William I (r. 1165-1214)

Born in 1143, William the Lion was the younger brother of Malcolm IV, on whose death in 1165 he became King of Scots

A year after his accession, he went to Normandy with Henry II and later spent Easter 1170 at Windsor. In 1174, however, he joined Henry II's son in his rebellion against his father, and invaded England. He was captured at Alnwick, Northumberland and brought to Henry II with 'his feet shackled beneath the belly of his horse.' 



He was then held prisoner first in Yorkshire, later at Northampton and finally in France. He was released by the terms of the Treaty of Falaise of 8 December 1174, having been forced to agree to do homage to Henry II 'for Scotland and for all his other lands', and surrender key Scottish castles such as Edinburgh and Stirling.

As William's feudal lord, Henry now had the right to arrange his marriage, and he gave him Ermengarde de Beaumont, whose father was the son of an illegitimate daughter of Henry I. 



William eventually recovered Scotland from the English king's feudal overlordship, however, when Henry II was succeeded by Richard I.



Richard, determined to raise money for his third Crusade, surrendered his feudal superiority over Scotland for 10,000 merks by the Quitclaim of Canterbury on 5 December 1189 and Scotland was an independent country once more. In 1196-7, William established his sovereignty in Caithness.

Under William, the development of feudal institutions continued; in part, the Scottish monarchy's government closely resembled England's. William established royal burghs in eastern Scotland up to the Moray Firth, and extended the use of sheriffs in the same area. Perth and Stirling became major centres of royal administration.

William I was a vigorous royal patron of the Scottish Church - he founded Arbroath Abbey, Angus in or before 1178. In 1182 Pope Lucius III sent him the Golden Rose and in 1188 Pope Clement III took the Scottish Church under his special protection. 



In 1192, the Pope granted a Bull to William that recognised the separate identity of the Scottish Church (previously the Church in Scotland had been brought under the authority of the Archbishop of York), and its independence of all ecclesiastical authorities apart from Rome. 



Gervase of Canterbury described William as 'a man of outstanding sanctity ... much preferring to have peace than the sword and to provide for his people by wisdom rather than iron'. 



William died at Stirling on 4 December 1214, aged 71, and was buried at Arbroath.

Related content

A Speech by The Duke of Cambridge at the Museum of Literature, Dublin

Today, our relationship goes far beyond two countries that are simply neighbours. “We are firm friends and equal partners”, as my grandmother put it.

04 March 2020

A speech by The Duchess of Cambridge at a SportsAid event, London Stadium

You may not always feel appreciated, or sometimes even noticed on the sidelines, in the car park or sitting high in the stands. But I am so proud that SportsAid recognises how...

26 February 2020
News

The Queen visits MI5

25 February 2020

The Queen's remarks during her visit to MI5

Because of the nature of your work, it is without public recognition, so it is on behalf of the country that I say to you all, thank you.

25 February 2020
Press release 24 February 2020

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will visit Ireland

Read more

A speech by The Duke of Cambridge at a reception for the Metropolitan and City Police Orphans Fund

Our society is defined by how we look after those who keep us all safe. It matters deeply that we help the families who play such an important role in supporting them.

12 February 2020
Press release 07 February 2020

The wedding of Princess Beatrice and Mr. Mapelli Mozzi

Read more

A speech by The Duke of Cambridge at the UK-Africa Investment Summit

Your Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of Her Majesty The Queen, Catherine and I are delighted to welcome you to Buckingham Palace for this reception to mark the...

20 January 2020
Press release 20 January 2020

The Countess of Wessex will visit Sierra Leone

Read more
Press release 18 January 2020

Statement from Her Majesty The Queen

Read more
Press release 13 January 2020

A statement from Her Majesty The Queen

Read more

A message from The Duke of Cambridge to the people of Oman

I offer my heartfelt condolences to the Omani people, and wish to send a personal message of friendship as Oman mourns the death of His Majesty.

11 January 2020
Press release 04 January 2020

The Queen's message of condolence to all Australians

Read more

The Queen’s Christmas Broadcast 2019

As a child, I never imagined that one day a man would walk on the moon. Yet this year we marked the fiftieth anniversary of the famous Apollo 11 mission. As those historic...

23 December 2019