religious zeal and interest in
knighthood and warfare. For much of his reign he was in poor health and died unmarried at the age of twenty-four.
Rex designatus
Earl Henry, who had perhaps been seriously ill in the 1140s, died unexpectedly at
Newcastle or
Roxburgh on
12 June,
1152, in the
Northumbrian domain which David and he'd done much to attach to the Scots crown in the decades of English weakness after the death of
Henry I of England. Unlike the death of
William Adelin in the
White Ship, which had left Henry I without male heirs, Earl Henry had three sons. Thus, although his death damaged David's plans, and made disorders after his death very likely indeed, it wasn't a disaster.
As the eldest of Earl Henry's sons, although only eleven years old, Malcolm was sent by his grandfather on a circuit of the kingdom, accompanied by
Donnchad,
Mormaer of Fife, styled
rector, perhaps indicating that he was to hold the
regency for Malcolm on David's death. Donnchad and Malcolm were accompanied by a large army. As it turned out, Donnchad didn't long survive David, holding the regency for a year before his death in 1154.
Rivals and neighbours
Malcolm's grandfather died at
Carlisle on
24 May,
1153, and Malcolm was inaugurated as king three days later, on
27 May,
1153, at
Scone, then aged twelve. The king-making ceremony took place before the old king was buried, which might appear hasty, but Malcolm wasn't without rivals for the kingship.
The
Orkneyinga Saga claims "William the Noble", son of
William fitz Duncan, was the man whom "every Scotsman wanted for his king". As William fitz Duncan married Alice de Rumilly in about 1137, young William can only have been a youth, perhaps a child. There is no sign that William made any claims to the throne. He died young, sometime in the early 1160s, leaving his sizable estates to his three sisters. Of William's other sons, Bishop
Wimund had already been blinded, emasculated and imprisoned at
Byland Abbey before David's death, but Domnall mac Uilleim, first of the
Meic Uilleim, had considerable support in the former
mormaerdom of Moray.
Another would-be king, imprisoned at Roxburgh since about 1130, was
Máel Coluim mac Alaxandair, an illegitimate son of
Alexander I. Máel Coluim's sons were free men in 1153. They could be expected to contest the succession, and did so.
As a new king, and especially as a young one, Malcolm could also expect challenges from his neighbours, with
Somerled, King of
Argyll,
Fergus, Lord of
Galloway and
Henry II,
King of England foremost among them. Only
Rognvald Kali Kolsson,
Earl of Orkney, was otherwise occupied, being on
crusade, and his death in 1158 brought the young and ambitious
Harald Maddadsson to sole power in the north.
The first opposition to Malcolm came in November of 1153, from the combination of a neighbour, Somerled of Argyll, and family rivals, the "sons of Malcolm", that's of Máel Coluim mac Alaxandair. This came to little as Somerled soon had more pressing concerns, firstly his war with
Godred Olafson of Man which lasted until 1156 and secondly, perhaps, a conflict with
Gille Críst,
Mormaer of Menteith, over
Cowal. Support for the sons of Máel Coluim mac Alaxandair may also have come from areas closer to the core of the kingdom, for two conspirators are named by chroniclers, one of whom died in trial by combat in February 1154.
In 1157, it's reported, King Malcolm was reconciled with Máel Coluim MacHeth, who was appointed to the
Mormaerdom of Ross, which had probably been held by his father.
Malcolm IV and Henry II
Malcolm wasn't only King of Scots, but also inherited the Earldom of Northumbria, which his father and grandfather had gained during the wars between
Stephen and
Empress Matilda. Malcolm granted Northumbria to his brother
William, keeping
Cumbria for himself. Cumbria was, like the earldoms of Northumbria and
Huntingdon, and later
Chester, a fief of the English crown. While Malcolm delayed doing homage to Henry II of England for his possessions in Henry's kingdom, he did so in 1157 at
Chester. Here Henry refused to allow Malcolm to keep Cumbria, or William to keep Northumbria, but instead granted the
Earldom of Huntingdon to Malcolm, for which Malcolm did homage.
After a second meeting between Malcolm and Henry, at
Carlisle in 1158, "they returned without having become good friends, and so that the king of Scots wasn't yet knighted." In 1159 Malcolm accompanied Henry to
France, serving at the siege of
Toulouse where he was, at last, knighted. "Whether this was the act of a king of Scots or of an earl of Huntingdon we're not told; it was certainly the act of a man desperate for knightly arms, but that didn't make it any more acceptable in Scotland."
Malcolm returned from Toulouse in 1160. At
Perth, Roger of Hoveden reports, he faced a rebellion by six earls, led by
Ferchar,
Mormaer of Strathearn, who besieged the king. Given that Earl Ferchar heads the list of those named, it's presumed that
Donnchad II,
Mormaer of Fife, wasn't among the rebels.
John of Fordun's version in the
Gesta Annalia appears to suggest a peaceful settlement to the affair, and both Fordun and Hoveden follow the report of the revolt and its ending by stating that the king led an expedition into
Galloway where he eventually defeated
Fergus, Lord of Galloway and took his son
Uchtred as a hostage while Fergus became a monk at
Holyrood, dying there in 1161. While it was assumed that the earls included Fergus among their number, and that the expedition to Galloway was related to the revolt, it's now thought that the earls sought to have Malcolm attack Galloway, perhaps as a result of raids by Fergus.
Some time before July 1163, when he did homage to Henry II, Malcolm was taken seriously ill at
Doncaster. Scottish sources report that a revolt in Moray brought Malcolm north, and it's said that he
Having made peace with Henry, replaced Fergus of Galloway with his sons, and resettled Moray, only one of Malcolm's foes remained, Somerled, by 1160 king of the Isles as well as of Argyll. In 1164, Somerled led a large army of Islesmen and Irishmen to attack
Glasgow and
Renfrew, where
Walter Fitzalan had newly completed a castle. There Somerled and his son Gillebrigte were killed in battle with the levies of the area, led by the
Bishop of Glasgow, probably
Herbert of Selkirk at that time. The chronicles of the day attributed the victory to the intercession of Saint
Kentigern.
Death and Posterity
Malcolm died on
December 9 1165 at
Jedburgh, aged twenty-four. His premature death may have been hastened by
osteitis deformans. While his contemporaries were in no doubt that Malcolm had some of the qualities of a great king, later writers were less convinced. The compiler of the
Annals of Ulster, writing soon after 1165, praises Malcolm:
William of Newburgh praises Malcolm, "the most Christian king of the Scots", highly in his
Historia Rerum Anglicarum.
Nonetheless, Malcom wasn't well regarded in all quarters. The
Gesta Annalia remarks
According to legend, he'd a daughter who was betrothed to
Henry, Prince of Capua, on the latter's deathbed, but this is false as Malcolm had no heirs. His mother formulated a plan for a marriage to Constance, daughter of
Conan III, Duke of Brittany, but Malcolm died before the wedding could be celebrated.
It is difficult, given the paucity of sources, to date many of the reforms of the Scoto-Norman era, but it appears that Malcolm continued the reforms begun by his grandfather and granduncles. The
sheriffdoms of
Crail,
Dunfermline,
Edinburgh,
Forfar,
Lanark and
Linlithgow appear to date from Malcolm's reign, and the office of
Justiciar of Lothian may also date from this period.
Malcolm founded a
Cistercian monastery at
Coupar Angus, and the royal taste for continental religious foundations extended to the magnates, as in Galloway, where the
Premonstratensians were established at
Soulseat by 1161.
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