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Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick

Donnchadh (Scottish Gaelic pronunciation: [ˈt̪ɔn̪ˠɔxəɣ]; Latin: Duncanus; English: Duncan) was a Gall-Gaidhil prince and Scottish magnate in what is now south-western Scotland, whose career stretched from the last quarter of the 12th century until his death in 1250. His father, Gille-Brighde of Galloway, and his uncle, Uhtred of Galloway, were the two rival sons of Fergus, Prince or Lord of Galloway. As a result of Gille-Brighde's conflict with Uhtred and the Scottish monarch William the Lion, Donnchadh became a hostage of King Henry II of England. He probably remained in England for almost a decade before returning north on the death of his father. Although denied succession to all the lands of Galloway, he was granted lordship over Carrick in the north.

Donnchadh (Duncan)
Mormaer or Earl of Carrick
A 19th-century reproduction of an impression of Donnchadh's seal, surviving from a Melrose charter, depicting [according to antiquarian Henry Laing] a "winged dragon";[1] the inscription reads SIGILLUM DUNCANI FILII GILLEBER.. ("The seal of Donnchadh son of Gille-Brighde")
Reignc. 1186–1250
PredecessorGille-Brighde mac Fergusa
SuccessorNiall mac Donnchaidh
Bornmid-to-late 12th century
location unknown, probably Galloway or Carrick
Died13 June 1250 (1250-06-14)
unknown
Burial
unknown
SpouseAvelina, daughter of Alan fitz Walter
Modern GaelicDonnchadh mac Ghille-Brìghde
LatinDon[n]ecanus or Dun[e]canus filius Gilleberti
Norman FrenchDunecan fitz Gilbert
FatherGille-Brighde of Galloway
Motheruncertain, but perhaps a daughter or sister of Donnchadh II, Earl of Fife

Allied to John de Courcy, Donnchadh fought battles in Ireland and acquired land there that he subsequently lost. A patron of religious houses, particularly Melrose Abbey and North Berwick priory nunnery, he attempted to establish a monastery in his own territory, at Crossraguel. He married the daughter of Alan fitz Walter, a leading member of the family later known as the House of Stewart—future monarchs of Scotland and England. Donnchadh was the first mormaer or earl of Carrick, a region he ruled for more than six decades, making him one of the longest serving magnates in medieval Scotland. His descendants include the Bruce and Stewart Kings of Scotland, and probably the Campbell Dukes of Argyll.

Sources edit

Donnchadh's career is not well documented in the surviving sources. Charters provide a little information about some of his activities, but overall their usefulness is limited; this is because no charter-collections (called cartularies) from the Gaelic south-west have survived the Middle Ages, and the only surviving charters relevant to Donnchadh's career come from the heavily Normanised English-speaking area to the east.[2] Principally, the relevant charters record his acts of patronage towards religious houses, but incidental details mentioned in the body of these texts and the witness lists subscribed to them are useful for other matters.[3]

Some English government records describe his activities in relation to Ireland, and occasional chronicle entries from England and the English-speaking regions of what became south-eastern Scotland record other important details. Aside from the Chronicle of Melrose, the most significant of these sources are the works of Roger of Hoveden, and the material preserved in the writings of John of Fordun and Walter Bower.[4]

Roger of Hoveden wrote two important works: the Gesta Henrici II ("Deeds of Henry II", alternatively titled Gesta Henrici et Ricardi, "Deeds of Henry and Richard") and the Chronica, the latter a re-worked and supplemented version of the former.[5] These works are the most important and valuable sources for Scottish history in the late 12th century.[6] The Gesta Henrici II covers the period from 1169 to April 1192, and the Chronica covers events until 1201.[7] Roger of Hoveden is particularly important in relation to what is now south-western Scotland, the land of the Gall-Gaidhil. He served as an emissary in the region in 1174 on behalf of the English monarch, and thus his account of, for example, the approach of Donnchadh's father Gille-Brighde towards the English king comes from a witness.[8] Historians rely on Roger's writings for a number of important details about Donnchadh's life: that Gille-Brighde handed Donnchadh over as a hostage to Henry II under the care of Hugh de Morwic, Sheriff of Cumberland; that Donnchcadh married the daughter of Alan fitz Walter under protest from the Scottish king; and that Donnchadh fought a battle in Ireland in 1197 assisting John de Courcy, Prince of Ulster.[9]

Another important chronicle source is the material preserved in John of Fordun's Chronica gentis Scottorum ("Chronicle of the Scottish people") and Walter Bower's Scotichronicon. John of Fordun's work, which survives on its own, was incorporated in the following century into the work of Bower. Fordun's Chronica was written and compiled between 1384 and August 1387.[10] Despite the apparently late date, Scottish textual historian Dauvit Broun has shown that Fordun's work in fact consists of two earlier pieces, Gesta Annalia I and Gesta Annalia II, the former written before April 1285 and covering the period from King Máel Coluim mac Donnchada (Malcolm III, died 1093) to 2 February 1285.[11] Gesta Annalia I appears to have been based on an even earlier text, about the descendants of Saint Margaret of Scotland, produced at Dunfermline Abbey.[12] Thus material from these works concerning the late 12th- and early 13th-century Gall-Gaidhil may represent, despite the apparent late date, reliable contemporary or near-contemporary accounts.[13]

Geographic and cultural background edit

 
Linguistic regions and provinces of what is now southern Scotland[14]

Donnchadh's territory lay in what is now Scotland south of the River Forth, a multi-ethnic region during the late 12th century.[15] North of the Forth was the Gaelic kingdom of Scotland (Alba), which under its partially Normanised kings exercised direct or indirect control over most of the region to the south as far as the borders of Northumberland and Cumberland.[16] Lothian and the Merse were the heartlands of the northern part of the old English Earldom of Northumbria,[17] and in the late 12th century the people of these regions, as well as the people of Lauderdale, Eskdale, Liddesdale, and most of Teviotdale and Annandale, were English in language and regarded themselves as English by ethnicity, despite having been under the control of the king of the Scots for at least a century.[18]

Clydesdale (or Strathclyde) was the heartland of the old Kingdom of Strathclyde; by Donnchadh's day the Scots had settled many English and Continental Europeans (principally Flemings) in the region, and administered it through the sheriffdom of Lanark.[19] Gaelic too had penetrated much of the old Northumbrian and Strathclyde territory, coming from the west, south-west and the north, a situation that led historian Alex Woolf to compare the region to the Balkans.[20] The British language of the area, as a result of such developments, was probably either dead or almost dead, perhaps surviving only in the uplands of Clydesdale, Tweeddale and Annandale.[21]

The rest of the region was settled by the people called Gall-Gaidhil (modern Scottish Gaelic: Gall-Ghàidheil) in their own language, variations of Gallwedienses in Latin, and normally Galwegians or Gallovidians in modern English.[22] References in the 11th century to the kingdom of the Gall-Gaidhil centre it far to the north of what is now Galloway.[23] Kingarth (Cenn Garadh) and Eigg (Eic) were described as "in Galloway" (Gallgaidelaib) by the Martyrology of Óengus, in contrast to Whithorn —part of modern Galloway—which was named as lying within another kingdom, The Rhinns (Na Renna).[24] These areas had been part of the Kingdom of Northumbria until the 9th century, and afterward were transformed by a process very poorly documented, but probably carried out by numerous small bands of culturally Scandinavian but linguistically Gaelic warrior-settlers moving in from Ireland and southern Argyll.[25] "Galloway" today only refers to the lands of Rhinns, Farines, Glenken, Desnes Mór and Desnes Ioan (that is, Wigtownshire and the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright), but this is due to the territorial changes that took place in and around Donnchadh's lifetime rather than being the contemporary definition.[26] For instance, a 12th-century piece of marginalia located the island of Ailsa Craig "lying between Gallgaedelu [Galloway] and Cend Tiri [Kintyre]", while a charter of Máel Coluim IV ("Malcolm IV") describes Strathgryfe, Cunningham, Kyle and Carrick as the four cadrez (probably from ceathramh, "quarter"s) of Galloway; an Irish annal entry for the year 1154 designated galleys from Arran, Kintyre, the Isle of Man as Gallghaoidhel, "Galwegian".[27]

By the middle of the 12th century, the former territory of the kingdom of the Rhinns was part of Galloway kingdom, but the area to the north was not. Strathgryfe, Kyle and Cunningham had come under the control of the Scottish king in the early 12th century, much of it given over to soldiers of French or Anglo-French origin.[28] Strathgryfe and most of Kyle had been given to Walter fitz Alan under King David I, with Hugh de Morville taking Cunningham.[29] Strathnith still had a Gaelic ruler (ancestor of the famous Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray), but he was not part of the kingdom of Galloway.[30] The rest of the region—the Rhinns, Farines, Carrick, Desnes Mór and Desnes Ioan, and the sparsely settled uplands of Glenken—was probably under the control of the sons of Fergus, King of Galloway, in the years before Donnchadh's career in the region.[31]

Origins and family edit

 
Family of Donnchadh

Donnchadh was the son of Gille-Brighde, son of Fergus, king of the Gall-Gaidhil. Donnchadh's ancestry cannot be traced further; no patronymic is known for Fergus from contemporary sources, and when Fergus' successors enumerate their ancestors in documents, they never go earlier than he does.[32] The name Gille-Brighde, used by Donnchadh's father (Fergus' son), was also the name of the father of Somhairle, petty king of Argyll in the third quarter of the 12th century.[33] As the original territory of the Gall-Gaidhil kingdom probably adjoined or included Argyll, Alex Woolf has suggested that Fergus and Somhairle were brothers or cousins.[33]

There is a "body of circumstantial evidence" that suggests Donnchadh's mother was a daughter or sister of Donnchadh II, Earl of Fife.[34] This includes Donnchadh's association with the Cistercian nunnery of North Berwick, founded by Donnchadh II of Fife's father, Donnchadh I of Fife; close ties seem to have existed between the two families, while Donnchadh's own name is further evidence.[35] The historian who suggested this in 2000, Richard Oram, came to regard this conjecture as certain by 2004.[36]

 
The Island of Dee, now the location of the late medieval Threave Castle, viewed from the south-east; it was probably this island that Uhtred retreated to when he was besieged by Donnchadh's brother Máel Coluim.

Roger of Hoveden described Uhtred of Galloway as a consanguinus ("cousin") of King Henry II of England, an assertion that has given rise to the theory that, since Gille-Brighde is never described as such, they must have been from different mothers. Fergus must therefore, according to the theory, have had two wives, one of whom was a bastard daughter of Henry I; that is, Uhtred and his descendants were related to the English royal family, while Gille-Brighde and his descendants were not.[37] According to historian G.W.S. Barrow, the theory is disproved by one English royal document, written in the name of King John of England, which likewise asserts that Donnchadh was John's cousin.[38]

It is unclear how many siblings Donnchadh had, but two at least are known. The first, Máel Coluim, led the forces that besieged Gille-Brighde's brother Uhtred on "Dee island" (probably Threave) in Galloway in 1174.[39] This Máel Coluim captured Uhtred, who subsequently, in addition to being blinded and castrated, had his tongue cut out.[39] Nothing more is known of Máel Coluim's life; there is speculation by some modern historians that he was illegitimate.[40] Another brother appears in the records of Paisley Abbey. In 1233, one Gille-Chonaill Manntach, "the Stammerer" (recorded Gillokonel Manthac), gave evidence regarding a land dispute in Strathclyde; the document described him as the brother of the Earl of Carrick, who at that time was Donnchadh.[41]

Exile and return edit

In 1160, Máel Coluim mac Eanric (Malcolm IV), king of the Scots, forced Fergus into retirement and brought Galloway under his overlordship.[42] It is likely that from 1161 until 1174, Fergus' sons Gille-Brighde and Uhtred shared the lordship of the Gall-Gaidhil under the Scottish king's authority, with Gille-Brighde in the west and Uhtred in the east.[43] When in 1174 the Scottish king William the Lion was captured during an invasion of England,[44] the brothers responded by rebelling against the Scottish monarch.[39] Subsequently, they fought each other, with Donnchadh's father ultimately prevailing.[39]

Having defeated his brother, Gille-Brighde unsuccessfully sought to become a direct vassal of Henry II, king of England.[45] An agreement was obtained with Henry in 1176, Gille-Brighde promising to pay him 1000 marks of silver and handing over his son Donnchadh as a hostage.[46] Donnchadh was taken into the care of Hugh de Morwic, sheriff of Cumberland.[47] The agreement seems to have included recognising Donnchadh's right to inherit Gille-Brighde's lands, for nine years later, in the aftermath of Gille-Brighde's death, when Uhtred's son Lochlann (Roland) invaded western Galloway, Roger of Hoveden described the action as "contrary to [Henry's] prohibition".[48]

