Migliorino Ubaldini

Last updated
Woodcut of Edinburgh in 1573, showing Ubaldini's Spur Edinburgh Siege 1573.jpg
Woodcut of Edinburgh in 1573, showing Ubaldini's Spur

Ubaldini Migliorino (active 1548), known also as "Captain Mellerin," was an Italian military engineer working in Scotland. He designed new fortifications at the entrances of Edinburgh Castle, Dunbar Castle, and possibly the walled town of Leith.

Contents

Scottish assignment

During the war with England known as the Rough Wooing, on 5 February 1548 Regent Arran appointed Migliorino Ubaldini as supreme commander of all Scottish forces by land and sea. Ubaldini had been sent to Scotland by Henry II of France who called him a famous captain. Despite this, Marcus Merriman, a modern historian, found no recorded details of his previous career. Merriman linked Ubaldini's appointment in Scotland with Lord Methven's plea to Mary of Guise in December 1547 for a French captain who had intelligence to assiege and order artillery. [1]

Two letters written by Ubaldini in 1548 to Mary of Guise survive. [2] In 1548/9 he wrote two letters to the brother of Mary of Guise, the Duc d'Aumale, which note a French form of his name as; "Captain Mellerin." [3] Ulbaldini and Piero Strozzi directed a refortification of Dunbar Castle in September 1548. [4] [5]

At the same period, there was another Ubaldini in Scotland; Petruccio Ubaldini, who fought for English at Haddington. [6] Other Italian engineers who worked in Scotland for the Scottish side during the Rough Wooings include Leone Strozzi, Piero Strozzi, and perhaps Giovanni Portinari, who Nicolas Throckmorton later recruited for English service because he already spoke Scots. [7] Camillo Marini, younger brother of Girolamo Marini, worked on border fortifications at Jedburgh, [8] and at Eyemouth and probably Dunbar Castle in 1550 and 1551. [9] Lorenzo Pomarelli worked for Mary of Guise for six years 1554 - 1560. [10]

Fort of the castle hill

Master John Hamilton of Milnburn began building a rampart and blockhouse in February 1547, recorded as casting the "foussys" or ditches on Castle Hill, and reported by James Stewart of Cardonald. [11]

While the English were fortifying Haddington, in March 1548 Ubaldini was working to strengthen Edinburgh Castle. A lodging was found in the Royal Mile for the "Italiane devisar of the forte of the castle hill"." [12] Ubaldini commenced the construction of a renaissance style trace italienne fortification in front of the castle on the present esplanade. Some of the timber and stone used was obtained from the woods and house of Alexander Crichton of Brunstane who had sided with England. His friend and ally Ninian Cockburn vowed the new work would never be finished, writing, "yon neu blak hous quhilk will nocht cum abof the erde." [13]

An account for building the new fort at Edinburgh Castle from January 1547 to 19 July 1550 amounts to £6,377 Scots. [14] There had been a French contribution of at least £4070 Scots for the work. [15]

The triangular blockhouse became known as the Spur. The Imperial envoy Mathieu Strick noted in July 1551 that the completed Spur was decorated with the arms of France. [16] [17] Ubaldini went on to design works at Dunbar Castle in September which were demolished in 1567, and perhaps at Stirling Castle where there are remains of a similar work, called the 'French Spur,' with carved French insignia. [18]

Mary of Guise strengthened the Spur in April 1560 with "a flank to be made on the side of the gate de l’Esperon." [19] She held a parley at the "fore blockhouse at the first gate of the castle" before the commencement of the siege of Leith with the English commander James Croft. According to John Knox she watched the fighting at Leith from the "foir wall" of the Castle on 7 May 1560 and commented that the bodies of English soldiers on the walls of Leith were the "fairest tapestry that ever I saw". [20]

Thomas Fisher's description of the Spur and the bulwarks at Leith

Sketch showing Edinburgh Castle in 1544, with Christopher Morris's siege gun placed at the site of the Spur Edinburgh Castle 1544.jpg
Sketch showing Edinburgh Castle in 1544, with Christopher Morris's siege gun placed at the site of the Spur
Thomas Fisher's Sketch of the Spur, from British Library Cotton Caligula B/VII f.336. Edinburgh Castle spur diagram.png
Thomas Fisher's Sketch of the Spur, from British Library Cotton Caligula B/VII f.336.

