Family Tree Welborn » Robert de Brus de Bruce 5th (1210-1294)

Personal data Robert de Brus de Bruce 5th 

Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8

Household of Robert de Brus de Bruce 5th

(1) He is married to isabel de Brus de Clare.

They got married May 1240, he was 30 years old.Source 5


Child(ren):


  • The couple has common ancestors.

  • (2) He is married to Christine de Ireby.

    They got married


    Child(ren):

    1. Robert de Brus  1243-1304
    2. Isabelle Bruce  1249-1284
    3. John Bruce  1847-????


    Notes about Robert de Brus de Bruce 5th



    Robert de Brus
    Gender:
    Male
    Birth:
    1210
    Annandale, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
    Death:
    March 31, 1295 (84-85)
    Lochmaben, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland
    Place of Burial:
    Priory, Guisburn, Yorkshire, England
    Immediate Family:
    Son of Robert de Brus, 4th Lord of Annandale and Isabel of Huntingdon

    Husband of Lady Isabel de Clare
    and Christian de Ireby

    Father of Robert de Bruce, 6th Lord of Annandale; Isabella de Bruce; William de Brus; Bernard de Brus; John de Brus; Richard de Brus and Earl of Carrick Robert de Brus

    Brother of Bernard de Brus, of Conington and Exton

    https://www.geni.com/people/Robert-de-Brus-5th-Lord-of-Annandale/6000000002176265383

    Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale is your 22nd great grandfather.
    You
    ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
    your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith Sr.
    her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith (Lee)
    his mother ·Üí William "Will" Manassas Lee
    her father ·Üí Martha Lee (Collier)
    his mother ·Üí Stephen T Collier
    her father ·Üí Catherine Collier (Roberts)
    his mother ·Üí Sarah Katherine Roberts (Turner)
    her mother ·Üí John Turner, Sr.
    her father ·Üí Thomas Turner of Frederick County
    his father ·Üí Anne Turner (Greer)
    his mother ·Üí Sir James Greer of Lag, of Capenoch
    her father ·Üí Sir William Grierson, 9th of Lag
    his father ·Üí Helena Douglas
    his mother ·Üí Sir James Douglas, 7th of Drumlanrig
    her father ·Üí Sir William Douglas, 6th Baron of Drumlanrig
    his father ·Üí Janet Scott, of Buccleuch
    his mother ·Üí N.N Scott (Somerville)
    her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Keith of Aboyne & Cluny
    her mother ·Üí Margaret Fraser of Touchfraser, heiress of Touchfraser
    her mother ·Üí John Fraser of Touchfraser
    her father ·Üí Mary Bruce
    his mother ·Üí Robert de Bruce, 6th Lord of Annandale
    her father ·Üí Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale
    his father

    Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale is your 26th great grandfather.
    You
    ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
    your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
    her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith
    his mother ·Üí William M LEE, Will
    her father ·Üí Britton Lee
    his father ·Üí William Samuel Lee
    his father ·Üí Lemuel Samuel Lee
    his father ·Üí Edward Lee, Sr.
    his father ·Üí Mary Bryan
    his mother ·Üí William Bryan, I
    her father ·Üí John Smith Bryan
    his father ·Üí Catherine Bryan (Morgan)
    his mother ·Üí Catherine Morgan
    her mother ·Üí Nicholas Herbert
    her father ·Üí Mathew Herbert
    his father ·Üí Elizabeth Herbert
    his mother ·Üí Elizabeth Berkeley (de Neville)
    her mother ·Üí Margaret Fenne, Baroness Abergavenny
    her mother ·Üí Phillipa Fiennes
    her mother ·Üí Sir Thomas Dacre, Kt.
    her father ·Üí Thomas Dacre, 6th Baron Dacre
    his father ·Üí Joan Douglas, of Mar
    his mother ·Üí James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas and Mar
    her father ·Üí Margaret of Mar, Countess of Mar
    his mother ·Üí Domhnall II, Earl of Mar
    her father ·Üí Christina Bruce
    his mother ·Üí Robert de Bruce, 6th Lord of Annandale
    her father ·Üí Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale
    his father

    https://www.geni.com/people/Robert-de-Brus-5th-Lord-of-Annandale/6000000002176265383

