Matches 401 to 450 of 11,582
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401 |
James Stewart, 5th High Steward of Scotland, b. c 1243, d. 1309. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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James Stewart, 5th Great Steward of Scotland; Regent of Scotland as one of the six Guardians of the Realm 1286, supported the claims of the elder Robert The Bruce to the throne, opposed Edward I's attempts to dominate Scotland and ratified the treaty with France 1295; forced to submit to Edward I in 1297 and sent by the English to negotiate with Sir William Wallace but joined him instead and fought for him at the rout of the English at Stirling Bridge 1297, Supported Robert The Bruce and attended his Parliament at St Andrews; married Jill du Bourg (Egidia de Burgo), daughter of Walter, 1st Earl of Ulster, and died 17 July 1309. [Burke's Peerage] | Stewart, James (I69986)
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402 |
Jean, heiress of the Isles of Bute and Arran, daughter of James (who with his father and brothers was killed 1210 by the men of Skye), son of Angus Lord of Bute & Arran (younger son of Somerled, King of the South Isles). [Burke's Peerage] | Of The Isles, Jean (I69889)
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403 |
Joan Stewart, daughter of Robert, 1st Duke of Albany, Regent of Scotland. [Burke's Peerage]
Joan, daughter of Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany, probably by his 1st wife Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith. [Magna Charta Sureties] | Stewart, Joan (I70152)
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404 |
Joan, daughter of Robert II, and widow of (a) Sir John Keith and (b) Sir John Lyon of Glamis. [Burke's Peerage] | Stewart, Princess Jean (Joan) (I69931)
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405 |
Joanna Isaac; m. John de Eragardia, Lord of Lorn. [Magna Charta Sureties] | Isaac, Joanna Mac (I69971)
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406 |
Joanna, widow of (a) Malise, 7th Earl of Strathe(a)rn of the creation deemed to have been effected by c1128, (b) John Campbell, 1st and last Earl of Atholl of the c1320 creation, and (c) Maurice Moray, 1st Earl of Strathearn of the Feb 1343/4 creation, and daughter of Sir John Menteith of Rusky; married (d) William 5th Earl of Sutherland. [Burke's Peerage]
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He [Malise of Strathearn} married, 2ndly, perhaps circa 1323, Joan, daughter of Sir John MENTEITH of Rusky. He died before 1329. His widow married John (CAMPBELL), EARL OF ATHOLL [SCT], who was killed at Halidon Hill, 19 July 1333. She married, 3rdly (dispensation 11 July 1339), Maurice (MORAY), EARL OF STRATHEARN [SCT] (so created 1344), who was killed at Neville's Cross, 17 October 1346. She married, 4thly, as his 2nd wife (post nuptial dispensation 9 November 1347), William (SUTHERLAND), 5th EARL OF SUTHERLAND [SCT], who died about 1370. She was living, 20 March 1366/7, but the date of her death is not known. [Complete Peerage XII/1:385, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] | Menteith, Joan (Joanna) (I70000)
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407 |
John (Sir) of Menteith; Sheriff of Dunbartonshire owing fealty to Edward I 1304 and as such captured the Scottish national hero Sir William Wallace, whom he took in chains to London; named Earl of Lennox by Edward I but joined Robert the Bruce, for whom he fought in the War of Scottish Independence and acted as Guardian of the Earldom of Menteith 1320; ancestor of the Menteith's of Rusky and Kerse (including some of the Dalyell of the Binns Bts). [Burke's Peerage] | Of Menteith, Sir John (I70001)
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408 |
John (Sir), Lord of Lorn in right of his wife (her sister and coheir having married his younger brother Robert, who resigned his share of Lorn in exchange for the lands of Durrisdeer 1388); inherited from father feudal Barony of Innermeath; Jt Ambassador to England and France 1412; married Isabel of Argyll, daughter and coheir of Eoin, Lord of Lorn, Chief of Clan Dougall (heir of the local dynasts of Argyll), and died 26 April 1421, having had, with three daughters (Christian, married James Dundas of that Ilk; Isabel, married 1st Sir William Oliphant of Aberdalgy and 2nd Sir David Murray of Tullibardine; Jean, married Sir David Bruce of Clackmannan). [Burke's Peerage]