The activities of Donnchadh's father Gille-Brighde after 1176 are unclear, but some time before 1184 King William raised an army to punish Gille-Brighde "and the other Galwegians who had wasted his land and slain his vassals";[49] he held off the endeavour, probably because he was worried about the response of Gille-Brighde's protector Henry II.[50] There were raids on William's territory until Gille-Brighde's death in 1185.[51] The death of Gille-Brighde prompted Donnchadh's cousin Lochlann, supported by the Scottish king, to attempt a takeover, thus threatening Donnchadh's inheritance.[52] At that time Donnchadh was still a hostage in the care of Hugh de Morwic.[53]

The Gesta Annalia I claimed that Donnchadh's patrimony was defended by chieftains called Somhairle ("Samuel"), Gille-Patraic, and Eanric Mac Cennetig ("Henry Mac Kennedy").[54] Lochlann and his army met these men in battle on 4 July 1185 and, according to the Chronicle of Melrose, killed Gille-Patraic and a substantial number of his warriors.[55] Another battle took place on 30 September, and although Lochlann's forces were probably victorious, killing opponent leader Gille-Coluim, the encounter led to the death of Lochlann's unnamed brother.[56] Lochlann's activities provoked a response from King Henry who, according to historian Richard Oram, "was not prepared to accept a fait accompli that disinherited the son of a useful vassal, flew in the face of the settlement which he had imposed ... and deprived him of influence over a vitally strategic zone on the north-west periphery of his realm".[54]

According to Hoveden, in May 1186 Henry ordered the king and magnates of Scotland to subdue Lochlann; in response, Lochlann "collected numerous horse and foot and obstructed the entrances to Galloway and its roads to what extent he could".[57] Richard Oram did not believe that the Scots really intended to do this, as Lochlann was their dependent and probably acted with their consent; this, Oram argued, explains why Henry himself raised an army and marched north to Carlisle.[58] When Henry arrived he instructed King William and his brother David, Earl of Huntingdon, to come to Carlisle, and to bring Lochlann with them.[59]

Lochlann ignored Henry's summons until an embassy consisting of Hugh de Puiset, Bishop of Durham and Justiciar Ranulf de Glanville provided him with hostages as a guarantee of his safety;[60] when he agreed to travel to Carlisle with the king's ambassadors.[60] Hoveden wrote that Lochlann was allowed to keep the land that his father Uhtred had held "on the day he was alive and dead", but that the land of Gille-Brighde that was claimed by Donnchadh, son of Gille-Brighde, would be settled in Henry's court, to which Lochlann would be summoned.[60] Lochlann agreed to these terms.[60] King William and Earl David swore an oath to enforce the agreement, with Jocelin, Bishop of Glasgow, instructed to excommunicate any party that should breach their oath.[60]

Ruler of Carrick edit

There is no record of any subsequent court hearing, but the Gesta Annalia I relates that Donnchadh was granted Carrick on condition of peace with Lochlann, and emphasises the role of King William (as opposed to Henry) in resolving the conflict.[61] Richard Oram has pointed out that Donnchadh's grant to Melrose Abbey between 1189 and 1198 was witnessed by his cousin Lochlann, evidence perhaps that relations between the two had become more cordial.[62] Although no details are given any contemporary source, Donnchadh gained possession of some of his father's land in the west of the kingdom of Gall-Gaidhil, namely the "earldom" of Carrick.[62]

When Donnchadh adopted or was given the title of earl (Latin: comes), or in his own language mormaer, is a debated question. Historian Alan Orr Anderson argued that he began using the title of comes between 1214 and 1216, based on Donnchadh's appearance as a witness to two charters issued by Thomas de Colville; the first, known as Melrose 193 (this being its number in Cosmo Innes's printed version of the cartulary), was dated by Anderson to 1214.[63] In this charter, Donnchadh has no title.[63] By contrast Donnchadh was styled comes in a charter dated by Anderson to 1216, Melrose 192.[64]

Oram pointed out that Donnchadh was styled comes in a grant to Melrose Abbey witnessed by Richard de Morville (Melrose 32), who died in 1196.[65] If the wording in this charter is accurate, then Donnchadh was using the title before Richard's death: that is, in or before 1196.[66] Furthermore, while Anderson dated Melrose 192 with reference to Abbot William III de Courcy (abbot of Melrose from 1215 to 1216), Oram identified Abbot William as Abbot William II (abbot from 1202 to 1206).[67] Whenever Donnchadh adopted the title, he is the first known "earl" of the region.[68]

 
Settlements and churches of Carrick in and around Donnchadh's era

Carrick was located in the Firth of Clyde, in the Irish Sea region far from the main centres of Scottish and Anglo-Norman influence lying to its east and south-east. Carrick was separated from Kyle in the north and north-east by the River Doon, and from Galloway proper by Glenapp and by the adjacent hills and forests.[69] There were three main rivers, the Doon, the Girvan and the Stinchar, though most of the province was hilly, meaning that most wealth came from animal husbandry rather than arable farming.[69] The population of Carrick, like that in neighbouring Galloway, consisted of kin groups governed by a "chief" or "captain" (cenn, Latin capitaneus).[70] Above these captains was the Cenn Cineoil ("kenkynolle"), the "kin-captain" of Carrick, a position held by the mormaer; it was not until after Donnchadh's death that these two positions were separated.[71] The best-recorded groups are Donnchadh's own group (known only as de Carrick, "of Carrick") and the Mac Cennétig (Kennedy) family, who seem to have provided the earldom's hereditary stewards.[72]

The population was governed under these leaders by a customary law that remained distinct from the common law of Scotland for the remainder of the Middle Ages.[73] One documented aspect of Carrick and Galloway law was the power of sergeants (an original Gaelic word Latinised as Kethres),[74] officials of the earl or of other captains, to claim one night of free hospitality (a privilege called sorryn et frithalos), and to accuse and arrest with little restriction.[75] The personal demesne, or lands, of the earl was probably extensive in Donnchadh's time; in 1260, during the minority of Donnchadh's descendant Countess Marjory of Carrick, an assessment made by the Scottish king showed that the earls had estates throughout the province, in upland locations like Straiton, Glengennet and Bennan, as well as in the east in locations such as Turnberry and Dalquharran.[76]

Relations with the church edit

Records exist for Donnchadh's religious patronage, and these records provide evidence for Donnchadh's associates as well as the earl himself. Around 1200 Earl Donnchadh allowed the monks of Melrose Abbey use of saltpans from his land at Turnberry.[77] Between 1189 and 1198 he had granted the church of Maybothelbeg ("Little Maybole") and the lands of Beath (Bethóc) to this Cistercian house.[78] The grant is mentioned by the Chronicle of Melrose, under the year 1193:

Donnchadh, son of Gille-Brighde, of Galloway, gave to God and St Mary and the monks of Melrose a certain part of their land in Carrick that is called Maybole, in perpetual alms, for the salvation of his soul, and the souls of all his relatives; in presence of bishop Jocelin, and many other witnesses.[79]

These estates were very rich, and became attached to Melrose's "super-grange" at Mauchline in Kyle.[80] In 1285 Melrose Abbey was able to persuade the earl of the time to force its tenants in Carrick to use the lex Anglicana (the "English law").[81]

Witness to both grants were some prominent churchman connected with Melrose: magnates like Earl Donnchadh II of Fife, the latter's son Máel Coluim, Gille Brigte, Earl of Strathearn, as well as probable members of Donnchadh's retinue, like Gille-Osald mac Gille-Anndrais, Gille-nan-Náemh mac Cholmain, Gille-Chríst Bretnach ("the Briton"), and Donnchadh's chamberlain Étgar mac Muireadhaich.[82] Áedh son of the mormaer of Lennox also witnessed these grants, and sometime between 1208 and 1214 Donnchadh (as "Lord Donnchadh") subscribed (i.e. his name was written at the bottom, as a "witness" to) a charter of Maol Domhnaich, Earl of Lennox, son and heir of Mormaer Ailean II, to the bishopric of Glasgow regarding the church of Campsie.[83]

There are records of patronage towards the nunnery of North Berwick, a house founded by Donnchadh's probable maternal grandfather or great-grandfather Donnchadh I of Fife.[84] He gave that house the rectorship of the church of St Cuthbert of Maybole sometime between 1189 and 1250.[85] In addition to Maybole, he gave the church of St Brigit at Kirkbride to the nuns, as well as a grant of three marks from a place called Barrebeth.[86] Relations with the bishop of Glasgow, within whose diocese Carrick lay, are also attested. For instance, on 21 July 1225, at Ayr in Kyle, Donnchadh made a promise of tithes to Walter, Bishop of Glasgow.[87]

 
James A. Morris' illustration of how the Cluniac Abbey of Crosssraguel roughly looked before its destruction in the early modern era

Donnchadh's most important long-term patronage was a series of gifts to the Cluniac Abbey of Paisley that led to the foundation of a monastery at Crossraguel (Crois Riaghail). At some date before 1227 he granted Crossraguel and a place called Suthblan to Paisley, a grant confirmed by Pope Honorius III on 23 January 1227.[88] A royal confirmation by King Alexander III of Scotland dated to 25 August 1236 shows that Donnchadh granted the monastery the churches of Kirkoswald (Turnberry), Straiton and Dalquharran (Old Dailly).[89] He may also have given the churches of Girvan and Kirkcudbright-Innertig (Ballantrae).[90]

It is clear from several sources that Donnchadh made these grants on the condition that the Abbey of Paisley established a Cluniac house in Carrick, but that the Abbey did not fulfil this condition, arguing that it was not obliged to do so.[88] The Bishop of Glasgow intervened in 1244 and determined that a house of Cluniac monks from Paisley should indeed be founded there, that the house should be exempt from the jurisdiction of Paisley save recognition of the common Cluniac Order, but that the Abbot of Paisley could visit the house annually. After the foundation, Paisley was to hand over its Carrick properties to the newly established monastery.[91]

A papal bull of 11 July 1265 reveals that Paisley Abbey built only a small oratory served by Paisley monks.[92] Twenty years after the bishop's ruling Paisley complained to the papacy, which led Pope Clement IV to issue two bulls, dated 11 June 1265 and 6 February 1266, appointing mandatories to settle the dispute; the results of their deliberations are unknown.[92] Crossraguel was not finally founded until about two decades after Donnchadh's death, probably by 1270; its first abbot, Abbot Patrick, is attested between 1274 and 1292.[93]

Anglo-French world edit

In secular affairs one of the few important facts recorded about Donnchadh was his marriage to Avelina, daughter of Alan fitz Walter, lord of Strathgryfe and [northern] Kyle, and High Steward of Scotland. The marriage is known from Roger of Hoveden's Chronica, which recorded that in 1200 Donnchadh:

Carried off (rapuit) Avelina, daughter of Alan fitz Walter, lord of Renfrew, before William king of Scotland returned from England to his own land. And hence that king was exceeding wroth; and he took from Alan fitz Walter twenty-four pledges that he would preserve the peace with his and with his land, and take the law about his law.[94]

The marriage bound Donnchadh closer to the Anglo-French circles of the northern part of the region south of the Forth, while from Alan's point of view it was part of a series of moves to expand his territory further into former Gall-Gaidhil lands, moves that had included an alliance a few years earlier with another Firth of Clyde Gaelic prince, Raghnall mac Somhairle (Rǫgnvaldr, son of Sumarliði or Somerled).[95]

Charter evidence reveals two Anglo-Normans present in Donnchadh's territory. Some of Donnchadh's charters to Melrose were subscribed by an Anglo-Norman knight named Roger de Skelbrooke, who appears to have been Lord of Greenan.[96] De Skelbrooke himself made grants to Melrose regarding the land of Drumeceisuiene (i.e. Drumshang), grants confirmed by "his lord" Donnchadh.[97] This knight gave Melrose fishing rights in the River Doon, rights confirmed by Donnchadh too and later by Roger's son-in-law and successor Ruaidhri mac Gille-Escoib (Raderic mac Gillescop).[98]

The other known Anglo-French knight was Thomas de Colville. Thomas (nicknamed "the Scot") was the younger son of the lord of Castle Bytham, a significant landowner in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire[99] Around 1190 he was constable of Dumfries, the royal castle which had been planted in Strathnith by the Scottish king, probably overrun by the Gall-Gaidhil in the revolt of 1174 before being restored afterwards.[100] Evidence that he possessed land in the region under Donnchadh's overlordship comes from the opening years of the 13th century when he made a grant of land around Dalmellington to the Cistercians of Vaudey Abbey.[101] Historians G.W.S. Barrow and Hector MacQueen both thought that Thomas' nickname "the Scot" (which then could mean "a Gael" as well as someone from north of the Forth), is a reflection of Thomas' exposure to the culture of the south-west during his career there.[102]

It is not known how these two men acquired the patronage of Donnchadh or his family. Writing in 1980, Barrow could find no cause for their presence in the area, and declared that they were "for the present impossible to account for".[103] As Richard Oram pointed out, in one of his charters Roger de Skelbrooke called Donnchadh's father Gille-Brighde "my lord", indicating that Donnchadh probably inherited them in his territory.[104] Neither of them left traceable offspring in the region, and even if they did represent for Carrick what could have been the embryonic stages of the kind of Normanisation that was taking place further east, the process was halted during Donnchadh's period as ruler.[105] Vaudey Abbey transferred the land granted to it by Donnchadh to Melrose Abbey in 1223, because it was "useless and dangerous to them, both on account of the absence of law and order, and by reason of the insidious attacks of a barbarous people".[106]

