Smith - Tilton Genealogy
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Person Page 314
| Married Name | Bumpass | |
| Birth* | 3 Jan 1678 | Sandwich, Barnstable Co., Massachusetts |
| Marriage* | 2 Feb 1703 | Plymouth Co., Massachusetts, Principal=James Bumpass1 |
| Family | James Bumpass b. c Jun 1678, d. 27 Sep 1727 | |
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| Married Name | Annis | |
| Birth* | 26 May 1709 | Newbury, Essex Co., Massachusetts |
| Marriage* | 11 Dec 1735 | Newbury, Essex Co., Massachusetts, Principal=Abraham Annis |
| Death* | 26 Sep 1741 | Haverhill, Essex Co., Massachsusetts |
| Family | Abraham Annis b. 4 Mar 1707/8, d. 1787 | |
| Marriage* | Principal=Joseph Hatch1 |
| Family | Joseph Hatch b. c May 1709, d. 9 Mar 1751/52 | |
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| Death* | FROM BET. 15 SEP 1733 TO 20 N | Little Compton, Newport Co., Rhode Island |
| Birth* | 1675 | Marshfield, Plymouth Co., Massachusetts |
| Marriage* | 10 Apr 1739 | Wells, York Co., Maine, Principal=Joseph Hill1 |
| Family | Joseph Hill b. c 1671, d. 5 Apr 1670 | |
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| Father | William SAYRE b. c 1500, d. 1564 | |
| Mother | Alice SQUIRE b. c 1505, d. 1567 | |
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| Father | William SAYRE b. c 1500, d. 1564 | |
| Mother | Alice SQUIRE b. c 1505, d. 1567 | |
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| Birth* | c 1541 | Bedfordshire, England |
| Family | John WHEELER b. c 1539, d. c 1567 | |
| Child | 1. | Thomas WHEELER+ b. c 1563, d. Feb 1632/33 |
| Father | William SAYRE b. c 1500, d. 1564 | |
| Mother | Alice SQUIRE b. c 1505, d. 1567 | |
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| Birth* | c 1500 | Hinwick, Bedfordshire, England |
| Death* | 1564 | Hinwick, Bedfordshire, England |
| Family | Alice SQUIRE b. c 1505, d. 1567 | |
| Children | 1. | William Sayre (living) |
| 2. | Thomas Sayre (living) | |
| 3. | Agnes Sayre (living) | |
| 4. | Alice SAYRE+ b. c 1541 | |
| Father | William SAYRE b. c 1500, d. 1564 | |
| Mother | Alice SQUIRE b. c 1505, d. 1567 | |
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| Married Name | HILLS | |
| Birth* | 1575 | Upminster, Essex Co., England |
| Marriage* | 16 Oct 1596 | Upminster, Essex Co., England, Principal=Thomas * HILLS |
| Family | Thomas * HILLS b. 1570 | |
| Children | 1. | Jane Hills b. 1598 |
| 2. | Robarge Hills b. 12 Oct 1600, d. 1634 | |
| 3. | Elizabeth Hills b. 6 Apr 1601, d. 16 Feb 1669/70 | |
| 4. | Blanche Hills b. 1603 | |
| 5. | Mary Hills b. 1603 | |
| 6. | Thomas Hills b. 1 Jun 1606, d. Nov 1634 | |
| 7. | William * HILLS+ b. c Dec 1608, d. 15 Aug 1683 | |
| 8. | Anthony Hills b. 1610 | |
| Marriage* | Principal=Ann Richards1 |
| Family | Ann Richards b. 1664 | |
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| Note* | Dau. of Arnoldus, Bishop of Metz; m. Pepin of Landen, Mayor of the Palace in Austrasia; mother of Begga. [Ancestral Roots, p. 163] | |
| Birth* | c 591 | Landen, Liege, Belguim |
| Death* | 652 | Landen, Liege, Belgium |
| Family | Pippin 'the Elder' d'AUSTRASIE b. abt 0580/0585, d. 21 Feb 639 | |
| Child | 1. | Beggue LANDEN+ b. c 613, d. bt 693 - 698 |
| Birth* | c 1600 | Utrecht, Holland |
| Death* | c 1625 |
| Father | Henry Prince of SCOTLAND b. Abt 1114/1119, d. 12 Jun 1152 | |
| Mother | Ada de WARENNE b. c 1112, d. 1178 | |
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| Note* | Children: 1. Mathilda (Mechtildis) Van HOLLAND b: abt. 1163 in of Nederland 2. Dirk VII Count Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1165 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid Holland, Nederland 3. Ada Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1163 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid Holland, Nederland 4. Margaretha Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1164 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 5. Willem I Count Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1167 in 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 6. Floris Count Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1169 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 7. Boudewijn Count Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1171 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 8. Robrecht Count Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1173 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 9. Beatrix Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1175 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 10. Elisabeth Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1177 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 11. Hedwig Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1179 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland 12. Agnes Countess Of HOLLAND b: abt. 1181 in of 's-Gravenhage, Zuid-Holland, Nederland | |