    Robert V de Brus
    http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SCOTLAND.htm#RobertBrusdied1295B

    ROBERT [V] de Brus, son of ROBERT [IV] de Brus "the Noble" Lord of Annandale & his wife Isabel of Huntingdon (-Lochmaben Castle 31 Mar 1295, bur 17 Apr Gysburne/Gisborough Priory). The manuscript history of the Bruce family of Carleton records that ·ÄúRobertus Brus tertius·Äù succeeded ·ÄúRobertus Brus secundus·Äù and was buried at Gysburne/Gisborough Priory[1025]. The Annales Londonienses name "Robert de Brus" as son of "la secounde fille Davi" and "sire Robert de Brus"[1026]. He succeeded his father in 1245 as Lord of Annandale. He was a claimant to the throne of Scotland in 1291, twelfth in order on the Great Roll of Scotland. After the court decision in favour of John Balliol, Robert de Brus resigned his claim 7 Nov 1292 in favour of his son Robert[1027]. The obituary of Gysburne/Gisborough priory records the death ·ÄúXI Kal Apr·Äù of "Roberti de Brus quinti"[1028], but presumably this date refers to his date of burial at the priory.
    m firstly (May 1240) ISABEL de Clare, daughter of GILBERT de Clare Earl of Hertford and Gloucester & his wife Isabel Marshal of Pembroke (2 Nov 1226-after 10 Jul 1264). The Chronica de Fundatoribus et Fundatione of Tewkesbury Abbey records the births of လduas filias, Agnetam et Isabellamဝ to လGilbertoဦGloucestriæ et Hertfordiæ comesဝ and his wife လdomina Isabella filia Willielmi Marescalli senioris, comitis de Pembrokeဝ, after the birth of their older brothers[1029]. The Annals of Tewkesbury record the birth လIV Non Novဝ in 1226 of လGileberto de Clare comiti Glocestriæဦfilia Ysabelဝ[1030]. The Annals of Tewkesbury record the marriage in May 1240 of လIsabella filia G. quondam comitis Gloucestriæဝ and လRoberto de Brusဝ[1031]. A charter dated 18 Jun 1240 records that "the town of Rip" was given "as a marriage portion to Robert de Brus with Isabel, daughter of the earl of Gloucersterဦthe earlမs [G. Marshal Earl of Pembroke] niece"[1032].
    m secondly (before 10 May 1275) as her third husband, CHRISTIAN de Ireby, widow firstly of THOMAS de Lascelles of Bolton, co. Cumberland and secondly of ADAM de Gesemuth of Cramlington, co. Northumberland, daughter and heiress of WILLIAM de Ireby. of Ireby, co. Cumberland & his wife Christian de Hodeholme (-before 6 Jul 1305). The primary source which confirms her parentage and first marriage has not yet been identified. A charter dated 29 Aug 1296 records an agreement between "Cristiana widow of Robert de Brus lord of Annandale" and "Robert de Brus his son and heir", granting dower to the former and reserving "her dower from her first husband Adam de Jessemuthမs land in Great Dalton"[1033]. Inquisitions dated 14 Sep 1305 (writ 6 Jul 1305) related to the lands of "Cristiana widow of Robert de Brus" noting that she and her husband "died withoutဦheirs [of their bodies]"[1034].
    Robert [V] & his first wife had two children:
    1. ROBERT [VI] Bruce (Jul 1243-shortly before 4 Apr 1304, bur Abbey of Holm Cultram). The Annals of Tewkesbury record the birth in Jul 1243 of လfilium nomine ---ဝ to လIsabel de Claraဦ[et] R. de Brusဝ[1035]. The manuscript history of the Bruce family of Carleton records that လRobertus Brus quartusဝ succeeded လRobertus Brus tertiusဝ[1036]. He succeeded his father in 1295 as Lord of Annandale.
    2. RICHARD Bruce (-before 25 Jan 1287). Inquisitions following a writ dated 25 Jan "15 Edw I" following the death of "Richard de Brus...·Äù record that his lands ·Äúought to revert to Sir Robert his father...he died without heir of himself as he never took a wife·Äù[1037]. A writ dated 6 May 1287 ordered the restitution of the lands of "Ricardum de Bruse" deceased to "Roberti de Bruse patri sui"[1038].

