- Yes, date unknown
Generation: 1
Generation: 2
2. | Ferquhard (2nd Earl Ross) De Ross (son of Malcolm Mackbeth (1st Earl of Ross) De Ross and Bethoc (of The Isles) Macgillebride); died in Jan 1250-1251 in Tain, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; was buried in Abbey Of Fearn. Notes:
"...hook up Walter (Lord Duffus) de Moravia to his granddaughter MaryMoravia. Here is the missing link: Walter married Euphemia, daughter ofFerquhard McTaggart, 1st Earl of Ross. Walter died about 1263. SP7:231-232; SP 8:321; Burke's B&P (1999) 2769. Walter and Euphemia had ason Freskin (of Duffus) Moravia, whom you already have in your GEDCOM,and he was the father of Mary Moravia. I note that you list Ferquhard asthe 2nd instead of the 1st Earl of Ross which is fine with me, but Isuggest that you add Euphemia, married to Walter de Moravia, Lord ofDuffus, 1224-1262 to the list of his children shown on your ID sheetI00887"
From Douglas Hickling, Dhhic@comcast.net, 516 Blair Avenue, Piedmont, CA94611. 1 February 2002
SP=THE SCOTS PEERAGE was edited by James (Sir) Balfour Paul. 9 volumes.Volume 1 published in 1904 and volume 8 in 1911. Volume 9, before 1925(includes the index)
CP= THE COMPLETE PEERAGE
Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain & theUnited
Kingdom : by G. E. Cokayne (Hardcover - March 2001]
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Generation: 3
Generation: 4
8. | Alexander I ( The Fierce) King of Scotland was born in 1078 (son of Malcolm III Caennmor King of Scotland and St Margaret Atheling); died on 23 Apr 1124 in Stirling Castle; was buried in Dumferline, Abbey,. Notes:
Alexander was the fifth son of King Mael Coluim III (d.1093) and his second wife, Margaret (d.1093). One of his two sisters, Matilda (d.1118), had married King Henry I of England in 1100. He succeeded his brother, Edgar, as king of Scots upon Edgar's death in 1107. He married Sybilla, an illegitimate daughter of Henry I, but they had no surviving children. He had an illegitimate son, Mael Coluim. Upon his death at Stirling on 27 April 1124, Alexander was succeeded on the throne by his youngest brother, David. Alexander was buried in Dunfermline Abbey. A.A.M. Duncan, 'Alexander I', ODNB, i, 648-49; [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/321]
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