James Douglas, 4th earl of Morton (born c. 1516—died June 2, 1581, Edinburgh, Scot.) was a Scottish lord who played a leading role in the overthrow of Mary, Queen of Scots. As regent of Scotland for young king James VI (later James I of England) from 1572 to 1578, he restored the authority of the central government, which had been weakened by years of civil strife.
The son of Sir George Douglas, James succeeded to the earldom of his father-in-law, James Douglas, 3rd Earl of Morton, in 1548. In 1557 he was part of a group of Scottish nobles who signed a “band,” or covenant, in support of the Scottish faith. Although he was a Protestant, Morton was in 1563 appointed chancellor by the Roman Catholic Mary Stuart. On March 9, 1566, Morton and several other Protestant nobles murdered the queen’s influential secretary, David Riccio (Rizzio). Mary pardoned them in December, and Morton then became partially involved in a conspiracy against her treacherous husband Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, who was mysteriously murdered on Feb. 9–10, 1567. In May the queen married the widely hated James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell. Morton led the forces that drove Bothwell from the kingdom in June, and in July he imprisoned Mary on Castle Island in Loch Leven, where she was forced to abdicate in favour of her infant son, James (King James VI). The queen escaped on May 2, 1568, but Morton decisively defeated her army at Langside, near Glasgow, 11 days later. She then fled to England.
During the ensuing civil war between the supporters of Mary and of James, Morton was an able ally of the regent, James Stewart, Earl of Moray (d. 1570). Upon becoming regent in 1572, Morton completed the suppression of the rebels, restored the rule of law, and introduced a reformed episcopacy. Nevertheless, the nobles resented the efficiency of his administration, and the Presbyterians rejected the episcopacy. He was also unsuccessful in seeking to persuade the English to enter a formal defensive league and financially support his government. His opponents forced him to resign the regency in 1578; three years later he was charged with complicity in Darnley’s murder and executed.