{{Short description|French nobleman}} [[File:Bastie Monument.jpg|thumb|Monument to Antoine d'Arcy, close to the site of his murder near [[Preston, Scottish Borders]]]] '''Antoine d'Arcy''', [[sieur]] de la Bastie-sur-Meylan and of [[:fr:Château de Lissieu|Lissieu]], (d. 17 September 1517) was a French nobleman involved in the government of [[Kingdom of Scotland|Scotland]].<ref>Helen Newsome-Chandler, ''The Holograph Letters of Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots, 1489–1541'' (Cambridge: Camden, 2025), p. 46. {{doi|10.1017/S0960116325000065}}</ref>

==The White Knight== Antoine d'Arces, or d'Arcy, is usually known as "De la Bastie" or "Labatie" in Scottish history. He was the son of Jesus d'Arces, sieur de la Bâtie and Anthoinette Baile (or Huguette). In his lifetime he was called the White Knight, (''Chevalier Blanc''), from his white clothes, white armour, or a white scarf worn as the favour of [[Anne of Brittany]]. Antoine came to Scotland for the [[Of Ane Blak-Moir|notable tournaments]] of [[James IV of Scotland|James IV]] and the king's marriage to [[Margaret Tudor]] in 1502, and he was a friend of [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]]. Antoine issued an international 'cartel' - a tournament challenge, in 1506, and travelled to Scotland where he stayed for 18 weeks at the king's expense. He jousted with [[James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran]] at [[Stirling Castle]] in January 1507. James IV gave him 400 crowns and paid for his horse's hoofs to be bathed in wine.<ref>Stuart, Marie W., ''The Scot who was a Frenchman'' (London, 1940), pp. 16-19: ''Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland'', vol. 3 (1901), pp. 358, 364-6.</ref> He returned to France with the Archdeacon of St Andrews, [[Gavin Dunbar (Bishop of Aberdeen)|Gavin Dunbar]] on the ''[[Treasurer (warship)|Treasurer]]'' on 18 May 1507.<ref>''Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland'', vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1901), pp. lxvi-lxvii, 334, 338, 347: Macdougall, Norman ''James IV'' (Tuckwell, 1998), p. 255.</ref>

He served in the [[Italian Wars]] and was captured at [[Agnadello]] in 1509 by the Venetians. Antoine married Françoise de Ferrières, dame de Livarol. They had two children; Jean d'Arces, baron de Livarol, and Anne.

==Albany's Lieutenant== He came to Scotland immediately after the Scots' defeat at [[Battle of Flodden Field|Flodden]] to help form Albany's government.<ref>[[Charles McKean]], "Renaissance in the North", J.M. Fladmark, ''Heritage and Identity: Shaping the Nations of the North'' (Routledge, 2015), p. 137.</ref> Antoine returned with some ships of the [[Royal Scots Navy]] which had been lent to France. As a French ambassador, his instructions from [[Louis XII of France]] dated 5 October 1513 include: commiserating with Margaret Tudor; finding out the circumstances of James's death at Flodden; and going to Denmark to give an account of the state of [[Auld Alliance]]. Albany also gave him instructions.<ref>[[Marguerite Wood]], ''Flodden Papers'' (SHS, Edinburgh, 1933), pp. lxxi-lxxii, lxxxvi, 87-92, 92-97.</ref> With a colleague, Master James Ogilvy, de la Bastie represented French interest at a parliament or council at [[Perth, Scotland|Perth]], 26 November 1513, which called for French aid and the return of Albany to be Regent of Scotland.<ref>[[Thomas Thomson (advocate)|Thomson, Thomas]], ''Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland,'' vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1814), p. 281.</ref> Antoine went to [[Christian II of Denmark]] with Sir Andrew Brownhill in January 1514. He was to promote the mutual benefits of the Danish king's marriage to a French noblewoman, [[Madeleine de La Tour d'Auvergne]], Albany's sister-in-law.<ref>Hay, Denys, ''Letters of James V'' (HMSO, 1954), pp. 4-5, 16 January 1514: Ruddiman, Thomas, ''Epistolae Regum Scotorum'', vol. 1 (1722), pp. 186, 189: [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=102707 ''Letters & Papers Henry VIII'', vol. 1 (London, 1920)], nos. 2578, 2579.</ref>

Antoine was made Deputy Governor and [[Lord Warden of the Marches|Warden of Scottish Marches]], and was the keeper of [[Dunbar Castle]]. On 25 April 1517 he was made the King's Lieutenant between the [[Merse (Scotland)|Merse]] and [[Lothian]].<ref>''Register of the Great Seal of Scotland'', vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1908), p. 458 no. 2898.</ref><ref>Helen Newsome-Chandler, ''The Holograph Letters of Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots, 1489–1541'' (Cambridge: Camden, 2025), p. 45. {{doi|10.1017/S0960116325000065}}</ref> At Dunbar and at [[Edinburgh Castle]], he was involved in the design and construction of artillery fortifications.<ref>Tabraham, p.102</ref> He had a company of 40 spearmen. In August 1517, during an outbreak of plague in the Edinburgh, [[James V of Scotland]] was moved to the care of De la Bastie at nearby rural [[Craigmillar Castle]], where extra locks were bought for the royal lodging.<ref>''Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland'', vol. 5 (Edinburgh, 1903), pp. 128, 130, 148.</ref>

