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James V (10 April 1512 – 14 December 1542) was King of Scotland from 9 September 1513 until his death in 1542. He was crowned on 21 September 1513 at the age of seventeen months. James was the son of King James IV and Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII of England.
- 9 September 1513 –, 14 December 1542
- Margaret Tudor
15 de mar. de 2024 · James V was the king of Scotland from 1513 to 1542. During the period of his minority, which lasted throughout the first half of his reign, James was a pawn in the struggle between pro-French and pro-English factions; after he assumed personal control of the government, he upheld Roman Catholicism.
21 de ene. de 2021 · James V of Scotland ruled as king from 1513 to 1542. He succeeded his father James IV of Scotland (r. 1488-1513), one of the country's most popular Stuart kings, but as he was still a child, the early part of his reign was tempestuous with his mother and nobles battling for control of the regency.
- Mark Cartwright
22 de mar. de 2024 · James V, King of Scots 1513 – 1542. After the death of James IV at the disastrous Battle of Flodden in 1513 Scotland once again had an infant Stewart king on the throne. And once again the...
Hace 4 días · James combined suspicion of nobles with a popular touch, travelling anonymously among Scottish people as the 'Gudeman o'Ballengeich'. John Knox described him thus: 'he was called of some, a good poor man's king; of others he was termed a murderer of the nobility, and one that had decreed their whole destruction'. In 1536 he decided to marry.
English Monarch at the time. Name: King James V of Scotland. Father: James IV, King of Scotland. Mother: Margaret Tudor. Relation to Charles III: 12th great-grandfather. House of: Stewart. Born: April 10, 1512 at Linlithgow Palace. Ascended to the throne: September 9, 1513 aged 1 years. Crowned: September 21, 1513 at Stirling Castle.
28 de nov. de 2022 · Scotland’s was a success, England’s a failure. James V, who reigned from 1513-42, came to the throne as an infant, after the death of his father, James IV, at the Battle of Flodden. By the latter’s will, the guardian of the new king and interim ruler of the realm was to be his mother Margaret, who was also the sister of Henry VIII.