Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale

Robert de Brus,
Earl of Carrick, 6th Lord of Annandale, Constable of Carlisle Castle
Predecessor Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale
Issue
i) Isabel b c1272
ii) Christina b c1273
iii) Robert b c1274
iv) Neil b c1276
v) Edward b c1279
vi) Mary b c1282
vii) Margaret b c1283
viii) Thomas b c1284
ix) Alexander b c1285
x) Elizabeth b c1286
ix) Matilda/Margery b c1287
Father Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale
Mother Isobel of Gloucester and Hertford
Born July 1243(1243-07-00)
probably Writtle, Essex
Died April 1304(1304-04-00) (aged 60)
Burial Holm Cultram Abbey, Cumberland

Sir Robert VI de Brus (July 1243 – soon bef. 4 March 1304[1]), 6th Lord of Annandale (dominus vallis Anandie), jure uxoris Earl of Carrick[2] (1271–1292), Lord of Hartness, Writtle and Hatfield Broad Oak (Wretele et Hatfeud Regis), was a cross-border lord,[3] and participant of the Second Barons' War, Welsh Wars, and First War of Scottish Independence.

The son and heir of Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale and Lady Isabella de Clare, daughter of the Earl of Gloucester and Hertford, his birth date is generally accepted (July 1243[1]) but there is a ongoing debate as to whether Robert and / or his son King Robert The Bruce, were born on the family estate at Writtle, Essex.[4][5][6][7]

Legend tells that the 27-year-old Robert de Brus was a handsome young man participating in the Ninth Crusade. When Adam de Kilconquhar, one of his companions-in-arms, fell in 1270, at Acre, Robert was obliged to travel to tell the sad news to Adam's widow Marjorie of Carrick. The story continues that Marjorie was so taken with the messenger that she had him held captive until he agreed to marry her, which he did in 1271.[1][8] However, since the crusade landed in Acre on 9 May 1271, and only started to engage the Muslims in late June, the story and his participation in the Ninth Crusade are generally discounted.[4][9]

What is recorded, is that in:

Shortly after the Battle of Stirling Bridge (1297), Annandale was laid waste as retaliation to younger Bruce's actions. Yet, when Edward returned to England after his victory at the Battle of Falkirk, which one source accords to Robert turning the Scottish flank,[20] Annandale and Carrick were excepted from the lordships and lands which he assigned to his followers, the father having not opposed Edward and the son being treated as a waverer whose allegiance might still be retained.

Robert at that time was old and ill, and there are reports that he wished his son to seek peace with Edward. If not his son's actions could jeopardise his own income, which was primarily derived from his holdings south of the border (est. £340 vs £150[12]). The elder Bruce would have seen that, if the rebellion failed and his son was against Edward, the son would lose everything, titles, lands, and probably his life.

It was around this time (1302) that Robert's son submitted to Edward I. The younger Robert had sided with the Scottish nationalists since the capture and exile of Balliol. There are many reasons which may have prompted his return to Edward, not the least of which was that the Bruce family may have found it loathsome to continue sacrificing his followers, family and inheritance for King John. There were rumours that John would return with a French army and regain the Scottish throne. Soulis supported his return as did many other nobles, but this would lead to the Bruces losing any chance of ever gaining the throne themselves. He died in Palestine and was buried at Holm Cultram Abbey.

Family

His first wife was by all accounts a formidable woman. Marjorie or Margaret (c. 1253 or 1256 – soon bef. 9 November 1292), 3rd Countess of Carrick (1256–1292), was the daughter and heiress of Niall, 2nd Earl of Carrick.[8] Carrick was a Gaelic Earldom in Southern Scotland. Its territories contained much of today's Ayrshire and Dumfriesshire. The couple married at Turnberry Castle in 1271 and held the principal seats of Turnberry Castle and Lochmaben. He had no children from his second wife Eleanor N (died btw 13 April and 8 September 1331).