| Married Name | Holland | |
| Birth* | c 1146 | Huntingdon, Huntingdonshire, England |
| Marriage* | 28 Aug 1162 | Principal=Floris III 'Crusader' Count Of Holland |
| Death* | a 11 Jan 1204 |
| Family | Floris III 'Crusader' Count Of Holland b. c 1141, d. 1 Aug 1190 | |
| Married Name | de MORMAER | |
| Birth* | c 984 | Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland |
| Marriage* | c 1010 | Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland, Principal=Crinan de MORMAER |
| Family | Crinan de MORMAER b. c 975, d. 1045 | |
| Child | 1. | Duncan I King Of SCOTLAND+ b. bt 1013 - 1024, d. bt 13 Nov 1093 - 1094 |
| Father | Malcolm III 'Ceanmor 'Longneck' \ 'Great head' I King Of SCOTLAND b. c 1031, d. 13 Nov 1093 | |
| Mother | Margaret 'Atheling' Queen of SCOTLAND b. 1045, d. 16 Nov 1093 | |
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| Note* | King of Scotland, 1124-53. Abolished the traditional system of tribal land tenure. Claiming universal ownership of the land, he conveyed huge grants, particularly in central and southern Scotland, to Anglo-Norman and Scottish nobles, who thereby became loyal vassals of the Crown. Instituted various judicial, legislative, and administrative reforms, all based on English models, encouraged the development of commerce with England, and granted extensive privileges to the Scottish burghs. [Funk & Wagnalls] Son of Malcolm III; reigned 1124-53; father of Earl Henry. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, chart] A popular figure and no stranger to the arts of government. He shared his predecessor/brother Alexander I's lively concern with the church and is also likely to keep up the good relations estblished by him with England. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 42] Yorkshire, 22 Aug 1138 -- King David lost to an English force on Cowton Moor near Northallerton. The clash was dubbed the 'Battle of the Standard' since the English displayed the banners of St. Peter of York and other northern saints. David had advanced south in pursuit of his claim to Northumberland, but was forced to retreat to Carlisle, his pride dented. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 42] Carlisle, 22 May 1149 -- King David won a major diplomatic victory at a meeting with his great-nephew Henry Plantagenet. Henry promised he would recognize Scottish control of Cumberland and Northumberland from the Tyne to the Tees, including Newcastle. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 45] Brought up in the English court where his sister was married to Henry I of England. Favoured by his royal bro-in-law, in Scotland, with English support, he had established himself in Lothian and Strathclyde as a virtually independent ruler within the kingdom of his bro., King Alexander I. In England, by marriage and kingly sanction, he had acquired the huge 'Honour of Huntingdon' with broad lands spreading across the counties of Huntingdon and Northamptonshire. Among his tenants-in-chief were a clutch of Anglo-Normans deriving from the same region on the borders of Normandy and Brittany, the Morevilles, the Soulises, the FitzAlans, the Bruces. When David I took over the governance of an unruly kingdom, it was to these he looked to set up military fiefs in sensitive areas each with its castle and Norman lord. Other Anglo-Normans followed in their train: Comyns, Baliols, Sinclairs, Frasers, Mowbrays, Hays. [Robert the Bruce, p. 6] Youngest son of Malcolm, King of Scots; m. Maud, dau/heir of Earl Waldeof in 1116. [Misc. Gen. et Heraldica, p. 337] King of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon in England ju. ux.; canonized 1140 by Pope Clementis; son of Malcolm Canmore III, king of Scotland, and St. Margaret; m. 1113 Maud/Mathilda, Lady of Northampton, Huntingdon, Fotheringhay and Scottesbury in Northampton; father of Henry. