Robert the Bruce, King of Scots

Male - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Robert the Bruce, King of Scots and died.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 6F3DEA656D0A4314A7B61D2AAC97C440B43B

    Family/Spouse: Isabella of Mar. Isabella and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Marjorie Bruce  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1296; died in 1316; was buried in Paisley (Abbey), Renfrewshire, Scotland.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Marjorie Bruce Descendancy chart to this point (1.Robert1) was born about 1296; died in 1316; was buried in Paisley (Abbey), Renfrewshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Marjorie de Brus
    • _UID: E9F63467CE974DE9A2DB46B15DD98F0654AE

    Notes:

    (Research):Marjorie Bruce or Marjorie de Brus (c. 1296 ?  1316 or 1317) was the eldest daughter of Robert the Bruce, King of Scots, and the only child born of his first marriage with Isabella of Mar.

    Marjorie's marriage to Walter, High Steward of Scotland, gave rise to the House of Stewart. Her son was the first Stewart monarch, King Robert II of Scotland.

    Early life
    Her mother, Isabella, was a noblewoman from the Clan Mar. Marjorie was named after her father's mother, Marjorie, Countess of Carrick. Soon after giving birth to Marjorie, at the age of 19, Isabella died. Marjorie's father was at that time the Earl of Carrick.

    According to legend, Marjorie's parents had been very much in love, and Robert the Bruce did not remarry until 1302 (six years after his first wife's death), to a courtier named Elizabeth de Burgh.

    On 27 March 1306, her father was crowned King of Scots at Scone, Perthshire.

    Imprisonment
    Three months after the coronation, in June, 1306, her father was defeated at the Battle of Methven. He sent his wife, two sisters, and Marjorie north with his supporter Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Buchan, but by the end of June they were captured by Uilleam II, Earl of Ross, a Balliol supporter, who handed them over to the English.

    As punishment, Edward I of England sent his hostages to different places in England. Marjorie was sent to the convent at Watton. Her aunt, Christina Bruce, was sent to another convent. Elizabeth de Burgh was placed under house arrest at a manor house in Yorkshire. Elizabeth de Burgh's punishment was lighter than the others. This is due to the fact that Edward I needed the support of her father, the powerful Earl of Ulster. Marjorie's aunt, Mary Bruce, and the Countess of Buchan were imprisoned in wooden cages, exposed to public view, at Roxburgh Castle and Berwick Castle, respectively.

    For the next four years, Elizabeth, Christina, Mary, and Isabella endured solitary confinement. The latter two experienced daily public humiliation. A cage was built for Marjorie, who was around the age of 12, at the Tower of London, but Edward I reconsidered. He instead sent her to the Gilbertine convent in Watton. Christopher Seton, Christina's husband, was executed.

    Edward I died on 7 July 1307. He was succeeded by his son, Edward II, who subsequently held Marjorie captive in a convent for about seven more years. She was freed in October 1314, in exchange for Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford captured after the Battle of Bannockburn.

    Marriage and death
    Upon the liberation of Elizabeth de Burgh and Marjorie from their long captivity in England, Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland, was sent to receive them at the Anglo-Scottish border and conduct them back to the Scottish court. He later married Marjorie. Her dowry included the Barony of Bathgate in West Lothian.

    The traditional story is that two years later, on 2 March 1316, Marjorie was riding in Gallowhill, Paisley, Renfrewshire while heavily pregnant. Her horse was suddenly startled and threw her to the ground. She went into premature labour and her child, Robert II of Scotland, was born. Marjorie died soon afterward at the age of around 20, like her mother, who was roughly the same age when she died in childbirth. However, it is not clear that this traditional story is correct; some accounts indicate that she may have survived into 1317. She may still have died in a riding accident, but this could have taken place after the birth of her son. In fact, one source states that she died in October 1317, after falling from a horse, during a second pregnancy. Following the same October 1317 tradition, the Renfrewshire historian Crawford recorded circa 1710 that local tradition reported she was "riding betwixt Pasly and the Castle of Renfrew, then the principal Residence of the Great Stewart of Scotland, her Husband, she was thrown from her Horse, and by the fall suffered a Dislocation of the Vertebrae of her Neck; she, being pregnant, fell in Labour (of King Robert II.) the child or Faetus, as they report, was a Cesar[ian]: The Operation being by an unskilful Hand, his Eye was touch'd by the Instrument, which afterwards proved incurable, from which he was called King Bleareie [ie. bleery eye]; she died upon the Spot: And on the Fatal Place where this Accident happened, there was erected a Cross, yet standing, called Queen Bleareie's Cross." This tradition appears to conflate the dates and facts from other known sources, however authentic references to the sight affliction occurring in infancy, and the related nickname, are lacking.

