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lords of the congregation : ウィキペディア英語版
lords of the congregation
The Lords of the Congregation, originally styling themselves "the Faithful Congregation of Christ Jesus in Scotland",〔T C Smout, A History of the Scottish People, 1560-1830, Collins 1969, p.53〕 were a group of Protestant Scottish nobles who in the mid-16th century favoured a reformation of the church according to Protestant principles and a Scottish-English alliance.
== Historical events ==
In December 1557 a group of Scottish lords opposed the marriage of the young Queen Mary of Scotland to the Dauphin of France (who became King Francis II of France from 1559 to 1560). The group signed the 'First Band' or Covenant to work to make Scotland Protestant.〔Tom Steel: ''Scotland's Story'', HarperCollins 1984, p 79〕 The initial members were the Earl of Argyll, his brother Colin Campbell, the Earl of Glencairn, the Earl of Morton, and John Erskine of Dun, though others, such as William Douglas of Whittinghame quickly followed.
Following religious riots in Perth, the Lords gained support and provided military help to John Knox in opposing the troops of Mary of Guise. Near Cupar, in Fife, the Lords fielded enough military strength to face off a French and Scottish army jointly led by the Duke of Châtelherault (who as Regent had supported the French match) and by D'Oysel the French king's lieutenant.〔
Pamela Ritchie, ''Mary of Guise in Scotland, 1548-1560 : A Political Career'', East Linton, Tuckwell Press, (2002): Eric Durot, « Le Crépuscule de lAuld Alliance''. La légitimité du pouvoir en question entre France, Angleterre et Écosse (1558-1561) », ''Histoire, Économie & Société'', 2007, p.3–46: Lindsay of Pitscottie, Robert, ''History of Scotland'', Edinburgh (1814), 536-545.
〕 By July 1559 the Lords of the Congregation had taken Edinburgh. As Edinburgh Castle held out against them, the Lords withdrew under the terms of the truce of the Articles of Leith (25 July 1559). In September, Châtelherault, now joined by his son the Earl of Arran, changed sides and became leader of the Congregation Lords.
Mary of Guise, who had earlier offered a degree of religious tolerance, maintained that their motives were secular in part. Queen Mary and King Francis wrote to her in November 1559, declaring that the lords were acting maliciously under the name and cloak of religion.〔
Michaud & Poujalat (ed.), , vol. 6 (1839), 451-453, Blois, November 1559.
〕 French re-inforcements pushed the Lords and their Protestant army back to Stirling and Fife.
By the Treaty of Berwick in February 1560 the Lords brought in an English army to resist the French troops. The armed conflict now centered on the Siege of Leith. After the death of the Queen Regent in June and the conclusion of hosilities at Leith by the Treaty of Edinburgh in July, the Scottish Reformation took effect in the Parliament of Scotland in August 1560.〔''Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland'', vol. ii (1814), 525-535, August 1560.〕

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