© Copyright 2024 Mary McGonigal Updated 14 October 2024 'Update' refers to the whole section update, not to each separate file.
, Isabel
(About 1302-)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. CRICHTON, William of Dryfesdale, 1st of Sanquhar

, Isabel 2

  • Born: About 1302
  • Marriage (1): CRICHTON, William of Dryfesdale, 1st of Sanquhar 1 2

   Another name for Isabel was ROSS, Isabella.1

   User ID: J47.


Isabel married William CRICHTON of Dryfesdale, 1st of Sanquhar, son of Nicholas CRICHTON and Unknown.1 2 (William CRICHTON of Dryfesdale, 1st of Sanquhar was born about 1297 and died after 13 December 1361 1.)


  Marriage Notes:

"Relationship: Bride/betrothed (f.) (sponsa)

Subject: Isabel, wife of William of Crichton

From Source: 1/53/526 (RMS, i, App. 1, no. 56)

Firm date: 25 March 1306 X 7 June 1329

Probable date:24 June 1314 ×

Dating Notes: inauguration × death of King Robert I; prob. after battle of Bannockburn"

from poms website




"From a charter by King Robert I. to Richard Edgar, also supposed to be dated circa 1320, of the manor place and one-half of the barony of Sanchar, it appears that the other half of the barony pertained to William de Crechton and Isabella, his wife, as heirs-portioners with Richard Edgar of the said barony. This lady is generally said to have been one of the two daughters of the last Ros or de Ros of Sanquhar, while the family of Edgar claim descent from her elder sister. In the war with Edward Baliol and Edward in. this William de Crichton seems to have remained faithful to the patriotic cause, for in 1335-36 one-half of the barony of Sennewhare is said to have been in the hands of the English King by reason of the forfeiture of William de Creghton, as well as two acres in Creghton for the same reason. This latter circumstance suggests that, at all events, at that time the lands of Crichton generally did not belong to William de Crechton, and the inference is confirmed by other entries in the same volume which narrate how along with Coldene and Dalkeith, the lands of Crichton had been forfeited by John de Graham, and how his widow Isabella had been allowed a dower out of them by Edward." (pages 53 and 54)

"William Crichton, who may have been a younger son of Alexander Crichton, named in the homage roll of 1296, was the first of his family to possess the lands of Sanquhar, from which his successors afterwards took the title of Lord Sanquhar, which they held for several generations. He however only held the half of the whole barony, which was divided between him and Richard Edgar, the latter getting also the chief messuage of the lands, as the husband of the elder of two heiresses, while Crichton married the younger.

His half of the barony was valued at the then considerable sum of one hundred merks yearly, as appears from an Exchequer account of King Edward III. in 1335, when it was forfeited owing to Crichton adhering to the patriotic party in Scotland, but the land brought no revenue to the English king, as it was then waste. William Crichton, of whom nothing more is recorded, married a lady named Isabella. Her surname is said to have been Ross, but her identity has not been certainly discovered. The chief direct evidence at present is that the 'water budgets' of Ross formed part of the armorial bearings of the Crichtons of Sanquhar as distinguished from the other families of the name. The next possessor on record of the lands of Sanquhar is Edward Crichton" (pages 210 and 220)

from Scots Peerage (vol 3)

Note:

The article says '
The next possessor on record of the lands of Sanquhar is Edward Crichton'. Documents at this time are scarce, and it is not clear if the line was in fact father to son. The dating suggests there may have been an additional generation between William and Edward. 1 2

Sources


1 e-books, The Scots Peerage ed. Sir James Balfour Paul vol. 3 (1906).

2 Internet Site, https://poms.ac.uk/record/factoid/97308/People of Medieval Scotland Relationship: Bride/Betrother (F.) Sponsa of William of Crichton [Familial relationship].

© Copyright 2024 Mary McGonigal


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