    At the junction of Renfrew Road and Dundonald Road in Paisley, a cairn marks the spot called "the Knock", near where Marjorie reputedly fell from her horse. Bruce Road and Marjorie Drive are named in her honour. She is buried at Paisley Abbey.

    Her son succeeded his childless uncle David II of Scotland in 1371 as King Robert II. Her descendants include the House of Stewart (now styled Stuart) and all their successors on the throne of Scotland, England and the United Kingdom.

    Died:
    died in childbirth, Robert Stewart II was child

    Marjorie married Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland in 1315. Walter (son of James Stewart, 5th High Steward of Scotland and Egidia de Burgh) was born about 1296 in Bathgate Castle, Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland; died on 9 Apr 1327 in Bathgate Castle, Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland; was buried in Paisley (Abbey), Renfrewshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. Robert Stewart, Robert II of Scotland  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Mar 1316; died on 19 Apr 1390 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; was buried in Scone Abbey, Scone, Perhshire, Scotland.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  Robert Stewart, Robert II of Scotland Descendancy chart to this point (2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born on 2 Mar 1316; died on 19 Apr 1390 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; was buried in Scone Abbey, Scone, Perhshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 1F51087A9DAF4C769A549D4F9B32204A1131

    Notes:

    (Research):Robert II (2 March 1316 ?  19 April 1390) was King of Scots from 1371 to his death in 1390. The son of Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland, and Marjorie, daughter of King Robert the Bruce, he was the first monarch of the House of Stewart. Upon the death of his uncle David II, Robert succeeded to the throne.

    Edward Bruce, younger brother of Robert the Bruce, was named heir presumptive but Edward had no children when he was killed in the Battle of Faughart on 14 October 1318. Marjorie Bruce had died probably in 1317 in a riding accident and Parliament decreed her infant son, Robert Stewart, as heir presumptive, but this lapsed on 5 March 1324 on the birth of a son, David, to King Robert and his second wife, Elizabeth de Burgh. Robert Stewart became High Steward of Scotland on his father's death on 9 April 1327, and in the same year Parliament confirmed the young Steward as heir should David die childless. In 1329 King Robert I died and his five-year-old son succeeded to the throne as David II under the guardianship of Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray.

    Edward Balliol, son of King John Balliol ?  assisted by the English and those Scottish nobles who Robert I had disinherited ?  invaded Scotland inflicting heavy defeats on the Bruce party on 11 August 1332 at Dupplin Moor and Halidon Hill on 19 July 1333. Robert, who had fought at Halidon, joined his uncle David in refuge in Dumbarton Castle. David escaped to France in 1334 and Parliament, still functioning, appointed Robert and John Randolph, 3rd Earl of Moray, as joint guardians of the kingdom. The English captured Randolph in July 1335 and in the same year, Robert submitted to Balliol bringing about the removal of his guardianship. His former position was reinstated in 1338 until David returned from France in June 1341. Hostilities continued and Robert was with David at the Neville's Cross on 17 October 1346 and either escaped or fled the field. David, however, was captured and remained a prisoner until he was ransomed in October 1357.

    Robert married Elizabeth Mure around 1348, legitimising their four sons and five daughters. His subsequent marriage to Euphemia de Ross in 1355 produced two sons and two surviving daughters. Robert rebelled against King David in 1363 but submitted to him following a threat to his right of succession. David died in 1371 and Robert succeeded him at the age of fifty-five. The border magnates continued to attack English-held zones in southern Scotland and by 1384, the Scots had re-taken most of the occupied lands. Robert ensured that Scotland was included in the Anglo-French truce of 1384 and that was a factor in the coup in November when he lost control of the country first to his eldest son, John, and then from 1388 to John's younger brother, Robert. Robert II died in Dundonald Castle in 1390 and was buried at Scone Abbey.

    Heir presumptive

    Robert Stewart, born in 1316, was the only child of King Robert I's daughter Marjorie Bruce, who died either in childbirth or shortly afterwards, and Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland. Robert had the upbringing of a Gaelic noble on the Stewart lands in Bute, Clydeside, and in Renfrew. In 1315, parliament revoked Marjorie Bruce's right as heir to her father in favour of her uncle, Edward Bruce. Edward was killed at the Battle of Faughart, near Dundalk on 14 October 1318, resulting in a hastily arranged Parliament in December to enact a new tailzie naming Marjorie's son, Robert, as heir should the king die without a successor. The birth of a son, afterwards David II, to King Robert on 5 March 1324 cancelled Robert Stewart's position as heir presumptive, but a Parliament at Cambuskenneth in July 1326 restored him in the line of succession should David die without an heir. This reinstatement of his status was accompanied by the gift of lands in Argyll, Roxburghshire, and the Lothians.

