Lot Essay
Sir John Stewart, 1st Earl of Traquair was a politician, becoming a member of the Scottish Privy Council in 1621, shortly after his marriage to Lady Catherine Carnegie, daughter of David, Earl of Southesk, on the 14 September 1620.
Stewart's loyalty to King Charles I was rewarded during the King's coronation in Edinburgh in June 1633 when he was made Earl of Traquair and Lord Linton and Caberston. In 1636 he was made Lord High Treasurer, and for the following five years was the most powerful and influential politician in Scotland. The remainder of Stewart's career was troublesome as he sought for a number of years to reconcile the Carolean episcopal policies with the militant presbyterianism of the Scottish élite. The present portrait has traditionally been mis-identified as George Keith, 5th Earl Marischal.
Stewart's loyalty to King Charles I was rewarded during the King's coronation in Edinburgh in June 1633 when he was made Earl of Traquair and Lord Linton and Caberston. In 1636 he was made Lord High Treasurer, and for the following five years was the most powerful and influential politician in Scotland. The remainder of Stewart's career was troublesome as he sought for a number of years to reconcile the Carolean episcopal policies with the militant presbyterianism of the Scottish élite. The present portrait has traditionally been mis-identified as George Keith, 5th Earl Marischal.