Sir John Stewart, Knight, d. 26 Apr 1421, Lord of Innermeath and Lorn. [Magna Charta Sureties] | Stewart Of Innermeath, Sir John (I69968)
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409 |
John (Sir), of Bonkyl; led his Islemen from Bute and his wife's Border archers in the fight for Scottish independence; married Margaret, daughter and heiress of Sir Alexander Bonkyl of that Ilk, and was killed fighting for Sir William Wallace at the Battle of Falkirk, 1298. [Burke's Peerage] | Stewart Of Bonkyl, Sir John (I69982)
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410 |
John FitzGilbert, styled also John the Marshal, 1st son and heir [of Gilbert], a party to the suit aforesaid, succeeded to his father's lands and office in or shortly before 1130, when he owed 22.13.4 marks for them. He then held land in Wiltshire, and owed 40 marks silver for the office of supplying fodder for the royal horses in his charge, as well as 30 marks silver for the land and daughter of Walter Pipard. He was with Henry I in Normandy in 1137 and in England in 1138, in which year he fortified the castles of Marlborough and Ludgershall. In 1140 he held Marlborough for the King, and captured Robert FitzHubert, who had taken the royal castle of Devizes. After Stephen had been taken prisoner at Lincoln, John joined the Empress, with whom he was at Reading in May, at Oxford in July, and at Winchester in Aug-Sep 1141, where in the final rout he was cut off and surrounded in Wherwell Abbey, but escaped with the loss of an eye and other wounds (b). In 1142 he was again with the Empress at Oxford, and some 2 years later at Devizes. In 1144 he was raiding the surrounding country form Marlborough Castle and oppressing the clergy. He was with Maud's son Henry at Devizes in 1149 and 1153; and in 1152 Newbury Castle was defended by his constable against Stephen. After Henry's accession John was granted Crown lands in Wiltshire worth 82 marks per annum, including Marlborough Castle; but he had to surrender the castle in 1158. He was present at the Council of Clarendon in 1164; soon after which he sued Thomas Becket for part of his manor at Pagham, in Sussex. John was a benefactor to the priory of Bradenstoke, the abbey of Troarn, and the Templars.
He m., 1stly, Aline, who may have been the daughter and heir of Walter Pipard. He is said to have repudiated her circa 1141, and he m., 2ndly, Sibyl, sister of Patrick de Salisbury, 1st Earl of WIltshire, and daughter of Walter de Salisbury, hereditary sheriff of Wiltshire and constable of Salisbury Castle, by Sibyl, daughter of Patrick de Chaources (Chaworth). John d. in 1165, before Michaelmas. [Complete Peerage X:Appendix G:93-95]
(b) According to the poem, John escaped from Winchester on foot to Marlborough, and there assembled troops, with which he inflicted much loss on the King and his partisans, and when Stephen marched towards Ludgershall, the Marshal waylaid and defeated the royal forces. After this Patrick de Salisbury (whom the poet prematurely makes an Earl) is said to have made many attacks on the Marshal, with the King's support; until the feud was settled by John repudiating his 1st wife and marrying Patrick's sister.
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John Marshal, whom the Gesta Stephani rather unkindly describes as 'a limb of hell and the root of all evil' was a man who loved warfare, and played the game of politics with great success. At first he supported Stephen but, when he began to realise the failings of the King and the potentialities of Matilda's party, he changed sides. Almost immediately he proved by a consummate act of bravery and hardihood, that he was worth having: escorting Matilda to safety in his castle at Ledgershall, John found that the party was going dangerously slowly because Matilda was riding side-saddle, so he persuaded her to ride astride, and stopped behind to delay the pursuers at Wherwell. His force was soon overpowered by the numbers of the enemy, and John took refuge with one of his knights in the Abbey. The opposing party promptly set fire to the church, and John and his knight had to take cover in the tower, John threatening to kill his knight if he made any move to surrender. As the lead of the roof began to melt and drop on the two soldiers, putting out one of John's eyes, the enemy moved off, convinced that they were dead. They escaped, in a terrible state, but triumphant, to John's castle.
