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Lady Isabel (Elizabeth) CAMPBELL

Lady Isabel (Elizabeth) CAMPBELL

Female 1458 - Abt 1515  (56 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Lady Isabel (Elizabeth) CAMPBELL was born on 5 Dec 1458 in Ardkinglass, Lochgoilhead, Argyllshire, Scotland (daughter of Lord Colin CAMPBELL, Earl Of Argyll and Isabel (Elizabeth) STEWART); died about 1515 in Cargill, Perthshire, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G8Y9-DXY
    • _UID: 09B74D5CD5AA47D98950CD0A480225E910AD

    Isabel married William Master Of DRUMMOND on 5 Mar 1479 in Scotland. William was born in 1460 in Stoball, Cargill, Perthshire, Scotland; died in 1504. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Walter DRUMMOND was born in 1480 in Drummond, Perthshire, Scotland; and died.

    Isabel married Sir John OLIPHANT, Baron Olip before 1485 in Scotland. John (son of Sir Laurance (Lawrence) OLIPHANT and Lady Isabel HAY) was born about 1465 in Forfar, Angus, Scotland; died in 1516 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. John OLIPHANT was born about 1486 in , , , Scotland; died before 1505.
    2. Master Colin OLIPHANT was born about 1487 in Aberdalgie, Gask, Perthshire, Scotland; died on 9 Sep 1513 in Batt Of Flodden, Flodden Field, Northumberland, England; was buried in Battle of Flodden Field, Branston, Northumberland, England.
    3. Sir William OLIPHANT was born about 1495 in Gask Co., Perth, Scottland; died in in Flodden Field (In Battle).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Lord Colin CAMPBELL, Earl Of Argyll was born in 1433 in Lochow, Argyllshire, Scotland (son of Archibald CAMPBELL and Elizabeth SOMERVILLE); died on 10 May 1493.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LBJQ-CSS
    • _UID: 97574D6962144B12A5E618C626BDA7EF5904

    Colin married Isabel (Elizabeth) STEWART on 9 Apr 1453 in Glenorchy and Inishail, Argyll, Scotland. Isabel (daughter of John STEWART, 2nd Lord of Lorne and Agnes MACDONALD) was born in Jan 1437 in Castle Glenorchy, Lorn, Argyll, Scotland; died on 26 Oct 1510 in Dunbartonshire, Scotland; was buried in Oct 1510 in Kilmun Parish Church and Cemetery, Kilmun, Argyll, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Isabel (Elizabeth) STEWART was born in Jan 1437 in Castle Glenorchy, Lorn, Argyll, Scotland (daughter of John STEWART, 2nd Lord of Lorne and Agnes MACDONALD); died on 26 Oct 1510 in Dunbartonshire, Scotland; was buried in Oct 1510 in Kilmun Parish Church and Cemetery, Kilmun, Argyll, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GH11-WP8
    • TitleOfNobility: ; Countess of Argyll
    • Name: Isabel STUART
    • Name: Isabella Elizabeth STEWART
    • _UID: 86BB10600CB4416C81AD4012B619673B0F80

    Notes:

    Isabel Elizabeth Stewart is the daughter of John Stewart 2nd Lord Lorn. She married Colin Campbell on 9 Apr 1465 in Clunie, Perthshire, Scotland. They had 9 known children:
    Colin, Mary, Thomas, Archibald, Catherine, Helena, Margaretha, Elizabeth, and Isabel. Her son Archibald became the 2nd Earl of Argyll.


    EARL COLIN CAMPBELL was born 10 September 1433, Kilchurn Castle, Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland, to Archibald Gillespic Campbell (1405-1440) and Lady Elizabeth Somerville Baroness (141301460.) He married Lady Isabel Stewart about 1455.

    Colin Campbell died 10 May 1493, Tullibardine, Perthshire, Scotland, age 60.


    Colin Campbell, 1st Earl of Argyll
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Colin Campbell, 1st Earl of Argyll (c. 1433 ? 10 May 1493) was a Scottish nobleman.
    Biography[edit]
    He was the son of Gillespic (Archibald) Campbell, Master of Campbell and Elizabeth Somerville. Colin Campbell succeeded his grandfather Duncan Campbell, 1st Lord Campbell in 1453, and was created Earl of Argyll in 1457 and Lord Lorne in 1470, after the resignation of his wife's uncle Walter Stewart, 3rd Lord Lorne, who became Lord Innermeath.
    Campbell had supported King James II against the "Black Douglases", led by the 8th Earl of Douglas, and was given the earldom by King James III. James also gave him the position of Lord Chancellor of Scotland, but he eventually collaborated in the slaying of James III in 1484. In 1488 he became Lord Chancellor again, this time given by James IV of Scotland.
    Marriage and issue[edit]
    He married Isabelle Stewart, daughter of John Stewart, 2nd Lord Lorne in 1465, and had issue:[1]
    ?Archibald Campbell, 2nd Earl of Argyll.[1].
    ?Thomas Campbell
    ?Margaret Campbell, married George Seton, 4th Lord Seton
    ?Isabel Campbell, married William Drummond, Master of Drummond, son to John Drummond, 1st Lord Drummond
    ?Mary Campbell married Aonghas ?g Lord of the isles.
    ?Helen Campbell, married to Hugh Montgomerie, 1st Earl of Eglinton
    ?Elizabeth Campbell, married John Oliphant, 2nd Lord Oliphant
    ?Catherine Campbell, married Lachlan Og Maclean



