Richard and Charlotte Allen Cosby Ancestry » Duncan MacCrinan, King of Scotland I (1001-1040)

Personal data Duncan MacCrinan, King of Scotland I 

Sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
  • Alternative names: I King of Scots Duncan, I Duncan, King Duncan I (The Gracious) Ceanmor Of Scotland, King of Scotland Duncan I I
  • He was born in the year 1001 in Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland.Sources 1, 2
  • Alternative: He was born about 1001.
  • Alternative: He was born in the year 1001 in Elgin, Moray, Scotland.
  • Resident in the year 1057: .
  • (Ruled) in 1034-1040.
  • He died on August 14, 1040 in Elgin, Morayshire, Scotland (killed by Macbeth), he was 39 years old.Sources 1, 2, 7, 8
  • Alternative: He died on August 14, 1040 in Bothganowan, he was 39 years old.
  • Alternative: He died on August 14, 1040 in Battle of Duncrub, Perthshire, Scotland, he was 39 years old.
  • A child of Crinan Lord of the Isles, and Bethoc Beatrix MacKenneth,

Household of Duncan MacCrinan, King of Scotland I

Waarschuwing Attention: Partner (Athelreda Dunbar) is 67 years younger.

Waarschuwing Attention: Spouse (Halvdan Sigurdsson) is 71 years older.

(1) He is married to Aelflaed Sybilla FitzSiward.

They got married in the year 1030 at Scotland, he was 29 years old.


(2) He had a relationship with Athelreda Dunbar.


(3) He had a relationship with Bethoc Scotland.


(4) He is married to Halvdan Sigurdsson.

They got married in the year 1034, he was 33 years old.


(5) He is married to Sibyl (Suthen) Biornsdottir,.

They got married at Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.Source 1

They got married in the year 1030 at Perth, Perthshire, Scotland, he was 29 years old.


Child(ren):



Notes about Duncan MacCrinan, King of Scotland I

Duncan I (d. Aug. 1, 1040, near Elgin, Moray, Scot.), king of the Scots from 1034 to 1040. Duncan was the grandson of King Malcolm II (ruled 1005-34), who irregularly made him ruler of Strathclyde when that region was absorbed into the Scottish kingdom (probably shortly before 1034). Malcolm violated the established system of succession whereby the kingship alternated between two branches of the royal family. Upon Malcolm's death, Duncan succeeded peacefully, but he soon faced the rivalry of Macbeth, Mormaor (subking) of Moray, who probably had a better claim to the throne. Duncan besieged Durham unsuccessfully in 1039 and in the following year was murdered by Macbeth. Duncan's elder son later killed Macbeth and ruled as King Malcolm III Canmore (1058-93).-eiffe p20]eth, reigned six years [Ref: Weis AR 170:20]ck on Durham. Like his grandfather's attack in 1006, it ended in disaster, with Scottish forces fleeing, and Scottish heads decorating the Durham marketplace. This defeat seems to hae weakened his authority so severely that Macbeth of the Cenel Loairn was able to defeat and kill him in battle near Elgin [Ref: Davidson 1995]. Duncan I succeeded his maternal grandfather Malcolm II as king in 1034, and was made famous in literature as the victim of Shakespeare's Macbeth, based on the historical king Mac Bethad mac Findláech, who killed Duncan in battle in 1040. [Ref: Henry Project]f Stratyclyde, which thus became united to Scotia. In 1040 Duncan unsuccessfully besieged Durham and was twice defeated by Thorfinn, earl of Orkney, before being killed by Macbeth. [Ref: Dict of Brit History]. [A History of Scotland by J.D. Mackie], Duncan succeeded him, and thus the kingdoms of Scotia, Lothian and Strathclyde were at last united.e time of his death in 1040 his two sons, Malcolm and Donald Ban (or Donaldbain), were small children.istry (any mature male of the royal kindred was eligible for the kingship if he were rigdomnae - 'the stuff of kings'), an equally good claim to the throne by right of birth, though Duncan had apparently succeeded as their grandfather's chosen heir. In 1040 Macbeth asserted his claim by force of arms, slew Duncan in battle and made himself king. [The Kings and Queens of Scotland]ibyla, a relative of Earl Siward of Northumbria, provided Duncan's son Malcolm a valuable ally in his efforts to wrest the Scottish kingship from Macbeth [Ref: Davidson 1995]c or Beatrice, daughter of Malcolm II, succeeded his grandfather in the year 1033. "In the extreme north, dominions more extensive than any Jarl of the Orkneys had hitherto acquired, were united under the rule of Thorfinn, Sigurd's son, whose character and appearance have been thus described: - 'He was stout and strong, but very ugly, severe and cruel, but a very clever man'. The extensive districts then dependant upon the Moray Maormors were in possession of the celebrated Macbeth". Duncan, in 1033, desiring to extend his dominions southwards, attacked Durham, but was forced to retire with considerable loss. His principal struggles, however, were with his powerful kinsman, Thorfinn, whose success was so great that he extended his conquests as far as the Tay. "His men spread over the whole conquered country", says the Orkneyinga Saga, "and burnt every hamlet and farm, so that not a cot remained. Every man that they found they slew; but the old men and women fled to the deserts and woods, and filled the country with lamentation. Some were driven before the Norwegians and made slaves. After the Earl Thorfinn returned to his ships, subjugating the country everywhere in his progress". Duncan's last battle, in which he was defeated, was in the neighbourhood of Burghead, near the Moray Firth; and shortly after this, on the 14th August, 1040, he was assassinated in Bothgowanan, - which in Gaelic, is said to mean "the smith's hut", - by his kinsman the Maormor Macbeda or Macbeth. Duncan had reigned only five years when he was assassinated by Macbeth, leaving two infant sons, Malcolm and Donal, by a sister of Siward, the Earl of Northumberland. The former fled to Cumberland, and the latter took refuge in the Hebrides, on the death of their father. [Ref: 110 Electric Scotland]y refs, let me know & I will oblige.

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Sources

  1. The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968, 21
  2. Millennium File, Heritage Consulting
  3. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 34-21, 121a-23, 170-20
  4. Ancestry Family Trees, Ancestry Family Tree
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=28696621&pid=3763
  5. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900, Yates Publishing, Source number: 1290.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: JWC
  6. American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI), Godfrey Memorial Library, comp.
  7. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999, 170-20
    AR uses term "murdered" - others have said "slain"
  8. Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on, UK-Ancestry of the British Royal House
    1040

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About the surname MacCrinan,


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Richard Cosby, "Richard and Charlotte Allen Cosby Ancestry", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/richard-and-charlotte-allen-cosby-ancestry/P36990.php : accessed May 13, 2024), "Duncan MacCrinan, King of Scotland I (1001-1040)".