He plainly expected his children to be as tough as himself, as an incident of the year 1152, when William was about six, will show. King Stephen went to besiege Newbury Castle, which Matilda had given John to defend; the castellan, realising that provisions and the garrison were both too low to stand a long siege, asked for a truce to inform his master. This was normal practice, for if the castellan were not at once relieved, he could then surrender without being held to have let his master down. Now John had not sufficient troops to relieve the castle, so he asked Stephen to extend the truce whilst he, in turn, informed his mistress, and agreed to give William as a hostage, promising not to provision and garrison the castle during the truce. This he promptly did, and when he received word from Stephen that the child would be hung if he did not at once surrender the castle, he cheerfully replied that he had hammer and anvils to forge a better child than William. [Who's Who in the Middle Ages, John Fines, Barnes & Noble Books, New York, 1995]
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John Mareschall, attaching himself to the fortunes of Maud against King Stephen, was with Robert, the consul, Earl of Gloucester, at the siege of Winchester Castle, when the party of the empress sustained so signal a defeat. Upon the accession of Henry II, however, in 1154, his fidelity was amply rewarded by considerable grants in the co. Wilts; and in the 10th of that monarch's reign, being then marshal, he laid claim, for the crown, to one of the manors of the see of Canterbury from the prelate, Thomas | Of Rockley, John "The Marshal" Fitzgilbert (I70895)
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411 |
John Kerr of the Forest of Selkirk; had a charter of part of Auldtounburn 5 Feb 1357/8 and another 4 Oct 1358 to himself and his w Mariot of a further part, together with the lands of Molle; had eldest grandson Robert. [Burke's Peerage] | Ker, Sir John (I70030)
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412 |
John of Touchfraser, died young, leaving a daughter and heir. [Burke's Peerage] | Fraser, Sir John (I70085)
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413 |
John Ravilious has postulated that the wife of Sir Alexander Lindsay was not a daughter of Alexander Stewart, but a granddaughter, either as daughter of Alexander's son John Stewart, or as daughter of Reginald Crawford by a daughter of Alexander Stewart. More info is needed.
@check ancestry. | Stewart, Alice (I69951)
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414 |
John, 1st Laird of Crawford, stepson of Baldwin de Biggar (ancestor of the Earls of Wigton), possessed c1153 the northern part of the territorial Barony of Crawford, later called Crawfordjohn, and took the surname Craufurd. [Burke's Peerage]
Note: Burke's would have John born a little earlier than I, but the later birth date was required to fit him into the ancestry portrayed on several Crawford family websites. See notes under Thor Sweynsson. | Craufurd, Sir John (I70215)
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415 |
JOHN, son and heir, was presumably born before 1056, for about 1076 he suddenly claimed and seized the mill of Vains, but after a trial before the King's Court judgement was delivered against him. As John son of Richard he gave the tithe of Saxlingham, Norfolk, to St. Peter's Abbey, Gloucester, in the time of Abbot Serlon (1072-1103/4). In 1086, described as John nepos W., he was a tenant-in-chief in Norfolk, his estates including the manor of Saxlingham to which the church was appurtenant; and as John nepos Walerami (sic) he held also the single manor of Elsenham ("Alsenham"), in Essex, in chief, and a carucate and a half at Saxlingham of the abbot of St. Benet of Holme. He is said to have been given the advowson of Hockham, Norfolk, by Roger Bigod (died 1107). Nothing is known of his marriage, death or burial. [Complete Peerage XII/2:269-70, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
Note: In Appendix B, Vol XII/2, the Complete Peerage gives evidence and a lengthy discussion, disproving a long held belief that John was brother of Serlo de Burg (and therefore son of Eustace de Burgo), whom I originally had as his brother. CP also states that John's son Eustace FitzJohn was called Monoculus, possibly as a hereditary nickname from his father, but potentially in place of his father.
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John, surnamed Monoculus from having but one eye, had three sons, Paganus, Eustace, and William. These brothers were witnesses to the foundation of the abbey of Cirencester, co. Gloucester, 1133. The elder son, Paganus, dying s. p., was s. by his brother, Eustace Fitz-John. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 121, Clavering, Barons Clavering] | Of Saxlingham, John "One Eye" (I71255)
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416 |
John; living 1317. [Burke's Peerage] | Graham, Sir John (I70151)
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417 |
John; married by 1243 Alicia, daughter of William de Conigburg; feudal Lord of Stapilgorton, and dvp. [Burke's Peerage] | Fraser, John (I71329)
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418 |
Juliana de Vere (daughter of Alice and Aubrey de Vere II), living 1185; m. (1) as his (2) wife, Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, b. c 1095, Lord of Framlingham 1120, Royal Steward 1123 (son of Roger Bigod, d. Sep 1107, and his wife Alice, living 1130, daughter of Robert de Toeni, Lord of Belvoir). The marriage of Juliana and Hugh was annulled. Juliana m. (2) Walkelin Maminot, d. 1182 and (3) Roger de Glanville, dead 7 Richard I. Hugh m. (2) Gundred, d. 1200/8, apparently daughter of Roger, Earl of Warwick, by Gundred, daughter of William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. [Magna Charta Sureties] | De Vere, Juliana (I21025)
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419 |
killed by nephew Malcolm son of brother Gilbert.