    Sir Colin Campbell of Lochow was the son of Sir Gillespic Campbell of Menstrie. He died circa 1294 at Ath-dearg of Argyllshire, Scotland, killed while fighting Alexander, Lord of Lorne.1
    He lived at Lochow, Argyllshire, Scotland.1


    Colin Campbell, second Lord Campbell and first Earl of Argyill, was the son of Archibald, second, but eldest, surviving son of Sir Duncan Cambell in 1445. He succeeded his grandfather in 1453. On the death of his father he was placed under the care of his uncle, Sir Colin Campbell of Glenorchy, who concluded a match between him and Isabel Stewart, the eldest of the three daughters, and coheiresses of John, third lord of Lorne. Having acquired the principal part of the landed property of the two sisters of his wife, he exchanged certainb lands in Perthshire for the lordship of Lorne with Walter, their uncle, on whom the lordship of Lorne, which stood limited to heirs male, had devolved. In 1457 he was created, by James II, Earl of Argyll. He was one of the commissioners for negotiating a truce with Edward IV of England in 1463. In 1465 he was appointed, along with Lord Boyd, lord justiciary of Scotland on the south of the Forth, and after the flight of Lord Boyd to England he acted as sole justiciary. In 1474 he was appointed one of the commissioners to settle the treaty of alliance with Edward IV, by which James, prince of Scotland, was affianced to Cecilia, youngest daughter of Edward. Early in 1483 he received the office of lord high chancellor of Scotland. He was one of the commissioners sent to France in 1484 to renew the ancient league with the crown, which was confirmed at Paris 9 July, and also one of the commissioners who concluded the pacification at Nottingham with Richard III, 21 September of the same year. In 1487 he joined the conspiracy of the nobles against James III, and at the time of the murder of the king, after the battle of Sauchieburn, he was in England on an embassy to Henry VII. After the accession of James IV he was restored to the office of lord high chancellor. He died 10 May 1493. He had two sons and seven daughters
    Coile?in "Colin Oig & Colin" Campbell
    BIRTH1433
    Lochawe, Argyll and Bute, Scotland
    DEATH10 May 1493 (aged 59? 60)
    Scotland
    BURIALKilmun Parish Church and Cemetery
    Kilmun, Argyll and Bute, Scotland
    Colin Campbell is the son of Archibald Gillespic Campbell Master of Campbell and Celeshine and Elizabeth Summerville.

    Colin Campbell was the 1st Earl of Argyll & the 1st Lord Lorne & 2nd Lord Campbell. He married Isabel Elizabeth Stewart on 9 Apr 1465 in Clunie, Perthshire, Scotland.

    They had 9 known children:
    Colin, Mary, Thomas, Archibald, Catherine, Helena, Margaretha, Elizabeth, and Isabel.

    Her son Archibald became the 2nd Earl of Argyll.

    Kilchurn Castle

    KILCHURN CASTLE CEMETERY

    LADY ELIZABETH STEWART, COUNTESS OF ARGYLL was born 9 April 1427, Argyll, Scotland, to Baron John Stewart (1405-1463) and Agnes MacDonald (1402-1463.) She married Earl Colin Campbell about 1455.

    Isabel Stewart passed away 16 October 1510, Dumbarton, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, age 83.

    Dumbarton Castle, Dumbartonshire, Scotland

    Isabel Elizabeth Stewart Campbell
    Birth: 1439, Scotland
    Death: Oct. 26, 1510
    East Dunbartonshire, Scotland

    Isabel Elizabeth Stewart is the daughter of John Stewart 2nd Lord Lorn. She married Colin Campbell on 9 Apr 1465 in Clunie, Perthshire, Scotland. They had 9 known children:
    Colin, Mary, Thomas, Archibald, Catherine, Helena, Margaretha, Elizabeth, and Isabel. Her son Archibald became the 2nd Earl of Argyll.

    Family links:
    Spouse:
    Colin Campbell (1433 - 1493)*

    Children:
    Archibald Campbell (1460 - 1513)*

    *Calculated relationship

    Burial:
    Kilmun Parish Church and Cemetery
    Kilmun
    Argyll and Bute, Scotland

    Edit Virtual Cemetery info [?]


