Gavin Douglas was born between about 1474…
1501 CE
Gavin Douglas was born between about 1474 and 1476 at Tantallon Castle, East Lothian, the third son of Archibald, 5th Earl of Angus by his second wife Elizabeth Boyd.
A Vatican register records that Gavin Douglas was thirteen in 1489, suggesting he was born in 1476.
An application had been lodged to award Gavin the right to hold a Church canonry or prebend and enjoy its income.
Another appeal to Rome concerning church appointments made in February 1495 states his age as twenty.
He was a student at St Andrews, 1489–1494, and thereafter, it is supposed, at Paris.
In 1496 he had obtained the living of Monymusk, Aberdeenshire, and later he became parson of Lynton (modern East Linton) and rector of Hauch (modern Prestonkirk), in East Lothian; and about 1501 was preferred to the deanery or provostship of the collegiate church of St Giles, Edinburgh, which he hols with his parochial charges.
An active player in the politics of the Scottish court, Douglas writes “The Palace of Honour” in 1501.
A dream-allegory extending to over two thousand lines, composed in nine-lined stanzas, it is his earliest work.
In its descriptions of the various courts on their way to the palace, and of the poet's adventures—first, when he incautiously slanders the court of Venus, and later when after his pardon he joins in the procession and passes to see the glories of the palace—the poem carries on the literary traditions of the courts of love, as shown especially in the "Romaunt of the Rose" and "The Hous of Fame."
The poem is dedicated to James IV, not without some lesson in commendation of virtue and honor.