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_de_Brus,_5th_Lord_of_Annandale
    Lord of Annandale, Lord of Ireby, Constable of Carlisle Castle, Sheriff of Cumberland
    Born ca. 1210
    Died 31 March 1295(1295-03-31) (aged c. 85)
    Place of death Lochmaben Castle
    Buried Gisborough Priory, Guisborough, Redcar and Cleveland
    Predecessor Robert de Brus, 4th Lord of Annandale
    Consorts
    1) Isobel of Gloucester and Hertford 2) Christina de Ireby
    Issue:
    1) Robert de Brus 2) Richard de Brus
    Father: Robert de Brus, 4th Lord of Annandale
    Mother: Isobel of Huntingdon
    Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale (Robert de Brus) (c1215 ·Äì 31 March 1295[1]), 5th Lord of Annandale, was a feudal lord, Justice and Constable of Scotland and England, a Regent of Scotland, and a leading Competitor to be King of Scotland in 1290-92 in the Great Cause.
    Robert was son of Robert Bruce, 4th Lord of Annandale and Isobel of Huntingdon, the second daughter of David of Scotland, 8th Earl of Huntingdon and Matilda de Kevilloc of Chester. David in turn was the son of Henry of Scotland, Earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland and Ada de Warenne; Henry's parents were King David I of Scotland and Maud of Northumberland.
    In addition to Annandale, Robert was Lord of Hartlepool in county Durham and Writtle and Hatfield Broadoak in Essex, England. His first wife brought to him the village of Ripe, in Sussex, and his second wife the Lordship of Ireby in Cumberland,
    His possessions were later increased following the defeat of Simon de Montford at the Battle of Evesham (1265), via a series of grants that included the estates of the former rebel barons Walter de Fauconberg and John de Melsa. Henry III also re-appointed Robert a Justice, and Constable of Carlisle and keeper of the Castle there in 1267, a position he had been sacked from in 1255, for his support during the rebellion.
    It's believed Robert joined the princes Edward and Edmund on their 1270-4 crusade, as his sons failed to attend.
    He succeeded in having the young widowed Marjorie of Carrick, heiress of that earldom, married to his son, another Robert Bruce in 1271. She was the daughter of Niall, 2nd Earl of Carrick.
    Robert Bruce was Regent of Scotland sometime during minority of his second cousin King Alexander III of Scotland (1241-1286) and was occasionally recognized as a Tanist of the Scottish Throne. He was the closest surviving male relative to the king: Margaret of Huntingdon's issue were all females up until birth of Hugh Balliol sometime in the 1260s. When Alexander yet was childless, he was officially named as heir-presumptive, but never gained the throne as Alexander later fathered three children. The succession in the main line of the House of Dunkeld became highly precarious when towards the end of Alexander's reign, all three of his children died within a few years. The middle-aged Alexander III induced in 1284 the Estates to recognize as his heir-presumptive his granddaughter Margaret, called the "Maid of Norway", his only surviving descendant. The need for a male heir led Alexander to contract a second marriage to Yolande de Dreux on November 1, 1285. All this was eventually in vain. Alexander died suddenly, in a fall from his horse, when only 45 years old, in 1286. His death ushered in a time of political upheaval for Scotland. His three-year old granddaughter Margaret, who lived in Norway, was recognized as his heir. However, the then 7-year old heiress Margaret died, travelling towards her kingdom, on the Orkney Islands around September 26, 1290. With her death, the main royal line came to an end and thirteen claimants asserted their rights to the Scottish Throne.
    After this extinction of the senior line of the Scottish royal house (the line of William I of Scotland) David of Huntingdon's descendants were the primary candidates for the throne. The two most notable claimants to the throne, John Balliol and Robert himself (grandfather of Robert The Bruce) represented descent through David's daughters Margaret and Isobel respectively.