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The following information was given in a post-em by Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com:
born: at or before 1121 [Ref: The Scots Peerage, 1904, v4 p136], parents: [Ref: Weis AR7 121b:27, 38:24], father: [Ref: Watney p430, 886]
Roland's father Uhtred married Gunnilda daughter of Waltheof, lord of Allerdale in Cumberland. [Ref: Essays of the Nobility of Medieval Scotland by K.J. Stringer, Edinburgh, 1985, p49 (citing Bruce by G.W.S. Barrow p36, n2)]
died: 22 Sep 1174 [Ref: Peerage of Scotland by John Philip Wood, Edinburgh, 1813, v1 p612-13, Watney 430, Weis AR7 121b:27] 1174 [Ref: Weis AR7 38:24]
murdered by his nephew, Malcolm, at the instigation of his brother, Gilbert [Ref: Watney 430]
Fergus was succeeded in the lordship of Galloway by his son Uchtred. . . .His brother Gilbert, having first torn out his eyes and brutally mutilated him, put him to death. Blinding and castration was used in Celtic times to make a man ineligible for the kingship; Gilbert apparently thought himself a monarch and wanted his brother out of the way. [Ref: A History of Dumfries and Galloway by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Edinburgh, 1896, p54]
Biographical notes:
Uchtred first appears 7 July 1136 when he and his father, Fergus, witnessed a charter of King David I granting land in Perdeyc or Patrick to the Church of Glasgow, when that church was dedicated. Considering he was at least 15, that would place his birth at or before 1121 and during the lifetime of his presumed grandfather, Henry I, who died in 1135. [Ref: The Scots Peerage, 1904 v4 p136] note: "presumed" implies his mother was possibly not the (illegit) dau of Henry I whereas CP, ES, Louda, Paget & Weis all say she was. Need to re-check these sources to see if they show any qualifications to the connection... Curt
Uchtred, youngest son, divided with Gilbert the extensive inheritance of Fergus. They led their forces to the army of King William the Lion, when he invaded Northumberland in 1174. The natives of Galloway rebelled. Gilbert and Uchtred gave homage to Henry II of England. Gilbert's son Malcolm murdered Uchtred 22 September 1174, and was resisted by Roland. [Ref: Peerage of Scotland by John Philip Wood, Edinburgh, 1813, v1 p612-13]
In summary, Uchtred murdered his brother Gilbert on 22 Sept 1174 after their return from England. On 4 July 1175, a battle in "Galweta" was fought between Uchtred's son Roland and Gillepatrick, in which many were slain, most on the side of the latter. Soon after, in another battle with Gillecolum, the latter was slain along with a brother of Roland.
Gillecolum was probably the same person as Gillecolam, a son of Somerled's by a previous marriage. If so, he no doubt contended for the rule of Galloway. In this there is another link to our statement that Fergus, first Lord of Galloway, and Somerled were connected. They carried the same armorial bearings--viz., a lion rampant--which, as we have described elsewhere, was of Scandanavian origin. [Ref: History of the Lands and Their Owners in Galloway by P.H. M'Kerlie, New Edition, 1906 v1 p118-9] | Galloway, Lord Uchtred (I56641)
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420 |
King of Deheubarth & Gwynedd [Ancestral Roots] | Of North Wales, Prince Llywelyn Ap Seisyll (I70740)
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421 |
King of Gwynedd & Powys (1039), and Deheubarth (1055) | Of Wales, Prince Gruffudd Ap Llewelyn (I70737)
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422 |
knighted c mid 1280's, joined Robert the Bruce 1296 in struggle against the English, one of the great Barons of Parliament which met at Ayr 26 April 1315 and fixed the succession to the Crown. [Burke's Peerage] | Campbell Of Lochow, Sir Neil Nigel (I70153)
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423 |
Lady Christian Bruce, sister of Robert I, who granted her the lands of Garioch for her life, but whereby the Earls of Mar acquired the (feudal) Lordship of Garioch (not a peerage dignity) and were even latterly styled "Earls of Garioch". [Burke's Peerage]
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Christian Bruce, d. 1357; m. (1) Gratney, Earl of Mar, d. before 1305, son of Donald, Earl of Mar, by Helen or Elen, illegitimate daughter of Llewellyn ap Iorwerth, Prince of Wales, widow of Malcolm, Earl of Fife. [Magna Charta Sureties] | Bruce, Christian (I70006)
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424 |
Lady Joan, only child of Maurice Moray, 1st Earl of Strathearn of the Feb 1343/4 creation, and widow of Sir Thomas Moray, feudal Lord of Bothwell. [Burke's Peerage] | Moray Of Strathearn, Joan (Joanna) (I69954)
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425 |
Lambinus; held temp. David I (1124-1153) the territorial Barony of Loudoun, Ayrshire. [Burke's Peerage] | De Loudoun, Sir Lambinus (I70221)
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426 |
Laurence de Abernethy; last hereditary Abbot of Abernethy, from whom the ecclesiastical functions were transferred to the Abbey of Arbroath; married Devorgulle. [Burke's Peerage] | Of Abernethy, Abbot Laurence (I70109)
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427 |
Lucy, living 1130, widow susscessively, of Ives Taillebois and Roger Fitz Gerold; m. probably c 1098 Ranulph III le Meschin. [Ancestral Roots]
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He [Ranulph le Meschin] married Lucy, widow of Roger FITZ-GEROLD (by whom she was mother of William de Roumare, afterwards Earl of Lincoln). He died 17 or 27 January 1128/9, and was buried at St. Werburg's, Chester. The Countess Lucy confirmed, as his widow, the grant of the Manor of Spalding to the monks of that place (f). [Complete Peerage III:166, XIV:170, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]
(f) She paid 500 marks to King Henry in 1130 for license to remain unmarried for 5 years.