    Created by: Sharren Formby
    Record added: Mar 14, 2015
    Find A Grave Memorial# 143726824




    Children of Colin Campbell and Isabel Stewart:

    1.*LADY MARGARET CAMPBELL (1456-1520)
    2.Lady Mary Campbell (1458-1528)
    3.Earl Archibald Campbell (1459-1513)
    4.Thomas Campbell (1460-1513)
    5.Lady Catherine Campbell (1460-1516)
    6.Helen Campbell (1460-1527)
    7.Elizabeth Campbell (1462-1524)
    8.Lady Isabel Campbell (1473-1518)
    9.Lady Janet Campbell (1478-1555)
    +


    Children:
    1. Lady Catherine CAMPBELL, of Argyll was born about 1453 in Argyll, Scotland; died in in Scotland; was buried in Scotland.
    2. Thomas CAMPBELL was born in 1455 in Argyll, Scotland; and died.
    3. Lady Margaret CAMPBELL was born on 25 Feb 1456 in Inveraray Castle, Argyll, Scotland; died on 11 Jul 1530 in Seton Manor, Prestonpans, East Lothian, Scotland; was buried in Jul 1530 in Ardchattan, Argyll, Scotland.
    4. 1. Lady Isabel (Elizabeth) CAMPBELL was born on 5 Dec 1458 in Ardkinglass, Lochgoilhead, Argyllshire, Scotland; died about 1515 in Cargill, Perthshire, Scotland.
    5. Sir Gillespie Archibald CAMPBELL, 2nd. Earl of Argyll, Lord High Chancellor of Scotland was born on 6 May 1459 in Tarbert Castle, Tarbert, Argyll, Scotland; died on 9 Sep 1513 in Flodden Field, Branxton, Northumberland, England; was buried in 1513 in Kilmun Parish Church And Cemetery, Kilmun, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Archibald CAMPBELL and died.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: BDDCF599F9DF4871A4E51FCA4CF690302C5A

    Archibald married Elizabeth SOMERVILLE. Elizabeth and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth SOMERVILLE and died.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 769C5DD007994045B70253AAF49215B66B6E

    Children:
    1. 2. Lord Colin CAMPBELL, Earl Of Argyll was born in 1433 in Lochow, Argyllshire, Scotland; died on 10 May 1493.

  3. 6.  John STEWART, 2nd Lord of Lorne was born in 1397 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland (son of Sir Robert STEWART, of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st Lord and Lady Joan STEWART, Of Albany); died on 20 Dec 1463 in Dunstaffnage Castle, Oban, Scotland; was buried in 1463 in Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LBGP-MQJ
    • TitleOfNobility: ; Lord of Lorne
    • Name: John Mourach STEWART

    Notes:

    The Life Summary of John
    When Sir John Stewart 2nd Lord of Lorne was born in 1397, in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland, United Kingdom, his father, Robert Stewart of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st Lord, was 18 and his mother, Lady Joan Stewart, was 18. He had at least 1 son and 2 daughters with Countess Agnes MacDonald. He died on 20 December 1463, in Rubha Garbh, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom, at the age of 66, and was buried in Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland.


    BARON JOHN STEWART, BARON OF LORNE, was born about 1405 of Fothergill, Argyll, Scotland, to Lord Robert Stewart (1479-1449) and Joan Stewart (1379-1445.) He married Agnes MacDonald, Common-law marriage 1427, Dingwall, Ross-shire, Scotland.

    John Stewart died 20 December 1463, Dunstaffnage Castle, Oban, Scotland, age 58.

    AGNES MACDONALD was born about 1402 of Dingwall, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, to Lord Donald MacDonald (1365-1423) and Countess Mariota Leslie (1367-1440.) She was the common-law wife of Baron John Stewart, 1427, Dingwall,Ross-shire, Scotland.

    Agnes passed away about 1463, Dunstaffnage Scotland, age 53.

    Children of John Stewart and Agnes MacDonald:

    1.*LADY ISABEL STEWART COUNTESS (1427-1510)
    2.Lady Janet Stewart (1432-1475)
    3.Dougald Stewart, Chief (1445-1498)


    He had two wives:

    daughter MacDougall and daughter MacLaren. All other wives linked to him do not have valid sources and will be disconnected. ------------------------------------------------------- The name of John's first wife is not known. With his first wife Janet, Isabel and Marion were born. With a mistress (daughter of MacLaren) Dugald of Appin.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- John Stewart, 2nd Lord Lorne was born between 1397 and 1434.3 He was the son of Sir Robert Stewart, 1st Lord Lorne and Joan Stewart. He gained the title of 2nd Lord Lorne [S., 1439] circa 1448.1 and also went by the nick-name of 'Muireach' (or in English, 'the Leper').4

    John, Lord Lorne, called "the Leper," was surprised and mortally wounded by some of the Clan Dougall led by the 10th Chief's wild son, Black Alan MacDougall. (Alan M'Coule (3). He is said to have married on his death-bed (but this was not recognised by the authorities). John died of his wounds in his castle of Dunstaffnage on 20 Dec 1463.

    Between 1449 and 1455 he sat in the Scottish Parliament as Lord Lorn.3

    Sources

    [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VIII, page 138. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
    [S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 218. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Family.
    [S6] Cokayne, and others, The Complete Peerage, volume VIII, page 139.
    [S37] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes (Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003), volume 2, page 2766. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 107th edition.
    Links

    http://www.thepeerage.com/p10798.htm#i107974
    Sources

    Scots Peerage page 332
    John Stewart, 2nd Lord Lorne was born between 1397 and 1434.3 He was the son of Sir Robert Stewart, 1st Lord Lorne and Joan Stewart. He gained the title of 2nd Lord Lorne [S., 1439] circa 1448.1 and also went by the nick-name of 'Muireach' (or in English, 'the Leper').4

    John, Lord Lorne, called "the Leper," was surprised and mortally wounded by some of the Clan Dougall led by the 10th Chief's wild son, Black Alan MacDougall. (Alan M'Coule (3). He is said to have married on his death-bed (but this was not recognised by the authorities). John died of his wounds in his castle of Dunstaffnage on 20 Dec 1463.