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 2916] m. 1113, Maud of Huntingdon. [Ancestral Roots, p. 130] Son of Malcolm III and Margaret of England; d. 1153. [The Irish and Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry, p. 208] King of Scotland, 23 Apr 1124-53; Earl of Huntingdon in England; 2nd husband of Matilda/Maud of Huntingdon (widow of Simon de St. Liz); father of Henry of Huntingdon. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 2] King of Scots, 1124-53; m. Maud, Countess of Huntingdon; father of Henry of Huntingdon. [Ancestral Roots, p. 147-8] King of Scotland, 1124-53; son of Malcolm Ceann Mor; father of Malcolm IV, William I, and David. [Scotland: A Concise History, Genealogy of the Scottish Kings] David, the 9th son of Malcolm III became king on his brother Alexander's death in 1124. He was already the ruler of most of southern Scotland and by a long way the most remarkable of Malcolm and Margaret's children. He ruled Scotland for close to 30 years. They were to be eventful years for Scotland. Like his brothers, David had been brought up in England, where he had received a Norman education and made many Norman friends and where, we learn from the patronizing William of Malmesbury, his manners 'were polished from the rust of Scottish barbarity'. In addition to being King of Scotland, he was in his own right Prince of Cumbria, and by his marriage to a rich Norman heiress, Earl of Northampton and Huntingdon. He was thus one of the most powerful barons in England as well as being the English King's brother-in-law. On returning to Scotland, he proceeded to distribute large estates there among his Anglo-Norman friends and associates, such as de Brus, Walter fitzAlan, a Breton who became his High Steward, de Bailleul, de Comines and many others, who thus became landowners on both sides of the Border. Simultaneously David introduced into the Lowlands of Scotland something more closely resembling a feudal system of ownership, founded on a new, French-speaking, Anglo-Norman aristocracy, who, although they intermarried and eventually merged with the old Celtic aristocracy, remained for a time separate and distinct from the native population, many of whom still spoke Gaelic, save in the south and east where they spoke a primitive from of English. In the Highlands, meanwhile, a different, more patriarchal system prevailed and the King's writ counted for very little, while the Islands and parts of the mainland gave a loose allegiance to Norway. [Scotland: A Concise History, pp. 26-29] David's long reign was for the most part peaceful. In 1135, however, he chose to intervene in the dynastic disputes which developed in England, on the death of King Henry I, between his daughter Maud and her cousin Stephen. These he turned to his own advantage, successfully playing one side off against the other and, though defeated in 1138 at the Battle of the Standard near Northallerton, emerged, thanks to skilful negotiation, with precisely what he wanted, namely the greater part of Northumbria. [Scotland: A Concise History, p. 30] The Scottish royal house, under David I, who began his reign in 1124, his grandson Malcolm IV, William the Lyon, Alexander II and Alexander III who d. in 1286, identified themselves completely with the French-speaking nobility and its feudal institutions. In 1212 Walter of Coventry called the Scots royal house 'Franch in race and manner of life, in speech and in culture'. These five kings all looked to the south and to the southern, foreign ideal. Two of them had English wives, and all, like David, who was Earl of Huntingdon, had English lands and titles. They created a new monarchy, on Anglo-Norman principles, based on four institutions: the spread of feudalism, the reform of the church on the lines William the Conqueror had follwed in England, the plantation of burghs, and the personal royal control of government machinery. David frequently held his court in his castles of Roxburgh and Carlisle (the latter was Scottish until the time of Rufus). [Castles of England, Scotland and Wales, p. 126] Founded Melrose Abbey. [The Plantagenet Ancestry, p. ii] Under King David I in the 12th century land was granted to Norman barons and churchmen who, in return, exercised feudal power in local bailieries. William the Lion organised these bailieries into the Sheriffdom of Ayr to limit the baron's powers, and Ayrshire came into being. Som of the baronies created established family names that are still important in East Ayrshire: the Houison-Craufurds of Craufurdland