'George Melville, 1st Earl of Melville' (
1636 –
May 20,
1707), was a
Scots aristocrat and
statesman during the reigns of
William and Mary.
In
1643, he succeeded his father as
Lord Melville.
Career
At the
Restoration of the
Stuarts Melville was a moderate
Whig and
Presbyterian who whilst serving under the
Duke of Monmouth in his suppression of the
Covenanters in
1679 had tried to persuade the
insurgents (Whig extremists) to lay down their arms peacefully.
Exile
The turning point in his career came in
1683 when Melville and his son
David Leslie-Melville, the
Earl of Leven, were accused of complicity in the
Rye House Plot — a Whig conspiracy to assassinate King
Charles II and his brother the
Duke of York (the future James VII).
To escape arrest Melville, together with his son, Leven fled to the Netherlands where they joined the band of British Protestant exiles at the court of Prince William of Orange. Here Melville became one of the chief
Scots supporters of
William of Orange.
Return
After the "
Glorious Revolution" of
1688 Melville played a prominent part in Scots and English politics, most notably in the
Convention Parliament which offered the crown of Scotland to William of Orange and his wife,
Mary, daughter of the deposed James VII. In
1689 William made him sole
Secretary of State for Scotland and in
1690 he was created
Earl of Melville,
Viscount Kirkaldie, and
Lord Raith, Monymaill and Balewarie (all in the
Peerage of Scotland).
Although Melville’s appointment as
Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland in
1693 was a political demotion he enjoyed substantial emoluments, the more so after
1696 when he became
President of the Privy Council of Scotland at an annual salary of £1,000 sterling.
In fiction
It is possible that details of Melville and his son's lives were used by
Sir Walter Scott in this novel
Old Mortality to lend authentic sounding biographical detail to the hero
Henry Morton.
In the novel the novel
Morton — like Melville a moderate Whig who desires peace and religious tolerance whilst supporting the
Stuart monarchy — is reluctantly involved in the
Covenanter uprising of 1689 (albeit on the Rebel side) and attempts to negotiate a peaceful end to the conflict between his brother
Calvinists and the
Anglican Royalists.
Later Morton is forced to flee to the
Netherlands where (living under his mother's name of
Melville) he becomes one of William of Orange's supporters, before returning to Britain in the wake of the Glorious Revolution.
References
"An Historical Account of Melville House", John Gifford