    Between 1449 and 1455 he sat in the Scottish Parliament as Lord Lorne.3

    ----------------------------

    http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getperson.php?personID=I929&tree=CC

    --------------------------

    Stewart, John 2nd Lord of Lorne (Sir ) [929] 4 5 6

    Born: 1400 1 Marriage (1): MacDougall, dau. [15692] circa 1429 in Argyll, Scotland 1 Marriage (2): MacLaren, dau. [3929] in 1463 2 3 Died: 20 December 1463, Dunstaffnage, Argyll, Scotland at age 63 1 7
    Cause of his death was killed by a renegade MacDougall in the pay of the English.
    Another name for John was Stewart, John "Mourach" of Lorne.
    General Notes:
    1 - On the murder of John, the second Stewart Lord of Lorne, in 1463 by a renegade MacDougall in the pay of the English, the Lordship and castle passed to his brother Sir Walter. There was a dispute, since the murdered man was on his way to be married to his mistress so as to legitimate his natural son. The last Stewart Lord of Lorne is said to have died on the threshold while reciting his marriage vows. Local sympathy seemingly favored the boy and for six years there was conflict in Lorne. Sir Walter, perhaps finding the lands more trouble than they were worth, exchanged the Lordship with Colin Earl of Argyll for richer and more peaceful lands in eastern Scotland. The exchange was ratified by royal charter in 1470.

    2 - Tradition tell us that in 1445, while returning to his seat at Dunstaffnage castle from the great cattle tryst at Crieff, Sir John met and fell in love with the daughter of MacLaren of Ardvech. Although married, he began an affaire with his new love which one year later produced a son. He was christened Dugald and was to be the first Chief of the Stewarts of Appin. After the death of his first wife, Sir John waited, for reasons we are unaware of today, for 5 years until setting up the marriage between himself and Dugald's mother, but it may have had something to do with the politics of the day. In 1463, Sir John set a wedding date and sent for Dugald and his mother to come to Dunstaffnage. Unknown to Sir John, there was a plot to kill the Lord of Lorne. It is not fully known, but it is thought to have been set up by the Lord of the Isles who was in a power struggle with the King of Scots, and who saw it as being in his best interest to neutralize this powerful and loyal representative of the King in the west highlands. The other plotters, which some feel included Colin Campbell, Lord Argyll, Sir John's son-in-law, were primarily represented by Alan MacCoul, the illegitimate grandson of an earlier MacDougall Chief. As the lightly armed wedding party made it's way from Dunstaffnage to the small chapel located approximately 180 yards from the castle walls, they were attacked by a superior force lead by Alan MacCoul. Although better armed, MacCoul's force was defeated, but not before mortally wounding Lord of Lorn. Sir John was rushed into the chapel and MacCoul and his henchmen ran into and occupied the deserted Dunstaffnage. With his last breath Sir John married Dugald's mother, legitimizing him and making him the de jure Lord of Lorne. After receiving the last rites, Sir John expired and a new chapter in west highland history was opened. 8

    John married dau. MacDougall [15692] [MRIN: 1529] circa 1429 in Argyllshire, Scotland.1 (dau. MacDougall [15692] was born circa 1412 in Argyll, Scotland.)

    John possibly married dau. MacLaren [3929] [MRIN: 2451], daughter of ?? MacLaren of Ardveich [22529], in 1463.2 3

    Sources

    1 International Genealogical Index - submitted, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, International Genealogical Index.

    2 Stirnet Genealogy, Peter Barns-Graham, Stirnet Genealogy (www.stirnet.com), Stewart18.

    3 www.electricscotland.com, http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/stoz/appin_stewarts.htm.

    4 http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/1150/ekf.html, http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Hills/1150/ekf.html.

    5 Colquoun_Cunningham.ged, Jamie Vans.

    6 Stirnet Genealogy, Peter Barns-Graham, Stirnet Genealogy (www.stirnet.com), Campbell02: The Scots Peerage (Argyll), Burkes Peerage 1934 (Argyll).

    7 Betty and Dick Field's Family History, Richard Field, Betty and Dick Field's Family History.

    8 www.electricscotland.com, 2 - http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/stoz/appin_stewarts.htm.

