McDonald and Potts family tree » Lady Joan "the dumb lady of Dalkeith" Stewart (1428-± 1486)

Persönliche Daten Lady Joan "the dumb lady of Dalkeith" Stewart 

Quelle 1

Familie von Lady Joan "the dumb lady of Dalkeith" Stewart

Sie ist verheiratet mit James (James 1st Earl of Morton) Douglas.

Sie haben geheiratet am 15. Mai 1459 in Perth,Perth,Scotland, sie war 31 Jahre alt.

Spouse: James Douglas, 1st Earl of Morton

Kind(er):

  1. Elizabeth Douglas  1466-> 1479
  2. James Douglas  > 1466-> 1480


Notizen bei Lady Joan "the dumb lady of Dalkeith" Stewart

==Primary Sourceswart''', of his diocese, from sentence of excommunication incurred by contracting marriage per verba legitime de presenti, by the persuasion of the late James king of Scots, they not being ignorant that they were related in the second and third degrees of kindred, and by having offspring, enjoining penance, and thereafter, and after temporary separation, to dispense them to contract marriage anew and remain therein, decreeing legitimate the offspring already born, and that to be born of the said marriage. Oblate nobis. reat Britain and Ireland: Volume 12, 1458-1471, ed. J A Twemlow (London, 1933), pp. 204-206. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-papal-registers/brit-ie/vol12/pp204-206 [accessed 22 September 2017].and, and the wife of James Douglas, 1st Earl of Morton. She was known, in Latin, as the muta domina [mute lady] of Dalkeith.otland and Joan Beaufort.[1] Joan had two older brothers, including the future King of Scotland, James II, and five sisters.[1] She had “the misfortune to be deaf and dumb”,[2] and was known as muta domina or “the mute lady”.[3] Joan was reported to have used sign language to communicate, even in public (although it was considered at that time to be impolite).[4]ontracted to marry James Douglas, 3rd Earl of Angus on 18 October 1440, but he died (without issue) in 1446 before the marriage could take place.[5] In 1445 she was sent to France and did not return home to Scotland until 1457.[c][2] She had been promised in marriage to the Dauphin of France but the marriage did not take place, probably due to her inability to articulate.[d][6] Joan married James Douglas, 4th Baron Dalkeith before 15 May 1459, who at the time of their marriage was raised to the peerage as the first Earl of Morton.[7] They were granted a dispensation on 7 January 1463-4 for being consanguineous in the second and third degrees.[8] Joan and her husband James were both aware of their close relationships but were persuaded to marry by her brother King James II of Scotland and applied for the dispensation to legitimize their marriage.[e][8] The Countess Joanna died in 1493, predeceasing her husband, James, by several months.[2] together in the choir of the parish church of St. Nicholas Buccleuch, known as the Dalkeith Collegiate Church, in Dalkeith, south of Fife and east of Edinburgh, in Midlothian, Scotland.[9] Known as the Morton Monument, their tombs are covered with their stone effigies, complete with their armorial bearings.[f] This is believed to be the world’s oldest image of a known deaf person.[4] The choir is now in the ruins, leaving the tombs out in the open, where, in a few centuries, the elements have erased their faces. Their hands, pressed together in prayer, were likely to have been destroyed during the Reformation. Today, as one of the visitors remarked, “[o]nce crisply carved and detailed with heraldic devices”, the tombs have “the look of sand sculptures after the tide has washed in and retreated”.[4] Due to their historical value, in 2005 a team of volunteers and preservationists created a protective canopy over their effigies.[4][10]d four children: bef. 1 February 1480–81 to Sir Patrick Hepburn, 1st Earl of Bothwell.