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  1. Alexander of Islay or Alexander MacDonald (died 1449; Scottish Gaelic: Alasdair MacDomhnaill, Dòmhnallach or MacDhòmhnaill) was a medieval Scottish nobleman who succeeded his father Domhnall of Islay as Lord of the Isles (1423–1449), later rising to the rank of Earl of Ross (1437–49). His lively career, especially before he attained the ...

  2. Donald Balloch MacDonald was a son of John Mór Tanister and Margery Byset, daughter of MacEoin Bisset, Lord of The Glens. He was the second lord of Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg, also known as Lord of Dunyvaig and the Glens. He succeeded to the lordship after his father was murdered by James Campbell (the agent of James I of Scotland) after a ...

  3. Lord of Islay was a thirteenth- and fourteenth-century title borne by the chiefs of Clann Domhnaill before they assumed the title "Lord of the Isles" in the late fourteenth century. The first person regarded to have styled themself "Lord of Islay" is Aonghus Mór , son of the eponymous ancestor of the clan, Domhnall mac Raghnaill .

  4. 5 de abr. de 2024 · MEMORIAL ID 187011930. Aonghus Mór mac Domhnaill, Lord of the Isles, was a son of Domhnall mac Raghnaill, the second Lord of the Isles, and progenitor of Clan Donald. He was the grandson of Reginal, the first Lord of the Isles, and great grandson of Somerled. Aonghus Mór was married to a member of the Caimbéalaigh kindred (the Campbells), a ...

  5. Domhnall of Islay, Lord of the Isles, d. 1423, married Mariota Leslie, daughter of Sir Walter Leslie. John Mór Tanister, d. 1427, married Margery Bisset, daughter of Sir Hugh Bisset. Became Lord of Dunyvaig and the Glens. Alastair Carrach, d. c. 1440, married Mary, daughter of Malcolm, Earl of Lennox. Agnes, married Sir John Montgomerie of ...

  6. The MacDonalds of Sleat. The story of Clan Donald of Sleat began with Ùisdean, or Hugh, the third son of Alexander of Islay and Somerled’s sixth great grandson. Ùisdean’s successors sculpted their history with murder, war and infighting as well as violent feuds with neighbouring families, namely the MacLeods of Dunvegan and the MacLeans of Duart.

  7. Alexander of Islay or Alexander MacDonald (died 1449; Scottish Gaelic: Alasdair MacDomhnaill, Dòmhnallach or MacDhòmhnaill) was a medieval Scottish nobleman who succeeded his father Domhnall of Islay as Lord of the Isles (1423–1449), later rising to the rank of Earl of Ross (1437–49).