    Source: http://clanmacfarlane.100megsfree5.com/929.htm

    Reference: MyHeritage Family Trees - SmartCopy: Apr 21 2017, 16:08:05 UTC
    view all
    John Stewart, 2nd Lord of Lorne's Timeline
    1397
    1397
    Birth of John
    Lorne, Argyll, Scotland
    1432
    1432
    Age 35
    Birth of Janet Stewart Of Lorn & Innermeath
    Lorne, Argyll, Scotland
    1437
    January 1437
    Age 40
    Birth of Isabel Stewart of Lorn, Countess of Argyll
    Lorne, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland

    1446
    1446
    Age 49
    Birth of Dugald Maclaurin Stewart, 1st of Ap


    John married Agnes MACDONALD. Agnes (daughter of Donald MACDONALD, 8th Lord of the Isles and Mariota LESLIE, Countess of Ross) was born about 1400 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; died in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland; was buried in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Agnes MACDONALD was born about 1400 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland (daughter of Donald MACDONALD, 8th Lord of the Isles and Mariota LESLIE, Countess of Ross); died in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland; was buried in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GN6X-8VK
    • Name: Agnes Isabel MACDONALD

    Notes:

    Biography of Agnes MacDonald
    Agnes MacDonald
    Birth date: 1410
    Birthplace: Dingwall, Cromarty, Scotland
    Death: Died 1463 in Dunstaffnage, Scotland
    Father Donald MacDonald, of Harlaw, 8th Lord of the Isles
    Mother Mariota Leslie, Countess of Ross
    Wife of John Stewart, 2nd Lord Lorn
    Children
    Janet Stewart of Lorn & Innermeath; Marion Stewart, Menteith and daughter of John Stewart of Lorn
    Sister of Alexander MacDonald, 9th Lord of the Isles, 12th Earl of Ross; Gilbert MacAlistair; Mariota MacDonald, of the Isles and Angus MacDonald
    Sources
    http://www.geni.com/people/Agnes-MacDonald/6000000006714374442
    Acknowledgements
    This WikiTree profile was created through merging one or more profiles either through imported GedComs or manual entry. Additionally, open profiles of historically significant people are subject to edits from many WikiTree managers. The following is a partial list of those who contributed to this profile :
    the import of wolfefamily.ged on Jun 26, 2011 by Herbert Wolfe.
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    When Agnes MacDonald was born in 1410,Dingwall, Cromarty, Scotland,her father, Donald, was 46, and her mother, Mariota, was 47. She had one daughter with John Stewart in 1437. She died in 1463 in Dunstaffnage, Scotland at the age of 53.


    Children:
    1. 3. Isabel (Elizabeth) STEWART was born in Jan 1437 in Castle Glenorchy, Lorn, Argyll, Scotland; died on 26 Oct 1510 in Dunbartonshire, Scotland; was buried in Oct 1510 in Kilmun Parish Church and Cemetery, Kilmun, Argyll, Scotland.
    2. Janet STEWART was born in 1439 in Scotland; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Sir Robert STEWART, of Innermeath and Lorn, 1st Lord was born in 1379 in Innermeath, Perthshire, Scotland; died on 20 Dec 1449 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland; was buried in 1449 in Argyll, Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LZV7-4KR

    Robert married Lady Joan STEWART, Of Albany. Joan was born in 1379 in Falkland Castle, Fife, Scotland; died in 1439 in Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland; was buried in 1439 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Lady Joan STEWART, Of Albany was born in 1379 in Falkland Castle, Fife, Scotland; died in 1439 in Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland; was buried in 1439 in Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LZZ6-6RM

    Children:
    1. 6. John STEWART, 2nd Lord of Lorne was born in 1397 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland; died on 20 Dec 1463 in Dunstaffnage Castle, Oban, Scotland; was buried in 1463 in Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland.

  3. 14.  Donald MACDONALD, 8th Lord of the Isles was born about 1351 in Western Isles, Scotland (son of John "Iain" Islay MACDONALD, Carrach and Lady Margaret STEWART, Princess of Scotland); died on 8 May 1423 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; was buried in 1423 in Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GSLZ-BNP
    • TitleOfNobility: ; 9th Earl of Ross
    • Name: Domhnall mac Domhnaill of Ross
    • Name: Donald of Harlaw
    • MilitaryService: 24 Jul 1411; fought in the Battle of Harlaw

    Notes:

    Donald, Lord of the Isles (Scottish Gaelic: D?mhnall; died 1423), was the son and successor of John of Islay, Lord of the Isles and chief of Clan Donald. The Lordship of the Isles was based in and around the Scottish west-coast island of Islay, but under Donald's father had come to include many of the other islands off the west coast of Scotland, as well as Morvern, Garmoran, Lochaber, Kintyre and Knapdale on the mainland.

    Donald was the grandson of King Robert II of Scotland and first cousin of King Robert III; he took pride in his royal blood, even adopting the royal tressure to surround his coat of arms.

    While it is customary to portray the Lords of the Isles as divorced from the mainstream of Scottish political life, and as representatives of a brand of lordship distinct from the rest of Scotland, this view obscures the fact that Donald was only one of many magnates who held large lordships with little interference from the crown in late 14th and early 15th century Scotland.[1] The Douglas kindred of southern Scotland and the Albany Stewarts had similar roles as Donald.

    Early rule
    Donald spent some of his first years as Lord of the Isles suppressing a revolt by his brother John M?r. John was Donald's younger brother, and resented his meagre inheritance. Although he was recognised as heir-apparent (t?naiste), he only received patches of land in Kintyre and Islay. The rebellion started in 1387 and went on into the 1390s, and John obtained the support of the MacLean kindred. However, John and the MacLeans were eventually forced to submit to Donald, and by 1395 John M?r had been forced into Ireland. There he entered the service of King Richard II of England and later established a MacDonald lordship in Antrim.

