Thomas Fraser, 2nd Lord Lovat

Thomas Fraser, 2nd Lord Lovat (died 21 October 1524) was a Scottish peer and Chief of Clan Fraser of Lovat from c. 1500/c. 1501 until 1524. He was the only son of Hugh Fraser, 1st Lord Lovat (died c. 1500/c. 1501) and Violetta Lyon, daughter of Patrick Lyon, 1st Lord Glamis, through whom he was a great-great-great-grandson of Robert II. Apart from a range of land transactions, little is known of his life.

Thomas Fraser, 2nd Lord Lovat
Died21 October 1524
TitleLord (Fraser) of Lovat
PredecessorHugh Fraser, 1st Lord Lovat
SuccessorHugh Fraser, 3rd Lord Lovat
Spouse(s)Janet Gordon; Janet Gray (d. c.1550)
Parent(s)Hugh Fraser, 1st Lord Lovat; Violetta Lyon

Lovat married, first, Janet Gordon, the daughter of Sir Alexander Gordon of Abergeldie, with whom he had three sons (Hugh, William and James) and three daughters (Margaret, Isobel and Janet). His second marriage was to Janet Gray, the daughter of Patrick, Master of Gray, with whom he had three sons (Robert, Andrew and Thomas).

Thomas was middle-aged when his father, Hugh died. His claim to fame was always about the ill-fated marriage to Margaret, the sister of Harry, daughter of King Henry VII for his King. James IV court returned with the princess for a marriage, attended by all the great Scots Highland lords in a spirit of reconciliation and renewal. Bagpipes filled the halls of Holyrood, and a parliament also met in Edinburgh. It immediately appointed sheriffs to the Highlands to assert legal and military control. Traditional Sheriffs of Inverness, Lord Lovat frequently perambulated his estate arresting lawless marauders and punishing delinquents. A 'precept of sasine' guaranteed the king's support for Thomas claim to his father's estates, as well as third to the barony of Aird and Abertarff, and to many other lands in the Glenelg. On 14 October 1501, the King recognised Lovat's barony of Kinnell. And a month later he came into his wife's lands at Dalcorse, Janet Gray.

Critics of Lovat's rule indicate how arbitrary judgements caused injustice. Declaratory speeches from the Moot Hill of Scoon are a mock-up of justice. Lovat claimed the precedence of Viking courts held high on a hill when he tried to regulate everything from the price of food to clothing. At the same time many of his properties burnt down in the lawless Highland countryside defying every attempt at court management. In one case he unlawfully appointed the chaplain to Inverness parish church, which under Sheriff court law was not in his gift of patronage, and alienated right to Sir Nicholas Barron. But when in 1518 his kin, James Fraser, bishop of Moray wished to presentment, and yet Lovat yielded the living to Sir John Scot.

References

  • Kidd, Charles; Williamson, David, eds. (1990). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage. London and New York: St Martin's Press.
  • Anderson, John (1825). Historical account of the family of Frisel or Fraser, particularly Fraser of Lovat. London: William Blackwood.
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
Hugh Fraser
Lord Lovat Succeeded by
Hugh Fraser
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