Ireland edit

The Anglo-Norman John de Courcy, whose early life was probably spent just across the Irish Sea in Cumbria, invaded the over-kingdom of Ulaid in north-eastern Ireland in 1177 with the aim of conquest.[107] After defeating the region's king Ruaidhrí Mac Duinn Shléibhe, de Courcy was able to take control of a large amount of territory, though not without encountering further resistance among the native Irish.[107] Cumbria was only a short distance too from the lands of the Gall-Gaidhil, and around 1180 John de Courcy married Donnchadh's cousin Affrica, whose father Guðrøðr (Gofraidh), King of the Isles, was son of Donnchadh's aunt.[108] Guðrøðr, who was thus Donnchadh's cousin, had in turn married a daughter of the Meic Lochlainn ruler of Tir Eoghain, another Irish kingdom.[107] Marriage thus connected Donnchadh and the other Gall-Gaidhil princes to several players in Ulster affairs.[citation needed]

The earliest information on Donnchadh's and indeed Gall-Gaidhil involvement in Ulster comes from Roger of Hoveden's entry about the death of Jordan de Courcy, John's brother.[109] It related that in 1197, after Jordan's death, John sought vengeance and

Fought a battle with the petty-kings of Ireland, of whom he put some to flight, slew others, and subjugated their territories; of which he gave no small part to Donnchadh, son of Gille-Brighde, the son of Fergus, who, at the time that the said John was about to engage with the Irish, came to assist him with no small body of troops.[110]

Donnchadh's interests in the area were damaged when de Courcy lost his territory in eastern Ulster to his rival Hugh de Lacy in 1203.[107] John de Courcy, with help from his wife's brother King Rǫgnvaldr Guðrøðarson (Raghnall mac Gofraidh) and perhaps from Donnchadh, tried to regain his principality, but was initially unsuccessful.[107] De Courcy's fortunes were boosted when Hugh de Lacy (then Earl of Ulster) and his associate William III de Briouze, themselves fell foul of John; the king campaigned in Ireland against them in 1210, a campaign that forced de Briouze to return to Wales and de Lacy to flee to St Andrews in Scotland.[111]

English records attest to Donnchadh's continued involvement in Ireland. One document, after describing how William de Briouze became the king's enemy in England and Ireland, records that after John arrived in Ireland in July 1210:

[William de Briouze's] wife [Matilda] fled to Scotland with William and Reinald her sons, and her private retinue, in the company of Hugh de Lacy, and when the king was at Carrickfergus Castle, a certain friend and cousin of his of Galloway, namely Donnchadh of Carrick, reported to the king that he had taken her and her daughter the wife of Roger de Mortimer, and William junior, with his wife and two sons, but Hugh de Lacy and Reinald escaped.[112]

The Histoire des Ducs de Normandie recorded that William and Matilda had voyaged to the Isle of Man, en route from Ireland to Galloway, where they were captured.[113] Matilda was imprisoned by the king, and died of starvation.[114]

Another document, this one preserved in an Irish memoranda roll dating to the reign of King Henry VI (reigned 1422–1461), records that after John's Irish expedition of 1210, Donnchadh controlled extensive territory in County Antrim, namely the settlements of Larne and Glenarm with 50 carucates of land in between, a territory similar to the later barony of Glenarm Upper.[115] King John had given or recognised Donnchadh's possession of this territory, and that of Donnchadh's nephew Alaxandair (Alexander), as a reward for his help; similarly, John had given Donnchadh's cousins Ailean and Tómas, sons of Lochlann, a huge lordship equivalent to 140 knight's fees that included most of northern County Antrim and County Londonderry, the reward for use of their soldiers and galleys.[116]

By 1219 Donnchadh and his nephew appear to have lost all or most of his Irish land; a document of that year related that the Justiciar of Ireland, Geoffrey de Marisco, had dispossessed ("disseised") them believing they had conspired against the king in the rebellion of 1215–6.[117] The king, John's successor Henry III, found that this was not true and ordered the Justiciar to restore Donnchadh and his nephew to their lands.[117] By 1224, Donnchadh had still not regained these lands and de Lacy's adherents were gaining more ground in the region. King Henry III repeated his earlier but ineffective instructions: he ordered Henry de Loundres, Archbishop of Dublin and new Justiciar of Ireland, to restore to Donnchadh "the remaining part of the land given to him by King John in Ireland, unless anyone held it by his father's own precept".[118]

Later in the same year Donnchadh wrote to King Henry. His letter was as follows:

[Donnchadh] Thanks him for the mandate which he directed by him to the Justiciar of Ireland, to restore his land there, of which he had been disseized on account of the English war; but as the land has not yet been restored, he asks the King to give by him a more effectual command to the Justiciar.[119]

Henry's response was a writ to his Justiciar:

King John granted to Donnchadh of Carrick, land in Ulster called Balgeithelauche [probably Ballygalley, county Antrim]. He says Hugh de Lacy disseized him and gave it to another. The King commands the Earl to inquire who has it, and its tenure; and if his right is insufficient, to give Donnchadh the land during the king's pleasure. At Bedford.[120]

It is unlikely that Donnchadh ever regained his territory; after Hugh was formally restored to the Earldom of Ulster in 1227, Donnchadh's land was probably controlled by the Bisset family. Historian Séan Duffy argues that the Bissets (later known as the "Bissets of the Glens") helped Hugh de Lacy, and probably ended up with Donnchadh's territory as a reward.[121]

Death and legacy edit

Donnchadh was said by the Martyrology of Glasgow to have died on 13 June 1250.[122] He was succeeded in the earldom by Niall. The traditional view, going back to the 19th century, is that Niall was Donnchadh's son.[123] This view has been undermined with more recent research by genealogist Andrew MacEwen, who has argued that Niall was not the son of Donnchadh, but rather his grandson, a view embraced by leading Scottish medievalist Professor G.W.S. Barrow.[124] According to this argument, Donnchadh's son and intended heir was Cailean mac Donnchaidh (alias Nicholaus), who as his son and heir, issued a charter in Donnchadh's lifetime, but seemingly predeceased him.[124] It was further suggested that Cailean's wife, Earl Niall's mother, was a daughter of the Tir Eoghain king Niall Ruadh Ó Neill, tying in with Donnchadh's Irish activities, accounting for the use of the name Niall, and explaining the strong alliance with the Ó Neill held by Niall's grandsons.[124]

Another of Donnchadh's sons, Eóin (John), owned the land of Straiton. He was involved in the Galwegian revolt of Gille Ruadh in 1235, during which he attacked some churches in the diocese of Glasgow.[125] He received a pardon by granting patronage of the church of Straiton and the land of Hachinclohyn to William de Bondington, Bishop of Glasgow, which was confirmed by Alexander II in 1244.[125] Two other sons, Ailean (Alan) and Alaxandair (Alexander), are attested subscribing to Donnchadh and Cailean's charters to North Berwick.[126] A Melrose charter mentions that Ailean was parson of Kirchemanen.[127] Cailean, and presumably Donnchadh's other legitimate sons, died before their father.[124]

Donnchadh's probable grandson, Niall, was earl for only six years and died leaving no son but four daughters, one of whom is known by name.[128] The last, presumably the eldest, was his successor Marjorie, who married in turn Adam of Kilconquhar (died 1271), a member of the Mac Duibh family of Fife, and Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale.[129] Marjorie's son Robert the Bruce, through military success and ancestral kinship with the Dunkeld dynasty, became King of Scots. King Robert's brother, Edward Bruce, became for a short time High King of Ireland.[citation needed]

Under the Bruces and their successors to the Scottish throne, the title Earl of Carrick became a prestigious honorific title usually given to a son of the king or intended heir;[130] at some time between 1250 and 1256 Earl Niall, anticipating that the earldom would be taken over by a man from another family, issued a charter to Lochlann (Roland) of Carrick, a son or grandson of one of Donnchadh's brothers. The charter granted Lochlann the title Cenn Cineoil, "head of the kindred", a position which brought the right to lead the men of Carrick in war. The charter also conferred possession of the office of baillie of Carrick under whoever was earl.[131] Precedent had been established here by other native families of Scotland, something similar having already taken place in Fife; it was a way of ensuring that the kin-group retained strong locally based male leadership even when the newly imposed common law of Scotland forced the comital title to pass into the hands of another family.[132] By 1372 the office had passed—probably by marriage—to the Kennedy family of Dunure.[133]