The English soldier Thomas Fisher described two bulwarks added to the fortification of Leith in a letter to the Duke of Somerset, 12 October 1548. Fisher passed on observations made by an English prisoner, the soldier Thomas Carlile, who had garrisoned Byllye Tower in January 1548, [21] but was captured at the siege of Haddington. Thomas Carlile saw the new works at Kirkgate and by the sea, and described the new Spur at Edinburgh Castle made by the Engineer who "came out of France". The Spur occupied the place where Christopher Morris had placed a cannon in 1544. Thomas Fisher included a sketch of the spur in his letter, "grocely pricked out." It is unclear if Fisher attributes the work at Leith to Ubaldini: the fortifications there were completed by his successor Piero Strozzi;

"Lastely he (Thomas Carlile) saith, that having had libertie to walke abrode in the towne of Edenbrughe with his taker, and somtymes betwene that and Leghe, he telleth that Leghe is entrenched round aboute, and that, besides a bulwarke made by the haven side towardes the sea on the ground where the Chapell stode, which I suppose your Grace remembreth, there is an other greater bulwerk made on the mayne ground at the gret churche standinge at the upper end of the towne, towardes Edenbrughe.
And that their engener having at the firste comyng of the Frenche, devised a traves walle, betwene the towne of Edenbrugh and the castell, the same, saith he, is already a good piece builded and rysen brest highe of a man, at the charges [of] the Governor, which wall, with a poynted bulwerk in the myddes, ronneth by the jugement of his eyes to'whart the grene where Sir Christopher Morres planted th'ordenance at your Graces first approche there, in sorte here under grocely pricked out, and at the south end thereof is th'entreet her unto, which distaunce seameth to be like a base court to the castell." [22]

The spur and the Marian civil war

During the Marian Civil War the castle was held by William Kirkcaldy of Grange for Mary, Queen of Scots. He modified and strengthened the spur. Workers were reinforcing the spur in April 1571 with earth in baskets called "gabions" when a man fell to his death. [23] The spur was described by Rowland Johnson, Surveyor of Berwick who came to assist the siege of Edinburgh Castle on 26 January 1573 during civil war in Scotland;

"we fynd upon the said este syde a spurre lyke a bulwarke standing befor the foot of the rocke, which spurre enclosethe that syde flanked out one bothe sydes; on the sowthe syde is the gaite wher they enter the castle. Which spur is like 20 foote high vamured with turf and basketes set and furnished with ordinance." [24]

The spur was repaired and improved by the end of March 1573, and these works were described by Johnson's colleague Nicolas Errington, who saw that the spur had been reinforced and filled with earth, and the tip or fore part cut back and rebuilt in masonry. [25] A woodcut illustration of the spur appeared in Holinshed's Chronicle depicting the 1573 siege which may derive from a drawing made by Johnson. The Earl of Leicester mentioned the spur in news of the final days of the siege in May:

Uppon Thursday last a tower, called Davy's Tower, the chief of the castle, was battered down almost flatt, with certain other smaller towrs, so that these place were ready saltable, and the bray at the gate, which some call the Spurr, was also the same day taken. [26]

The Spur was finally demolished in 1650, and the stones were taken for the use of John Milne for the town's building work at the Parliament House and the Citadel and fortifications at Leith. It was planned to erect the gate arch at the Parliament. [27]

