GORDON, Adam 6th of that Ilk, Sir 1 2
- Born: About 1225
- Marriage (1): DE GORDON, Alicia 1
- Died: About 1274, on Crusade, before reaching Palestine
Another name for Adam was DE GORDUN, Adam of Huntly, 6th of that Ilk.
User ID: X93.
General Notes:
"William, it is said, went to the Crusades, and never returned to Scotland. He was succeeded, it is alleged, by his brother Adam, who was the father of Sir Adam."
from Scots Peerage 1
Adam married Alicia DE GORDON, daughter of Sir Thomas GORDON younger, 5th of that Ilk and Marjory.1 (Alicia DE GORDON was born about 1225 and died 1280 ? 1.)
Marriage Notes:
"She (Alicia de Gordon) married Sir Adam Gordon, who is usually described as her cousin, though the exact relationship is doubtful, and his parentage is also uncertain. Some Gordon historians say that, as Alicia was great-granddaughter of the first Richard of Gordon, so Sir Adam was great-grandson of the first Adam of Gordon, who is alleged to be Richard's brother......... The name of Adam Gordon appears first between 1189 and 1199 as a witness alongwith Richard Gordon. He or a later Adam appears at intervals in various writs, and in a charter dated about 1232, Adam Gordon and Adam, his son, are mentioned. The latter may have been the Sir Adam Gordon, Knight, who is a witness on 9 December 1251 to the ratification by Patrick, seventh Earl of Dunbar, of the sale of his father's horses, and this Sir Adam may be identical with the husband of Alicia." (pages 508 and 509)
"Sir Adam Gordon, some time after his marriage, granted to the monks of Dryburgh, on behalf of himself and Alicia, his spouse, certain rights of pasturage and peatary in his lands of Fawnes, co. Berwick. A recent writer on the Gordons suggests that this was done in preparation for Sir Adam's departure for the Crusade under King Louis XI. of France in 1270, and the writer adds that Sir Adam, as did a number of other Scots knights, died on the expedition. This statement may be true, but there is no record or authentic evidence for it. Ferrerius, in his history of the Gordons, states that a William Gordon at this period went as a Crusader, and died in 1270. As, however, the name of William Gordon is nowhere on record, it has been assumed that Sir Adam was the Crusader, though the narrative has no recorded basis. Suffice it to say, Alicia Gordon survived her husband, as appears from a charter to the Abbey of Kelso, granted by her in her widowhood. She is said to have died in 1280, but no authority is given." (page 510)
from Scots Peerage 1 2
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