The 17th-century genealogical compilation known as Ane Accompt of the Genealogie of the Campbells by Robert Duncanson, minister of Campbeltown, claimed that "Efferic" (i.e. Affraic or Afraig), wife of Gilleasbaig of Menstrie (fl. 1263–6) and mother of Campbell progenitor Cailean Mór, was the daughter of one Cailean (anglicised Colin), "Lord of Carrick".[134] Partly because Ane Accompt is a credible witness to much earlier material, the claim is thought probable.[135] Thus Donnchadh was likely the great-grandfather of Cailean Mór, a lineage that explains the popularity of the names Donnchadh (Duncan) and Cailean (Colin) among later Campbells, as well as their close alliance to King Robert I during the Scottish Wars of Independence.[136]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Laing, Descriptive Catalogue, p. 33
  2. ^ Duncan, Scotland, p. 643
  3. ^ A discussion of charters, in relation to the Scottish king William the Lion, can be found in Barrow (ed.), Acts of William I, pp. 68–94.
  4. ^ Duncan, "Roger of Howden", pp. 135–59, and Gillingham, "Travels", pp. 69–81, for Hoveden's importance; Ross, "Moray, Ulster, and the MacWilliams", pp. 24–44 for discussion of these two sources in reference to more northerly events of the same era
  5. ^ Corner, "Howden [Hoveden], Roger of"; Duncan, "Roger of Howden", p. 135; Gillingham, "Travels", pp. 70–71; Gransden, Historical Writing, pp. 222–36
  6. ^ Duncan, "Roger of Howden", p. 135; Gillingham, "Travels", p. 70
  7. ^ Duncan, "Roger of Howden", p. 135
  8. ^ Corner, "Howden [Hoveden], Roger of"; Oram, Lordship, pp. 95–97
  9. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, pp. 268, 325; Lawrie, Annals, p. 326; Riley (ed.), Annals of Roger de Hoveden, vol. ii, p. 404
  10. ^ Broun, Scottish Independence, p. 215
  11. ^ Broun, Scottish Independence, pp. 257–58; Broun, "New Look at Gesta Annalia, p. 17
  12. ^ With perhaps another chronicle closely related to the Chronicle of Melrose and the Chronicle of Holyrood; see Broun, Scottish Independence, p. 217; Duncan, "Sources and Uses", p. 169
  13. ^ Broun, Scottish Independence, pp. 215–30
  14. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, p. 51
  15. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 32–35; Barrow, Kingdom of the Scots, pp. 38–40
  16. ^ Barrow, Kingdom of the Scots, pp. 112–29
  17. ^ Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 232–40
  18. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 48–50; Broun, "Becoming Scottish", p. 19
  19. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 30–50, illustrative maps at pp. 51–60
  20. ^ Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 294–96
  21. ^ Broun, "Welsh Identity", pp. 120–25; Edmonds, "Personal Names", pp. 49–50
  22. ^ Clancy, "Galloway and the Gall-Ghàidheil", pp. 32–33, et passim
  23. ^ Clancy, "Gall-Ghàidheil", pp. 29–39
  24. ^ Byrne, "Na Renna", p. 267; Clancy, "Gall-Ghàidheil", pp. 29–32; Stokes (ed.), Martyrology, pp. 116–17, 184–85, 212–3
  25. ^ Clancy, "Gall-Ghàidheil", p. 44; Woolf, Pictland to Alba, pp. 293–98
  26. ^ Clancy, "Gall-Ghàidheil", passim
  27. ^ Clancy, "Gall-Ghàidheil", pp. 33–34
  28. ^ Oram, David, pp. 93–96.
  29. ^ Barrow, Kingdom of the Scots, p. 251; Stringer, "Early Lords of Lauderdale", pp. 46–47
  30. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. vi, pp. 286–91; Barrow, Kingdom of the Scots, pp. 139–40
  31. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 103; Woolf, "Age of Sea-Kings", p. 103
  32. ^ For Alan of Galloway, see Stringer, "Acts of Lordship", p. 224; for Donnchadh, see Innes (ed.), Liber Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 32, at p. 25, where sometime before 1196 he is described as "Donnchadh, son of Gille-Brighde, son of Fergus, earl of Carrick".
  33. ^ a b Woolf, "Age of Sea-Kings", p. 103
  34. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 89
  35. ^ Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, pp. 147–48; Oram, Lordship, p. 89
  36. ^ Fawcett and Oram, Melrose Abbey, pp. 231–32
  37. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 257; Oram, Lordship, p. 61; Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. iv, p. 422
  38. ^ Barrow, Robert Bruce, pp. 430–31, n. 28
  39. ^ a b c d Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 257; Oram, Lordship, p. 61; Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 422
  40. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 110, n. 39; Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 421
  41. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, p. 422; Innes (ed.), Registrum Monasterii de Passelet, pp. 166–68
  42. ^ Barrow, Acts of Malcolm IV, pp. 12–13
  43. ^ Oram, Lordship, pp. 87–92
  44. ^ Barrow, Acts of William I, p. 7; Oram, Lordship, p. 93
  45. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 258; Oram, Lordship, p. 96
  46. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 268; Oram, Lordship, p. 97
  47. ^ Corner, Scott, Scott and Watt (eds.), Scotichronicon, vol. 4, p. 546, n. 18; Lawrie, Annals, pp. 218, 254; Oram, Lordship, p. 97
  48. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 289; Oram, Lordship, p. 100
  49. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, p. 286
  50. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 99
  51. ^ Oram, Lordship, pp. 99–100
  52. ^ Oram, Lordship, pp. 100–101
  53. ^ Lawrie, Annals, p. 218
  54. ^ a b Oram, Lordship, p. 100
  55. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, vol. ii, pp. 309–10
  56. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, vol. ii, p. 310; Oram, Lordship, p. 100
  57. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 289
  58. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, pp. 289–90; Corner, et al., Scotichronicon, vol. iv, pp. 366–67; Oram, Lordship, p. 101
  59. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, pp. 289–90; Oram, Lordship, p. 101
  60. ^ a b c d e Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 290; Oram, Lordship, p. 101
  61. ^ Corner (et al.), Scotichronicon, vol. iv, pp. 366–69
  62. ^ a b Oram, Lordship, pp. 103–104
  63. ^ a b Anderson, Early Sources, vol. ii, pp. 330–31, n. 2; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 193, p. 173
  64. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, vol. ii, pp. 330–31, n. 2; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 192 and 193, pp. 172–73
  65. ^ Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 32, pp. 25–26; Oram, Lordship, p. 111, n. 80
  66. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 111, n. 80
  67. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 111, n. 80; Watt and Shead, Heads of Religious Houses, pp. 149–50
  68. ^ E.g. Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. iv, p. 422
  69. ^ a b MacQueen, "Survival and Success", p. 74, n. 31
  70. ^ MacQueen, "Laws of Galloway", p. 132
  71. ^ MacQueen, "Kin of Kennedy", pp. 278–80
  72. ^ MacQueen, "Survival and Success", pp. 75–76
  73. ^ MacQueen, "Laws of Galloway", pp. 138–39
  74. ^ MacQueen, "Laws of Galloway", p. 134
  75. ^ MacQueen, "Kin of Kennedy", p. 280; MacQueen, "Laws of Galloway", p. 134
  76. ^ Oram, Lordship, pp. 212–13
  77. ^ Fawcett and Oram, Melrose Abbey, p. 243; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, no. 37, p. 29; Reid and Barrow, Sheriffs of Scotland, p. 3
  78. ^ Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 29 and 30, pp. 20–24; Oram, Lordship, p. 104
  79. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, p. 330
  80. ^ Fawcett and Oram, Melrose Abbey, pp. 228–40, for details, and p. 228 for the term "super-grange"
  81. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, p. 119; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 316, pp. 277–78
  82. ^ Carrick and Maidment, Some Account of the Ancient Earldom of Carric, p. 28; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 29, 30, pp. 20–24
  83. ^ Innes (ed.), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, vol. i, no. 102, pp. 87–88 Neville, Native Lordship, p. 55
  84. ^ Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, p. 147; Fawcett and Oram, Melrose Abbey, pp. 231–32
  85. ^ Innes (ed.), Carte Monialium de Northberwic, nos. 13–14, pp. 13–14; Watt and Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 238
  86. ^ Cowan, Parishes, p. 118; Innes (ed.), Carte Monialium de Northberwic, nos. 1, 28, pp. 3, 30–31
  87. ^ Innes (ed.), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, vol. i, no. 139, pp. 117–18; Shead and Cunningham, "Glasgow"
  88. ^ a b Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, pp. 63–64
  89. ^ Cowan, Parishes, pp. 123, 189–90
  90. ^ Cowan, Parishes, pp. 73, 120; another early possession of Crossraguel was the church of Inchmarnock, for which see Cowan, Parishes, pp. 35–36.
  91. ^ Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, p. 64; Cowan, Parishes, p. 123
  92. ^ a b Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, p. 64
  93. ^ Cowan and Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, pp. 63–64; Watt and Shead, Heads of Religious Houses, p. 47
  94. ^ Anderson, Scottish Annals, p. 325; Lawrie, Annals, pp. 326–27
  95. ^ Oram, Lordship, p. 132; Alan, who died four years later, fell into disgrace with King William and disappeared from royal circles, but his son Walter (nicknamed Óg, "the little" or "younger" in several Melrose charters) recovered the family's position, and by the late 1210s held, along with the Galloway family, a dominant position in the councils of William's successor Alexander II; see Boardman, "Gaelic World", p. 92; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. ii, nos. 452–55, pp. 420–23; Oram, Lordship, pp. 132–33.
  96. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 46, 115
  97. ^ Carrick and Maidment, Some Account of the Ancient Earldom of Carric, p. 28; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 31–35, pp. 24–28
  98. ^ Fawcett and Oram, Melrose Abbey, p. 243; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 34–36, pp. 27–29
  99. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 31, 177
  100. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, p. 31; Duncan, Scotland, pp. 182–83
  101. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 31–32; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, nos. 192 and 193, pp. 172–73
  102. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, p. 31; MacQueen, ""Survival and Success", p. 77
  103. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 46–47
  104. ^ Oram, Lordship, pp. 90–91
  105. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, pp. 31–32; Oram, Lordship, p.
  106. ^ Barrow, Anglo-Norman Era, p. 32; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 195, pp. 174–75
  107. ^ a b c d e Duffy, "Courcy [Courci], John de"
  108. ^ Duffy, "Courcy [Courci], John de"; Oram, Lordship, p. 105
  109. ^ Greeves, "Galloway lands in Ulster", p. 115
  110. ^ Riley (ed.), Annals of Roger de Hoveden, vol. ii, p. 404
  111. ^ Smith, "Lacy, Hugh de, earl of Ulster"
  112. ^ Bain (ed.), Calendar of Documents, vol. i, no. 480, p. 82; spellings modernised
  113. ^ Anderson, Early Sources, vol. ii, p. 387; McDonald, Manx Kingship, p. 132
  114. ^ Lawrie, Annals, p. 327
  115. ^ Duffy, "Lords of Galloway", p. 37
  116. ^ Duffy, "Lords of Galloway", p. 38
  117. ^ a b Bain (ed.), Calendar of Documents, vol. i, no. 737, p. 130; Duffy, "Lords of Galloway", pp. 43–44
  118. ^ Bain (ed.), Calendar of Documents, vol. i, no. 874, p. 155; Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 422, n. 7; Smith, "Lacy, Hugh de"
  119. ^ Bain (ed.), Calendar of Documents, vol. i, no. 878, p. 156
  120. ^ Bain (ed.), Calendar of Documents, vol. i, no. 879, p. 156
  121. ^ These were Anglo-Norman nobles who were settling in northern Scotland at this time in the lordship of the Aird (An Àird) in the aftermath of the destruction of the Meic Uilleim and would quickly become Gaelicised; Duffy, "Lords of Galloway", pp. 39–42, 50; see also, Stringer, "Periphery and Core", pp. 92–95.
  122. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 423; Innes (ed.), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, vol. ii, p. 616
  123. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 423; MacQueen, "Survival and Success", p. 72
  124. ^ a b c d Barrow, Robert Bruce, pp. 34–35;, 430, n. 26
  125. ^ a b Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 243; Innes (ed.), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, vol. i, no. 187, pp. 151–52
  126. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 243; Innes (ed.), Carte Monialium de Northberwic, nos. 13–14, pp. 13–15; MacQueen, "Kin of Kennedy", p. 284, illus; MacQueen, "Survival and Success", p. 72, illus; there is a possibility that he had two sons named Alaxandair [Alexander], as appears in MacQueen's illustrations
  127. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, vol. ii, p. 243; Innes (ed.), Liber de Sancte Marie, vol. i, no. 189, pp. 170–71
  128. ^ Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage, p. 426; MacQueen, "Survival and Success", p. 78
  129. ^ MacQueen, "Survival and Success", p. 78
  130. ^ Boardman, Early Stewart Kings, pp. 22, 57, 198–99, 279, 282, 294–95
  131. ^ MacQueen, "Kin of Kennedy", pp. 278–80; MacQueen, "Survival and Success", pp. 76, 78–80
  132. ^ Bannerman, "Macduff of Fife", pp. 20–28, for discussion in relation to Fife; MacQueen, Common Law, p. 174
  133. ^ MacQueen, "Kin of Kennedy", pp. 278, 286–87
  134. ^ Boardman, Campbells, p. 18; Campbell of Airds, History, p. 41; Sellar, "Earliest Campbells", p. 115
  135. ^ Sellar, "Earliest Campbells", pp. 115–16
  136. ^ Campbell of Airds, History, pp. 41–42; Sellar, "Earliest Campbells", p. 116