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The following copied from www.linacre.ox.ac.uk/research/prosop/PRSPN2.stm,
gives the latest research on the ancestry of Lucy:
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Antecessor Noster:
The Parentage of Countess Lucy Made Plain
A lot of ink has flowed on the subject, but there can be no doubt that the 'mysterious' Countess Lucy of Chester was William Malet's thrice-married granddaughter, the daughter of Robert Malet's sister and Turold the Sheriff of Lincoln (dead by 1079). The suggestion was first made by R. Kirk in 1888. As N. Sumner has more recently observed: 'This account has the merit of explaining why the lordship of Spalding and other places in Lincolnshire were held after Ivo's death not by Beatrice, his direct heir and the daughter of his marriage to Lucy, but by the later husbands of Lucy, Roger fitz Gerold and Ranulph Meschines.' It is clear from her charters that Lucy was an heiress; as was to be expected, her estates passed to the sons of her second and third marriages. Kirk's work was based upon conjecture, and contained a number of errors. The question of Lucy's parentage has therefore remained open. Nevertheless, there is proof that Kirk was right.
A spurious charter of Crowland Abbey made Turold of Bucknall (the Sheriff) the founder of the priory of Spalding as a cell of Crowland. It also called Turold brother of Godiva countess of Mercia, but subsequently described Godiva's son Earl Algar as Turold's cognatus (cousin). A genealogia fundatoris of Coventry Abbey made Lucy a daughter of Earl Algar and sister and heiress of earls Edwin and Morcar. The Peterborough Chronicle and the Pseudo-Ingulf's Chronicle of Crowland both made Lucy the daughter of Algar and niece or great-niece of Turold. We know that William Malet was half-English, so these traditions probably boil down to a relationship between Countess Godiva and William's English mother.
In 1153 a charter [RRAN, III, 180] of the future Henry II for Lucy's son Ranulf II of Chester referred to her uncles Robert Malet and Alan of Lincoln. Alan of Lincoln was the successor, and almost certainly the son, of Domesday's Alfred of Lincoln. Chronologically, it is most unlikely that Alan was Lucy's uncle. It was probably another of Alfred's sons whom Domesday described as Alfred nepos [nephew or grandson] of Turold, then holding a fee which was certainly thereafter held with the rest of the senior Alfred's fee by his heir Alan. Domesday provides a further indication that Alfred senior married another of William Malet's daughters when it names a William as Alfred's predecessor in two of his manors. Other parts of each of these manors (Linwood and Rothwell) were held in 1086 by Durand Malet, who was probably William's son. It seems that Henry's charter can be explained by seeing a scribe, perhaps in search of rhetorical balance, commit the error of ascribing two uncles to Lucy, instead of a niece (Lucy) and a nephew (Alan of Lincoln) to Robert Malet, who was uncle to both.