    High Steward of Scotland
    Renewed war for independence

    The first war of independence began in the reign of King John Balliol. His short reign was bedevilled by Edward I's insistence on his overlordship of Scotland. The Scottish leadership concluded that only war could release the country from the English king's continued weakening of Balliol's sovereignty and so finalised a treaty of reciprocal assistance with France in October 1295. The Scots forayed into England in March 1296 ?  this incursion together with the French treaty angered the English king and provoked an invasion of Scotland taking Berwick on 30 March before defeating the Scots army at Dunbar on 27 April. John Balliol submitted to Edward and resigned the throne to him before being sent to London as a prisoner. Despite this, resistance to the English led by William Wallace and Andrew Moray had emerged in the name of King John Balliol. On their deaths, Robert the Bruce continued to resist the English and eventually succeeded in defeating the forces of Edward II of England and gained the Scottish throne for himself.

    David Bruce, aged five, became king on 7 June 1329 after the death of his father Robert. Walter the Steward had died earlier on 9 April 1327, and the orphaned eleven-year-old Robert was placed under the guardianship of his uncle, Sir James Stewart of Durrisdeer, who along with Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, and William Lindsey, Archdeacon of St Andrews were appointed as joint guardians of the kingdom. David's accession kindled the second independence war which threatened Robert's position as heir. In 1332 Edward Balliol, son of the deposed John Balliol, spearheaded an attack on the Bruce sovereignty with the tacit support of King Edward III of England and the explicit endorsement of "the disinherited". Edward Balliol's forces delivered heavy defeats on the Bruce supporters at Dupplin Moor on 11 August 1332 and again at Halidon Hill on 19 July 1333, at which the 17-year-old Robert participated. Robert's estates were overrun by Balliol, who granted them to David Strathbogie, titular earl of Atholl, but Robert evaded capture and gained protection at Dumbarton Castle where King David was also taking refuge. Very few other strongholds remained in Scottish hands in the winter of 1333 ?  only the castles of Kildrummy (held by Christina Bruce, elder sister of Robert I and wife of Andrew Murray of Bothwell), Loch Leven, Loch Doon, and Urquhart held out against Balliol forces.

    n May 1334, the situation looked dire for the house of Bruce and David II gained safety in France. Robert set about winning back his lands in the west of Scotland. Strathbogie came over to the Bruce interest after disagreements with his fellow "disinherited" but his fierce opposition to Randolph came to a head at a Parliament held at Dairsie Castle in early 1335 when Strathbogie received the support of Robert. Strathbogie once again changed sides submitting to the English king in August and was made Warden of Scotland. Robert likely submitted to Edward in September 1335 relinquishing the guardianship by early December.

    The Bruce resistance to Balliol may have been verging on collapse in 1335 but a turn-round in its fortunes began with the appearance of Sir Andrew Moray of Bothwell as a potent war leader at the Battle of Culblean. Moray had been captured in 1332, ransomed himself in 1334, and immediately sped north to lay siege to Dundarg Castle in Buchan held by Sir Henry de Beaumont, with the castle falling on 23 December 1334. Moray was appointed guardian at Dunfermline during the winter of 1335? 1336 while besieging Cupar Castle in Fife. He died at his castle in Avoch in 1338 and Robert resumed the guardianship. Murray's campaign put an end to any chance of Edward III having full lasting control over the south of Scotland and Edward's failure in the six-month siege of Dunbar Castle confirmed this. Balliol lost many of his major supporters to the Bruce side and the main English garrisons began to fall to the Scots ?  Cupar in the spring or summer of 1339, Perth taken by the combined armies of Sir William Douglas, Lord of Liddesdale, Robert Stewart and Maurice Murray of Drumsargard in June 1339. Edinburgh was taken by stratagem by William Douglas of Liddesdale in April 1341.

    John Randolph was released from English custody in a prisoner exchange in 1341 and visited David II in Normandy before returning to Scotland. Just as Randolph was a favourite of the king, David II mistrusted Robert Stewart with his powerful positions of heir presumptive and guardian of Scotland. At the beginning of June 1341, the kingdom appeared sufficiently stable to allow the king to return to a land where his nobles while fighting for the Bruce cause, had considerably increased their own power bases. On 17 October 1346, Robert accompanied David into battle at Neville's Cross, where many Scottish nobles including Randolph, died ?  David II was wounded and captured while Robert and Patrick, earl of March had apparently fled the field.