References edit

Primary sources edit

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donnchadh, earl, carrick, donnchadh, scottish, gaelic, pronunciation, ˠɔxəɣ, latin, duncanus, english, duncan, gall, gaidhil, prince, scottish, magnate, what, south, western, scotland, whose, career, stretched, from, last, quarter, 12th, century, until, death,. Donnchadh Scottish Gaelic pronunciation ˈt ɔn ˠɔxeɣ Latin Duncanus English Duncan was a Gall Gaidhil prince and Scottish magnate in what is now south western Scotland whose career stretched from the last quarter of the 12th century until his death in 1250 His father Gille Brighde of Galloway and his uncle Uhtred of Galloway were the two rival sons of Fergus Prince or Lord of Galloway As a result of Gille Brighde s conflict with Uhtred and the Scottish monarch William the Lion Donnchadh became a hostage of King Henry II of England He probably remained in England for almost a decade before returning north on the death of his father Although denied succession to all the lands of Galloway he was granted lordship over Carrick in the north Donnchadh Duncan Mormaer or Earl of CarrickA 19th century reproduction of an impression of Donnchadh s seal surviving from a Melrose charter depicting according to antiquarian Henry Laing a winged dragon 1 the inscription reads SIGILLUM DUNCANI FILII GILLEBER The seal of Donnchadh son of Gille Brighde Reignc 1186 1250PredecessorGille Brighde mac FergusaSuccessorNiall mac DonnchaidhBornmid to late 12th centurylocation unknown probably Galloway or CarrickDied13 June 1250 1250 06 14 unknownBurialunknownSpouseAvelina daughter of Alan fitz WalterModern GaelicDonnchadh mac Ghille BrighdeLatinDon n ecanus or Dun e canus filius GillebertiNorman FrenchDunecan fitz GilbertFatherGille Brighde of GallowayMotheruncertain but perhaps a daughter or sister of Donnchadh II Earl of FifeAllied to John de Courcy Donnchadh fought battles in Ireland and acquired land there that he subsequently lost A patron of religious houses particularly Melrose Abbey and North Berwick priory nunnery he attempted to establish a monastery in his own territory at Crossraguel He married the daughter of Alan fitz Walter a leading member of the family later known as the House of Stewart future monarchs of Scotland and England Donnchadh was the first mormaer or earl of Carrick a region he ruled for more than six decades making him one of the longest serving magnates in medieval Scotland His descendants include the Bruce and Stewart Kings of Scotland and probably the Campbell Dukes of Argyll Contents 1 Sources 2 Geographic and cultural background 3 Origins and family 4 Exile and return 5 Ruler of Carrick 6 Relations with the church 7 Anglo French world 8 Ireland 9 Death and legacy 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Primary sources 11 2 Secondary sourcesSources editDonnchadh s career is not well documented in the surviving sources Charters provide a little information about some of his activities but overall their usefulness is limited this is because no charter collections called cartularies from the Gaelic south west have survived the Middle Ages and the only surviving charters relevant to Donnchadh s career come from the heavily Normanised English speaking area to the east 2 Principally the relevant charters record his acts of patronage towards religious houses but incidental details mentioned in the body of these texts and the witness lists subscribed to them are useful for other matters 3 Some English government records describe his activities in relation to Ireland and occasional chronicle entries from England and the English speaking regions of what became south eastern Scotland record other important details Aside from the Chronicle of Melrose the most significant of these sources are the works of Roger of Hoveden and the material preserved in the writings of John of Fordun and Walter Bower 4 Roger of Hoveden wrote two important works the Gesta Henrici II Deeds of Henry II alternatively titled Gesta Henrici et Ricardi Deeds of Henry and Richard and the Chronica the latter a re worked and supplemented version of the former 5 These works are the most important and valuable sources for Scottish history in the late 12th century 6 The Gesta Henrici II covers the period from 1169 to April 1192 and the Chronica covers events until 1201 7 Roger of Hoveden is particularly important in relation to what is now south western Scotland the land of the Gall Gaidhil He served as an emissary in the region in 1174 on behalf of the English monarch and thus his account of for example the approach of Donnchadh s father Gille Brighde towards the English king comes from a witness 8 Historians rely on Roger s writings for a number of important details about Donnchadh s life that Gille Brighde handed Donnchadh over as a hostage to Henry II under the care of Hugh de Morwic Sheriff of Cumberland that Donnchcadh married the daughter of Alan fitz Walter under protest from the Scottish king and that Donnchadh fought a battle in Ireland in 1197 assisting John de Courcy Prince of Ulster 9 Another important chronicle source is the material preserved in John of Fordun s Chronica gentis Scottorum Chronicle of the Scottish people and Walter Bower s Scotichronicon John of Fordun s work which survives on its own was incorporated in the following century into the work of Bower Fordun s Chronica was written and compiled between 1384 and August 1387 10 Despite the apparently late date Scottish textual historian Dauvit Broun has shown that Fordun s work in fact consists of two earlier pieces Gesta Annalia I and Gesta Annalia II the former written before April 1285 and covering the period from King Mael Coluim mac Donnchada Malcolm III died 1093 to 2 February 1285 11 Gesta Annalia I appears to have been based on an even earlier text about the descendants of Saint Margaret of Scotland produced at Dunfermline Abbey 12 Thus material from these works concerning the late 12th and early 13th century Gall Gaidhil may represent despite the apparent late date reliable contemporary or near contemporary accounts 13 Geographic and cultural background edit nbsp Linguistic regions and provinces of what is now southern Scotland 14 Donnchadh s territory lay in what is now Scotland south of the River Forth a multi ethnic region during the late 12th century 15 North of the Forth was the Gaelic kingdom of Scotland Alba which under its partially Normanised kings exercised direct or indirect control over most of the region to the south as far as the borders of Northumberland and Cumberland 16 Lothian and the Merse were the heartlands of the northern part of the old English Earldom of Northumbria 17 and in the late 12th century the people of these regions as well as the people of Lauderdale Eskdale Liddesdale and most of Teviotdale and Annandale were English in language and regarded themselves as English by ethnicity despite having been under the control of the king of the Scots for at least a century 18 Clydesdale or Strathclyde was the heartland of the old Kingdom of Strathclyde by Donnchadh s day the Scots had settled many English and Continental Europeans principally Flemings in the region and administered it through the sheriffdom of Lanark 19 Gaelic too had penetrated much of the old Northumbrian and Strathclyde territory coming from the west south west and the north a situation that led historian Alex Woolf to compare the region to the Balkans 20 The British language of the area as a result of such developments was probably either dead or almost dead perhaps surviving only in the uplands of Clydesdale Tweeddale and Annandale 21 The rest of the region was settled by the people called Gall Gaidhil modern Scottish Gaelic Gall Ghaidheil in their own language variations of Gallwedienses in Latin and normally Galwegians or Gallovidians in modern English 22 References in the 11th century to the kingdom of the Gall Gaidhil centre it far to the north of what is now Galloway 23 Kingarth Cenn Garadh and Eigg Eic were described as in Galloway Gallgaidelaib by the Martyrology of oengus in contrast to Whithorn part of modern Galloway which was named as lying within another kingdom The Rhinns Na Renna 24 These areas had been part of the Kingdom of Northumbria until the 9th century and afterward were transformed by a process very poorly documented but probably carried out by numerous small bands of culturally Scandinavian but linguistically Gaelic warrior settlers moving in from Ireland and southern Argyll 25 Galloway today only refers to the lands of Rhinns Farines Glenken Desnes Mor and Desnes Ioan that is Wigtownshire and the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright but this is due to the territorial changes that took place in and around Donnchadh s lifetime rather than being the contemporary definition 26 For instance a 12th century piece of marginalia located the island of Ailsa Craig lying between Gallgaedelu Galloway and Cend Tiri Kintyre while a charter of Mael Coluim IV Malcolm IV describes Strathgryfe Cunningham Kyle and Carrick as the four cadrez probably from ceathramh quarter s of Galloway an Irish annal entry for the year 1154 designated galleys from Arran Kintyre the Isle of Man as Gallghaoidhel Galwegian 27 By the middle of the 12th century the former territory of the kingdom of the Rhinns was part of Galloway kingdom but the area to the north was not Strathgryfe Kyle and Cunningham had come under the control of the Scottish king in the early 12th century much of it given over to soldiers of French or Anglo French origin 28 Strathgryfe and most of Kyle had been given to Walter fitz Alan under King David I with Hugh de Morville taking Cunningham 29 Strathnith still had a Gaelic ruler ancestor of the famous Thomas Randolph 1st Earl of Moray but he was not part of the kingdom of Galloway 30 The rest of the region the Rhinns Farines Carrick Desnes Mor and Desnes Ioan and the sparsely settled uplands of Glenken was probably under the control of the sons of Fergus King of Galloway in the years before Donnchadh s career in the region 31 Origins and family edit nbsp Family of DonnchadhDonnchadh was the son of Gille Brighde son of Fergus king of the Gall Gaidhil Donnchadh s ancestry cannot be traced further no patronymic is known for Fergus from contemporary sources and when Fergus successors enumerate their ancestors in documents they never go earlier than he does 32 The name Gille Brighde used by Donnchadh s father Fergus son was also the name of the father of Somhairle petty king of Argyll in the third quarter of the 12th century 33 As the original territory of the Gall Gaidhil kingdom probably adjoined or included Argyll Alex Woolf has suggested that Fergus and Somhairle were brothers or cousins 33 There is a body of circumstantial evidence that suggests Donnchadh s mother was a daughter or sister of Donnchadh II Earl of Fife 34 This includes Donnchadh s association with the Cistercian nunnery of North Berwick founded by Donnchadh II of Fife s father Donnchadh I of Fife close ties seem to have existed between the two families while Donnchadh s own name is further evidence 35 The historian who suggested this in 2000 Richard Oram came to regard this conjecture as certain by 2004 36 nbsp The Island of Dee now the location of the late medieval Threave Castle viewed from the south east it was probably this island that Uhtred retreated to when he was besieged by Donnchadh s brother Mael Coluim Roger of Hoveden described Uhtred of Galloway as a consanguinus cousin of King Henry II of England an assertion that has given rise to the theory that since Gille Brighde is never described as such they must have been from different mothers Fergus must therefore according to the theory have had two wives one of whom was a bastard daughter of Henry I that is Uhtred and his descendants were related to the English royal family while Gille Brighde and his descendants were not 37 According to historian G W S Barrow the theory is disproved by one English royal document written in the name of King John of England which likewise asserts that Donnchadh was John s cousin 38 It is unclear how many siblings Donnchadh had but two at least are known The first Mael Coluim led the forces that besieged Gille Brighde s brother Uhtred on Dee island probably Threave in Galloway in 1174 39 This Mael Coluim captured Uhtred who subsequently in addition to being blinded and castrated had his tongue cut out 39 Nothing more is known of Mael Coluim s life there is speculation by some modern historians that he was illegitimate 40 Another brother appears in the records of Paisley Abbey In 1233 one Gille Chonaill Manntach the Stammerer recorded Gillokonel Manthac gave evidence regarding a land dispute in Strathclyde the document described him as the brother of the Earl of Carrick who at that time was Donnchadh 41 Exile and return editIn 1160 Mael Coluim mac Eanric Malcolm IV king of the Scots forced Fergus into retirement and brought Galloway under his overlordship 42 It is likely that from 1161 until 1174 Fergus sons Gille Brighde and Uhtred shared the lordship of the Gall Gaidhil under the Scottish king s authority with Gille Brighde in the west and Uhtred in the east 43 When in 1174 the Scottish king William the Lion was captured during an invasion of England 44 the brothers responded by rebelling against the Scottish monarch 39 Subsequently they fought each other with Donnchadh s father ultimately prevailing 39 Having defeated his brother Gille Brighde unsuccessfully sought to become a direct vassal of Henry II king of England 45 An agreement was obtained with Henry in 1176 Gille Brighde promising to pay him 1000 marks of silver and handing over his son Donnchadh as a hostage 46 Donnchadh was taken into the care of Hugh de Morwic sheriff of Cumberland 47 The agreement seems to have included recognising Donnchadh s right to inherit Gille Brighde s lands for nine years later in the aftermath of Gille Brighde s death when Uhtred s son Lochlann Roland invaded western Galloway Roger of Hoveden described the action as contrary to Henry s prohibition 48 The activities of Donnchadh s father Gille Brighde after 1176 are unclear but some time before 1184 King William raised an army to punish Gille Brighde and the other Galwegians who had wasted his land and slain his vassals 49 he held off the endeavour probably because he was worried about the response of Gille Brighde s protector Henry II 50 There were raids on William s territory until Gille Brighde s death in 1185 51 The death of Gille Brighde prompted Donnchadh s cousin Lochlann supported by the Scottish king to attempt a takeover thus threatening Donnchadh s inheritance 52 At that time Donnchadh was still a hostage in the care of Hugh de Morwic 53 The Gesta Annalia I claimed that Donnchadh s patrimony was defended by chieftains called Somhairle Samuel Gille Patraic and Eanric Mac Cennetig Henry Mac Kennedy 54 Lochlann and his army met these men in battle on 4 July 1185 and according to the Chronicle of Melrose killed Gille Patraic and a substantial number of his warriors 55 Another battle took place on 30 September and although Lochlann s forces were probably victorious killing opponent leader Gille Coluim the encounter led to the death of Lochlann s unnamed brother 56 Lochlann s