King Robert has Crown Prince James taken …
Years: 1406 - 1406
King Robert has Crown Prince James taken in secrecy to Dirleton Castle in February 1406 to wait for a ship to transport him to France.
James's uncle, the Duke of Albany, sends a large force after James and when a battle is fought nearby, James is put in a rowing boat and ferried to the Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth.
The eleven-year-old heir to the throne and his guardians are left for a month on the tiny, windswept, rocky island among the boiling seas, before a ship arrives trying to bring James to France.
Albany informs the English King, who arranges the ship's interception.
Thus James becomes a prisoner of the King of England, and will remain so for eighteen years.
When Robert III hears of his son's capture, he becomes even more depressed and allegedly dies from grief over the capture of James.
Robert asks to be buried under a dunghill with the epitaph: Here lies the worst of Kings and the most miserable of men.
Instead he is interred at Paisley, rather than Scone, the traditional burial ground of the Scottish kings, as he had not considered himself worthy of the honor.
Albany, who has become Regent on the death of Robert III, shows no haste in paying for his nephew's release.
He secures the release of his own son Murdoch, captured in 1402 at the Battle of Homildon Hill, but not James.