    King David's captivity

    With the king now imprisoned in England and Randolph dead, the guardianship once again fell to Robert. In 1347 he took the important step of ensuring the legitimation of his four sons, John, Earl of Carrick (the future King Robert III), Walter, Lord of Fife (d. 1362), Robert (the future Duke of Albany) and Alexander, Lord of Badenoch (and future Earl of Buchan), and six daughters by petitioning Pope Clement VI to allow a canon law marriage to Elizabeth Mure.

    Even though an English prisoner, David retained influence in Scotland and Robert had his guardianship removed by parliament and given jointly to the earls of Mar and Ross and the lord of Douglas ?  this did not last and Robert was once again appointed guardian by the Parliament of February 1352. The paroled David attended this Parliament to present to Robert and the members of the Three Estates the conditions for his release. These contained no ransom demand but required the Scots to name the English prince John of Gaunt as heir presumptive. The Council rejected these terms, with Robert opposing a proposal that threatened his right of succession. The king had no option but to return to captivity ?  the English chronicler Henry Knighton wrote of the event:

    ... the Scots refused to have their King unless he entirely renounced the influence of the English, and similarly refused to submit themselves to them. And they warned him that they would neither ransom him nor allow him to be ransomed unless he pardoned them for all their acts and injuries that they had done, and all the offences that they had committed during the time of captivity, and he should give them security for that, or otherwise, they threatened to choose another king to rule them.

    By 1354 ongoing negotiations for the king's release reached the stage where a proposal of a straight ransom payment of 90,000 marks to be repaid over nine years, guaranteed by the provision of 20 high-ranking hostages, was agreed upon ?  this understanding was destroyed by Robert when he bound the Scots to a French action against the English in 1355. The capture of Berwick together with the presence of the French on English soil jolted Edward III into moving against the Scots ?  in January 1356 Edward led his forces into the south-east of Scotland and burned Edinburgh and Haddington and much of the Lothians in a campaign that became known as the "Burnt Candlemas". After Edward's victory over France in September, the Scots resumed negotiations for David's release ending in October 1357 with the Treaty of Berwick. Its terms were that in turn for David's freedom, a ransom of 100,000 marks would be paid in annual instalments over ten years ?  only the first two payments were completed initially and nothing further until 1366. This failure to honour the conditions of the Berwick treaty allowed Edward to continue to press for a Plantagenet successor to David ?  terms that were rejected by the Scottish Council and probably by Robert himself. This may have been the cause of a brief rebellion in 1363 by Robert and the earls of Douglas and March. Later French inducements could not bring David to their aid and the country remained at peace with England during his reign.

    King of Scots
    Consolidation of Stewart power and personal rule
    David died childless on 22 February 1371 and was succeeded by Robert II. David was buried at Holyrood Abbey almost immediately but an armed protest by William, Earl of Douglas delayed Robert II's coronation until 26 March 1371. The reasons for the incident remain unclear but may have involved a dispute regarding Robert's right of succession, or may have been directed against George Dunbar, Earl of March (also known as Earl of Dunbar) and the southern justiciar, Robert Erskine. It was resolved by Robert giving his daughter Isabella in marriage to Douglas's son, James and with Douglas replacing Erskine as justiciar south of the Forth. Robert's accession did affect some others who held offices from David II. In particular, George Dunbar's brother John Dunbar, the Lord of Fife who lost his claim on Fife and Sir Robert Erskine's son, Sir Thomas Erskine who lost control of Edinburgh Castle.

    The Stewarts greatly increased their holdings in the west, in Atholl, and in the far north: the earldoms of Fife and Menteith went to Robert's second surviving son, Robert; the earldoms of Buchan and Ross (along with the lordship of Badenoch) to his fourth son, Alexander; and the earldoms of Strathearn and Caithness to the eldest son of his second marriage, David. King Robert's sons-in-law were John MacDonald, Lord of the Isles, John Dunbar, Earl of Moray and James who would become the 2nd Earl of Douglas. Robert's sons John, Earl of Carrick, the king's heir, and Robert, Earl of Fife, were made keepers of the castles of Edinburgh and Stirling respectively, while Alexander, Lord of Badenoch and Ross, and afterwards Earl of Buchan, became the king's justiciar and lieutenant in the north of the kingdom. This build-up of the Stewart family power did not appear to cause resentment among the senior magnates ?  the king generally did not threaten their territories or local rule and where titles were transferred to his sons the individuals affected were usually very well rewarded. This style of kingship was very different from his predecessor's ?  David tried to dominate his nobles whereas Robert's strategy was to delegate authority to his powerful sons and earls and this generally worked for the first decade of his reign. Robert was to have influence over eight of the fifteen earldoms either through his sons directly or by strategic marriages of his daughters to powerful lords.