    Robert Bruce pleaded tanistry and proximity of blood in the succession dispute. He descended from the second daughter of David of Huntingdon, whereas John Balliol descended from the eldest, and thus had the lineal right. However, Robert was a second cousin of kings of Scotland and descended in 4th generation from King David I of Scotland, whereas John Balliol was a third cousin of kings and descended in 5th generation from King David I, the most recent common ancestor who had been Scottish king. The ensuing 'Great Cause' was concluded in 1292. It gave the Crown of Scotland to his family's great rival, John Balliol. The events took place as follows:
    Soon after the death of young queen Margaret, Robert Bruce raised a body of men with the help of the Earls of Mar and Atholl and marched to Perth with a considerable following and uncertain intentions. Bishop Fraser of St. Andrews, worried of the possibility of civil war, wrote to Edward, asking for his assistance in choosing a new monarch.
    Edward took this chance to demand sasine of the Scottish royal estate, but agreed to pass judgement in return for recognition of his suzerainty. The [guardians of Scotland] denied him this, but Robert Bruce was quick to pay homage. All the claimants swore oaths of homage, but John Balliol was the last to do so. The guardians were forced to concede and were thus reinstated by Edward.
    Judgement processed slowly. On August 3, 1291 Edward asked both Balliol and Bruce to choose forty auditors while he himself chose twenty-four, to decide the case. After considering all of the arguments, in early November the court decided in favour of John Balliol, having the superior claim in feudal law, not to mention greater support from the kingdom of Scotland. In accordance with this, final judgement was given by Edward on 17 November. On November 30, John Balliol was crowned as King of Scots at Scone Abbey. On December 26, at Newcastle upon Tyne, King John swore homage to Edward I for the kingdom of Scotland. Edward soon made it clear that he regarded the country as his vassal state. The Bruce family thus lost what they regarded as their rightful place on the Scottish throne.
    (Edward I decided in favor of the senior legitimate heir by primogeniture, John Balliol; however, in 1306, the crown was assumed by a grandson of the Robert himself, who became King Robert I. In doing this, the rightful heir- John Balliol's own son- was smited by his father's misfortune of having been placed on the throne in an inopportune period.)
    Robert, 5th Lord of Annandale resigned the lordship of Annandale to his son, the Earl of Carrick, as well as his claim to the Crown. Shortly after this, Robert's daughter-in-law Marjorie died in 1292, and on the day of her death his son transferred Carrick to his eldest grandson, the future Robert I of Scotland thus making the boy the Earl of Carrick.
    In 1292 Robert V de Brus held a market at Ireby, Cumberland, in right of his wife. The following year he had a market at Hartlepool, county Durham within the liberties of the Bishop of Durham.
    Sir Robert de Brus died at Lochmaben Castle and was buried at Guisborough Priory.
    Family and children
    He married firstly May 12, 1240:
    Isabella, (November 2, 1226- after July 10, 1264), daughter of Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford and 1st Earl of Gloucester and Lady Isabel Marshal of Pembroke, with issue:
    Isabel (b. 1249 - c1284), married (as his first wife) Sir John FitzMarmaduke, Knt., of Horden, Eighton, Lamesley, Ravensholm, and Silksworth, county Durham, Sheriff of North Durham, and Joint Warden beyond the Scottish Sea between the Forth and Orkney. He fought on the English side at the Battle of Falkirk, July 22, 1298, and was present at the Siege of Caerlaverock Castle in 1300. In 1307 he was commanded to assist the Earl of Richmond in expelling Robert de Brus and the Scottish rebels from Galloway. In 1309 his armour and provisions in a vessel bound for Perth were arrested off Great Yarmouth. He was governor of St. John's Town (Perth) in 1310 until his death. Isabel was buried at Easington, county Durham.[6] Robert VI the Bruce, Earl of Carrick (1253 - 1304)
    He married, secondly on May 3, 1275 at Hoddam, in the diocese of Glasgow:

