Robert III Keith, Marischal of Scotland explained

Sir Robert Keith
Great Marischal of Scotland
Noble Family:Clan Keith
Father:John Keith
Spouse:Margaret de la Hay
Death Date:1346

Sir Robert Keith (died 1346) was a Scottish nobleman and a hereditary Great Marischal of Scotland.

Biography

Sir Robert Keith was the son of John Keith, Master of Marischal,[1] and the grandson of Robert II Keith, Marischal of Scotland, who commanded the Scottish cavalry at the Battle of Bannockburn, and his wife Barbara Douglas.[2] He succeeded his grandfather as Great Marischal.[2]

Robert Keith fought for King David II of Scotland in his wars against Edward Balliol and the English.[3] He was also the Sheriff of Aberdeen.[3] He accompanied King David when he fled for protection to France where the exiled Scottish royal court was given Château Gaillard as a residence. There Sir Robert acted as the king's tutor in arms. [4] When David II, King of Scotland invaded England in 1346, Robert was with him. At the Battle of Neville's Cross on 17 October 1346, he was killed.[3] He was succeeded by his brother, Sir Edward Keith, Great Marischal of Scotland.[3]

The following is from the National Encyclopedia, Vol VIII, P 165, London.

William MacKenzie

69 Ludgate Hill, Edinburgh.

KEITH

"The family of Keith is one of the most ancient and historical in Scotland.  The office of the Kings Marischal was attached to the lands of Keith in East Lothian, and in 1305 Sir Robert of Keith, hereditary Marischal of Scotland was justiciary of Scotland from the Forth to the Mounth, and sat in the English Council at Westminster as a Scottish representative.  He commanded the Scots cavalry at Bannockburn, and afterwards married a relative of Bruce.  Through this alliance the Keiths acquired large estates in Kincardinshire, and, by purchase, the sea-girt rock of Dunnattor, where they built a castle, which they made their chief seat.  The family was ennobled about 1458, and the fourth earl nearly doubled his domains by marriage with the heiress of Inveragie, and was reputed the wealthiest peer in Scotland.  these vast possessions passed to George, the fifth earl Marischal, and founder of Marischal College, Aberdeen, who succeeded his grandfather in 1581.  His memory has been perpetuated mainly by his enlightened munifence displayed in the establishment of the above college."

Family

Robert married Margaret, daughter of Gilbert de la Hay, Constable of Scotland.[3] They had the following children:

See also

Notes and References

  1. The title "Master of Marischal is a courtesy title given to a Scottish heir presumptive who either had not yet inherited at that time, or for some reason did not inherit the title (in this case Marischal of Scotland). See the Complete Peerage, Vol. IV, Appendix E: Courtesy Titles. The name of John's wife, Robert's mother, is unknown. See Complete Peerage VIII, 470.
  2. George Edward Cokayne, The complete Peerage; or, A history of the House of lords and all its members from the earliest times, Volume VIII, Ed. H. A. Doubleday & Howard de Walden (London: The St. Catherine Press, Ltd., 1932), pp. 469–70
  3. John Mackintosh, Historic Earls and Earldoms of Scotland (Aberdeen: W. Jolly & Sons, 1898), p. 274
  4. Book: Penman . Michael . David II . 2004 . Tuckwell Press Ltd. . East Linton, Scotland . 41-42.
  5. P. Buchan, The Ancient and Noble Family of Keith (Clark & Sangster, Peterhead; G. Clark, Aberdeen, A. Constable &Co. and W. Laing, Edinburgh; and G.&W.B. Whittaker, London, 1820), p. 33
  6. The Scots Peerage, Founded on Wood's Edition of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage of Scotland, Vol. I, Ed. James Balfour Paul (Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1904), p. 278