    In 1373, Robert ensured the future security of the Stewart dynasty by having Parliament pass entailments regarding the succession. At this time, none of his sons had heirs so it became necessary for a system to be devised to define precisely the circumstances in which each of his sons could inherit the crown? none of this would take precedence over normal succession by primogeniture. By 1375, the king had commissioned John Barbour to write the poem, The Brus, a history intended to bolster the public image of the Stewarts as the genuine heirs of Robert I. It described the patriotic acts of both Sir James, the Black Douglas and Walter the Steward, the king's father, in their support of Bruce. Robert's rule during the 1370s saw the country's finances stabilised and greatly improved due in part to the flourishing wool trade, reduced calls on the public purse and the halting of his predecessor's ransom money on the death of Edward III of England. Robert ?  unlike David II whose kingship was predominantly Lothian and therefore lowland based ?  did not restrict his attention to one sector of his kingdom but frequently visited the more remote areas of the north and west among his Gaelic lords.

    Robert ruled over a country that continued to have English enclaves within its borders and Scots who gave their allegiance to the king of England ?  the important castles of Berwick, Jedburgh, Lochmaben and Roxburgh had English garrisons and controlled southern Berwickshire, Teviotdale and large areas in Annandale and Tweeddale. In June 1371, Robert agreed to a defensive treaty with the French, and although there were no outright hostilities during 1372, the English garrisons were reinforced and placed under an increased state of vigilance. Attacks on the English-held zones, with the near-certain backing of Robert, began in 1373 and accelerated in the years 1375? 77. This indicated that a central decision had probably been taken for the escalation of conflict rather than the previous small-scale marauding attacks by the border barons. In 1376, the Earl of March successfully recovered Annandale, but then found himself constrained by the Bruges Anglo-French truce

    In his dealings with Edward III, Robert blamed his border magnates for the escalating attacks on the English zones; regardless, the Scots retained the recaptured lands, often portioned out among minor lords, to secure their interest in preventing English re-possession. Despite Robert's further condemnations of his border lords, all the signs were that Robert backed the growing successful Scottish militancy following Edward III's death in 1377. In a charter dated 25 July 1378 the king decreed that Coldingham Priory would no longer be a daughter house of the English Durham Priory but was to be attached to Dunfermline Abbey. In early February the Scots ?  apparently unaware of the conclusion of an Anglo-French truce on 26 January 1384 that included the Scots in the cease-fire ?  conducted an all-out attack on the English zones winning back Lochmaben Castle and Teviotdale. John of Gaunt led a reciprocal English attack that took him as far as Edinburgh, where the burgesses bribed him to leave the town unharmed. Haddington, however, was destroyed. Carrick and James, Earl of Douglas (his father William had died in April), wanted a retaliatory strike for the Gaunt raid. Robert may have concluded that as the French had reneged on a previous agreement to send assistance in 1383 and then entered into a truce with England, any military action would have been met with retaliation and exclusion from the forthcoming Boulogne peace talks. On 2 June 1384, Robert resolved to send Walter Wardlaw, Bishop of Glasgow to the Anglo-French peace talks, yet Carrick ignored this and allowed raids into the north of England to take place. Despite this, by 26 July, the Scots were part of the truce that would expire in October. Robert called a Council in September probably to decide how to proceed when the truce concluded.

    Loss of authority and death

    Robert's son, John, Earl of Carrick, had become the foremost Stewart magnate south of the Forth just as Alexander, Earl of Buchan was in the north. Alexander's activities and methods of royal administration, enforced by Gaelic mercenaries, drew criticism from northern earls and bishops and his younger half-brother David, Earl of Strathearn. These complaints damaged the king's standing within the Council leading to criticism of his ability to curb Buchan's activities. Robert's differences with the Carrick affinity regarding the conduct of the war and his continued failure or unwillingness to deal with Buchan in the north led to the political convulsion of November 1384 when the Council removed the king's authority to govern and appointed Carrick as lieutenant of the kingdom ?  a coup d'?etat had taken place. With Robert sidelined, there was now no impediment in the way of war. In June 1385, a force of 1200 French soldiers joined the Scots in a campaign that involved the Earl of Douglas and two of Robert's sons, John, Earl of Carrick and Robert, Earl of Fife. The skirmishes saw small gains but a quarrel between the French and Scottish commanders saw the abandonment of an attack on the important castle of Roxburgh.

