Sir James Douglas
Douglas became one of Robert I's key supporters and
military leaders. Later writers held up Sir James as the exemplar
of chivalry in his long loyalty to the king. This appears to be
where he acquired his epithet 'the Good'. It seems the relationship
of the two developed into one of trust and friendship. From 1307 to
1327, Sir James fought for the king, initially in Galloway, later
in the Borders (using the Forest of Selkirk as his base), and he
also took annual raiding parties into England, as far south as
Pontefract on one occasion. He was knighted by Robert I on the eve
of the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.
In 1325 the king granted him the lands of Buittle, near
Dalbeattie, the former stronghold of the Balliol family -
the bitter opponents of the Bruce. Galloway was generally
pro-Balliol, and anti-Bruce. The land grant to Sir James, allowed
him to maintain a degree of control over the rebellious area of
Galloway.
However Sir James time in Buittle was short-liven. On his deathbed
in 1325, Robert I asked Sir James to take his heart on crusade
against the Islamic Moors of Spain. Loyal to the last,. Sir James
and followers sailed south to join the Crusaders. He was killed in
his first encounter with the Moors at Teba de Ardales in 1330.
According the medieval poem The Howlatt' , Sir James in a
chivalrous way by throwing the heart into the ranks of the Moors,
and then throwing himself in after it. The heart of Bruce was
thereafter incorporated in the Douglas family coat of arms, and was
used until recently in the coat of arms of Castle Douglas. The town
has no medieval connections with the family, but was created by Sir
William Douglas, who liked to think that there was a connection
between.
Sir James illegitimate son - Archibald 'the Grim' - became Lord of
Galloway in1369. His purchase of the Earldom of Wigtown in 1372
gave him extensive powers across Galloway. In 1388 he became 3rd
Earl of Douglas on the death of his brother. He built Threave
Castle as his stronghold, and by the time of his death in 1400, the
family was the most powerful in Scotland. Suspicion of the Douglas
family loyalty and its wealth and lands eventually prompted the
falling-out with the Crown in the 1450s. Threave was one of the
last Douglas strongholds to surrender in 1455, and thereafter the
power of the Black Douglas was broken as a political and military
force in Scotland.