activities provoked a response from King Henry who according to historian Richard Oram was not prepared to accept a fait accompli that disinherited the son of a useful vassal flew in the face of the settlement which he had imposed and deprived him of influence over a vitally strategic zone on the north west periphery of his realm 54 According to Hoveden in May 1186 Henry ordered the king and magnates of Scotland to subdue Lochlann in response Lochlann collected numerous horse and foot and obstructed the entrances to Galloway and its roads to what extent he could 57 Richard Oram did not believe that the Scots really intended to do this as Lochlann was their dependent and probably acted with their consent this Oram argued explains why Henry himself raised an army and marched north to Carlisle 58 When Henry arrived he instructed King William and his brother David Earl of Huntingdon to come to Carlisle and to bring Lochlann with them 59 Lochlann ignored Henry s summons until an embassy consisting of Hugh de Puiset Bishop of Durham and Justiciar Ranulf de Glanville provided him with hostages as a guarantee of his safety 60 when he agreed to travel to Carlisle with the king s ambassadors 60 Hoveden wrote that Lochlann was allowed to keep the land that his father Uhtred had held on the day he was alive and dead but that the land of Gille Brighde that was claimed by Donnchadh son of Gille Brighde would be settled in Henry s court to which Lochlann would be summoned 60 Lochlann agreed to these terms 60 King William and Earl David swore an oath to enforce the agreement with Jocelin Bishop of Glasgow instructed to excommunicate any party that should breach their oath 60 Ruler of Carrick editThere is no record of any subsequent court hearing but the Gesta Annalia I relates that Donnchadh was granted Carrick on condition of peace with Lochlann and emphasises the role of King William as opposed to Henry in resolving the conflict 61 Richard Oram has pointed out that Donnchadh s grant to Melrose Abbey between 1189 and 1198 was witnessed by his cousin Lochlann evidence perhaps that relations between the two had become more cordial 62 Although no details are given any contemporary source Donnchadh gained possession of some of his father s land in the west of the kingdom of Gall Gaidhil namely the earldom of Carrick 62 When Donnchadh adopted or was given the title of earl Latin comes or in his own language mormaer is a debated question Historian Alan Orr Anderson argued that he began using the title of comes between 1214 and 1216 based on Donnchadh s appearance as a witness to two charters issued by Thomas de Colville the first known as Melrose 193 this being its number in Cosmo Innes s printed version of the cartulary was dated by Anderson to 1214 63 In this charter Donnchadh has no title 63 By contrast Donnchadh was styled comes in a charter dated by Anderson to 1216 Melrose 192 64 Oram pointed out that Donnchadh was styled comes in a grant to Melrose Abbey witnessed by Richard de Morville Melrose 32 who died in 1196 65 If the wording in this charter is accurate then Donnchadh was using the title before Richard s death that is in or before 1196 66 Furthermore while Anderson dated Melrose 192 with reference to Abbot William III de Courcy abbot of Melrose from 1215 to 1216 Oram identified Abbot William as Abbot William II abbot from 1202 to 1206 67 Whenever Donnchadh adopted the title he is the first known earl of the region 68 nbsp Settlements and churches of Carrick in and around Donnchadh s eraCarrick was located in the Firth of Clyde in the Irish Sea region far from the main centres of Scottish and Anglo Norman influence lying to its east and south east Carrick was separated from Kyle in the north and north east by the River Doon and from Galloway proper by Glenapp and by the adjacent hills and forests 69 There were three main rivers the Doon the Girvan and the Stinchar though most of the province was hilly meaning that most wealth came from animal husbandry rather than arable farming 69 The population of Carrick like that in neighbouring Galloway consisted of kin groups governed by a chief or captain cenn Latin capitaneus 70 Above these captains was the Cenn Cineoil kenkynolle the kin captain of Carrick a position held by the mormaer it was not until after Donnchadh s death that these two positions were separated 71 The best recorded groups are Donnchadh s own group known only as de Carrick of Carrick and the Mac Cennetig Kennedy family who seem to have provided the earldom s hereditary stewards 72 The population was governed under these leaders by a customary law that remained distinct from the common law of Scotland for the remainder of the Middle Ages 73 One documented aspect of Carrick and Galloway law was the power of sergeants an original Gaelic word Latinised as Kethres 74 officials of the earl or of other captains to claim one night of free hospitality a privilege called sorryn et frithalos and to accuse and arrest with little restriction 75 The personal demesne or lands of the earl was probably extensive in Donnchadh s time in 1260 during the minority of Donnchadh s descendant Countess Marjory of Carrick an assessment made by the Scottish king showed that the earls had estates throughout the province in upland locations like Straiton Glengennet and Bennan as well as in the east in locations such as Turnberry and Dalquharran 76 Relations with the church editRecords exist for Donnchadh s religious patronage and these records provide evidence for Donnchadh s associates as well as the earl himself Around 1200 Earl Donnchadh allowed the monks of Melrose Abbey use of saltpans from his land at Turnberry 77 Between 1189 and 1198 he had granted the church of Maybothelbeg Little Maybole and the lands of Beath Bethoc to this Cistercian house 78 The grant is mentioned by the Chronicle of Melrose under the year 1193 Donnchadh son of Gille Brighde of Galloway gave to God and St Mary and the monks of Melrose a certain part of their land in Carrick that is called Maybole in perpetual alms for the salvation of his soul and the souls of all his relatives in presence of bishop Jocelin and many other witnesses 79 These estates were very rich and became attached to Melrose s super grange at Mauchline in Kyle 80 In 1285 Melrose Abbey was able to persuade the earl of the time to force its tenants in Carrick to use the lex Anglicana the English law 81 Witness to both grants were some prominent churchman connected with Melrose magnates like Earl Donnchadh II of Fife the latter s son Mael Coluim Gille Brigte Earl of Strathearn as well as probable members of Donnchadh s retinue like Gille Osald mac Gille Anndrais Gille nan Naemh mac Cholmain Gille Christ Bretnach the Briton and Donnchadh s chamberlain Etgar mac Muireadhaich 82 Aedh son of the mormaer of Lennox also witnessed these grants and sometime between 1208 and 1214 Donnchadh as Lord Donnchadh subscribed i e his name was written at the bottom as a witness to a charter of Maol Domhnaich Earl of Lennox son and heir of Mormaer Ailean II to the bishopric of Glasgow regarding the church of Campsie 83 There are records of patronage towards the nunnery of North Berwick a house founded by Donnchadh s probable maternal grandfather or great grandfather Donnchadh I of Fife 84 He gave that house the rectorship of the church of St Cuthbert of Maybole sometime between 1189 and 1250 85 In addition to Maybole he gave the church of St Brigit at Kirkbride to the nuns as well as a grant of three marks from a place called Barrebeth 86 Relations with the bishop of Glasgow within whose diocese Carrick lay are also attested For instance on 21 July 1225 at Ayr in Kyle Donnchadh made a promise of tithes to Walter Bishop of Glasgow 87 nbsp James A Morris illustration of how the Cluniac Abbey of Crosssraguel roughly looked before its destruction in the early modern eraDonnchadh s most important long term patronage was a series of gifts to the Cluniac Abbey of Paisley that led to the foundation of a monastery at Crossraguel Crois Riaghail At some date before 1227 he granted Crossraguel and a place called Suthblan to Paisley a grant confirmed by Pope Honorius III on 23 January 1227 88 A royal confirmation by King Alexander III of Scotland dated to 25 August 1236 shows that Donnchadh granted the monastery the churches of Kirkoswald Turnberry Straiton and Dalquharran Old Dailly 89 He may also have given the churches of Girvan and Kirkcudbright Innertig Ballantrae 90 It is clear from several sources that Donnchadh made these grants on the condition that the Abbey of Paisley established a Cluniac house in Carrick but that the Abbey did not fulfil this condition arguing that it was not obliged to do so 88 The Bishop of Glasgow intervened in 1244 and determined that a house of Cluniac monks from Paisley should indeed be founded there that the house should be exempt from the jurisdiction of Paisley save recognition of the common Cluniac Order but that the Abbot of Paisley could visit the house annually After the foundation Paisley was to hand over its Carrick properties to the newly established monastery 91 A papal bull of 11 July 1265 reveals that Paisley Abbey built only a small oratory served by Paisley monks 92 Twenty years after the bishop s ruling Paisley complained to the papacy which led Pope Clement IV to issue two bulls dated 11 June 1265 and 6 February 1266 appointing mandatories to settle the dispute the results of their deliberations are unknown 92 Crossraguel was not finally founded until about two decades after Donnchadh s death probably by 1270 its first abbot Abbot Patrick is attested between 1274 and 1292 93 Anglo French world editIn secular affairs one of the few important facts recorded about Donnchadh was his marriage to Avelina daughter of Alan fitz Walter lord of Strathgryfe and northern Kyle and High Steward of Scotland The marriage is known from Roger of Hoveden s Chronica which recorded that in 1200 Donnchadh Carried off rapuit Avelina daughter of Alan fitz Walter lord of Renfrew before William king of Scotland returned from England to his own land And hence that king was exceeding wroth and he took from Alan fitz Walter twenty four pledges that he would preserve the peace with his and with his land and take the law about his law 94 The marriage bound Donnchadh closer to the Anglo French circles of the northern part of the region south of the Forth while from Alan s point of view it was part of a series of moves to expand his territory further into former Gall Gaidhil lands moves that had included an alliance a few years earlier with another Firth of Clyde Gaelic prince Raghnall mac Somhairle Rǫgnvaldr son of Sumarlidi or Somerled 95 Charter evidence reveals two Anglo Normans present in Donnchadh s territory Some of Donnchadh s charters to Melrose were subscribed by an Anglo Norman knight named Roger de Skelbrooke who appears to have been Lord of Greenan 96 De Skelbrooke himself made grants to Melrose regarding the land of Drumeceisuiene i e Drumshang grants confirmed by his lord Donnchadh 97 This knight gave Melrose fishing rights in the River Doon rights confirmed by Donnchadh too and later by Roger s son in law and successor Ruaidhri mac Gille Escoib Raderic mac Gillescop 98 The other known Anglo French knight was Thomas de Colville Thomas nicknamed the Scot was the younger son of the lord of Castle Bytham a significant landowner in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire 99 Around 1190 he was constable of Dumfries the royal castle which had been planted in Strathnith by the Scottish king probably overrun by the Gall Gaidhil in the revolt of 1174 before being restored afterwards 100 Evidence that he possessed land in the region under Donnchadh s overlordship comes from the opening years of the 13th century when he made a grant of land around Dalmellington to the Cistercians of Vaudey Abbey 101 Historians G W S Barrow and Hector MacQueen both thought that Thomas nickname the Scot which then could mean a Gael as well as someone from north of the Forth is a reflection of Thomas exposure to the culture of the south west during his career there 102 It is not known how these two men acquired the patronage of Donnchadh or his family Writing in 1980 Barrow could find no cause for their presence in the area and declared that they were for the present impossible to account for 103 As Richard Oram pointed out in one of his charters Roger de Skelbrooke called Donnchadh s father Gille Brighde my lord indicating that Donnchadh probably inherited them in his territory 104 Neither of them left traceable offspring in the region and even if they did represent for Carrick what could have been the embryonic stages of the kind of Normanisation that was taking place further east the process was halted during Donnchadh s period as ruler 105 Vaudey Abbey transferred the land granted to it by Donnchadh to Melrose Abbey in 1223 because it was useless and dangerous to them both on account of the absence of law and order and by reason of the insidious attacks of a barbarous people 106 Ireland editThe Anglo Norman John de Courcy whose early life was probably spent just across the Irish Sea in Cumbria invaded the over kingdom of Ulaid in north eastern Ireland in 1177 with the aim of conquest 107 After defeating the region s king Ruaidhri Mac Duinn Shleibhe de Courcy was able to take control of a large amount of territory though not without encountering further resistance among the native Irish 107 Cumbria was only a short distance too from the lands of the Gall Gaidhil and around 1180 John de Courcy married Donnchadh s cousin Affrica whose father Gudrodr Gofraidh King of the Isles was son of Donnchadh s aunt 108 Gudrodr who was thus Donnchadh s cousin had in turn married a daughter of the Meic Lochlainn ruler of Tir Eoghain another Irish kingdom 107 Marriage thus connected Donnchadh and the other Gall Gaidhil princes to several players in Ulster affairs citation needed The earliest information on Donnchadh s and indeed Gall Gaidhil involvement in Ulster comes from Roger of Hoveden s entry about the death of Jordan de Courcy John s brother 109 It related that in 1197 after Jordan s death John sought vengeance andFought a battle with the petty kings of Ireland of whom he put some to flight slew others and subjugated their territories of which he gave no small part to Donnchadh son of Gille Brighde the son of Fergus who at the time that the said John was about to engage with the Irish came to assist him with no small body of troops 110 Donnchadh s interests in the area were damaged when de Courcy lost his territory in eastern Ulster to his rival Hugh de Lacy in 1203 107 John de Courcy with help from his wife s brother King Rǫgnvaldr Gudrodarson Raghnall mac Gofraidh and perhaps from Donnchadh tried to regain his principality but was initially unsuccessful 107 De Courcy s fortunes were boosted when Hugh de Lacy then Earl of Ulster and his associate William III de Briouze themselves fell foul of John the king campaigned in Ireland against them in 1210 a campaign that forced de Briouze to return to Wales and de Lacy to flee to St Andrews in Scotland 111 English records attest to Donnchadh s continued involvement in Ireland One document after describing how William de Briouze became the king s enemy in England