    he victory of the Scots over the English at the Battle of Otterburn in Northumberland in August 1388 set in motion Carrick's fall from power. One of the Scottish casualties was Carrick's close ally James, Earl of Douglas. Douglas died without an heir, which led to various claims upon the title and estate ?  Carrick backed Malcolm Drummond, the husband of Douglas's sister, while Fife sided with the successful appellant, Sir Archibald Douglas, Earl of Wigtown and Lord of Galloway who possessed an entail on the Douglas estates. Fife, now with his powerful Douglas ally, and those who supported the king ensured a countercoup at the December Council meeting when the guardianship of Scotland passed from Carrick (who had recently been badly injured from a horse-kick) to Fife. Many had also approved of Fife's intention to properly resolve the situation of lawlessness in the north and in particular the activities of his younger brother, Buchan. Fife relieved Buchan of his offices of lieutenant of the north and justiciar north of the Forth. The latter role was given to Fife's son, Murdoch Stewart. Robert II toured the northeast in late January 1390, perhaps to reinforce the changing political scene in the north following Buchan's removal from authority. In March, Robert returned to Dundonald Castle in Ayrshire where he died on 19 April and was buried at Scone on 25 April.


    Marriages and issue
    In 1336, he first married Elizabeth Mure (died 1355), daughter of Sir Adam Mure of Rowallan. The marriage was criticised for being uncanonical, so he remarried her in 1349 after receiving a papal dispensation in 1347.

    From this union, ten children reached adulthood:

    John (died 1406), who became King of Scotland as Robert III, married Anabella Drummond;
    Walter (died in 1362), husband of Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Fife;
    Robert, Earl of Fife and from 1398 Duke of Albany (died 1420), married in 1361 Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith, and his second wife in 1381 Muriella Keith (died in 1449);
    Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan (died 1405), nicknamed "the Wolf of Badenoch", married in 1382 to Euphemia of Ross;
    Margaret, married John of Islay, Lord of the Isles;
    Marjorie, married John Dunbar, Earl of Moray, then Sir Alexander Keith;
    Elizabeth, married Thomas de la Hay, Lord High Constable of Scotland;
    Isabel (died 1410), married James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas (died in 1388), followed in 1389 by John Edmonstone of that Ilk;
    Johanna (Jean), married Sir John Keith (died 1375), then John Lyon, Lord of Glamis (died 1383) and finally, Sir James Sandilands;
    Katherine, married Sir Robert Logan of Grugar and Restalrig, Lord High Admiral of Scotland.
    In 1355, Robert married his second wife Euphemia de Ross (died 1387), daughter of Hugh, Earl of Ross. They had four children:

    David Stewart, Earl of Strathearn, born about 1356 and died in 1389;
    Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, born about 1360, was beheaded at Edinburgh in 1437 for being involved in the assassination of King James I;
    Elizabeth, who married in 1380 David Lindsay, 1st Earl of Crawford;
    Egidia, who married in 1387 William Douglas of Nithsdale.
    King Robert II also had many illegitimate children with several mistresses, including four sons with his favourite Mariota de Cardeny, daughter of Sir John Cardeny, and widow of Alexander Mac Naugthon:

    Alexander Stewart, of Inverlunan;
    Sir John Stewart, of Cardeny;
    James Stewart, of Abernethy and Kinfauna;
    Walter Stewart.
    By Moira Leitch (according to tradition):

    Sir John Stewart, Sheriff of Bute (1360 ?  1445/9), ancestor of the Marquesses of Bute
    Other issue born by unknown women:

    John Stewart, Lord of Burley (killed 1425);
    Alexander Stewart, canon of Glasgow;
    Sir Alexander Stewart of Inverlunan;
    Thomas Stewart, Archdeacon of St Andrews, Dean of Dunkeld;
    James Stewart of Kinfauns;
    Walter Stewart;
    Maria or Mary Stewart, wife of Sir John de Danielstoun and mother of Sir Robert de Danielstoun of that Ilk (ancestor of Cunningham of Kilmaurs, and Maxwell of Calderwood).

    Birth:
    Robert II (2 March 1316 ? 19 April 1390) was King of Scots from 1371 to his death in 1390. The son of Walter Stewart, 6th High Steward of Scotland, and Marjorie, daughter of King Robert the Bruce, he was the first monarch of the House of Stewart. Upon the death of his uncle David II, Robert succeeded to the throne.

    Died:
    Dundonald Castle

    Dundonald Castle is situated on a hill overlooking the village of Dundonald, between Kilmarnock and Troon in South Ayrshire, Scotland. Dundonald Castle is a fortified tower house built for Robert II on his accession to the throne of Scotland in 1371 and it was used as a royal residence by Robert II and his son Robert III.

