Anabella Drummond

Annabella Drummond
Queen consort of Scotland
Tenure 1390–1401
Spouse Robert III
Issue
Elizabeth
Mary, Countess of Angus
Egidia
Margaret, Countess of Douglas
Robert
David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay
James I of Scotland
Father Sir John Drummond, 11th Thane of Lennox
Mother Mary Montifex
Born ca. 1350
Dunfermline Abbey, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
Died October 1401 (aged 51)
Scone Palace, Scone, Perth
Burial Dunfermline Abbey

Anabella Drummond (c. 1350–1401) was the Queen Consort of Scotland as the wife of Robert III of Scotland.

Contents

Family

She was the daughter of Sir John Drummond, of Stobhall, near Perth, 11th Thane of Lennox and Chief of Clan Drummond, and Mary Montifex. Her father's sister was Margaret Drummond, the second wife of David II of Scotland.

Life

She married John Stewart (the future Robert III of Scotland) in 1367. Soon, she was enveloped in a power struggle with her husband's brother, Robert. Since Annabella and John did have two daughters, but no sons for several years, he was a supporter of a law that would bar women from inheriting the throne.

Annabella was crowned with her husband at Scone Palace when he came to the throne in 1390. She continued bearing children until she was past forty and had her last child, the future James I of Scotland, in 1394.[1]

She protected the interests of her oldest son David. In 1398, she arranged a great tournament in Edinburgh when her oldest son was knighted.[2] She and her husband were also present when he was created Duke of Rothesay in the same year. Shortly after his mother's death he would be imprisoned by his uncle and died in a mysterious way.

The Fife burgh of Inverkeithing was a favorite residence of the queen. Her presence is still recalled in the sandstone font, decorated with angels and heraldry, which she presented to the parish church of the town, one of Scotland's finest surviving pieces of late medieval sculpture.

Issue

Annabella had several children with Robert III:

She died in Scone Palace and was buried at her birthplace of Dunfermline. .

Notes

  1. ^ Marshall, Rosalind K. (2003). Scottish Queens, 1034-1714. Tuckwell Press. p. 46. 
  2. ^ Marshall, Rosalind K. (2003). p. 47. 

External links

Scottish royalty
Preceded by
Euphemia de Ross
Queen consort of Scotland
1390–1401
Succeeded by
Joan Beaufort