Turold is evidenced in Domesday Book as a benefactor of Crowland Abbey, to which he gave a parcel of land at Bucknall. The abbey also held land at Spalding that had probably been granted to it by Earl Algar and there is evidence to suggest that Turold the Sheriff gave further land there to the abbey of St Nicholas, Angers, before 1079. Lucy and her first husband Ivo Taillebois subsequently founded, or perhaps re-founded, a priory at Spalding subject to St Nicholas, Angers. A revealing phrase from the Register of Spalding Priory reads: 'mortuo quia dicto Thoraldo relicta sibi herede Lucia predicta' [at his death Turold left an heir, the aforesaid Lucy]. The word heres, 'heir', was often used of the child who was to inherit his/her father's property. Lucy later confirmed the gifts of all three of her husbands: 'pro redempcione anime patris mei et matris mee et dominorum meorum et parentum meorum' [for the souls of my father and mother, my husbands and my (other) relatives]. The association of the priory with such a small group of people and the description of Lucy as heres of Turold strongly hint at Lucy's parentage. But we can go further still.
In their initial benefaction Ivo and Lucy referred to 'antecessorum suorum Turoldi scilicet uxorisque eius regine' [our 'ancestors' Turold and his wife]. The reference to Turold's wife indicates that some part of his landholding had come to him through his wife, something also indicated by the occurrence of William Malet amongst those who had held the Domesday lands of Lucy's first husband Ivo Taillebois before him. The apparently vague Latin words antecessor and predecessor can both be used to mean something like 'predecessor'. Each of them conveys a range of very precise meanings in different circumstances. The description of Turold and his wife as antecessores of Ivo and Lucy may be compared to the usage in a charter in the cartulary of Mont-Saint-Michel by which the Angevins Hugh Chalibot and his wife confirmed the grants of her father, who was described as antecessor noster. Other examples of this phrase show clearly that it was used by a married man to describe the parent from whom his wife had inherited the property she brought to the marriage. Acting on her own account (normally after her husband's death), the heiress will often describe herself as the daughter of the parent her husband described as antecessor noster. A rare use of the phrase was to indicate the couple's immediate predecessor, not her father but her brother. In Lucy and Ivo's case the plurality of their antecessores, Turold and his wife, puts the matter beyond doubt. Lucy's parents were indeed Turold the Sheriff and a daughter of William Malet.
K. S. B. Keats-Rohan
Linacre College
Oxford | De Rumily, Countess Lucy (I55057)
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428 |
Mabel, daughter and heir of Robert FITZ-HAMOND, lord of Tewkesbury. [Complete Peerage] | Fitzhammon, Maud (I53498)
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429 |
Madach Earl of Atholl m. Margaret (married 2nd Erlend "Ugni", Jarl of Orkney), daughter of Ha(a)kon, Jt Earl of Orkney and apparently Jt Earl of Caithness. [Burke's Peerage] | Orkney, Margaret Hakonsdottir Of (I70481)
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430 |
Madach, 1st Earl of Atholl/Athole, so created by 1115, at a time when the earlier Mormaers of Scotland were beginning to be recognised as Earls, the territory under that of Atholl having comprised the northeast section of what later became Perthshire; married (probably 2nd) c1133 Margaret (married 2nd Erlend "Ugni", Jarl of Orkney), daughter of Ha(a)kon, Jt Earl of Orkney and apparently Jt Earl of Caithness, and died c1152, having had issue by his 2nd wife and specifically, apparently by his 1st wife [Malcolm]. [Burke's Peerage]
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The Scots Peerage has the following article:
The first Earl of Atholl who appears in actual Scottish record is Earl Madach, or Madeth, who is named as a witness to the foundation charter of the Abbey of Scone, granted by King Alexander I., which is usually said to be granted in the year 1113-14, but was probably after 1116. Earl Madach is described by the Norwegian writer Trof | Of Atholl, Madach (Madadd) (I70480)
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431 |
Malcolm de Keith; alleged father of [Philip]. [Burke's Peerage] | Keith, Malcolm (I71304)
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432 |
Many people have Godchilde daughter of Hilduin de Ponthieu & Hersende, but according to the dates that I have for the people involved, Eileen Suggs, World Connect db=emsuggs, is correct in placing her as daughter of Guillaume & Maud. | De Ponthieu, Godchilde (I70589)
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433 |
Margaret (married 2nd c 17 May 1509, as his 2nd wife, 4th Earl of Erroll), daughter of Andrew Kerr of Auldtounburn and Cessford. [Burke's Peerage]