Their children were:

  1. Isabel, married King Eric II of Norway in 1293, d 1358 in Bergen, Norway
  2. Christina b c 1273, Seton, East Lothian, married 1) Sir Christopher Seton, 2). Gartnait, Earl of Mar, 1292 in Kildrummy, Aberdeenshire, 3) Sir Andrew Moray, 20 September 1305, d. 1356/7 in Scotland {By her second marriage mother of Domhnall II, Earl of Mar}
  3. Robert b 11 July 1274, married 1) Isabella of Mar, 2) Elizabeth de Burgh, d 7 June 1329
  4. Neil (Niall or Nigel), taken prisoner at Kildrummie, hanged, drawn and quartered at Berwick-upon-Tweed in September 1306.[8]
  5. Edward, crowned 2 May 1316, 'King of Ireland'. Killed in battle, 5 October 1318.[8] Possible marriage to Isabel, daughter of John de Strathbogie, 9th Earl of Atholl-parents of Alexander Bruce, Earl of Carrick; Edward obtained a dispensation for a marriage to Isabella of Ross, daughter of Uilleam II, Earl of Ross, on 1 June 1317.
  6. Mary, married (1) Sir. Neil Campbell; (2) Sir. Alexander Fraser of Touchfraser and Cowie.
  7. Sir Thomas, taken prisoner in Galloway, hanged, drawn and quartered 9 February 1307, Carlisle, Cumberland[8]
  8. Alexander, hanged, drawn and quartered 9 February 1307, Carlisle, Cumberland
  9. Elizabeth Bruce, married Sir William Dishington of the Orkney Isles.
  10. Matilda, married Hugh / Aodh, Earl of Ross, in 1308 Orkney Isles, died after September 1323

Bruce in fiction

He was portrayed (as a leper) by Ian Bannen in the 1995 film Braveheart. Braveheart inaccurately portrays Robert de Brus as being involved in the capture of William Wallace in Edinburgh; as noted above Robert de Brus died in 1304 and William Wallace was captured on 3 August 1305 by Sir John de Menteith in Glasgow. {Menteith was a son-in-law to Gartnait, Earl of Mar and Christina Bruce.}

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Richardson, Douglas, Everingham, Kimball G. "Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families", Genealogical Publishing Com, 2005: p732-3, ISBN 0-8063-1759-0, 9780806317595 link
  2. ^ Dunbar, Sir Alexander H., Bt., Scottish Kings, a Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005 – 1625, Edinburgh, 1899: 126
  3. ^ The “Scottish Baronial Research Group”, formed in 1969, first defined the term “Cross-Border Lord”, to categorise the Anglo-Norman families with holdings on both sides of the border, the list includes the Balliol, Bruce, Ross and Vescy.
  4. ^ a b c d A. A. M. Duncan, ‘Brus, Robert (VI) de, earl of Carrick and lord of Annandale (1243–1304)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Oct 2008 accessed 29 Nov 2008
  5. ^ Dunbar (1899) p.127, gives Robert The Bruce's birthplace as Writtle, near Chelmsford, Essex.
  6. ^ Scottish Kings 1005 – 1625, by Sir Archibald H Dunbar, Bt., Edinburgh, 1899, p.127, where Robert the Bruce's birthplace is given "at Writtle, near Chelmsford in Essex, on the 11th July 1274". Baker, cited above, is also mentioned with other authorities.
  7. ^ Geoffrey le Baker's: Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke, ed. Edward Maunde Thompson (Oxford, 1889)
  8. ^ a b c d e Dunbar, Sir Alexander (1899): 67
  9. ^ The contemporary records seem to suggest Robert's father accompanied the Princes Edward and Edmund on the 1270-4 crusade, in lieu of his sons.
  10. ^ John Of Fordun’s Chronicle Of The Scottish Nation, 1363, translated 1872 Skene, page 299 “Therefore the common belief of the whole country was that she had seized-by force , as it were-this youth for her husband. But when this came to the King Alexander’s ears, he took the castle of Turnberry, and made all her other lands and possessions be acknowledged as in his hands; because she had wedded with Robert of Bruce without having consulted his royal majesty. By means of the prayers of friends, however, and by a certain sum of money agreed upon, this Robert gained the King’s goodwill, and the whole domain.”
  11. ^ Prestwich, Michael, (1988,1997) Edward I: 196
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q The Brus Family in England and Scotland: 1100–1295, By Ruth Margaret Blakely
  13. ^ Essex Records Office – Deed – D/DBa T4/22
  14. ^ Essex Records Office – Deed – D/DP T1/1770
  15. ^ Essex Records Office – Deed – D/DBa T4/24
  16. ^ Essex Records Office – Deed – D/DBa T2/9
  17. ^ Essex Records Office – Roll – D/DBa T3/1
  18. ^ National Archives, SC 8/95/4727
  19. ^ The Historic Lands of England, p 120, By Bernard Burke, Published Churton, Clayton & Co 1848
  20. ^ John of Fordun's Chronicle of the Scottish nation

References

Preceded by
Robert V de Brus
Lord of Annandale
1295–1304
Succeeded by
Robert VII de Brus