Castle, the Campbells of Loudoun Castle, the Boyds of Dean Castle, the Mures (Rowallan), and the Cunninghames (Caprington). Other major landowners included religious orders such as the Franciscans and the Dominicans. [Castles in the East Ayrshire Both Stirling and Edinburgh have a magnificent royal abbey of Augustinian canons founded in the vicinity by David I: Cambuskenneth at Stirling, and Holyrood at Edinburgh. [Stirling Castle, p. 2] A village existed at Craigmillar in the 12th century, when David I (1124-53) granted Dunfermline Abbey land and houses there, and in 1253 more land was given to the abbey by the son of the laird of Craigmillar. [Craigmillar Castle, p. 4] 1083-1153. Youngest son of Malcolm Canmore and St Margaret, sister of Edgar Aetheling, king of England. In 1113 his marriage to Matilda, daughter and heiress of Waltheof, 2nd earl of Northumberland brought him the earldom of Huntingdon in England. As king he was a strong supporter of Empress Matilda against King Stephen of England, but was defeated by Stephen's army at the battle of the Standard in 1138. After narrowly escaping capture at Winchester in 1141, David confined himself to the affairs of his Scottish kingdom, where he organized the royal court on Anglo-Norman lines. He founded five bishoprics and many monasteries--and received an excellent press from the chroniclers. Ailred of Rievalux records only one criticism of him--that he allowed his armies too much leeway in battle. David died at Carlisle ans was succeeded by his grandson Malcolm IV. [The Plantagenet Encyclopedia, p. 59] | |
| Birth* | c 1080 | Scotland |
| Marriage* | 1113 | Scotland, Principal=Maud (Matilda) HUNTINGDON1 |
| Burial* | c May 1153 | Dunfermline Abbey, Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland |
| Death* | 24 May 1153 | Carlisle, Cumberlandshire, England |
| Family | Maud (Matilda) HUNTINGDON b. c 1072, d. 23 Apr 1130 | |
| Child | 1. | Henry Prince of SCOTLAND+ b. Abt 1114/1119, d. 12 Jun 1152 |
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| Father | Henry Prince of SCOTLAND b. Abt 1114/1119, d. 12 Jun 1152 | |
| Mother | Ada de WARENNE b. c 1112, d. 1178 | |
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| Note* | Was given in 1185, the Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England by his brother King William. It is possible that he was born here, as his father, Prince Henry, was in possesion of it at the time of his birth., Text: pp. 118-119. Children: 1. Robert De HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1191 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 2. Henry De HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1193 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 3. Margaret HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1194 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 4. Ada HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1198 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 5. Isabelle HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1199 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 6. Matilda HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1203 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England 7. John Le SCOT OF HUNTINGDON b: abt. 1207 in Of Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England | |
| Burial* | Abbey Of Saltre (Sawtrey), Huntingtonshire, England | |
| Birth* | c 1144 | Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England4 |
| Marriage* | 26 Aug 1190 | Scotland, Principal=Maud de MESCHINES4,5 |
| Death* | 17 Jun 1219 | Jedburgh, Roxburghshire, Scotland4 |
| Family | Maud de MESCHINES b. bt 1171 - 1174, d. b 1232 | |
| Marriage* | 26 Aug 1190 | Scotland, Principal=Maud de MESCHINES4,5 |
| Child | 1. | Ada de HUNTINGTON+ b. c 1200, d. a 2 Nov 1241 |
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| Father | Crinan de MORMAER b. c 975, d. 1045 | |
| Mother | Bethoc (Beatrix) Princess Of SCOTLAND b. c 984 | |