Footnotes

  1. Calendar State Papers Spain, vol. 9 (London, 1912), p. 246: Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings (East Linton, 2000), pp. 321-323: Annie I. Cameron, Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine, (Edinburgh: SHS, 1927), pp. 208-211.
  2. Merriman, Marcus, The Rough Wooings (East Linton, 2000), pp. 327-330: illustrations in Merriman, (1999)
  3. Henri Omont, Catalogue général des manuscrits Français de la Bibliotheque Nationale, 1 (Paris, 1868), pp. 129, 138.
  4. Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings (Tuckwell, 2000), pp. 327–330.
  5. Alexandre Teulet, Relations politiques de la France et de l'Espagne avec l'Ecosse, 1 (Paris, 1862), p. 188
  6. Marcus Merriman, The Rough Wooings, (East Linton: Tuckwell, 2000), p. 370.
  7. Calendar State Papers Foreign Elizabeth: 1559-60 (London, 1865), p. 110, Killigrew to Elizabeth, 14 November 1559: HMC 5th Report: Malet (London, 1876), p. 309.
  8. Marie-Noëlle Baudouin-Matuszek, "Un ambassadeur en Ecosse au XVIe siècle: Henri Clutin d'Oisel", Revue Historique, 281:1 (569) (January–March 1989), p. 96.
  9. Carlo Promis, 'Camillo Marini', in Miscellanea di storia Italiana, vol. 4 (Torino, 1867), pp. 627-34: Pamela Ritchie, Mary of Guise in Scotland, 1548-1560 (East Linton, 2002), p. 38: Annie Cameron, Balcarres Papers 1548-1557 (Edinburgh: SHS, 1925), pp. 92-3: Christopher Duffy, Siege Warfare: The Fortress in the Early Modern World 1494-1660 (London, 1979), p. 39, 52-4: For Camillo Marini, see also BNF Guerre et artillerie, de 1540 à 1595. Tome 1, MS. Français 4552, fol. 48v & 50r
  10. Amadio Ronchini, 'Lorenzo Pomarelli' in Atti e memorie delle RR. Deputazioni di storia patria per le provincie Modenesi e Parmensi (Modena, 1868), pp. 264-5, 271: Ciro Birra, 'Lorenzo Pomarelli, un architetto del XVI secolo tra Siena e Napoli' in Rendiconti della Accademia di Archeologia Lettere e Belle Arti (Giannini Editore: Napoli 2016), pp. 287-302: For Pomarelli at Inchkeith see National Records of Scotland, E34/21 (2).
  11. Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1547-1563, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 5: Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), p. 56.
  12. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), p. 163.
  13. Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), pp. 56, 161-163: CSP Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 93 no. 190, 97 no. 195, 108 no. 220
  14. James Balfour Paul, Accounts of the Treasurer, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), p. 446.
  15. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh, 1911), p. 21.
  16. Calendar State Papers Spain, vol. 10 (London, 1914), 340.
  17. Elizabeth Bonner, "The Politique of Henri II: De Facto French Rule in Scotland, 1550-1554", Journal of the Sydney Society for Scottish History, 7 (1999), pp. 74–75
  18. Richard Fawcett, Stirling Castle (Historic Scotland, Batsford, 1995), pp. 65-6.
  19. Calendar of State Papers Foreign Elizabeth, 1559-1560 (Longman: London, 1865), p. 604 no. 1093.
  20. John Bruce, ed., John Hayward's First Four Years of Elizabeth (London, 1840), p. 55: David Laing, History of the Reformation by John Knox, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1848), pp. 67-8.
  21. Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), 68, 70
  22. Henry Ellis, Original Letters Illustrative to British History, series 3 vol. 3 (London, 1846), pp. 299-300: British Library Cotton Caligula B. VII. (325) f.168.
  23. Memoriales of Transactions in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1836) p. 112.
  24. Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 4 (London, 1905), p. 475: Marcus Merriman, Marcus, The Rough Wooings (East Linton, 2000), p. 325.
  25. William Boyd, Calendar of State Papers Scotland: 1571-1574 (Edinburgh, 1905), p. 534.
  26. Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 2 (London, 1791), p. 105.
  27. Marguerite Wood, Extracts from the Burgh Records of Edinburgh, 1642-1655 (Edinburgh, 1938), pp. 196-7, 241 etc.

Further reading

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary of Guise</span> Queen of Scotland from 1538 to 1542

Mary of Guise, also called Mary of Lorraine, was Queen of Scotland from 1538 until 1542, as the second wife of King James V. She was a French noblewoman of the House of Guise, a cadet branch of the House of Lorraine and one of the most powerful families in France. As the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots, she was a key figure in the political and religious upheaval that marked mid-16th-century Scotland, ruling the kingdom as queen regent on behalf of her daughter from 1554 until her death in 1560.

Broughty Castle is a historic castle on the banks of the River Tay in Broughty Ferry, Dundee, Scotland. It was completed around 1495, although the site was earlier fortified in 1454, when George Douglas, 4th Earl of Angus, received permission to build on the site. His son, Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Angus, was coerced into ceding the castle to the crown. The main tower house forming the centre of the castle with four floors was built by Andrew, 2nd Lord Gray, who was granted the castle in 1490.

The Treaty of Edinburgh was a treaty drawn up on 5 July 1560 between the Commissioners of Queen Elizabeth I of England with the assent of the Scottish Lords of the Congregation, and the French representatives of King Francis II of France to formally conclude the siege of Leith and replace the Auld Alliance with France with a new Anglo-Scottish accord, while maintaining the peace between England and France agreed by the Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis.

Sir Richard Lee (1513–1575) was a military engineer in the service of Henry VIII of England, Edward VI and Elizabeth I. He was a commander of Henry VIII and appointed surveyor of the King's works. Lee was member of parliament for Hertfordshire in 1545. He was the first English engineer to be knighted.