and Ireland records that after John arrived in Ireland in July 1210 William de Briouze s wife Matilda fled to Scotland with William and Reinald her sons and her private retinue in the company of Hugh de Lacy and when the king was at Carrickfergus Castle a certain friend and cousin of his of Galloway namely Donnchadh of Carrick reported to the king that he had taken her and her daughter the wife of Roger de Mortimer and William junior with his wife and two sons but Hugh de Lacy and Reinald escaped 112 The Histoire des Ducs de Normandie recorded that William and Matilda had voyaged to the Isle of Man en route from Ireland to Galloway where they were captured 113 Matilda was imprisoned by the king and died of starvation 114 Another document this one preserved in an Irish memoranda roll dating to the reign of King Henry VI reigned 1422 1461 records that after John s Irish expedition of 1210 Donnchadh controlled extensive territory in County Antrim namely the settlements of Larne and Glenarm with 50 carucates of land in between a territory similar to the later barony of Glenarm Upper 115 King John had given or recognised Donnchadh s possession of this territory and that of Donnchadh s nephew Alaxandair Alexander as a reward for his help similarly John had given Donnchadh s cousins Ailean and Tomas sons of Lochlann a huge lordship equivalent to 140 knight s fees that included most of northern County Antrim and County Londonderry the reward for use of their soldiers and galleys 116 By 1219 Donnchadh and his nephew appear to have lost all or most of his Irish land a document of that year related that the Justiciar of Ireland Geoffrey de Marisco had dispossessed disseised them believing they had conspired against the king in the rebellion of 1215 6 117 The king John s successor Henry III found that this was not true and ordered the Justiciar to restore Donnchadh and his nephew to their lands 117 By 1224 Donnchadh had still not regained these lands and de Lacy s adherents were gaining more ground in the region King Henry III repeated his earlier but ineffective instructions he ordered Henry de Loundres Archbishop of Dublin and new Justiciar of Ireland to restore to Donnchadh the remaining part of the land given to him by King John in Ireland unless anyone held it by his father s own precept 118 Later in the same year Donnchadh wrote to King Henry His letter was as follows Donnchadh Thanks him for the mandate which he directed by him to the Justiciar of Ireland to restore his land there of which he had been disseized on account of the English war but as the land has not yet been restored he asks the King to give by him a more effectual command to the Justiciar 119 Henry s response was a writ to his Justiciar King John granted to Donnchadh of Carrick land in Ulster called Balgeithelauche probably Ballygalley county Antrim He says Hugh de Lacy disseized him and gave it to another The King commands the Earl to inquire who has it and its tenure and if his right is insufficient to give Donnchadh the land during the king s pleasure At Bedford 120 It is unlikely that Donnchadh ever regained his territory after Hugh was formally restored to the Earldom of Ulster in 1227 Donnchadh s land was probably controlled by the Bisset family Historian Sean Duffy argues that the Bissets later known as the Bissets of the Glens helped Hugh de Lacy and probably ended up with Donnchadh s territory as a reward 121 Death and legacy editDonnchadh was said by the Martyrology of Glasgow to have died on 13 June 1250 122 He was succeeded in the earldom by Niall The traditional view going back to the 19th century is that Niall was Donnchadh s son 123 This view has been undermined with more recent research by genealogist Andrew MacEwen who has argued that Niall was not the son of Donnchadh but rather his grandson a view embraced by leading Scottish medievalist Professor G W S Barrow 124 According to this argument Donnchadh s son and intended heir was Cailean mac Donnchaidh alias Nicholaus who as his son and heir issued a charter in Donnchadh s lifetime but seemingly predeceased him 124 It was further suggested that Cailean s wife Earl Niall s mother was a daughter of the Tir Eoghain king Niall Ruadh o Neill tying in with Donnchadh s Irish activities accounting for the use of the name Niall and explaining the strong alliance with the o Neill held by Niall s grandsons 124 Another of Donnchadh s sons Eoin John owned the land of Straiton He was involved in the Galwegian revolt of Gille Ruadh in 1235 during which he attacked some churches in the diocese of Glasgow 125 He received a pardon by granting patronage of the church of Straiton and the land of Hachinclohyn to William de Bondington Bishop of Glasgow which was confirmed by Alexander II in 1244 125 Two other sons Ailean Alan and Alaxandair Alexander are attested subscribing to Donnchadh and Cailean s charters to North Berwick 126 A Melrose charter mentions that Ailean was parson of Kirchemanen 127 Cailean and presumably Donnchadh s other legitimate sons died before their father 124 Donnchadh s probable grandson Niall was earl for only six years and died leaving no son but four daughters one of whom is known by name 128 The last presumably the eldest was his successor Marjorie who married in turn Adam of Kilconquhar died 1271 a member of the Mac Duibh family of Fife and Robert de Brus 6th Lord of Annandale 129 Marjorie s son Robert the Bruce through military success and ancestral kinship with the Dunkeld dynasty became King of Scots King Robert s brother Edward Bruce became for a short time High King of Ireland citation needed Under the Bruces and their successors to the Scottish throne the title Earl of Carrick became a prestigious honorific title usually given to a son of the king or intended heir 130 at some time between 1250 and 1256 Earl Niall anticipating that the earldom would be taken over by a man from another family issued a charter to Lochlann Roland of Carrick a son or grandson of one of Donnchadh s brothers The charter granted Lochlann the title Cenn Cineoil head of the kindred a position which brought the right to lead the men of Carrick in war The charter also conferred possession of the office of baillie of Carrick under whoever was earl 131 Precedent had been established here by other native families of Scotland something similar having already taken place in Fife it was a way of ensuring that the kin group retained strong locally based male leadership even when the newly imposed common law of Scotland forced the comital title to pass into the hands of another family 132 By 1372 the office had passed probably by marriage to the Kennedy family of Dunure 133 The 17th century genealogical compilation known as Ane Accompt of the Genealogie of the Campbells by Robert Duncanson minister of Campbeltown claimed that Efferic i e Affraic or Afraig wife of Gilleasbaig of Menstrie fl 1263 6 and mother of Campbell progenitor Cailean Mor was the daughter of one Cailean anglicised Colin Lord of Carrick 134 Partly because Ane Accompt is a credible witness to much earlier material the claim is thought probable 135 Thus Donnchadh was likely the great grandfather of Cailean Mor a lineage that explains the popularity of the names Donnchadh Duncan and Cailean Colin among later Campbells as well as their close alliance to King Robert I during the Scottish Wars of Independence 136 Notes edit Laing Descriptive Catalogue p 33 Duncan Scotland p 643 A discussion of charters in relation to the Scottish king William the Lion can be found in Barrow ed Acts of William I pp 68 94 Duncan Roger of Howden pp 135 59 and Gillingham Travels pp 69 81 for Hoveden s importance Ross Moray Ulster and the MacWilliams pp 24 44 for discussion of these two sources in reference to more northerly events of the same era Corner Howden Hoveden Roger of Duncan Roger of Howden p 135 Gillingham Travels pp 70 71 Gransden Historical Writing pp 222 36 Duncan Roger of Howden p 135 Gillingham Travels p 70 Duncan Roger of Howden p 135 Corner Howden Hoveden Roger of Oram Lordship pp 95 97 Anderson Scottish Annals pp 268 325 Lawrie Annals p 326 Riley ed Annals of Roger de Hoveden vol ii p 404 Broun Scottish Independence p 215 Broun Scottish Independence pp 257 58 Broun New Look at Gesta Annalia p 17 With perhaps another chronicle closely related to the Chronicle of Melrose and the Chronicle of Holyrood see Broun Scottish Independence p 217 Duncan Sources and Uses p 169 Broun Scottish Independence pp 215 30 Barrow Anglo Norman Era p 51 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 32 35 Barrow Kingdom of the Scots pp 38 40 Barrow Kingdom of the Scots pp 112 29 Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 232 40 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 48 50 Broun Becoming Scottish p 19 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 30 50 illustrative maps at pp 51 60 Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 294 96 Broun Welsh Identity pp 120 25 Edmonds Personal Names pp 49 50 Clancy Galloway and the Gall Ghaidheil pp 32 33 et passim Clancy Gall Ghaidheil pp 29 39 Byrne Na Renna p 267 Clancy Gall Ghaidheil pp 29 32 Stokes ed Martyrology pp 116 17 184 85 212 3 Clancy Gall Ghaidheil p 44 Woolf Pictland to Alba pp 293 98 Clancy Gall Ghaidheil passim Clancy Gall Ghaidheil pp 33 34 Oram David pp 93 96 Barrow Kingdom of the Scots p 251 Stringer Early Lords of Lauderdale pp 46 47 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol vi pp 286 91 Barrow Kingdom of the Scots pp 139 40 Oram Lordship p 103 Woolf Age of Sea Kings p 103 For Alan of Galloway see Stringer Acts of Lordship p 224 for Donnchadh see Innes ed Liber Sancte Marie vol i no 32 at p 25 where sometime before 1196 he is described as Donnchadh son of Gille Brighde son of Fergus earl of Carrick a b Woolf Age of Sea Kings p 103 Oram Lordship p 89 Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses pp 147 48 Oram Lordship p 89 Fawcett and Oram Melrose Abbey pp 231 32 Anderson Scottish Annals p 257 Oram Lordship p 61 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol iv p 422 Barrow Robert Bruce pp 430 31 n 28 a b c d Anderson Scottish Annals p 257 Oram Lordship p 61 Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 422 Oram Lordship p 110 n 39 Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 421 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage p 422 Innes ed Registrum Monasterii de Passelet pp 166 68 Barrow Acts of Malcolm IV pp 12 13 Oram Lordship pp 87 92 Barrow Acts of William I p 7 Oram Lordship p 93 Anderson Scottish Annals p 258 Oram Lordship p 96 Anderson Scottish Annals p 268 Oram Lordship p 97 Corner Scott Scott and Watt eds Scotichronicon vol 4 p 546 n 18 Lawrie Annals pp 218 254 Oram Lordship p 97 Anderson Scottish Annals p 289 Oram Lordship p 100 Anderson Early Sources p 286 Oram Lordship p 99 Oram Lordship pp 99 100 Oram Lordship pp 100 101 Lawrie Annals p 218 a b Oram Lordship p 100 Anderson Early Sources vol ii pp 309 10 Anderson Early Sources vol ii p 310 Oram Lordship p 100 Anderson Scottish Annals p 289 Anderson Scottish Annals pp 289 90 Corner et al Scotichronicon vol iv pp 366 67 Oram Lordship p 101 Anderson Scottish Annals pp 289 90 Oram Lordship p 101 a b c d e Anderson Scottish Annals p 290 Oram Lordship p 101 Corner et al Scotichronicon vol iv pp 366 69 a b Oram Lordship pp 103 104 a b Anderson Early Sources vol ii pp 330 31 n 2 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i no 193 p 173 Anderson Early Sources vol ii pp 330 31 n 2 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 192 and 193 pp 172 73 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i no 32 pp 25 26 Oram Lordship p 111 n 80 Oram Lordship p 111 n 80 Oram Lordship p 111 n 80 Watt and Shead Heads of Religious Houses pp 149 50 E g Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol iv p 422 a b MacQueen Survival and Success p 74 n 31 MacQueen Laws of Galloway p 132 MacQueen Kin of Kennedy pp 278 80 MacQueen Survival and Success pp 75 76 MacQueen Laws of Galloway pp 138 39 MacQueen Laws of Galloway p 134 MacQueen Kin of Kennedy p 280 MacQueen Laws of Galloway p 134 Oram Lordship pp 212 13 Fawcett and Oram Melrose Abbey p 243 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie no 37 p 29 Reid and Barrow Sheriffs of Scotland p 3 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 29 and 30 pp 20 24 Oram Lordship p 104 Anderson Early Sources p 330 Fawcett and Oram Melrose Abbey pp 228 40 for details and p 228 for the term super grange Barrow Anglo Norman Era p 119 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i no 316 pp 277 78 Carrick and Maidment Some Account of the Ancient Earldom of Carric p 28 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 29 30 pp 20 24 Innes ed Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis vol i no 102 pp 87 88 Neville Native Lordship p 55 Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses p 147 Fawcett and Oram Melrose Abbey pp 231 32 Innes ed Carte Monialium de Northberwic nos 13 14 pp 13 14 Watt and Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 238 Cowan Parishes p 118 Innes ed Carte Monialium de Northberwic nos 1 28 pp 3 30 31 Innes ed Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis vol i no 139 pp 117 18 Shead and Cunningham Glasgow a b Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses pp 63 64 Cowan Parishes pp 123 189 90 Cowan Parishes pp 73 120 another early possession of Crossraguel was the church of Inchmarnock for which see Cowan Parishes pp 35 36 Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses p 64 Cowan Parishes p 123 a b Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses p 64 Cowan and Easson Medieval Religious Houses pp 63 64 Watt and Shead Heads of Religious Houses p 47 Anderson Scottish Annals p 325 Lawrie Annals pp 326 27 Oram Lordship p 132 Alan who died four years later fell into disgrace with King William and disappeared from royal circles but his son Walter nicknamed og the little or younger in several Melrose charters recovered the family s position and by the late 1210s held along with the Galloway family a dominant position in the councils of William s successor Alexander II see Boardman Gaelic World p 92 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol ii nos 452 55 pp 420 23 Oram Lordship pp 132 33 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 46 115 Carrick and Maidment Some Account of the Ancient Earldom of Carric p 28 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 31 35 pp 24 28 Fawcett and Oram Melrose Abbey p 243 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 34 36 pp 27 29 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 31 177 Barrow Anglo Norman Era p 31 Duncan Scotland pp 182 83 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 31 32 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i nos 192 and 193 pp 172 73 Barrow Anglo Norman Era p 31 MacQueen Survival and Success p 77 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 46 47 Oram Lordship pp 90 91 Barrow Anglo Norman Era pp 31 32 Oram Lordship p Barrow Anglo Norman Era p 32 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i no 195 pp 174 75 a b c d e Duffy Courcy Courci John de Duffy Courcy Courci John de Oram Lordship p 105 Greeves Galloway lands in Ulster p 115 Riley ed Annals of