    Conflict with the Stewarts
    Suppression of the revolt enabled Donald to turn his attention northwards and eastwards. Most of the area to the north and east of the Lordship, that is Skye, Ross, Badenoch and Urquhart, was under the control of Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, famously known as the "Wolf of Badenoch". The Stewarts had been building up their power in the central Highlands and north of Scotland since the death of John Randolph, 3rd Earl of Moray in 1346. Alexander had acquired control of the lordship of Badenoch, the earldom of Buchan and the Justiciarship of Scotia. He had been appointed "Lieutenant of the North", giving him the flexibility to exercise total control over most of Scotland north of the mounth. Alexander was at once the de facto ruler of northern Scotland as well as the means by which the crown itself exercised control.

    However, there had been complaints over the activities of his caterans (war bands). More importantly, Alexander's position had become threatening not only to the crown, but also to Euphemia I, Countess of Ross, her son Alexander and the titular Dunbar Earl of Moray. Late in 1388, soon after becoming Guardian of the Kingdom, Robert Stewart, Earl of Fife (created Duke of Albany in 1398) deprived Alexander of the Justiciarship. The assault of Alexander's position continued into the 1390s. Donald and his brother Alexander of Lochaber were in a perfect position to benefit. In 1394, the latter entered a 17-year agreement with the Earl of Moray, taking over Alexander Stewart's role as "protector" of the wealthy comital and episcopal lands in the Moray lowlands. The MacDonalds were in possession of Urquhart Castle by the end of 1395, and had given control of the Duart Castle to Maclean of Duart.

    The Guardian soon turned his hostility against Donald and his family. Alexander of Lochaber had been using his role as "protector" to further his own lordship, including granting episcopal lands to his military followers. In 1398, Robert Stewart (now Duke of Albany) was called upon to take action, but the well-prepared expedition in the end came to nothing. Lochaber continued his activities, and in a raid of 1402 burned the burgh of Elgin along with the manses of the canons belonging to Elgin Cathedral. For this he was excommunicated by William Spynie, bishop of Moray. Later in the year Alexander visited Spynie to seek forgiveness and was thereafter absolved.

    Ross claims
    Donald himself was causing still further concern when in the same year, following the death of Alexander Leslie, Earl of Ross, Donald pressed the claims of Mariota, Alexander Leslie's sister and Donald's wife, to the possession of Ross. Donald attempted to gain control of the earldom. Sometime after 1405 but before 1411, Donald gained control of Dingwall Castle, the chief seat of the earldom. In the year after the death of the nominal king, Robert III, Donald sent emissaries to England, to make contact with the heir of the Scottish throne, the captive James Stewart. King Henry IV of England sent his own emissaries to Donald in the following year to negotiate an alliance against Albany.

    With control over the principal seat of the earldom of Ross and support of the exiled heir to the Scottish throne, in 1411 Donald felt strong enough to march against Albany's main northern ally, Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar. At the Battle of Harlaw, Donald failed to inflict a decisive victory, and withdrew back to the western highlands. In the aftermath, Albany was able to retake Dingwall and seize control of Easter Ross. In 1415, the heir of Alexander Leslie, Euphemia II, resigned the earldom to Albany. Donald prepared for war and proclaimed himself "Lord of Ross". Although Albany appointed his own son John Stewart to the earldom, Donald's wife continued to regard herself as the rightful Countess.

    Donald died in 1423 in Islay. He was succeeded by his son Alexander.[2]

    Marriage and children
    He married Mary Leslie, Countess of Ross. They had at least three children:

    Alexander Macdonald, 10th Earl of Ross who died on 7 May 1449
    Angus Macdonald
    Anna Macdonald who married Duncan Maclagmayn

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_of_Islay,_Lord_of_the_Isles

    When Donald MacDonald was born in 1364,The Isles of Scotland,his father, John, was 38 and his mother, Margaret, was 22. He had one daughter with Mariota Leslie in 1410. He died in 1423 in Dingwall, Ross-shire, Scotland, at the age of 59.


    Donald married Mariota LESLIE, Countess of Ross on 8 Oct 1395 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland. Mariota (daughter of Lord Walter LESLIE, 7th. Earl of Ross and Euphemia OF ROSS) was born in 1363 in Leslie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; died in 1429 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; was buried in 1429 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mariota LESLIE, Countess of Ross was born in 1363 in Leslie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland (daughter of Lord Walter LESLIE, 7th. Earl of Ross and Euphemia OF ROSS); died in 1429 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; was buried in 1429 in Scotland.

    Other Events:

    • Clan: ; Donald
    • FamilySearch ID: LBBH-XMW
    • Title (Nobility): ; Countess of Ross
    • Name: Mairead
    • Name: Margaret

    Notes:

    The Life Summary of Mariota
    When Mariota Leslie Countess of Ross was born about 1370, in Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland, her father, Walter Leslie Earl of Ross, was 49 and her mother, Euphemia Ross, was 40. She married Donald MacDonald 8th Lord of the Isles about 1391, in Harlaw, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 2 daughters. She died in 1440, in Dingwall, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland, United Kingdom, at the age of 70.