Note: Burke's does not identify Margaret's mother, but by the late marriage dates (Margaret married her 2nd husband, the 4th Earl of Erroll c 17 May 1509), Margaret must have been born late. That plus the name Margaret would lead toward the 2nd wife Margaret being mother. | Ker, Margaret (I70041)
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434 |
Margaret (or Marjorie), Countess of Carrick, d. 1292, widow of Adam de Kilconquhar dsp 1270, daughter of Neil, Earl of Carrick, and Margaret, daughter of Walter, High Steward of Scotland. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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Marjorie (or Margaret) (one of four daughters), in her own right Countess of Carrick, d. by 27 Oct 1292; m. (1) Adam de Kilconquhar, d. in the Holy Lands 1271 or 1272; m. (2) Robert Bruce, son of Robert of Annandale and Cleveland, in right of his wife Earl of Carrick, which title he resigned to his son Robert (later Robert I of Scots) 27 Oct 1292. [Ancestral Roots]
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Earldom of Carrick
3. Margaret, suo jure (in her own right) Countess of Carrick, daughter and heir. She m. 1stly Adam de Kilconquhar, who thus became jure uxoris (in right of wife) Earl of Carrick. He dsp, being killed in the French Crusade of 1268 at Acre in Palestine in 1270. The Countess m, the next year 1271, at her castle of Turnberry, Robert de Bruce, who thus became jure uxoris Earl of Carrick. For this marriage, which was without the Royal consent, she had to pay a heavy fine. Her husband was son and heir of Robert de Bruce, of Annandale (one of the Competitors for the Crown of Scotland), by his 1st wife, Isabel, daughter of Gilbert (de Clare), Earl of Gloucester and Hertford. In 1278 he swore fealty, as proxy for Alexander III, for the Kingdom of Scotland, to Edward I, to which King, on 13 June 1291, he also swore fealty. He was summoned to be at Shrewsbury for the trial of David ap Griffith, 28 June 1283 (11 Edward I), by writ directed Roberto de Brus Comiti de Carrik, his name appearing as 11th and last of the earls who were then summoned. His wife, the Countess, having previously died, he, on 27 Oct 1292, resigned the Earldom of Carrick to his 1st son, though he appears still to have been styled Earl thereof. On 1 Apr 1295 he succeeded his father (who d. aged about 85), and was made Governor of Carlisle Castle. On 24 June 1295 (23 Edward I), he was summoned to Parliament (England) by writ directed Roberto de Brus, whereby he may be held to have become Lord Bruce. He was also summoned to attend the King at Salisbury, 26 Jan 1296/7 (25 Edward I). He accompanied Edward I into Scotland, and fought 28 Apr 1296, at the battle of Dunbar. To that King he again swore fealty 28 Aug 1296 at Berwick. He m. 2ndly, Eleanor. He resided latterly in England, and died there or in Palestine, 1304, before 14 June, and was buried at Holmcultram. His widow m. in 1305/6, as his 1st wife, Richard Waleys (Lord Waleys). She d. between 16 Mar and 19 Oct 1330. [Complete Peerage] | Of Carrick, Countess Margaret (Marjory) (I69941)
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Margaret de Lacy, d. 1256, Lady of Dulek; m. as 1st wife, 1 4 May 1244 John de Verdun, b. c 1226, d. 21 Oct 1274, son o f Theobald le Boteler and Rohese de Verdun. [Magna Chart a Sureties]
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He [John de Verdun] married, 1stly, before 14 May 1244, Mar gery, 1st daughter of Gilbert DE LACY, of Ewyas Lacy, co. H ereford, by Isabel, daughter of Hugh (LE BIGOD), EARL OF NO RFOLK, which Gilbert (who died v.p. between 12 August and 2 5 December 1230) was son and heir ap. of Walter de Lacy, Lo rd of Meath (who died s.p.m.s. shortly before 24 February 1 240/1), to whom Margery was coheir. [Complete Peerage XII/ 2:246-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] | Lacy, Margaret De (I69855)
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Margaret de Loudoun; married c1200 Sir Reynald de Crawford, Heritable Sheriff of Ayrshire. [Burke's Peerage] | De Loudoun, Margaret (I70218)
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Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith in her own right, carried the title with its caput or chief seat of Doune Castle to her 4th husband, Robert Stuart, Duke of Albany, with whom she was ancestor of the Earls of Castle Stewart and of Moray. [Burke's Peerage]
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Margaret, d. between 20 July 1372 and 4 May 1380, suo juris Countess of Menteith. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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He [Robert Stewart] m., 1stly (dispensation 9 Sep 1361), Margaret, suo jure Countess of Menteith (who had previously been the wife of Sir John Moray of Bothwell (dsp. 1352), of Thomas Erskine, 9th Earl of Mar, and of Sir John Drummond of Concraig), daughter (only surviving child & heir) of John Graham, jure uxoris Earl of Menteith, by Mary, suo jure Countess of Menteith. She d. about 1380, between 21 Jul 1372 and 4 May 1380. [Complete Peerage I:77-79, XIV:15] | Graham, Countess Margaret (I70143)