[2]iki/Joan_of_Scotland,_Countess_of_Mortonorn deaf and reportedly used sign language in public, which was thought to be scandalous behavior during the Fifteenth Century.at the time of their marriage was raised to the peerage as the first Earl of Morton. They were granted a dispensation on 7 January 1463-4 for being consanguineous in the second and third degrees. Joan and her husband James were both aware of their close relationships but were persuaded to marry by her brother King James II of Scotland and applied for the dispensation to legitimize their marriage.ral writs 1466-1480.[2]her.[2]ur Paul (Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1909), p. 356 Office of Deaf Access_Earl_of_Morton_______ Joan Beaufort7,8 b. 1398, d. 15 Jul 1445Ambassador to France & Castile, son of James Douglas, 2nd Lord Dalkeith and Elizabeth Giffard, before 15 May 1459; They had 2 sons (Sir John, 2nd Earl of Morton; & James) and 2 daughters (Janet, wife of Patrick Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell; & Elizabeth).5,6 Joanna (Jean) Stewart and James Douglas, 1st Earl Morton, 3rd Lord Dalkeith, Ambassador to France & Castile obtained a marriage license on 7 January 1464; Date of Dispensation, being related in the 2nd and 3rd degrees. Joanna (Jean) Stewart died between 16 October 1486 and 1490.5,6ith, Ambassador to France & Castile b. c 1425, d. bt 22 Jun 1493 - 22 Oct 1493. b 1466, d. bt 19 Jul 1511 - Sep 1515[S11572] The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, by Gerald Paget, Vol. II, p. 395.htage, 1938 ed., by Sir Bernard Burke, p., 1788.III, p. 579-580.Ancestry, Vol. I, p. 655-656.er 1486s were engaged on 18 October 1440.3 She married James Douglas, 1st Earl of Morton, son of James Douglas, 2nd Lord of Dalkeith and Elizabeth Gifford, before 15 May 1459.2 She died after 16 October 1486.2 She was buried at Dalkeith Church, Midlothian, Scotland.2t of her marriage, Joan Stewart was styled as Countess of Morton before 15 May 1459.ouglas2 d. a 1480bleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume II, page 238. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.s Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 231. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Families.n Wood's edition of Sir Robert Douglas's The Peerage of Scotland (Edinburgh, Scotland: David Douglas, 1904), volume I, page 19. Hereinafter cited as The Scots Peerage.533.htm#i105328Continuator) names "Jacobum regem" as son of "Robertus tertius"[1264]. He became Duke of Rothesay 10 Dec 1404 after receiving from his father all lands belonging to the office of Steward of Scotland[1265]. A prisoner in France 1406-1424. He succeeded his father in 1406 as JAMES I King of Scotland. erset & his wife Margaret de Holand of the Earls of Kent (-15 Jul 1445). A late 15th century/early 16th century manuscript names “Johamem aliter Henricum comitem Somersecie qui cito moritur, Thomam qui moritur, Edmundum ducem Somersecie, Joh[anname reginam Scotorum et Margaretam comitissam Devoni]” as the children of “Johannes Bowfurth comes Somersecie”[1266]. The Julius B II Chronicle records the marriage in Feb 1424 of “Sir James Styward kyng of Scotland” and “dame Joan the duchesse douhter of Clarence goten by her ffirst hosbond the Erle of Somersete”[1267]. She married secondly James Stewart "the Black Knight of Lorn". Abbaye de Saint-Laon, Vienne). m (contract Perth, Scotland 19 Jul 1428, contract Chinon, Indre-et-Loire 30 Oct 1428, Cathédrale de Tours 24 Jun 1436) as his first wife, LOUIS de France Dauphin de Viennois, son of CHARLES VII King of France & his wife Marie d'Anjou (Bourges, Bishop's palace 3 Jul 1423-Château de Plessis-les-Tours, La Riche, Indre-et-Loire 30 Aug 1483, bur Notre-Dame de Cléry, Loiret). He succeeded his father in 1461 as LOUIS XI King of France. to JEAN VI Duke of Brittany, son of JEAN V "le Vaillant" Duke of Brittany & his third wife Infanta doña Juana de Navarra (Château de l'Hermine, near Vannes, Morbihan 24 Dec 1389-manoir de La Touche, near Nantes 29 Aug 1442, bur Tréguier, Cathédrale Saint-Tugdual). He died before the religious ceremony. m (30 Oct 1442) as his second wife, FRANÇOIS I Duke of Brittany, son of JEAN VI Duke of Brittany & his wife Jeanne de France (Vannes 11 May 1414-Château de l'Hermine, Vannes 17 Jul 1450, bur Redon Abbaye de St Sauveur, Ille-et-Vilaine). 