    From Wikipedia:

    Mariota, Countess of Ross
    Born:Scotland
    Died:1440, Scotland
    Spouse:Donald of Islay, Lord of the Isles
    House:Clan Donald
    Father:Walter Leslie, Lord of Ross
    Mother:Euphemia I, Countess of Ross

    Mariota, Countess of Ross (Mairead, also called Mary and Margaret; died 1440) was the daughter of Euphemia I, Countess of Ross and her husband, the crusading war-hero Walter Leslie, Lord of Ross. Upon the death of her brother, Alexander Leslie, Earl of Ross, she became the heir-presumptive of her niece Euphemia II, Countess of Ross although her husband Domhnall of Islay, Lord of the Isles pressed Mariota's superior claim to the earldom.

    Domhnall attempted to gain control of the earldom, and sometime after 1405 but before 1411, Domhnall gained control of Dingwall Castle. In the year after the death of the nominal king Robert III of Scotland (1406), in August 1407, Domhnall sent emissaries to England to the heir of the throne, the captive James Stewart. King Henry IV of England sent his own emissaries the following year to negotiate an alliance against Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany, the Guardian of Scotland who was controlling Euphemia and the earldom.

    With control over the principal seat of the earldom of Ross and support of the exiled heir to the Scottish throne, in 1411 Domhnall felt strong enough to march against Albany's main northern ally, Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar. At the Battle of Harlaw Domhnall failed to inflict a decisive victory, and withdrew back to the western highlands. In the aftermath, Albany was able to retake Dingwall and seize control of Easter Ross. In 1415, Euphemia was persuaded by Albany to resign the earldom to his own second son, John Stewart, Earl of Buchan. This action was challenged by Domhnall of Islay, who continued to claim the earldom on behalf of Mariota.

    After the return of King James the latter destroyed the power of the Albany Stewarts, executing the Albany's son and successor Murdoch Stewart, Duke of Albany. Domhnall had died in 1423, but Mariota continued to enjoy the support of his successor and her own son, Alexander. Alexander took over her claims, and in 1437 her son was recognized as earl by the king. She died in 1440. She had two known children, Alexander and Mariota.




    About Mariota Leslie, Countess of Ross
    Mariota, Countess of Ross (Mairead, also called Mary and Margaret; died 1440) was the daughter of Euphemia I, Countess of Ross and her husband, the crusading war-hero Walter Leslie, Lord of Ross. Upon the death of her brother, Alexander Leslie, Earl of Ross, she became the heir-presumptive of her niece Euphemia II, Countess of Ross although her husband Domhnall of Islay, Lord of the Isles pressed Mariota's superior claim to the earldom.

    http://books.google.com/books?id=7QGnt0PLWo8C&pg=PA81#v=onepage&q=&f=false Page 81 - 85

    DONALD, LORD OF THE ISLES; AND MARGARET LESLIE, Tenth Countess of Ross.

    Lady Margaret Leslie, daughter of Walter Leslie, Earl of Ross, by his wife Euphemia, Countess of Ross, married Donald, Lord of the Isles. When Lady Margaret's niece, Euphemia, Countess of Ross, daughter of her deceased brother, Alexander, Earl of Ross, had declared her intention to take the veil, Donald of the Isles asserted his claim to the earldom of Ross as next heir, in right of his wife, in conformity with the entail made by William, Earl of Ross, her grandfather, in 1370. He disputed the destination made by his wife's niece Euphemia, as being made in prejudice to his wife, who was the lawful heir to the earldom. The Duke of Albany, and his son John Stewart, Earl of Buchan, wishing to keep what they had got, insisted that the resignation of the Countess Euphemia was legal, and they declared that they would maintain it. Whereon Donald resolved to assert his right by force of arms; and he so far took possession that he held the castle of Dingwall, the residence of the Earls of Ross. He raised an army of 10,000 men in the Hebrides and Ross, and marched through Moray into the Garioch, on Mar, intending, it is said, to attack the city of Aberdeen.

    Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar and Lord of the Garioch, the king's lieutenant in the North, collected a body of troops in haste, and met the invader at Harlaw, on the river Urie, about eighteen miles north-west of the city of Aberdeen, 24th July 1411. Although Mar's army was inferior in number, the battle was most obstinately contested, with great loss on both sides. It proved indecisive, however. Both parties claimed the victory. On the side of Donald, the chiefs of Macintosh and Maclean fell, with about 900 men ; Mar lost 500 men, besides many persons of rank. Sir Andrew de Leslie, third Baron of Balquhain, who commanded Mar's horse, lost six sons in the battle.

    Donald of the Isles was so much weakened by this sanguinary battle, that he was forced to retire, and the Duke of Albany, Regent of the kingdom, shortly afterwards proceeded with a force to the north, and took the castle of Dingwall; and in the following year, 1412, he invaded Donald's territories, and obliged him to abandon his pretensions to the earldom of Ross, and to give hostages for his future observance of peace.

