Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Douglas

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Archibald Douglas
Earl of Douglas
Titles Duke of Touraine(de jure)
Earl of Wigtown
Lord of Galloway
Lord of Bothwell, Selkirk and Ettrick Forest, Eskdale, Lauderdale, Liddesdale and Annandale
Count of Longueville
Seigneur de Dun-le-Roi
Born 1390
Birthplace Scotland
Died 1439
Place of death Restalrig, Midlothian
Buried St Bride's Kirk Douglas, South Lanarkshire
Predecessor Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas
Successor William Douglas, 6th Earl of Douglas
Issue William Douglas, 6th Earl of Douglas
Margaret Douglas
David Douglas
Dynasty Douglas
Father Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas
Mother Princess Margaret of Scotland

Archibald Douglas (139026 June 1439), was a Scottish nobleman, son of Archibald Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas and Joan Moray. He was Earl of Douglas and Wigtown, Lord of Galloway, Lord of Bothwell, Selkirk and Ettrick Forest, Eskdale, Lauderdale, and Annandale in Scotland, and de jure Duke of Touraine, Count of Longueville, and Seigneur of Dun-le-roi in France.

He fought with the French at Baugé in 1421, and was made count of Longueville in Normandy. He succeeded to his father's English and Scottish titles in 1424, though he never drew on his father's French estates of the Duchy of Touraine. Douglas served as ambassador to England in 1424, during the ransoming of James I. He held the office of Regent of the Kingdom, during the minority of James II from 1437 to 1439. Douglas died from a fever in Restalrig, Midlothian, and was buried at Douglas.

[edit] Marriage and issue

Between 1423 and 1425 he married Eupheme Graham (before 1413–1468), daughter of Patrick Graham, de jure Earl of Strathearn. They had three children.

Both sons were summarily beheaded at Edinburgh Castle on trumped up charges, in the presence of the young King James II. The so-called 'Black Dinner' thus broke the power of the 'Black' Douglases. The lordships of Annandale and Bothwell fell to the crown, Galloway to Margaret Douglas, and the Douglas lands and earldom passed to William's great-uncle James Douglas, Earl of Avondale, who was himself implicated, with Sir William Crichton, in the murder of the young earl.

Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
Archibald Douglas

Earl of Douglas

1424–1439
Succeeded by
William Douglas
French nobility
Preceded by
Archibald Douglas

de jure Duke of Touraine
1424–1439
Louis III of Naples de facto

1424-1434
Succeeded by
René I of Naples

[edit] References

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