Mieulx est de ris que de larmes escripre, pour ce que rire est le propre de l’homme
“It’s better to write about laughter than tears, because laughter is what humans do”
Rabelais, Gargantua
(Well there might be a few serious bits)
July 2022
Lord Adam Stewart: another Tudor in Orkney
Henry VIII's great-nephew is buried in St Magnus cathedral
July 28, 20220 comment
I have already mentioned that moderately famous almost-Tudor, Robert Stewart, earl of Orkney, great-nephew of Henry VIII. Another of Henry’s great-nephews also had a connection with Orkney. Earl Robert’s half-brother, Lord Adam Stewart, is buried in St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall.

Coat of arms from Lord Adam Stewart's memorial stone in Kirkwall Cathedral Adam Stewart was, like Earl Robert, the illegitimate son of James V and a half-sibling of Mary Queen of Scots. He is thought to have been born in 1535 and died in 1575, at the age of around 40. His mother was one of the daughters of Sir John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Lennox and 1st Earl of Atholl, but there is some confusion as to whether it was Lady Helen Stewart or Lady Elizabeth Stewart.
His life is poorly documented and little is known about him. Unlike several of his half-brothers, there is no record of the king having given him the commendatorship of an abbey as a source of income. He seems to have been a monk at the Carthusian Charterhouse in Perth, from which he was allotted a pension in 1561, but he was almost certainly not the prior, although he sometimes claimed to be.
The Charterhouse in Perth, built around 1429, was the only Carthusian foundation in Scotland. Known as “Domus Vallis Virtutis" – House of the Valley of Virtue – it was the burial place of James I of Scotland, who instigated its foundation shortly before his death and contributed financially. His queen Joan Beaufort, and Adam Stewart’s grandmother, Margaret Tudor, widow of James IV and sister of Henry VIII of England, were also buried there.
Carthusian monasteries were small, and usually had only a prior and around twelve monks. The Carthusian rule was extremely strict, and the life was something like that of a hermit. The monks lived a relatively solitary life of silent meditation, in individual cells, dressed in white habits with uncomfortable hair shirts next to the skin. The cells were small houses with several rooms, individual cloisters for meditation, and walled gardens where the monks could grow food. There was a small hatch beside the entrance door through which their meals were passed. Most of the daily eight offices, including Mass, were celebrated alone in their cells. They only came together for communal prayer, eating and business discussions on Sundays and feast days. The monks worked at various occupations, such as weaving and illuminating manuscripts, in work rooms in their cells. They were supported by lay brothers who handled necessary contact with the outside world and communal activities such as food preparation and cleaning. It seems odd to imagine a son of James V living a life of such austerity, considering the lives of wealth and political involvement led by his half-brothers Earl Robert and Earl James of Moray.
In 1559 the Charterhouse was attacked by Protestant reformers, following a sermon by John Knox in the burgh kirk of St John the Baptist. As well as the Charterhouse, the Perth mob attacked the monasteries of the Greyfriars and Blackfriars and destroyed the altars in St John’s Kirk. Only six monks remained at the Charterhouse afterwards; two of them then fled abroad. Adam is said to have been one of the four monks who remained there. The Charterhouse was suppressed ten years later in 1569 and the king gave the buildings and gardens to the burgh of Perth, although until 1602 commendators held the monastery.
In 1560 after the Scottish Reformation, Adam Stewart, no longer a monk required to be celibate, married Janet Ruthven, daughter of William Ruthven, in Edinburgh. They had least one son and seven daughters. Janet died in 1606 in Perth at the age of 86. Perhaps they lived in Perth, familiar to Lord Adam, during their married life.
In 1572 there is a record that Adam Stewart was in Edinburgh where he witnessed a contract between three of his half-brother Robert’s servants and two of his Edinburgh agents.
In 1575 Adam died and was buried in Orkney, but I can find no information about what he was doing there. There is no record of his wife having been in Orkney; it might be remembered that Earl Robert’s wife never came to Orkney either. One of Adam and Janet’s daughters, Barbara Stewart, had married an Orkney landowner, Henry Halcro, and she dedicated a memorial stone to her father (described by J. Clouston in 1919 in the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 53), in the cathedral in Kirkwall, naming him as the son of King James V.
From time to time, many museums create small exhibitions, trails, or blog posts, by asking all their staff to write a short piece about their favourite object. They usually call these “Curator’s Choice”. I have been thinking about some of my own favourite objects from the historical and archaeological world all over the planet. This little statuette of a frog is one of them. You might call this a “Curator's Choice" – look out for more!
I have never seen the actual object myself, and I don’t expect I ever will. Nevertheless, from the three images I have seen, it is one of my favourite pieces of art. It has the complete simplicity I like so much, and makes excellent use of the natural colouring of the stone it is carved from. Also I happen to be fond of frogs.

Predynastic figurine of a frog (image WIKI Commons, link here) It is a religious object from around the turn of the 3rd millennium BCE, i.e. during the Predynastic period in Egypt. The frog was an ancient symbol of fertility, relating to the annual flooding of the Nile which allowed the crops to grow, and which naturally encouraged the breeding of millions of frogs in its mud. It was later known to have been associated with rebirth and life after death, with childbirth and with the fertility goddess Heket or Heqet, who was identified with the goddess Hathor. Heqet was the wife of Khnum, the potter-god who shaped human beings on his wheel. She was sometimes represented as a woman with the head of a frog; sometimes as a frog.
This statuette has no provenance, i.e.no-one knows where it was found. It is made of travertine/alabaster and is 154mm tall. The clever use of the stone’s natural veining was probably intentional, as it was not intended to be painted.
It is now in the Cleveland Museum of Art.
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