    Christina (d. 1305), daughter and heiress of Sir William de Ireby of Ireby, Cumberland. They had no issue.
    Preceded by Robert IV de Brus Lord of Annandale 1226 x 1233-1295 Succeeded by Robert VI de Brus

    Annadale is located in Dumfries and Galloway (Southwest Scotland)
    Robert de Brus family was given this land by David I in 1124, as one of the border lordships when David became Prince of the Cumbrians. Along with Carrick, these lands acted as a buffer between the quasi-independent Lordship or Kingdom of Galloway and David's lands of Strathclyde and Cumbria.
    ____________________
    Pedigree Resource File
    name: Robert "The Competitor" /de Brus/ (AFN: 9G42-PK) sexo: male nacimiento: 1210 of, Annandale, Dumfriesshire, Scotland defunción: 31 May 1295 Priory, Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire, Scotland bautismo en otra Iglesia: (Abt 85-1295) entierro: 17 April 1295 Priory, Guisburn, Yorkshire, England matrimonio: , , , Scotland
    Padres: Padre: Robert /de Bruce/ (AFN: 9G42-M7) madre: Isabelle /Huntingdon/ (AFN: 9G42-3G) Matrimonios (1)
    cónyuge: Isabel /de Clare/ (AFN: 8WKL-7K) matrimonio: , , , Scotland
    Ocultar hijos (8)
    hijo 1: Robert /de Brus/ (AFN: 9G45-B3) sexo: male nacimiento: July 1243 of, Annandale, Dumfrieshire, Scotland defunción: antes de 4 April 1304 , , , Palestine entierro: Holme Abbey, Holme Cultram, Cumberland, England
    hijo 2: Bernard /Brus/ (AFN: 9G45-DF) sexo: male nacimiento: aproximadamente 1247 of, Connington, Huntingsonshire, England defunción:
    hijo 3: William /Brus/ (AFN: 9G45-C8) sexo: male nacimiento: aproximadamente 1248 of, Annandale, Dumfriesshire, Scotland defunción:
    hijo 4: Richard de /Brus/ (AFN: VB10-P9) sexo: male nacimiento: aproximadamente 1249 of, Annandale, Dumfriesshire, Scotland defunción: antes de 26 January 1286
    hijo 5: Isabella /Bruce/ (AFN: 9G45-FL) sexo: female nacimiento: aproximadamente 1252 of, , Argyllshire, Scotland defunción: 1300
    hijo 6: John /Brus/ (AFN: 18KB-T4T) sexo: male nacimiento: 1252 Clackmannan, Clackmannan, Scotland defunción:
    hijo 7: Alosia /Bruce/ (AFN: 9G45-GR) sexo: female nacimiento: aproximadamente 1254 of, Annandale, Dumfrieshire, Scotland defunción:
    hijo 8: Christiana /Bruce/ (AFN: 9G45-HX) sexo: female nacimiento: aproximadamente 1256 of, Annandale, Dumfrieshire, Scotland defunción:
    Fuentes (1) Ancestral File (R) The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Cita de este registro "Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/S5X9-Z4G : accessed 2014-07-30), entry for Robert "The Competitor" /de Brus/.

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Sources

  1. GenealogieOnline
  2. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=dd7a8f7f-9835-4697-9199-25e918f37840&tid=108978476&pid=6609
    jpg
    Dictionary of National Biography, Volumes 1-20, 22
  3. Find A Grave
  4. GenealogieOnline
  5. The Millennium File
  6. Book Title: Martin Genealogy : Descendants of Lieutenant Samuel Martin of Wethersfield, Connecticut : showing descent from royalty : also giving brief histories of, and descent from the following Colonial families : Nichols, Bradstreet, Marsh, Cotton, Squi
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=d9467a41-1d1b-4d19-9324-63194c4653f6&tid=108978476&pid=522
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    North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000
  7. GenealogieOnline
  8. Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950

Historical events



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Source: Wikipedia


About the surname De Brus de Bruce


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I6608.php : accessed April 29, 2024), "Robert de Brus de Bruce 5th (1210-1294)".