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Margaret, daughter and heiress of Sir Alexander Bonkyl of that Ilk. [Burke's Peerage] | De Bonkyl, Margaret (I69983)
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Margaret, daughter of James Tweedie of Drummelzier. [Burke's Peerage] | Tweedie, Margaret (I70042)
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Margaret, daughter of Robert, 2nd Earl of Leicester of the post-Conquest creation made in favour of Robert's father Robert de Beaumont. [Burke's Peerage]
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He [Ralph de Toeni] married Margaret, daughter of Robert, 2nd EARL OF LEICESTER, by Amice, daughter of Ralph, SEIGNEUR OF GAEL AND MONTFORT in Brittany. He died in 1162. His widow had Walthamstow, Essex, in dower; and also held land at Pont-St.-Pierre and other places in Normandy. In 1185 she was said to be 60 years of age. [Complete Peerage XII/1:764-5, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] | De Beaumont, Margaret (I70934)
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Margaret, daughter of Walter, High Steward of Scotland. [Magna Charta Sureties] | Stewart, Margaret (I69943)
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Margaret; married Sir William Keith, Marshal of Scotland, and had issue. [Burke's Peerage] | Fraser, Margaret (I70084)
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Marjory (died 1438), daughter of Sir John Stewart of Ralston (half-brother of Robert II) and widow of Sir Alexander Lindsay of Glenesk. [Burke's Peerage] | Stewart, Marjory (I70180)
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Marjory de Bruce, d. 2 Mar 1316; m. 1314/1315 Walter Stewart, b. 1292, d. 9 Apr 1327 (buried at Paisley, Scotland), High Steward of Scotland, son of James Stewart (d. 16 July 1309) and Egidia de Burgh. [Magna Charta Sureties]
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DEATH: Died in a riding accident well within a year of her marriage. At the time of her death she was pregnant, but her unborn son was saved by caesarian operation and in time this son, Robert, became the Seventh High Steward.
Click here for Photo of Paisley Abbey (use browser back arrow to return) | Bruce, Princess Marjorie (I69937)
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Marjory, probably a daughter of the Earl of Dunbar. [Magna Charta Sureties]
Probably daughter of Earl of Dunbar-does not say which, could be the 9th or 10th Earl. | Dunbar, Marjory (I70169)
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Marriage to Ada de Tyson, a rich heiress, bestowed by William I for father's distinguished services. | De Vescy, Yves (John) (I71268)
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Mary (married 4th by 10 April 1299, as his 2nd wife William FitzWarin and died by 10 Oct 1301), daughter of Ewen of Argyll and widow of (a) Magnus, King of the Isles of Man (died 1265) and (b) Malise, 5th Earl of Strathearn (died by 23 Nov 1271) [3rd husband was Hugh Aberneth (died c1291)]. [Burke's Peerage]
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He [Malise of Strathearn] married, 4thly, circa 1268, Mary, widow of Magnus, KING OF MAN (died 1265), daughter of Ewen of Argyll. He died (before 23 November) 1271, it is said in France, and was buried at Dunblane. His widow married, 3rdly (post nuptial dispensation 5 April 1281), Sir Hugh ABERNETHY of that Ilk, who died between 28 June 1291 and 10 February 1291/2. She married, 4thly, as his 2nd wife, before 10 April 1299, William FITZWARIN, who died before 1 December following and was buried in the church of the Grey Friars, London. M.I. She was living, 28 September 1300, but died before 10 October 1303 and was buried with him. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:382-3, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] | Of Argyll, Mary (I70007)
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Mary is in the "classic" pedigree for Hugh & Walter de Burgh. However the existence of Mary as a 2nd wife of Walter de Burgh is questioned by some genealogists (incluing note (f) in CP XII/2:172), who say it is an untrue statement in a "Charter of St. Mary's". Even if she did exist, they state with certainty that Mary had nothing to do with Walter's being given the title of Earl of Ulster, and that his heir was not born by her. | Lacy, Mary (Maud) De (I69909)
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Mary Stewart, Countess of Menteith in her own right from 1332; married Sir John Graham, 9th Earl of Menteith in right of his wife, and died c1360. [Burke's Peerage] | Stewart Of Menteith, Mary (I70147)
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Mary was imprisoned in a cage by Edward I after her first husband's death. | Brus, Mary De (I69868)
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