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| Note* | His reign, 1057-1093, introduced a new era in Scotland, marked by fundamental transformations of the ancient Celtic culture and institutions. Long an exile among the English, he had acquired a profound interest in their customs and affairs, which was accelerated when he married the English princess, Margaret. Defeated and killed Macbeth to take the throne. Macbeth had assassinated his father, Duncan I to take the throne. [Funk & Wagnalls] Submitted to William I and became his vassal when William reached Abernethy on the Tay in 1072. Edgar Aetheling, who he had been harboring, was forced to leave Scotland for Flanders. [William I and the Norman Conquest] Took advantage of the squabbling between William I's three sons following their father's death as they all struggled to have supreme power. While they were engaged in Normandy, Malcolm invaded the northern counties; and William II hastened to drive him back. The armies met in Lothian; but a peace was concluded. On the return to the south, the English king seized Carlisle, which had been considered an appanage of the crown of Scotland. Here he founded a colony, and built the present castle. Another quarrel was the consequence; and Malcolm, after having met the English king at Gloucester, and resisted his claims, invaded Northumberland. Here the unfortunate king of Scotland, and his son Edward, were killed in a sudden surprise -- some say by treachery. The good Queen Margaret survived her husband and son only four days. [Knight's Popular History of England, Vol. 1, p. 252] Four of his sons were his successors, the three eldest dying without succession. [The Bruces and the Cumyns, p. 506] Son of Duncan I; father of Duncan II, Edgar, Alexander I, David I, and Matilda. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, chart] Grampian, 15 August 1057. King Macbeth of Scots has died of wounds received in a skirmish with his rival, Malcolm Canmore. The two men came into violent conflict at Lumphanan, about 20 miles west of Aberdeen. Malcolm established control of Strathclyde and Lothian after Macbeth's defeat in 1054. Another obstacle in his path to the throne is Lulach, the 25-year-old son of Macbeth's wife, Gruoch and her first husband, Gillacomean. After spending 14 years in exile following his father's death, Malcolm is not to be thwarted in his ambition. He has no intention whatsoever of allowing Lulach to rule in peace. Northumbria, 1061. King Malcolm III raids lands governed by his old ally, Earl Tostig of Northumbria. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 26-7] The cruelties perpetrated by the earls in England during the three decades preceding the Norman Conquest were as revolting as anything that took place later, and according to Simeon of Durham, no military operation of the period -- not even the harrying of the north -- was marked by greater atrocities than those committed by Malcolm III, king of Scotland, in his raids on Teesdale and Cumberland. [The Norman Achievement, p. 72] 1st king of Scots of the Scoto-Saxon line of kings; m. St. Margaret; father of David I, king of Scotland. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 2916] Son of Duncan I; d. 1094; m.1 Ingibiorg and had Duncan II; m.2 Margaret of England and had David, King of Scotland. [The Irish and Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry, p. 208] King of Scotland, 1058-93; crowned at Scone, 17 Mar 1057/8; b.c. 1031, Scotland; d. in battle 13 Nov 1093 while besieging Alnwick Castle; m.2 1068/9, St. Margaret of Scotland and was father of David I the Saint, King of Scotland, and Matilda/Edith of Scotland, Queen of England; m.1 1059, Ingeborge of Holland. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 2, 85] King of Scots 1058-1093, b. 1031, crowned at Scone 17 Mar 1057/8; slain while besieging Alnwick Castle, 13 Nov 1093; m.1 1059, Ingibiorg; m.2 Margaret; father of David I. [Ancestral Roots, p. 147] Ruled 1057-93; father of Duncan II, Edgar, Alexander I, and David I. [Scotland: A Concise History, Genealogy of the Scottish Kings] Known to his contemporaries as Ceann Mor or Bighead, had been brought up in England from the age of 9. In 1069, 12 years after his return to Scotland, he m. as his 2nd wife, the English Princess Margaret, who had taken refuge in Scotland with her bro. Edgar the Atheling after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. [Scotland: A Concise History, p. 23] In 1093, in the course of an attack on Alnwick in Northumberland (intended, it was said, to forestall a Norman invasion), he was killed in an ambush by one of his Norman friends named Morel. [Scotland: A Concise History, p. 25] King Malcolm III, Macum Caen Mor King of Scotland, built Kindrochit Castle between 1057-93. The castle was then named Ceann-drochit meaning Bridge Head. A bridge was built across the River Clunie. It was the only means to cross for several miles. [Kindrochit Castle http://www.darkisle.com/k/kindrochit/kindrochit.html] Malcolm invited all his adherents 'to see us crowned at Scone' (Shakespeare) after he had killed Macbeth. [Scone Palace, p. 1] | |
