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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Moysie (fl. 1590) was a Scottish notary public, known as the author of the Memoirs of the Affairs of Scotland, 1577–1603.[1]

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  • Was King James Gay? Part 2

Transcription

I've been writing extra material for a book based on the conversation that Jack McElroy and I had, that we put on YouTube. I was working on the chapter "Was King James a Homosexual?" and I came across some extra information that I'm adding to the book. I tried it with people here at Chick. They loved it! Then I asked some of you guys on Facebook if you'd like a little ammunition to deal with the "King James is gay" people. Would you like to hear what I found? Hi, I'm David Daniels from Chick Publications. Every ruler has his enemies. And King James was certainly no exception. And he was Scottish, not English. A lot of people were upset about a Scot taking over England. He was James I of England, but James VI of Scotland! Add to that the fact that his mother was Mary Stuart, who was beheaded for treason against Queen Elizabeth, and you have a pot full of seething anger for some people. King James VI and I had seven main detractors that anti-King James people love to trot out: Francis Osborne, Sir Edward Peyton, Sir Simonds D'Ewes, John Hacket, David Moysie, Sir John Oglander and Sir Anthony Weldon. They had a number of things in common. They all were political and religious opponents, all were racists (or at least anti-Scot), and all spread rumors and gossip. In short, these guys all had a beef against James. They wanted James to give them something or do something for them (as most people do, who hang around kings), and he said No. And they were upset about it. They had something else in common. They never witnessed the dirty deeds they accused the King of. And of the worst charge, they never at any time witnessed any sodomy between James and anyone else. As Stephen Coston put it, "All the accounts, every single one to the last man all rely upon gossip, innuendo, speculation, conjecture, theory, fear or hypothesis." That's from another one of his books, called "King James and the Hearsay of Homosexuality." What's the point? It's hard to convict anyone of anything when you have no actual evidence. That's damaging enough to the "James was gay" crowd. But there were two more facts that Stephen Coston found, that amazed me: This is Catherine Drinker Bowen right here. 1. After King James died, Weldon seems to have had a change of heart. According to this biographer, Catherine Drinker Bowen, "Yet Sir Anthony Weldon, as scurrilous a chronicler as ever set pen to paper, hater of all Stuarts..., at James' death suddenly relented, finding softer words than many who were to write in later centuries: 'He was (take him altogether and not in pieces) such a king, I wish this kingdom have never any worse ... For he lived in peace, died in peace and left all his kingdoms in a peaceable condition, with his own motto: Beati Pacifici [Blessed are the peacemakers].'" She wrote this back in 1956, p. 465 of that book that you saw. 2. People knew that Weldon's accusations against James (Here's a picture of him from the actual book right there.) People knew that Weldon's accusations against James didn't start until well after the king's death. (If you look over here, it says 1650). But I was astounded to learn that Weldon didn't publish the book that bears his name. This book, "The Court and Character of King James" (it's copyrighted right there), wasn't published until 1650, about a year after Weldon's death! There is the very real possibility that Weldon's words --if they were Weldon's-- were changed by somebody else. And these facts are even admitted by anti-King James writer Michael B. Young. So Sir Anthony Weldon died (this guy) in 1649. This book against King James with his name on it came out in 1650. --That's "a" book. And the same year, out came another book. I found this yesterday. Take a look! See that? "Aulicus Coquinariae" - "Kitchen Courtier" - a person in the king's court who works in the kitchen, is kind of the way it comes out. "Aulicus Coquinariae: or a Vindication in Answer to a Pamphlet Entitled The Court and Character of King James. Pretended to be penned by Sir Anthony Weldon and published since his death, 1650." Now this leaves open the distinct possibility that someone used Weldon's name, since he couldn't have published it, having been dead for about a year. And that's the book that so many quote against James to this day. And look at the date on here. This was written the same year: 1650! So let's sum up. 1. There were a number of English who resented a Scottish King, especially one whose mom tried to take over the kingdom a few years earlier. 2. All the stories about James are based on rumors and gossip. 3. Let me make this clear: There was no eyewitness evidence of their foul accusations. In other words, there is NO EVIDENCE. 4. The main 7 guys against King James were anti-Scot (James was a Scot) and had a personal grief against James. 5. The most famous, Sir Anthony Weldon, actually wrote NICE things after James died, about James. 6. The book accusing King James of being a sodomite wasn't published until after Weldon died --it wasn't even published by Weldon, and at the very least was edited by someone else. 7. Not only that, but there is another book published that same year, 1650, that refutes that book "pretended to be penned by Sir Anthony Weldon." I have so much more information I could tell you, but this is enough ammo for now. God bless you, and have a wonderful day.

Life

He was by profession a writer and notary public. A notarial attestation of a lease by him occurs in 1577. From 1582 he was engaged as a crown servant, first as a clerk of the privy council, carrying out secretarial work under the superintendence of John Andrew, and attending James VI at court. Afterwards, about 1596, he was in the office of John Lindsay of Balcarres, Lord Menmuir, the king's secretary. On 3 August 1584 he obtained a grant under the privy seal for his son David's schooling; on the death of his son, soon after, he had the gift ratified in his own favour on 19 February 1585. Other references to Moysie occur in letters written to Sir John Lindsay the secretary in 1596.

Works

The Memoirs are the record of an eyewitness, surviving in two manuscripts. They were printed by Ruddiman (Edinburgh, 1755), and edited for the Bannatyne Club (Edinburgh, 1830) by James Dennistoun. Dennistoun used a manuscript belonging to Lord Belhaven and Stenton and provided an appendix of additional variant readings from other versions of the text.[2]

Notes

  1. ^ Also Moise, Moyses, Mosey.
  2. ^ James Dennistoun, Memoirs of the Affairs of the Scotland by David Moysie (Edinburgh: Maitland Club, 1830), pp. xi–xii.

References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Moysie, David". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
This page was last edited on 30 January 2024, at 19:19
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