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Sir William Douglas, Lord of Nithsdale
- Birth: ABT. 1364
- Death: 1420, possibly whilst on crusade in Prussia
Father: Archibald the Grim (3rd Earl
of Douglas) Douglas b: ABT. 1346
Mother: Joan\Johana (of Strathearn) Moray b: ABT. 1350
Note: the possibility exists that he was a natural son of Archibald.
Marriage 1 Egidia (Princess) Stewart
b: ABT. 1368 in of Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland, dau of King Robert II
Children
Egidia
(of Nithsdale) Douglas b: ABT. 1391, married Henry (2nd Earl of Orkney)
Sinclair, whose son's third marriage was to Elizabeth, dau of 4th
earl of Douglas, her second marriage and by whom she had two children.
William
(Lord of Nithsdale) Douglas b: ABT. 1390
William Douglas was an illegitimate son of Archibald the Grim, 3rd Earl of
Douglas and an unknown mother.
A man of apparently dashing bearing,
Douglas was with the Franco-Scots army when it unsuccessfully besieged Carlisle
Castle in 1385, the defending Governor being Lord Clifford. He is recorded as
there performing feats of valour and killing many Englishmen.
"A yhowng
joly bachelere Prysyd gretly wes off were, For he wes evyr traveland
Qwhille be se and qwhille be land To skathe his fays rycht besy Swa that
thai dred him grettumly" (Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland ix, c.21)
Douglas certainly had gained his spurs by 1387 when he married the Egidia (or
Gelis) Stewart, princess of Scotland, a daughter of King Robert II. According to
the Liber Pluscarden, Egidia Stewart's beauty was well renowned. Charles V of
France had "sent a certain most subtle painter to do her portrait and portray
her charms, intending to take her to wife." But the King of France and all other
of Egidia's admirers had lost out to the chivalric charms of Douglas. As part of
her marriage portion went the lands of Nithsdale in south-western Scotland,
Herbertshire in the county of Stirling and an annuity of £300.
Within
his first year of marriage the young Nithsdale led a punitive raid against Irish
raiders who had been troubling the tenantry of his father's Fiefdom of Galloway.
In early summer 1388, with a party of 500 well prepared veteran men-at-arms he
sailed into Carlingford Lough, landed outside the town and summoned their
leaders. The chief of the townsfolk offered a sum for a temporary truce, to
which Nithsdale agreed. Secretly the townsfolk sent off to Dundalk for
reinforcements, with which they were obliged. 800 spearmen from Dundalk
surprised the Scots camp by night, and were supported by a sortie from
Carlingford town. The Scots, veterans of years of brutal Border warfare, beat
the Irishmen off, captured the town and burnt it, seized the Castle and captured
15 ships in the harbour. Nithsdale and his expeditionary force sailed back into
Loch Ryan with enough time to participate in the raiding of Northern England
that was to culminate in the Battle of Otterburn
on the 19th of August, in which
he fought with distinction.
The year after Otterburn a truce was called
between Scotland and England. Nithsdale on a knightly quest for glory decided,
about 1389, to join the Teutonic Knights, who were fighting the Ottomans and
Lithuanians in eastern Europe. Nithsdale had previously quarrelled with Lord
Clifford, a former adversary at Carlisle and whose forebear had claimed
Douglasdale under Edward I of England's oppression. While both were abroad, it
is alleged that Clifford challenged Nithsdale to single combat, and that Douglas
even went to France to obtain special armour for the fight. Clifford, however,
died on August 18, 1391, but Nithsdale is said to have kept their 'tryst', and
whilst walking upon on the bridge leading to the main gate at Danzig was "killed
by the English". The burgers of Danzig decided that "upon account of a signal
service which the Douglas family did to this city in relieving it in its utmost
extremities against the Poles, the Scotch were allowed to be free burghers of
the town". Subsequently the stone facia of the Hohe Thor (High Gate) was adorned
with the coat of arms of this nobleman and for centuries it was commonly
referred to as the Douglas Port or Douglas Gate, described as such as late as
1734.
As Nithsdale had drawn most of his rentals from the burgh of
Dumfries in 1392 his death is assumed to have occurred that year or shortly
afterwards.
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