Maud of Northumbria (1074–1130), Countess of the Honour of Huntingdon and Northampton, was the daughter of Waltheof II, Earl of Northumbria and Judith of Lens, the last of the major Anglo-Saxon earls to remain powerful after the Norman conquest of England in 1066.
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Maud was married to Simon of Senlis [St Lyz] in about 1090. Before the end of the year 1090, he received the earldom of Huntingdon (Northampton included) from William Rufus, probably in right of his wife.[1]
She had three known children with him[1]:
Her first husband died in 1109 and Maud next married King David I of Scotland in 1113. From this marriage she had:
The Scottish House of Dunkeld produced the remaining Earls of Huntingdon of the first creation of the title. She was succeeded to the Earldom of Huntingdon by her son Henry.
Maud of Huntingdon appears as a character in Elizabeth Chadwick's novel The Winter Mantle (2003), as well as Alan Moore's novel "Voices of the Fire" (1995) and Nigel Tranter's novel David the Prince (1980).
Preceded by Sybilla de Normandy |
Queen consort of Scotland 1124–1130 |
Succeeded by Ermengarde de Beaumont |