    Robert married Elizabeth Mure about 1348. Elizabeth (daughter of Sir Adam Mure and Joanna Danzielstour) was born in 1320 in Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland; died in 1354 in House of Stewart, Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland; was buried in Paisley Abbey, Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 4. Walter Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl  Descendancy chart to this point died in 1362; was buried in Church of the Friars Preaches of St Laurence, Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
    2. 5. John Stewart, "Robert" Stewart III of Scotland  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1337 in Scone, Perthshire, Scotland; died in 1406 in Rothesay, Argyll and Bute, Scotland; was buried in Paisley (Abbey), Renfrewshire, Scotland.
    3. 6. Robert Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1340 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 3 Sep 1420 in Stirling Castle, Scotland; was buried in Dunfermline Fife, Scotland.
    4. 7. Margaret Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1342; died in 1417.
    5. 8. Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, "The Wolf of Badenoch"  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Jun 1343 in Highlands, Scotland; died on 24 Jul 1394 in Highlands, Scotland.
    6. 9. Marjorie Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 6 May 1417 in Moray, Scotland.
    7. 10. Isabella Eupheme Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 26 Oct 1410 in Douglas, South Lanark, Scotland; was buried in Saint Bride's Cemetery, Douglas, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.
    8. 11. Elizabeth Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died in 1389 in Errol, Perthshire, Scotland; was buried in Errol Parish Church Graveyard, Errol, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.
    9. 12. Jean Stewart  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1350 in Scotland; died in 1404 in Scotland; was buried in Scone Abbey, Scone, Perhshire, Scotland.
    10. 13. David Stewart, 1st Earl of Caithness and Strathearn  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1357 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland; died about 1389 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland.
    11. 14. David Stewart, Earl Palatine of Strathern  Descendancy chart to this point and died.

    Robert married Euphemia de Ross, Queen of Scots on 2 May 1355. Euphemia (daughter of Hugh de Ross, Earl of Ross and Margaret de Graham) was born in 1329; died in 1387. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Elizabeth Stewart, Princess, Countess of Crawford  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Jan 1362 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died in Feb 1446 in Crawford Castle, Crawford, South Lanarkshire, Scotland; was buried in The Howff, Dundee, Dundee City, Scotland.


Generation: 4

  1. 4.  Walter Stewart, 1st Earl of Atholl Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) died in 1362; was buried in Church of the Friars Preaches of St Laurence, Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: A44642586F9F4D55847C30919B9B67EF81E9

    Walter married Isabella, Countess of Fife about 1361. Isabella and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  John Stewart, "Robert" Stewart III of Scotland Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1337 in Scone, Perthshire, Scotland; died in 1406 in Rothesay, Argyll and Bute, Scotland; was buried in Paisley (Abbey), Renfrewshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Robert Stewart
    • _UID: EDCF33A980254CF2A3000CE05F97848509EF


  3. 6.  Robert Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1340 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 3 Sep 1420 in Stirling Castle, Scotland; was buried in Dunfermline Fife, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: A6A35672C99A43E69D5CE626E451198272EE

    Robert married Margaret Graham, Countess of Menteith in 1361. Margaret was born in 1334; died in 1380. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Margaret Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1342; died in 1417.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 97FF3A6C641846FF966A29E88919D9921B3B

    Family/Spouse: John MacDonald, Lord of the Isles. John (son of Angus Og MacDonald, Lord of the Isles) was born in 1325 in Argyll and Bute, Scotland; died in 1386 in Scotland; was buried in St Oran's Chapel Cemetery - The Rilig Ourain, Isle of Iona, Argyll and Bute, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 8.  Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, "The Wolf of Badenoch" Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born on 14 Jun 1343 in Highlands, Scotland; died on 24 Jul 1394 in Highlands, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 9934274543FF487CBACA653C3570160A29BE


  6. 9.  Marjorie Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 6 May 1417 in Moray, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Marjory Stuart
    • _UID: 32B1BFDE2D164E63B33272F9F0293B99B195

    Marjorie married John Dunbar, 1st Earl of Moray between 11 Jul 1370 and 1384 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland. John was born in 1340 in Stranith, Dumfriesshire, Scotland; died on 15 Feb 1391 in Cumnocke, East Ayrshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 10.  Isabella Eupheme Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 26 Oct 1410 in Douglas, South Lanark, Scotland; was buried in Saint Bride's Cemetery, Douglas, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 79430B157FD342E6BAE93633BCEAE3FDE8BA

    Family/Spouse: Sir James Douglas, of Dalkeith. James (son of William Douglas) was born in 1358 in Douglas, South Lanark, Scotland; died on 19 Aug 1388 in Otterburn, Northumberland Unitary Authority, Northumberland, England; was buried in Melrose Abbey, Scottish Borders (Roxburgh or Melrose), Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 11.  Elizabeth Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1348 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died in 1389 in Errol, Perthshire, Scotland; was buried in Errol Parish Church Graveyard, Errol, Perth and Kinross, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: E35C40F46F2145E98580C7CB816C0914D2B1