Roger de Hoveden vol ii p 404 Smith Lacy Hugh de earl of Ulster Bain ed Calendar of Documents vol i no 480 p 82 spellings modernised Anderson Early Sources vol ii p 387 McDonald Manx Kingship p 132 Lawrie Annals p 327 Duffy Lords of Galloway p 37 Duffy Lords of Galloway p 38 a b Bain ed Calendar of Documents vol i no 737 p 130 Duffy Lords of Galloway pp 43 44 Bain ed Calendar of Documents vol i no 874 p 155 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 422 n 7 Smith Lacy Hugh de Bain ed Calendar of Documents vol i no 878 p 156 Bain ed Calendar of Documents vol i no 879 p 156 These were Anglo Norman nobles who were settling in northern Scotland at this time in the lordship of the Aird An Aird in the aftermath of the destruction of the Meic Uilleim and would quickly become Gaelicised Duffy Lords of Galloway pp 39 42 50 see also Stringer Periphery and Core pp 92 95 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 423 Innes ed Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis vol ii p 616 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 423 MacQueen Survival and Success p 72 a b c d Barrow Robert Bruce pp 34 35 430 n 26 a b Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 243 Innes ed Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis vol i no 187 pp 151 52 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 243 Innes ed Carte Monialium de Northberwic nos 13 14 pp 13 15 MacQueen Kin of Kennedy p 284 illus MacQueen Survival and Success p 72 illus there is a possibility that he had two sons named Alaxandair Alexander as appears in MacQueen s illustrations Balfour Paul Scots Peerage vol ii p 243 Innes ed Liber de Sancte Marie vol i no 189 pp 170 71 Balfour Paul Scots Peerage p 426 MacQueen Survival and Success p 78 MacQueen Survival and Success p 78 Boardman Early Stewart Kings pp 22 57 198 99 279 282 294 95 MacQueen Kin of Kennedy pp 278 80 MacQueen Survival and Success pp 76 78 80 Bannerman Macduff of Fife pp 20 28 for discussion in relation to Fife MacQueen Common Law p 174 MacQueen Kin of Kennedy pp 278 286 87 Boardman Campbells p 18 Campbell of Airds History p 41 Sellar Earliest Campbells p 115 Sellar Earliest Campbells pp 115 16 Campbell of Airds History pp 41 42 Sellar Earliest Campbells p 116References editPrimary sources edit Anderson Alan Orr ed 1922 Early Sources of Scottish History A D 500 to 1286 2 vols Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd Anderson Alan Orr ed 1908 Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers A D 500 to 1286 1991 revised amp corrected ed Stamford Paul Watkins ISBN 978 1 871615 45 6 Bain Joseph ed 1831 Calendar of Documents Relating to Scotland Preserved in Her Majesty s Public Record Office Vol 1 A D 1108 1272 Edinburgh H M General Register House Corner David J Scott A B Scott William W Watt D E R eds 1994 Scotichronicon by Walter Bower in Latin and English Scotichronicon by Walter Bower New Edition in Latin and English with Notes and Indexes General Editor D E R Watt Aberdeen Aberdeen University Press ISBN 978 1 873644 35 5 Innes Cosmo ed 1843 Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis Munimenta Ecclesie Metropolitane Glasguensis a Sede Restaurata Seculo Incunte Xii ad Reformatam Religionem 2 vols Edinburgh The Bannatyne Club Innes Cosmo ed 1847 Carte Monialium de Northberwic Prioratus Cisterciensis B Marie de Northberwic Munimenta Vetusta que Supersunt Edinburgh Bannatyne Club Innes Cosmo ed 1837 Liber Sancte Marie de Melros Munimenta Vetustiora Monasterii de Melros 2 vols Edinburgh Bannatyne Club Innes Cosmo ed 1832 Registrum Monasterii de Passelet Cartas Privilegia Conventiones Aliaque Munimenta Complectens a Domo Fundata A D MCLXIII usque ad A D MDXXIX Edinburgh Maitland club publications 17 Lawrie Archibald Campbell ed 1910 Annals of the Reigns of Malcolm and William Kings of Scotland A D 1153 1214 collected with notes and an index Glasgow MacLehose Riley Henry T 1853 The Annals of Roger de Hoveden Comprising the History of England and of Other Countries of Europe from A D 732 to A D 1201 Translated from the Latin with Notes and Illustrations 2 vols London H G Bohn Stokes Whitley ed 1905 Felire oengusso Celi De The Martyrology of Oengus the Culdee Critically Edited from Ten Manuscripts with a Preface Translation Notes and Indices Dublin Henry Bradshaw Society Republished Dublin Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1984 ISBN 978 1 85500 127 5 Secondary sources edit Bannerman John 1993 Macduff of Fife in Grant Alexander Stringer Keith J eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Essays Presented to G W S Barrow Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 20 38 ISBN 978 0 7486 1110 2 Barrow G W S ed 1960 The Acts of Malcolm IV King of Scots 1153 1165 Together with Scottish Royal Acts Prior to 1153 Not Included in Sir Archibald Lawrie s Early Scottish Charters Regesta Regum Scottorum vol i Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 85224 141 7 Barrow G W S ed 1971 The Acts of William I King of Scots 1165 1214 Regesta Regum Scottorum vol ii Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 85224 142 4 Barrow G W S 1980 The Anglo Norman Era in Scottish History The Ford Lectures Delivered in the University of Oxford in Hilary Term 1977 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822473 0 Barrow G W S 2003 The Kingdom of the Scots Government Church and Society from the Eleventh to the Fourteenth Century 2nd ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1802 6 Barrow G W S 2005 Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland 4th ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2022 7 Campbell of Airds Alastair 2000 A History of Clan Campbell Volume 1 From Origins to Flodden Edinburgh Polygon ISBN 978 1 902930 17 6 Boardman Stephen 2006 The Campbells 1250 1513 Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 978 0 85976 631 9 Boardman Stephen 1996 The Early Stewart Kings Robert II and Robert III 1371 1406 The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland Series East Linton Tuckwell Press ISBN 978 1 898410 43 0 Boardman Steve 2007 The Gaelic World and the Early Stewart Court in Broun Dauvit MacGregor Martin eds Miorun Mor nan Gall The Great Ill Will of the Lowlander Lowland Perceptions of the Highlands Medieval and Modern PDF Glasgow Centre for Scottish and Celtic Studies University of Glasgow pp 83 109 OCLC 540108870 archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 retrieved 24 July 2009 Broun Dauvit 2007 Becoming Scottish in the Thirteenth Century The Evidence of the Chronicle of Melrose in Smith Beverley Ballin Taylor Simon Williams Gareth eds West over Sea Studies in Scandinavian Sea Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300 A Festschrift in Honour of Dr Barbara E Crawford Leiden Brill pp 19 32 ISBN 978 90 04 15893 1 Broun Dauvit 1999 A New Look at the Gesta Annalia Attributed to John of Fordun in Crawford Barbara E ed Church Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower s Scotichronicon Edinburgh Mercat Press pp 9 30 ISBN 978 1 84183 001 8 Broun Dauvit 2007 Scottish Independence and the Idea of Britain From the Picts to Alexander III Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2360 0 Broun Dauvit 2004 Welsh Identity of the Kingdom of Strathclyde c 900 c 1200 Innes Review 55 2 111 80 doi 10 3366 inr 2004 55 2 111 ISSN 0020 157X Byrne Francis J 1982 Na Renna Peritia 1 267 doi 10 1484 J Peri 3 615 ISSN 0332 1592 Carrick Andrew Maidment James 1857 Some Account of the Ancient Earldom of Carric To Which are Prefixed Notices of the Earldom after it Came into the Families of De Bruce and Stewart Edinburgh Thomas George Stevenson Clancy Thomas Owen 2008 The Gall Ghaidheil and Galloway Journal of Scottish Name Studies 2 19 50 ISSN 1747 7387 Corner David 2004 Howden Hoveden Roger of d 1201 2 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography fee required Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13880 Retrieved 24 July 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Cowan Ian B Easson David E 1976 Medieval Religious Houses Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man 2nd ed London and New York Longman ISBN 978 0 582 12069 3 Cowan Ian B 1967 The Parishes of Medieval Scotland Scottish Record Society vol 93 Edinburgh Neill amp Co Ltd Duffy Sean 2004 Courcy John de d 1219 conqueror of Ulster Oxford Dictionary of National Biography fee required Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 6443 Retrieved 24 July 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Duffy Sean 2004 The Lords of Galloway Earls of Carrick and the Bissets of the Glens Scottish Settlement in Thirteenth Century Ulster in Edwards David ed Regions and Rulers in Ireland 1100 1650 Dublin Four Courts Press pp 37 50 ISBN 978 1 85182 742 8 Duffy Sean 2007 The Prehistory of the Galloglass in Duffy Sean ed The World of the Galloglass Kings Warlords and Warriors in Ireland and Scotland 1200 1600 Dublin Four Courts Press pp 1 23 ISBN 978 1 85182 946 0 Duncan A A M 1999 Roger of Howden and Scotland 1187 1201 in Crawford Barbara E ed Church Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower s Scotichronicon Edinburgh Mercat Press pp 135 59 ISBN 978 1 84183 001 8 Duncan A A M 1975 Scotland The Making of the Kingdom The Edinburgh History of Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 05 003183 4 Duncan A A M 2000 Sources and Uses of the Chronicle of Melrose 1165 1297 in Taylor Simon ed Kings Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland 500 1297 Essays in Honour of Marjorie Ogilvie Anderson on the Occasion of Her Ninetieth Birthday Dublin Four Courts Press pp 146 85 ISBN 978 1 85182 516 5 Edmonds Fiona 2009 Personal Names and the Cult of Patrick in Eleventh Century Strathclyde and Northumbria in Boardman Steve Davies John Reuben Williamson Eila eds Saints Cults in the Celtic World Studies in Celtic History Woodbridge Boydell and Brewer pp 42 65 ISBN 978 1 84383 432 8 ISSN 0261 9865 Fawcett Richard Oram Richard 2004 Melrose Abbey Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 2867 3 Gillingham John 2000 The Travels of Roger of Howden and his Views of the Irish Scots and Welsh in Gillingham John ed The English in the Twelfth Century Imperalism National Identity and Political Values Woodbridge Boydell pp 69 91 ISBN 978 0 85115 732 0 Gransden Antonia 1997 Historical Writing in England vol 1 c 550 c 1307 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15124 5 Greeves Ronald 1959 The Galloway Lands in Ulster Transactions of the Dumfriesshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society 3rd 36 115 22 ISSN 0141 1292 Laing Henry 1850 Descriptive Catalogue of Impressions from Ancient Scottish Seals Embracing a Period from A D 1094 to the Commonwealth Taken from Original Charters and Other Deeds Preserved in Public and Private Archives Edinburgh Bannatyne and Maitland Clubs McDonald R Andrew 2007 Manx Kingship in its Irish Sea Setting 1187 1229 King Rǫgnvaldr and the Crovan Dynasty Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 978 1 84682 047 2 McNeill Peter G B MacQueen Hector L Lyons Anna May eds 2000 Atlas of Scottish History to 1707 reprinted with corrections ed Edinburgh The Scottish Medievalists and Department of Geography University of Edinburgh ISBN 978 0 9503904 1 3 MacQueen Hector L 1993 Common Law and Feudal Society in Medieval Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 0416 6 MacQueen Hector 1993 The Kin of Kennedy Kenkynnol and the Common Law in Grant Alexander Stringer Keith J eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Essays Presented to G W S Barrow Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 274 96 ISBN 978 0 7486 1110 2 MacQueen Hector L 1991 The Laws of Galloway A Preliminary Survey in Oram Richard D Stell Geoffrey P eds Galloway Land and Lordship Edinburgh The Scottish Society for Northern Studies pp 131 43 ISBN 978 0 9505994 6 5 MacQueen Hector L 2003 Survival and Success The Kennedys of Dunure in Boardman Steve Ross Alasdair eds The Exercise of Power in Medieval Scotland C 1200 1500 Dublin Four Courts Press pp 67 94 ISBN 978 1 85182 749 7 Oram Richard 2004 David I The King Who Made Scotland Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 2825 3 Oram Richard D 2000 The Lordship of Galloway Edinburgh John Donald ISBN 978 0 85976 541 1 Paul James Balfour 1904 1914 The Scots Peerage Founded on Wood s Edition of Sir Robert Douglas s Peerage of Scotland Containing an Historical and Genealogical Account of the Nobility of that Kingdom 9 volumes Edinburgh D Douglas Reid Norman H Barrow G W S eds 2002 The Sheriffs of Scotland An Interim List to C 1306 St Andrews University of St Andrews Library on behalf of The Scottish Medievalists ISBN 978 0 900897 17 7 Ross Alasdair 2007 Moray Ulster and the MacWilliams in Duffy Sean ed The World of the Galloglass Kings Warlords and Warriors in Ireland and Scotland 1200 1600 Dublin Four Courts Press pp 24 44 ISBN 978 1 85182 946 0 Sellar David 1973 The Earliest Campbells Norman Briton or Gael Scottish Studies 17 109 26 ISSN 0036 9411 Shead N F Cunningham I C Glasgow Syllabus of Scottish Cartularies PDF University of Glasgow archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 retrieved 24 July 2009 Smith B 2004 Lacy Hugh de earl of Ulster d 1242 magnate and soldier Oxford Dictionary of National Biography fee required Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 15853 Retrieved 24 July 2009 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stringer Keith J 2000 Acts of Lordship The Records of the Lords of Galloway to 1234 in Brotherstone Terry Ditchburn David eds Freedom and Authority Scotland c 1050 c 1650 Historical and Historiographical Essays Presented to Grant G Simpson East Linton Tuckwell Press pp 203 34 ISBN 978 1 898410 79 9 Stringer Keith 1985 The Early Lords of Lauderdale Dryburgh Abbey and St Andrew s Priory at Northampton in Stringer Keith ed Essays on the Nobility of Medieval Scotland Edinburgh John Donald pp 44 61 ISBN 978 1 904607 45 8 Stringer Keith J 1993 Periphery and Core in Thirteenth Century Scotland Alan son of Roland Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland in Grant Alexander Stringer Keith J eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Essays Presented to G W S Barrow Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 82 113 ISBN 978 0 7486 1110 2 Watt D E R Murray A L eds 2003 Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638 The Scottish Record Society New Series Volume 25 Revised ed Edinburgh The Scottish Record Society ISBN 978 0 902054 19 6 ISSN 0143 9448 Watt D E R Shead N F eds 2001 The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from Twelfth to Sixteenth Centuries The Scottish Record Society New Series Volume 24 Revised ed Edinburgh The Scottish Record Society ISBN 978 0 902054 18 9 ISSN 0143 9448 Woolf Alex 2004 The Age of Sea Kings 900 1300 in Omand Donald ed The Argyll Book Edinburgh Birlinn pp 94 109 ISBN 978 1 84158 253 5 Woolf Alex 2007 From Pictland to Alba 789 1070 The New Edinburgh History of Scotland Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1234 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Donnchadh Earl of Carrick amp oldid 1134372276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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