    John Stewart, Earl of Buchan, was now styled Earl of Ross, and he held the title till his death at the battle of Verneil, in Normandy, 17th August 1424; and his brother, Sir Robert Stewart, being also killed in the same battle, and neither of them leaving any male issue, the earldom of Ross, in virtue of the limitation in the charter granted to them by their father, the Regent, in 1415, devolved on the crown.

    It would appear that although the Stewarts got forcible possession of the earldom of Ross, yet Lady Margaret Leslie did not forego her just claims, and she retained at least the title of Countess of Ross, as is shown by the following document: ?

    "John Byschop of Ross, Dame Margaret of the Ile, Lady of the Yles and of Ross, Huchen Fraser, Lord of Lovat, John Urchard, Lord of Crommathy, Donald of Kalder, Thayne of that like, with many others, till all and sundry, &c. We mak knowyn, truche thir presents that in August 16 year 1420, in the kyrk yharde of Rosmarkyn, compeart Willyam the Grame, son and heyr umquhile of Henry the Grame, in presence of us before a nobil Lord and a michty Thomas Erie of Murreff, his ovyr Lord of the barony of Kerdale, resyngnan over of his auyn fre will in til handes of the sayde Lord the Erie the sayde all his lands of the barony of Kerdale Scheradom of Inverness, and all other lands, to be gyffyn to the sayde Willyam the Grame and his heyris-male, and faylzand them, to Willyam the Hay. Upon the quhylkes thyngis the sayde Willyam the Grame and Willyam the Hay requirit us in witnesyng by our letters testimonial and our seals. The quhilk we grawntit at the place and day before sayde."

    Lady Margaret Leslie, Countess of Ross, had by her husband, Donald, Lord of the Isles, issue ?

    I. Alexander, who succeeded as Lord of the Isles, and assumed the title of Earl of Ross; II. Mariot, married to Alexander Sutherland. She and her husband, Alexander Sutherland, in 1429, got a grant of the lands of Duchall from her brother, Alexander, Lord of the Isles and Earl of Ross.
    Donald, Lord of the Isles, died before 1427. Margaret, Countess of Ross, and her son, Alexander, Lord of the Isles, were arrested by King James I. when he held a parliament at Inverness, in 1427. The Lord of the Isles was soon released, but his mother, the Countess of Ross, was detained a prisoner, and died about 1429. ----------------------------------------------- Margaret (Mariota) Leslie ? Surname: Leslie ? Given Name: Margaret (Mariota) ? Sex: F ? Birth: ABT 1375 ? Death: ABT 1440 in Tulloch Castle, Dingwall, Ross, Scot.

    ? Note: Vol 7, pg. 241 "The Scot's Peerage" by Sir James Balfour Paul

    vol. 5, pg. 42, "The Scots Peerage" by Sir James Balfour Paul

    pg. 638, "A Genealogical & Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage & Baronetage of the British Empire" by John B. Burke, Eleventh Edition, published 1849

    Source: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=brucedjohnson1&id=I17642

    Father: Walter of Ross Leslie b: ABT 1321 in Leslie, Garioch, Aberdeens, Scot. Mother: Euphemia of Ross b: ABT 1352 in Ross, , Scot.

    Marriage 1 Donald of the Isles b: ABT 1355 Children 1.Alexander MacDonald of the Isles 2.Mariota of the Isles b: ABT 1410 in The Isles, Inverness, Scot.

    http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Leslie-101
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariota,_Countess_of_Ross
    view all
    Mariota Leslie, Countess of Ross's Timeline
    1363
    1363
    Birth of Mariota
    Ross, Cromartyshire, Scotland
    1380
    1380
    Age 17
    Birth of Gilbert MacAlistair
    1398
    1398
    Age 35
    Birth of Alexander MacDonald, 9th Lord of the Isles,...
    Tulloch Castle,Dingwall,Ross And Cromarty,Scotland
    1404
    1404
    Age 41
    Birth of Mariota MacDonald, of the Isles
    Of The Isles,Scotland
    1410
    1410
    Age 47
    Birth of Agnes MacDonald
    Dingwall, Cromarty, Scotland
    1429
    1429
    Age 66
    Death of Mariota at Tulloch Castle
    Dingwall, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland
    ????
    Birth of A


    Children:
    1. Alexander MACDONALD, 10th. Earl of Ross was born in Jul 1396 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; died on 7 May 1449 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; was buried in 1449 in Fortrose Cathedral, Fortrose, Ross-shire, Scotland.
    2. Mariota MACDONALD OF THE ISLES was born in 1398 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; died on 20 Jul 1448 in Cromarty, Cromartyshire, Scotland; was buried in 1448 in Cromartyshire, Scotland.
    3. 7. Agnes MACDONALD was born about 1400 in Dingwall, Ross-Shire, Scotland; died in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland; was buried in 1463 in Glenorchy, Argyll, Scotland.
    4. Anna MACDONALD was born about 1405 in Scotland; died in in Scotland.
    5. Angus MACDONALD, Bishop of the Isles was born in 1410 in Ardtornish Castle, Argyll, Scotland; died in 1470 in Scotland; was buried in 1470 in Scotland.