    Family/Spouse: Sir Thomas de la Hay, 7th Lord of Erroll, Lord High Constable of Scotland. Thomas was born in 1342 in Errol, Perthshire, Scotland; died on 14 Jul 1406 in Aberdeenshire, Scotland; was buried in Errol Parish Church Graveyard, Errol, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 12.  Jean Stewart Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in 1350 in Scotland; died in 1404 in Scotland; was buried in Scone Abbey, Scone, Perhshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: F0E85119DCF442E8B593852E43A053F25F08

    Jean married Sir John Keith on 17 Jan 1374. John was born in 1352; died in 1374. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Jean married John Lyons, 6th of Glamis, King's secretary, Chamberlain of Scotland and Keeper of the Privy Seal in 1376. John was born in 1340 in Glamis, Agnus, Scotland; died on 4 Nov 1382 in Menmuir, Angus, Scotland; was buried in Scone Abbey, Scone, Perhshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Jean married Sir James Sandilands, of Calder in Nov 1384. James was born in 1346 in West Calder, West Lothian, Scotland; died in 1397 in West Calder, West Lothian, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 13.  David Stewart, 1st Earl of Caithness and Strathearn Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born about 1357 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland; died about 1389 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: FD7EC29234624CDA824C00A1BBA53BDD72F7


  11. 14.  David Stewart, Earl Palatine of Strathern Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) and died.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 54BB9140EA0C47C889A5D245A958E0A3AECC

    Family/Spouse: Christine Lindsay, of Glenesk. Christine (daughter of Sir Alexander Lindsay, Lordof Glenesk, Knight Banneret and Catherine Stirling) was born in 1356; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Family/Spouse: Eupheme Lindsay, of Glenesk. Eupheme (daughter of Sir Alexander Lindsay, Lordof Glenesk, Knight Banneret and Marjory Stewart) was born in 1360; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  12. 15.  Elizabeth Stewart, Princess, Countess of Crawford Descendancy chart to this point (3.Robert3, 2.Marjorie2, 1.Robert1) was born in Jan 1362 in Dundonald Castle, South Ayrshire, Scotland; died in Feb 1446 in Crawford Castle, Crawford, South Lanarkshire, Scotland; was buried in The Howff, Dundee, Dundee City, Scotland.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: AB48B41C991F4AEA86BC373C8BD4DA6C095D

    Notes:

    (Research):Elizabeth Stewart, Princess of Scotland was the daughter of Robert II of Scotland and Euphemia de Ross. She was born between 1356 and 1370, well after her parents' marriage on 2 May 1355. Her brothers were David Stewart, Earl of Strathearn and Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, and her half-brother was Robert III of Scotland.


    She married David Lindsay on 22 February 1375. Her dowry was the barony of Strathnairn in Inverness-shire. In 1398, her father granted Lindsay the title of Earl of Crawford. They had seven, possibly eight, children:

    Gerard Lindsay (d. before 1421)
    Ingram Lindsay, Bishop of Aberdeen (d. 1458)
    Marjorie Lindsay, married Sir William Douglas. They were parents of Catherine Douglas.
    Alexander Lindsay, 2nd Earl of Crawford (c. 1387? 1438)
    David Lindsay, Lord of Newdosk (1407? ?); he later became a priest
    Elizabeth Lindsay; she married Sir Robert Keith.
    Elizabeth Lindsay (1407? ?); married Robert Erskine, 1st Lord Erskine; she may have been confused with her sister of the same name, and it is possible that they were one and the same person.
    Isabella Lindsay (1407? ?), married Sir John Maxwell of Pollok, and had issue.
    They presumably lived at Crawford Castle.

    Family/Spouse: Sir Robert Logan, of Restalrig, Edinburgh, Admiral of Scotland. Robert was born in 1371 in Scotland; died in 1439 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Elizabeth married Sir David Lindsay, of Glenesk, 1st Earl of Crawford, Knight Banneret, 10th Baron of Crawford on 22 Feb 1375. David (son of Sir Alexander Lindsay, Lordof Glenesk, Knight Banneret and Catherine Stirling) was born in 1359 in Scotland; died in 1407 in Finhaven (Finavon) Castle, Forfar, Angus, Scotland; was buried in Church of the Greyfriars, Dundee, Aberdeen, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Alexander Lindsay, 2nd Earl of Crawford  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1387; died in 1438-1439.




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