Michael Durham was a Scottish courtier and physician to James V of Scotland. His family was from Grange at Monifieth near Dundee.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dunbar Castle</span> Fortress overlooking the harbour of Dunbar, Scotland

Dunbar Castle was one of the strongest fortresses in Scotland, situated in a prominent position overlooking the harbour of the town of Dunbar, in East Lothian. Several fortifications were built successively on the site, near the English-Scottish border. The last was slighted in 1567; it is a ruin today.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Stewart, 1st Lord Methven</span> 16th-century Scottish noble

Henry Stewart, 1st Lord Methven was Master of the Scottish Artillery and third, and last husband, of Margaret Tudor, eldest daughter of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York.

Berwick Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary was an English office of arms created around 1460 for service on the Scottish Marches based at Berwick-upon-Tweed. In the 16th century there was also a Herald or Pursuivant based at Carlisle on the west border.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Piero Strozzi</span> Italian military leader

PieroStrozzi was an Italian military leader. He was a member of the rich Florentine family of the Strozzi.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Haddington</span> 1548–49 Siege of Haddington during the War of the Rough Wooing

The sieges of Haddington were a series of sieges staged at the Royal Burgh of Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, as part of the War of the Rough Wooing, one of the last Anglo-Scottish Wars. Following Regent Arran's defeat at the battle of Pinkie Cleugh on Saturday 10 September 1547, he captured the town of Haddington. The intention was to form a network of mutually supporting English forts in lowland Scotland. The English forces built artillery fortifications and were able to withstand an assault by the besieging French and Scots troops supported by heavy cannon in July 1548. Although the siege was scaled down after this unsuccessful attempt, the English garrison abandoned the town on 19 September 1549, after attrition by Scottish raids at night, sickness, and changing political circumstance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rough Wooing</span> 16th century war between Scotland and England

The Rough Wooing, also known as the Eight Years' War, was part of the Anglo-Scottish Wars of the 16th century. Following its break with the Catholic Church, England attacked Scotland, partly to break the Auld Alliance and prevent Scotland being used as a springboard for future invasion by France, partly to weaken Scotland, and partly to force the Scottish Parliament to confirm the existing marriage alliance between Mary, Queen of Scots, and the English heir apparent Edward, son of King Henry VIII, under the terms of the Treaty of Greenwich of July 1543. An invasion of France was also contemplated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of Leith</span> 1560 Siege at Leith

The siege of Leith ended a twelve-year encampment of French troops at Leith, the port near Edinburgh, Scotland. French troops arrived in Scotland by invitation in 1548. In 1560 the French soldiers opposed Scottish supporters of religious reformation, and an English army arrived to besiege the French garrison at Leith. The town was not taken by force and the French troops finally left peacefully under the terms of a treaty signed by Scotland, England and France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henri Cleutin</span>

Henri Cleutin, seigneur d'Oisel et de Villeparisis, was the representative of France in Scotland from 1546 to 1560, a Gentleman of the Chamber of the King of France, and a diplomat in Rome 1564–1566 during the French Wars of Religion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Siege of St Andrews Castle</span> 1546–47 Siege of St Andrews Castle during the Rough Wooing

The siege of St Andrews Castle (1546–1547) followed the killing of Cardinal David Beaton by a group of Protestants at St Andrews Castle. They remained in the castle and were besieged by the Governor of Scotland, Regent Arran. However, over 18 months the Scottish besieging forces made little impact, and the Castle finally surrendered to a French naval force after artillery bombardment. The Protestant garrison, including the preacher John Knox, were taken to France and used as galley slaves.

Ninian Cockburn was a Scottish soldier and officer of the Garde Écossaise, a company which guarded the French king. He had an ambiguous role in political relations between Scotland, France and England during the war of the Rough Wooing and the Scottish Reformation.

Alexander Crichton of Brunstane,, was a Scottish Protestant laird who advocated the murder of Cardinal David Beaton and supported the plan for the marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots and Prince Edward of England. In contemporary letters and documents Alexander is known by variant spellings of "Brunstane," his territorial designation. The original House of Brunstane was near Penicuik, and another Crichton estate at Gilberstoun near Portobello, Edinburgh later became known as Brunstane.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brunstane Castle</span>

Brunstane Castle is a ruined tower house, dating from the 16th century, around 2 miles (3.2 km) south-west of Penicuik, on the north bank of the North Esk, in Midlothian, Scotland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Hamilton of Briggis</span> Scottish soldier and military engineer

Robert Hamilton of Briggis was a Scottish soldier and military engineer. He was keeper of Linlithgow Palace and Dunbar Castle and was Master of the Scottish artillery.

Matthew Hamilton of Milnburn and Binning was a Scottish landowner and courtier.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Archangelo Arcano</span> Italian military engineer

Archangelo Arcano was an Italian military engineer who worked for Henry VIII of England from 1523.