6 Oct 1486). She was deaf and dumb, known as "the dumb lady of Dalkeith". She lived in France from Aug 1445 to Spring 1458[1268]. m (before 15 May 1459) JAMES Douglas Earl of Morton, son of JAMES Douglas of Dalkeith & his wife Elizabeth Gifford of Sheriffhall (-[22 Jun/22 Oct] 1493). 0-Roxburgh 3 Aug 1460, bur Holyrood). John of Fordun’s Scotichronicon (Continuator) names "Jacobum secundum regem qui nunc est" as son of "Jacobum secundum"[1269]. He succeeded his father in 1437 as JAMES II King of Scotland. reiche" Archduke of Austria, Graf von Tirol, son of FRIEDRICH IV "mit den leeren Tasche" Duke of Austria, Graf von Tirol & his second wife Anna von Braunschweig-Lüneburg (Innsbruck 26 Oct 1427-Innsbruck 4 Mar 1496, bur Stams). of Buchan[1270]. m (ter Veere, Zeeland 1444) as his first wife, WOLFART van Borselen, son of HENDRIK van Borselen Comte de Grandpré & his second wife Jeanne van Halewijn (-Ghent 29 Apr 1487, bur Sandenburg, ter Veere, Zeeland). Earl of Buchan, de iure uxoris. He succeeded his father in 1474 as Comte de Grandpré. Governor of Holland, Zeeland and Friesland 1477-1480[1271]. NNABEL Stewart . The marriage contract between "Lodovico di Savoia figlio secundogenito del Duca Lodovico" and "Anabella figlia del Re Giacomo di Scozia" is dated 14 Dec 1444[1272]. m firstly (contract 14 Dec 1444[1273], 14 Dec 1447, divorced 1458) as his first wife, LOUIS de Savoie Comte de Genève, son of LOUIS Duke of Savoy & his wife Anne Pss of Cyprus (5 Jun 1436-château-monastère de Ripaille 16 Jul 1482). m secondly (before 10 Mar 1460, divorced 24 Jul 1471) as his second wife, GEORGE Gordon, son of ALEXANDER Gordon [formerly Seton] Earl of Huntly & his second wife Elizabeth Crichton (-Stirling [8 Jun] 1501, bur Cambuskenneth). He succeeded his father in 1470 as Earl of Huntly. ________fter 8 Sep 1456), dau. of James Giffard of Sheriffhall, and had issue:s], 1st Earl of Mortonort, 1st dau. of John [Beaufort], 1st Earl of Somerset), mar. bef. 1 Feb 1480/1 as his first wife Patrick [Hepburn], 1st Earl of Bothwell, and had issuerl of Mortonorn bef. 1466564), mar., and had issuel Marischal, by his wife Lady Elizabeth Gordon, 3rd dau. by his third wife of George [Gordon], 2nd Earl of Huntly, and had issue], 5th Lord Livingston, and had issuel in Scotland 1503later 1st Earl of Bothwell ap. of Patrick [Hepburn], 1st Lord Hailess Jean, 3rd dau. of James I, King of Scotlandargaret Hepburn (dsps. 1513), mar. 26 Jun 1509 as his first wife Archibald [Douglas], 6th Earl of Angusntly, by his second wife .... etc.le The Friars Preachers, Perth (Age ~ 42 years) d. 1446 (Age ~ 47 years)m: http://www.douglashistory.co.uk/famgen/getperson.php?personID=I39239&tree=Main

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  • Im Jahr 1459: Quelle: Wikipedia
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    • 20. September » Bukarest wird zum ersten Mal urkundlich erwähnt.
    • 23. September » In der Schlacht von Blore Heath, einer der ersten Schlachten der Rosenkriege, besiegt das Haus York das Haus Lancaster.
    • 12. Oktober » In der Schlacht von Ludlow erleiden die Yorkisten unter Richard Plantagenet ihre schwerste Niederlage der Rosenkriege gegen HeinrichVI. aus dem Haus Lancaster.

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