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98:, and defeated an English landing force. In August 1549, Erskine objected to the appointment of Captain Beauchastell and a French garrison to the fort at Montrose. Guise wrote that he was still technically in command, and that, "Otherwise it is not best that such thing should be done, considering we have written so much good of your part to the king, and that now any thing should be shown of you in the contrary".
109:, Erskine was a conspicuous figure and a moderating influence. He was able to soothe the queen when her feelings had been outraged by Knox's denunciations — being a man "most gentill of nature" — and frequently acted as mediator both between the
134:. From 1579 he was a member of the king's council. Erskine owed his peculiar influence among the Scottish reformers to his personality; Queen Mary described him as "a mild and sweet-natured man, with true honesty and uprightness".
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47:. At the age of twenty-one Erskine was the cause — probably by accident — of a priest's death, and was forced to go abroad, where he came under the influence of the
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Following his ordination to the ministry in 1561, because he was held in such high esteem by the leaders of the church that he was elected
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of the reformed church of
Scotland for Angus and Mearns, and in 1572 he gave his assent to the modified episcopacy proposed by
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Erskine married Agnes Ogilvy, daughter of
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and reforming parties, and among the reformers themselves. In 1560 he was appointed — though a layman —
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was first taught in
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several times (first in 1564), and he was amongst those who in 1588 drew up the
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Fasti
Ecclesiae Scoticanae, Revised and Enlarged edition 1925, Volume 5 p. 387.
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63:. Erskine was also drawn towards the new faith, being a close friend of
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and she wrote to him in March 1548 to thank him for his support of
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Moderators of the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland
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94:. Erskine built a fort to defend the harbour of
101:In the stormy controversies of the time of
59:. This was a factor in the progress of the
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305:Alumni of the University of Aberdeen
71:, who advised him to discountenance
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243:"Dun Papers" in the Spalding Club
189:(London, 1874), p. 635 (in Scots).
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254:"Erskine, John (1509-1591)"
126:moderator of the general assembly
119:James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton
263:. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
260:Dictionary of National Biography
251:Henderthson, T. F. (1885–1900).
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300:Scottish scholars and academics
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187:HMC 5th Report (A. J. Erskine)
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31:The son of Sir John Erskine,
315:16th-century Scottish people
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295:Clergy from Angus, Scotland
78:Erskine was a supporter of
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51:. It was through him that
310:Lords of the Congregation
131:Second Book of Discipline
121:at the Leith convention.
90:, and recommended him to
230:Erskine, John (reformer)
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235:Encyclopædia Britannica
82:during the war of the
45:University of Aberdeen
39:, he was educated at
240:This article cites:
103:Mary, Queen of Scots
88:Mary, Queen of Scots
23:religious reformer.
17:John Erskine of Dun
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171:Patrick Abercromby
92:Henri II of France
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285:1591 deaths
280:1509 births
61:Reformation
274:Categories
245:Miscellany
206:References
69:John Knox
27:Biography
107:James VI
96:Montrose
75:openly.
73:the mass
57:Montrose
21:Scottish
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141:Notes
53:Greek
33:Laird
232:".
37:Dun
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