===The Murder=== In 1517, Antoine went to investigate the murder of a Frenchman who had been killed by the [[Clan Home]] in revenge for Albany's execution of [[Alexander Home, 3rd Lord Home]].<ref>Helen Newsome-Chandler, ''The Holograph Letters of Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots, 1489–1541'' (Cambridge: Camden, 2025), p. 46.</ref> While pursuing David Home, Laird of [[Wedderburn Castle|Wedderburn]] and George Home, he was forced to retreat to Dunbar, but his horse got stuck in a marsh (which was for many years after called 'Batty's Bog'). George Home lopped off the White Knight's head and, it was said, threaded the diplomat's hair to his saddle cloth, then rode to [[Duns, Scottish Borders|Duns]] and set this trophy on a pole in the centre of the village.<ref>Buchanan, Patricia, ''Margaret Tudor'' (Scottish Academic Press, 1985), pp. 155-156.</ref> The chronicler [[Lindsay of Pitscottie]] writing in the 1570s tells the story;<blockquote>"fearing ane conspiracie, he spurred his hors, and fled towardis the castle of Dunbar; thinking to have wone away, because he was weill horsed. But being ane stranger, and not knawing the ground weill, he laired his hors in ane mos, and thair his enemies cam upoun him, and slew and murthered him verrie unhonestlie, and cutted aff his head and carried with thame. And it was said that he had long hair plett in his neck quhilk David Home of Wedderburne knitt to his saidle bow and keipt it."<ref>Lindsay of Pitscottie, Robert, ''The Chronicles of Scotland'', vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1814), p. 307.</ref></blockquote> [[John Lesley]]'s version, also written in the 1570s, differs only slightly. Antoine came to break Wedderburn's siege of [[Langton Castle]], lured by a false report by William Cockburn, tutor of Langton,<ref>Ken Emond, ''The Minority of James V'' (Edinburgh, 2019), p. 87.</ref> and according to his sixteenth century translator; "Bautie, tha heidet, and in the toun of Dunce his heid affixt on a staik, that all men mycht se it, September xix."<ref>Lesley, John, ''The Historie of Scotland'', vol. 2 (STS, 1895), p. 170.</ref> By all accounts, the head was taken to Wedderburn Castle, and remained there for three hundred years.

This was a significant international incident, as de la Bastie was both Border Warden and French ambassador. [[Francis I of France]] wrote to the [[Parliament of Scotland]] on 16 November 1517 urging punishment. In response [[James Hamilton of Finnart]] carried the reply at the end of March 1528 that his father the [[James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran|Earl of Arran]] had captured the Home family strongholds, one Home had been hung drawn and quartered, and the others had escaped into England.<ref>Hay, Denys, ed., ''Letters of James V'' (HMS0, 1954), pp. 56-8.</ref>

There is monument to Bastie at [[Preston, Scottish Borders]], erected by General James Home in early 19th-century in honour of Antoine d'Arces. It consists of a square plinth and pedestal embossed with crosses with a classical cornice, topped by a stylised urn. Antoine's body was buried nearby, it is said, close to the scene of the murder in a field at Swallowdene farm.<ref>Stuart, Marie (1940), pp. 86-7.</ref>

==Portrait== A drawing of Antoine d'Arces made by an unknown artist in the 1560s is included in the album known as the [[Recueil d'Arras]].<ref>Andrea Thomas, ''Glory and Honour'' (Edinburgh, 2013), p. 93.</ref> The inscription mentions that he was called the White Knight, and went into Scotland with M. de Saint-Maurice, Guillaume Dorberke, and Jehan Joffroy sieur de Dompierre who was killed in the jousting.<ref>[http://initiale.irht.cnrs.fr/codex/11668 ARRAS, Bibliothèque municipale: 0944.2 (0266) Recueil d'Arras, f.246r]</ref><ref>Henri Bouchot, ''Les portraits aux crayons des XVIe et XVIIe siècles conservés à la Bibliothèque nationale'' (Paris, 1884), p. 295.</ref>

== In literature == Antoine d'Arces is the inspiration for the fictional character Antoine de Lissieu, the hero of 2024 historical murder mystery ''The Trail of Blood'', by A.K. Nairn. Several other characters in the novel are also based on real historical figures from this time and place, including John Stewart, [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany|Duke of Albany]], [[Isabella Hoppringle]] and [[Alexander Home, 3rd Lord Home|Alexander 3rd Lord Hume]].

==Footnotes== {{Reflist|30em}}

==Sources== * Buchanan, Patricia, ''Margaret Tudor'', Scottish Academic Press, (1985) * Wood, Marguerite, ed., ''Flodden Papers'', Scottish History Society, (1933), diplomatic correspondence of James IV. * Stuart, Marie W., ''The Scot who was a Frenchman, John Stewart Duke of Albany'', Hodge, (1940) *{{cite book |author=Tabraham, Chris |year=1997 |title=Scotland's Castles |publisher=BT Batsford/Historic Scotland |isbn=0-7134-7965-5 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/scotlandscastles0000tabr }}

==External links== * [http://www.dunsehistorysociety.co.uk/delabastie.shtml Murder of Chevalier de la Bastie], Duns History Society * [http://www.dunsehistorysociety.co.uk/ballad.shtml Death of de la Beaute (traditional ballad)], Duns History Society * [http://biviers.free.fr/hist/genearc2.pdf Genealogy of the d'Arces family] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20121012142204/http://membres.multimania.fr/stephanerevel/chatcorbeau.htm Château Corbeau, Meylan-Bâtie, the de la Bastie Castle]

{{DEFAULTSORT:Arcy, Antoine D}} [[Category:French soldiers]] [[Category:16th-century French diplomats]] [[Category:1513 in Scotland]] [[Category:1517 in Scotland]] [[Category:16th century in Scotland]] [[Category:1517 deaths]] [[Category:People murdered in Scotland]] [[Category:Assassinated Scottish politicians]] [[Category:Court of James IV of Scotland]] [[Category:Year of birth unknown]] [[Category:French people murdered abroad]] [[Category:Politicians assassinated in the 16th century]]