Family Card - Person Sheet
Family Card - Person Sheet
NameSir James “The Good” Douglas , Lord of Douglas
Birth1286
Death25 Aug 1330, Spain
Misc. Notes
SIR JAMES "the Black" Douglas to the English and "Sir James the Good" to the Scots, James Douglas was born into a family loyal to the Scottish crown.

His grandfather was killed alongside William Wallace, his father murdered in an English jail. He spent his childhood in safety in Paris before returning to Scotland when he was age 18.
He met Robert the Bruce soon after Bruce’s coronation and was the first Scottish nobleman to pledge loyalty to the king.

Key facts
Douglas signed the Declaration of Arbroath and was an important ally of Robert the Bruce. He was second in command of the Scots at Bannockburn.

Douglas fought alongside Bruce for the rest of his life, where his ability to appear out of nowhere and trounce a larger army gained him a demonic reputation with the English troops.
Mothers in England warned children to behave lest Black Douglas come and find them. For them he was the bogey-man. For his fellow Scots, a hero.

Hush ye, hush ye, little pet ye.
Hush ye, hush ye, do not fret ye.
The Black Douglas shall not get ye.
-English lullaby

He next appears in 1314 as Bruce’s second-in-command at Bannockburn. He fought valiantly on the battlefield and chased the English all the way to Berwick. The thought that Black Douglas was on their tail sent the English fleeing so fast that, according to reports, "they did not even stop to pass water".

He signed the Declaration of Arbroath in 1320, and his last act of loyalty was to agree to Bruce’s death-bed request to take his heart on crusade. On Bruce’s death Douglas cut out his King’s heart and placed it round his neck in a silver casket.

He left for Spain where his fame and reputation ensured knights from across Europe rallied to his banner. They travelled to Grenada in southern Spain to help Alfonso XI's crusade against the "heathen" moor. In the village of Teba they met the forces of Mohammed IV and a fierce battle took place. Douglas succeeded in cutting a path to freedom. Reaching safety, he saw William Sinclair of Roslin isolated and vulnerable. Douglas pulled his horse round, and throwing Bruce’s heart into battle charged with a shout of "A Bruce, a Bruce". He was quickly overwhelmed, and realising he was soon to die threw the casket into battle again, crying out: "Now, go in front of us, as you had desired, and I'll follow you or I'll die".

The Scots won the battle, and in the aftermath Douglas's body was found beside Bruce's heart. His men would not hear of him being buried on foreign soil, so his body was boiled in a cauldron of vinegar until the flesh fell from the bones. This was buried in Spain and his bones returned to Scotland.
Last Modified 26 Jan 2006Created 12 Oct 2023 using Reunion for Macintosh
Created Thursday, October 12, 2023 by Mike Perry

using Reunion for Macintosh