ames III (1453-88), king of Scotland, was
the son of James II. Until 1466 the government was carried on by
guardians. Of these the Earl of Angus died in 1462, and Bishop
Kennedy of St. Andrews in 1465, and up to 1483, James was
occupied in making himself the real master of his kingdom. Owing
to the intrigues of Louis XI, hostilities between England and
Scotland recommenced. His weak government provoked a rising of
the nobles, which led to his defeat at Sauchieburn, near
Bannockburn, and he was murdered while fleeing from the defeat.
James III patronized the fine arts, and under him a vigorous
national literature was developed. Robert Henryson, the poet, was
the Scottish Chaucer. [World Wide Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1935]