Biography of Alan Lord of Galloway 1194-1234
Around 1194 Alan Lord of Galloway was born.
Before 1209 Alan Lord of Galloway (age 14) and Unamed Lacy were married.
In 1209 Alan Lord of Galloway (age 15) and Margaret Dunkeld (age 15) were married. She the daughter of David Dunkeld 8th Earl Huntingdon (age 57) and Matilda Gernon Countess Huntingdon (age 38). She a great x 3 granddaughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England.
Around 1210 [his daughter] Dervorguilla Galloway was born to Alan Lord of Galloway (age 16) and [his wife] Margaret Dunkeld (age 16).
On 17 Jun 1219 [his father-in-law] David Dunkeld 8th Earl Huntingdon (age 67) died. His son [his brother-in-law] John Dunkeld 9th Earl Huntingdon 7th Earl Chester (age 12) succeeded 9th Earl Huntingdon, 8th Earl of Northampton. Elen ferch Llewellyn Aberffraw Countess Huntingdon and Mar (age 1) by marriage Countess Huntingdon.
Around 1222 [his brother-in-law] John Dunkeld 9th Earl Huntingdon 7th Earl Chester (age 15) and Elen ferch Llewellyn Aberffraw Countess Huntingdon and Mar (age 4) were married. He the son of [his father-in-law] David Dunkeld 8th Earl Huntingdon and [his mother-in-law] Matilda Gernon Countess Huntingdon (age 51). They were second cousin twice removed. He a great x 3 grandson of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England. She a granddaughter of King John of England.
Before 1228 [his wife] Margaret Dunkeld (age 33) died.
In 1229 Alan Lord of Galloway (age 35) and Rose Lacy were married.
Before 1234 [his son-in-law] William Forz 4th Earl Albemarle and [his daughter] Christiana Galloway were married. He the son of William Forz 3rd Earl Albemarle and Aveline Montfichet.
In 1234 Alan Lord of Galloway (age 40) died.
Apr 1236. About the same time, several nobles and powerful men from the various provinces of the West, namely from Galloway, the Isle of Man, and parts of Ireland, assembled at the instance of [his father-in-law] Hugh de Lacy (age 60), whose [his wife] daughter had been married to Alan of Galloway, lately deceased, and they all united together for the purpose of restoring Galloway to the illegitimate son of the aforesaid Alan, and of annulling by force the just disposition made by the king of Scots (age 37), who had distributed the inheritance amongst the three daughters of Alan, to whom it belonged by hereditary right. In order, therefore, to revoke and annul his distribution, and to restore the territory to the aforesaid Thomas, or to the son of Thomas, Alan's brother, or at least to one of that family, these presumptuous chiefs flew to arms, and, bursting forth into insolence, endeavoured to free themselves from the authority of the king. And in order to bring their attempts to the desired result, they entered into a strange kind of treaty, by means of a certain mode of divination, yet according to an abominable custom of their ancestors. For all these barbarians and their chiefs and magistrates drew blood from a vein near the heart, and poured it into a large cup, they then stirred and mixed it up, and afterwards, drinking to one another, quaffed it off, as a token that they were from that time forth allied by an indissoluble and, as it were, kindred treaty, and indivisible both in prosperity and adversity, even at the risk of their heads. They therefore provoked the king and the kingdom to war, burning their own houses and those of their neighbours, that the king, when he arrived, might not find either shelter or food for his army, and indulged in rapine and incendiarism, heaping injury on injury. On hearing of this, the king of Scotland collected his forces from all quarters, and, marching to meet them, drew up his forces in order and engaged them in open battle; and the fortune of war turning against the Galwegians, they were put to flight, and the royal troops, pursuing them at the sword's point, slew many thousands of them, and those who were taken alive by the king and his soldiers were put to an ignominious death without any chance of ransoming themselves. Some threw themselves on the king's mercy, and were consigned to close imprisonment by him till he could consult as to what should be done with them, and all of them, together with their descendants, he, not without good reason, disinherited. Having gained this victory the king glorified God, the lord of armies, and listening to good counsel, he sent word to [his future son-in-law] Roger de Quincy (age 41), earl of Winchester, John Baliol (age 28), and [his son-in-law] William, the son of the earl of Albemarle, that, as they had married the three sisters, the daughters of Alan of Galloway, they might now, as the disturbances were quelled, hold peaceable possession of the rights pertaining to them. This battle took place in the month of April, the fortune of war favouring the king of Scots.
[his daughter] Christiana Galloway was born to Alan Lord of Galloway and Unamed Lacy.
[his daughter] Helen Galloway Countess Winchester was born to Alan Lord of Galloway and Margaret Dunkeld.
[his illegitimate son] Thomas of Galloway was born illegitimately to Alan Lord of Galloway.
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