Hugh, Earl of Ross explained

Hugh de Ross
More:no
Reign:Ross
Reign-Type:Mormaerdom
Successor:William III
Suc-Type:Successor
Spouse-Type:Wives
Noble Family:Ross
House-Type:Scottish clan
Father:William II, Earl of Ross
Mother:Euphemia de Berkeley
Birth Date:bef. 1297[1]
Death Date:19 July 1333
Death Place:Halidon Hill

Hugh [probably [[Scottish Gaelic|Gaelic]]: Aodh], was the third successor of Ferchar mac in tSagairt as Mormaer of Ross (1323–1333).

Biography

Hugh de Ross was the eldest son and heir of William II, Earl of Ross by his wife Euphemia de Berkeley, or Barclay.

Hugh was a favorite of King Robert I of Scotland, who endowed him with many lands. Hugh even married Robert's sister, Matilda/Maud Bruce (c. 1287 - aft. September 1323), in 1308 in the Orkney Isles. Hugh's young brother, John, married Margaret Comyn, heiress of Buchan (although he died childless).

Marriages and issue

Hugh de Ross married twice:

(1) Matilda (Maud) de Brus, sister of Robert I "the Bruce", King of Scots, and daughter of Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale and his wife Marjorie, Countess of Carrick; married in 1308. [2] Hugh and Matilda had several children:

(2) Margaret de Graham, daughter of Sir John de Graham of Abercorn;[5] married by Papal dispensation dated 24 November 1329. Hugh and Margaret had two known children:

Hugh and Margaret are often also assigned a daughter Janet, wife of Sir John de Monymusk.[8] This has been found to be erroneous, as Janet was actually Janet de Barclay, daughter of Margaret de Graham by her 2nd husband, John de Barclay of Gartley.[9] All received prestigious marriage partners, including to the earls of Buchan and Moray, to Maol Íosa IV, Earl of Strathearn and the future king Robert II.

Death

He was killed along many other Scottish nobles at the Battle of Halidon Hill on 19 July 1333, and was succeeded by his son and successor, William.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Scots Peerage VII:234, cites a reference to a safe-conduct agreement that allowed Hugh to visit his father in prison in 1297.
  2. Scots Peerage VII, p. 236 "He married, first, in 1308, Lady Maud Bruce, sister of the King."
  3. Book: Paul. James Balfour. The Scots Peerage. 1910. David Douglas. Edinburgh. 7:236-27. 28 January 2017.
  4. Kalendar of Fearn 1364 https://digital.nls.uk/scottish-history-society-publications/browse/archive/127352313?mode=transcription
  5. John P. Ravilious, Queen Euphemia and her ancestry, The Scottish Genealogist, June 2017, vol. LXIV(2) pp. 49-52. Prior publications including J. Balfour Paul's Scots Peerage identify Margaret de Graham in error as a daughter of Sir David Graham of Montrose.
  6. Book: Paul. Scots Peerage.
  7. Robert and Euphemia were related in the 3rd degree of affinity, and 4th degree of consanguinity: Andrew Stuart, Genealogical History of the Stewarts, pp. 420–421
  8. Scots Peerage VII:237, cites Anderson's Dip. Scot., p. lix, and Earldom of Strathern, Nicolas
  9. John P. Ravilious, The Ancestry of Euphemia, Countess of Ross: Heraldry as Genealogical Evidence, The Scottish Genealogist, Vol. LV, No. 1 (March 2008), pp. 33–38