| Birth* | bt 1013 - 1024 | Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland |
| Marriage* | 1030 | Scotland, Principal=Sybil FITZSIWARD |
| Burial* | c Aug 1040 | Holy Trinity Church, Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland |
| Death* | 14 Aug 1040 | Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland, Killed by McBeth. |
| Death* | bt 13 Nov 1093 - 1094 | Alnwick Castle, Alnwick, Northumberland, England |
| Family | Sybil FITZSIWARD b. c 1017, d. 1070 | |
| Child | 1. | Malcolm III 'Ceanmor 'Longneck' \ 'Great head' I King Of SCOTLAND+ b. c 1031, d. 13 Nov 1093 |
| Father | Malcolm III 'Ceanmor 'Longneck' \ 'Great head' I King Of SCOTLAND b. c 1031, d. 13 Nov 1093 | |
| Mother | Margaret 'Atheling' Queen of SCOTLAND b. 1045, d. 16 Nov 1093 | |
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| Note* | Christened Edith, but adopted the name Matilda upon her marriage to Henry I. It was thought the Norman barons might not respect a queen with a Saxon name. The marriage to Henry represented the union of the Norman & Saxon royal lines. | |
| Married Name | 'Beauclerc' | |
| Birth* | 1 Jun 1079 | Dumfermline, Scotland |
| Marriage* | 11 Nov 1100 | Westminster, England, Principal=Henry I 'Beauclerc' |
| Death* | 1 May 1118 | Westminster, England |
| Burial* | Jun 1118 | Church St Peter, Westminster, England |
| Family | Henry I 'Beauclerc' b. Sep 1068, d. 1 Dec 1135 | |
| Children | 1. | Euphemia of England b. Jul 1101 |
| 2. | Matilda 'the Empress' of England+ b. c Aug 1102, d. 10 Sep 1167 | |
| 3. | William 'the Aetheling' ..?.. b. b 5 Aug 1103, d. 25 Nov 1120 | |
| 4. | Richard of England b. b 1118, d. 25 Nov 1120 | |
| Birth* | c 1151 | Scotland |
| Family | William 'the Lion' of SCOTLAND b. 1143, d. 4 Dec 1214 | |
| Child | 1. | Aufrica de SCOTLAND+ b. 1136 |
| Father | David I 'the Saint' King of SCOTLAND b. c 1080, d. 24 May 1153 | |
| Mother | Maud (Matilda) HUNTINGDON b. c 1072, d. 23 Apr 1130 | |
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| Birth* | Abt 1114/1119 | Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England1 |
| Note | Person Source2 | |
| Note | Person Source3 | |
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| Note* | Earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland. 3rd and only surviving son of David I, King of Scotland. [Ped. of Charlemagne, Vol. III, p. 310] D.v.p. 1152, eldest son of David I, King of Scotland by Lady Matilda. [Magna Charta Barons, p. 260] Son of David I; father of William I, David, and Malcolm IV. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, chart] Earl of Huntingdon; son of David I, and Matilda of Northumberland; m. Ada de Warenne; father of David of Scotland. [Royal Descents, p. 369] Son of David I; father of Malcolm IV, William I, Ada, and David, Earl of Huntingdon. [Robert the Bruce, chart] Created Earl of Northumberland in 1139; d. 1152, leaving 3 sons and 3 daus. [Williams-Wolcott & Related Families, p. 159] b. 1117, son of King David and Queen Maud. 1138 - Prince Henry of Scotland doth homage for the Earldom of Huntingdon abt the abt the age of 16. 1141 - Malcolm, eldest son of Prince Henry, born. 1152 - Prince Henry of Scotland d. at Kelso. [Misc. Gen. et Heraldica, p. 337] Crown Prince of Scots, did homage to King Stephen and received Lordship of Huntingdon; b.c. 1114, son of David I, king of Scotland, and Maud, Lady of Northampton, Huntingdon, Fotgheringhay and Scottesbury; m. Adeline of Warrenne & Surrey; father of David, Earl of Huntingdon. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 2916] Earl Henry of Carlisle, Doncaster, Huntingdon and Northumberland; son of David I and Matilda, Countess of Northampton; father of Malcolm IV, William the Lion, Margaret, Ada and David, Earl of Huntingdon. [William Wallace: Brave Heart, p. 46-7] c1150 - First castle built at Warkworth by Henry, Earl of Northumberland, at a time when the North of England was part of his father's realm. The castle was well placed to defend the southern approaches to the crossing of the River Coquet, at a point where it makes a great loop around the village. In 1157 Henry II of England recovered Northumberland from the Scots, and in the following year gave Warkworth, with its castle, to Roger FitzRichard. [Warkworth Castle, p. 3] Prince of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland; b.c. 1115, Scotland; d. 12 June 1152; bur Kelso, Roxburgh, Scotland; m. 1139, Ada de Warenne. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 2] Son of David I and Maud; father of William the Lion. [Ancestral Roots, p. 148] The first fortifications at Warkworth Castle, apart from what remained of the Saxon stronghold, were erected abt 1140 by Henry, son of David I of Scotland. [Castles of Northumbria: The Coast, p. 30] Another motte and bailey castle was established during the same period at Wark on Tyne, probably by Henry, Earl of Huntingdon. Tynedale was held as a fief by th King of Scotland from the King of England. So Scottish justices held courts at Wark Castle. [Castles, Towers, Peles and Bastles in Northumberland, p. 41] Earl Henry held the earldoms of Northumberland and Cumberland following the peace settlement with King Stephen of England in 1139, and it was the reclaiming of the earldoms by Henry II upon King David's death, which caused bitter and lasting resentment in Anglo-Scottish relations for the next 80 years. [Prudhoe Castle, p. 22] In 1139 King Stephen besieged Ludlow Castle and showed great bravery by rescuing his ally, young Prince Henry of Scotland, from a grappling iron. [Ludlow Castle, p. 2] | |
| Marriage* | 1139 | Principal=Ada de WARENNE1,6 |
| Burial* | c Jun 1152 | Kelso, Roxburgh, Roxburghshire, Scotland |
| Death* | 12 Jun 1152 | Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England1 |
| Family | Ada de WARENNE b. c 1112, d. 1178 | |
| Marriage* | 1139 | Principal=Ada de WARENNE1,6 |
| Children | 1. | Henry Prince of Scotland (living) |
| 2. | Malcolm IV 'the Maiden' of Scotland b. 20 Mar 1141, d. 9 Dec 1165 | |
| 3. | William 'the Lion' of SCOTLAND+ b. 1143, d. 4 Dec 1214 | |
| 4. | David OF SCOTLAND+ b. c 1144, d. 17 Jun 1219 | |
| 5. | Margaret de HUNTINGDON+ b. 1145, d. 1201 | |
| 6. | Ada Princess of Scotland b. c 1146, d. a 11 Jan 1204 | |
| 7. | Matilda Princess of Scotland b. c 1148, d. 1152 | |
| 8. | Marjory Princess of Scotland b. c 1152, d. c 1213 | |
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| Father | Henry Prince of SCOTLAND b. Abt 1114/1119, d. 12 Jun 1152 | |
| Mother | Ada de WARENNE b. c 1112, d. 1178 | |
| Pop-up Pedigree | ||
| Father | Duncan I King Of SCOTLAND b. bt 1013 - 1024, d. bt 13 Nov 1093 - 1094 | |
| Mother | Sybil FITZSIWARD b. c 1017, d. 1070 | |
| Pop-up Pedigree | ||
| Note* | His reign, 1057-1093, introduced a new era in Scotland, marked by fundamental transformations of the ancient Celtic culture and institutions. Long an exile among the English, he had acquired a profound interest in their customs and affairs, which was accelerated when he married the English princess, Margaret. Defeated and killed Macbeth to take the throne. Macbeth had assassinated his father, Duncan I to take the throne. [Funk & Wagnalls] Took advantage of the squabbling between William I's three sons following their father's death as they all struggled to have supreme power. While they were engaged in Normandy, Malcolm invaded the northern counties; and William II hastened to drive him back. The armies met in Lothian; but a peace was concluded. On the return to the south, the English king seized Carlisle, which had been considered an appanage of the crown of Scotland. Here he founded a colony, and built the present castle. Another quarrel was the consequence; and Malcolm, after having met the English king at Gloucester, and resisted his claims, invaded Northumberland. Here the unfortunate king of Scotland, and his son Edward, were killed in a sudden surprise -- some say by treachery. The good Queen Margaret survived her husband and son only four days. [Knight's Popular History of England, Vol. 1, p. 252] Four of his sons were his successors, the three eldest dying without succession. [The Bruces and the Cumyns, p. 506] Son of Duncan I; father of Duncan II, Edgar, Alexander I, David I, and Matilda. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, chart] Grampian, 15 August 1057. King Macbeth of Scots has died of wounds received in a skirmish with his rival, Malcolm Canmore. The two men came into violent conflict at Lumphanan, about 20 miles west of Aberdeen. Malcolm established control of Strathclyde and Lothian after Macbeth's defeat in 1054. Another obstacle in his path to the throne is Lulach, the 25-year-old son of Macbeth's wife, Gruoch and her first husband, Gillacomean. After spending 14 years in exile following his father's death, Malcolm is not to be thwarted in his ambition. He has no intention whatsoever of allowing Lulach to rule in peace. Northumbria, 1061. King Malcolm III raids lands governed by his old ally, Earl Tostig of Northumbria. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 26-7] The cruelties perpetrated by the earls in England during the three decades preceding the Norman Conquest were as revolting as anything that took place later, and according to Simeon of Durham, no military operation of the period -- not even the harrying of the north -- was marked by greater atrocities than those committed by Malcolm III, king of Scotland, in his raids on Teesdale and Cumberland. [The Norman Achievement, p. 72] 1st king of Scots of the Scoto-Saxon line of kings; m. St. Margaret; father of David I, king of Scotland. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 2916] Son of Duncan I; d. 1094; m.1 Ingibiorg and had Duncan II; m.2 Margaret of England and had David, King of Scotland. [The Irish and Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry, p. 208] King of Scotland, 1058-93; crowned at Scone, 17 Mar 1057/8; b.c. 1031, Scotland; d. in battle 13 Nov 1093 while besieging Alnwick Castle; m.2 1068/9, St. Margaret of Scotland and was father of David I the Saint, King of Scotland, and Matilda/Edith of Scotland, Queen of England; m.1 1059, Ingeborge of Holland. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 2, 85] King of Scots 1058-1093, b. 1031, crowned at Scone 17 Mar 1057/8; slain while besieging Alnwick Castle, 13 Nov 1093; m.1 1059, Ingibiorg; m.2 Margaret; father of David I. [Ancestral Roots, p. 147] Ruled 1057-93; father of Duncan II, Edgar, Alexander I, and David I. [Scotland: A Concise History, Genealogy of the Scottish Kings] Known to his contemporaries as Ceann Mor or Bighead, had been brought up in England from the age of 9. In 1069, 12 years after his return to Scotland, he m. as his 2nd wife, the English Princess Margaret, who had taken refuge in Scotland with her bro. Edgar the Atheling after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066. [Scotland: A Concise History, p. 23] In 1093, in the course of an attack on Alnwick in Northumberland (intended, it was said, to forestall a Norman invasion), he was killed in an ambush by one of his Norman friends named Morel. [Scotland: A Concise History, p. 25] King Malcolm III, Macum Caen Mor King of Scotland, built Kindrochit Castle between 1057-93. The castle was then named Ceann-drochit meaning Bridge Head. A bridge was built across the River Clunie. It was the only means to cross for several miles. [Kindrochit Castle http://www.darkisle.com/k/kindrochit/kindrochit.html] Malcolm invited all his adherents 'to see us crowned at Scone' (Shakespeare) after he had killed Macbeth. [Scone Palace, p. 1] | |
| Birth* | c 1031 | Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland |
| Marriage* | bt 17 Mar 1057 - 1058 | Scone, Scotland, Principal=Ingeborg Finnsdatter |
| Marriage* | 1067 | Dunfermline Abbey, Fifeshire, Scotland, Principal=Margaret 'Atheling' Queen of SCOTLAND |
| Burial* | c Nov 1093 | Holy Trinity Church, Dumferline, Fifeshire, Scotland |
| Death* | 13 Nov 1093 | Alnwick, Northumberlandshire, England |
| Family 1 | Margaret 'Atheling' Queen of SCOTLAND b. 1045, d. 16 Nov 1093 | |
| Children | 1. | Editha Atheling of Scotland+ b. 1 Jun 1079, d. 1 May 1118 |
| 2. | David I 'the Saint' King of SCOTLAND+ b. c 1080, d. 24 May 1153 | |
| Family 2 | Ingeborg Finnsdatter b. 1045, d. bt 1064 - 1066 | |
| Father | Henry Prince of SCOTLAND b. Abt 1114/1119, d. 12 Jun 1152 | |
| Mother | Ada de WARENNE b. c 1112, d. 1178 | |
| Pop-up Pedigree | ||
| Note | Person Source1 | |
| Note | Person Source2 | |
| Note | Person Source3 | |
| Note | Person Source4 | |
| Burial* | Church of the Holy Trinity, Dunfermline, Scotland, Burke says Dunfermline Abbey. | |
| Note* | Since he never married, the moniker 'The Maiden' came into fashion. His brother William 'The Lion' succeeded him. | |
| Birth* | 20 Mar 1141 | Barony of Fotheringay, Northamptonshire, England |
| Death* | 9 Dec 1165 | Jedburgh, Roxburghshire, Scotland |
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Compiler:
Margo Tilton
Ada, OK 74820
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