Sybilla of Normandy explained

Consort:yes
Sybilla of Normandy
Succession:Queen consort of Scotland
Spouse:Alexander I of Scotland
Dynasty:Norman
Mother:Lady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester
Death Date:12 or 13 July 1122
Birth Place:Domfront, Normandy
Death Place:Kenmore, Scotland
Place Of Burial:Dunfermline Abbey

Sybilla of Normandy (c. 1092 – 12 or 13 July 1122) was Queen of Scotland as the wife of Alexander I.

Sybilla was the first child of Henry I of England and his mistress, Lady Sybilla Corbet of Alcester (b. 1077 in Alcester, Warwickshire, d. after 1157). Her maternal grandfather was Robert Corbet of Alcester, part of the Corbet family. She was born circa 1092 in Domfront, Normandy.

Around 1107, Sybilla married Alexander I, King of Scots. The marriage was childless. The marriage ceremony may have occurred as early as 1107, or as at late as 1114.[1]

William of Malmesbury's account attacks Sybilla, but the evidence argues that Alexander and Sybilla were a devoted but childless couple and Sybilla was of noteworthy piety.[2] Sybilla died in unrecorded circumstances at Eilean nam Ban (Kenmore on Loch Tay) in July 1122 and was buried at Dunfermline Abbey. Alexander did not remarry and Walter Bower wrote that he planned an Augustinian Priory at the Eilean nam Ban dedicated to Sybilla's memory, and he may have taken steps to have her venerated.

Notes and References

  1. Oram, p. 65; a date around 1114 would place the marriage at about the same time as that of David and Maud of Huntingdon.
  2. Duncan, p. 65; Oram, p. 71.