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  1. Sir Robert Bruce, Lord of Liddesdale (fallecido el 11 de agosto de 1332) era un hijo ilegítimo del rey Robert the Bruce y una madre desconocida. Fue nombrado caballero y galardonado con las armas reales en la batalla de Bannockburn .

  2. Marjorie Bruce o Marjorie de Brus (probablemente 1296-1317) fue la hija mayor de Roberto I de Escocia e Isabella de Mar. Se casó con Walter Estuardo, VI Gran Senescal de Escocia dando origen a la Casa real de los Estuardo. Su hijo fue el primer rey de esta familia, Roberto II de Escocia. Tras enviudar, su padre se casó con Isabel de Burgh .

  3. Roberto I Bruce (11 de julio de 1274 – 7 de junio de 1329) fue rey de Escocia de 1306 a 1329. Noble escocés, era hijo de Roberto VI Bruce (tataranieto del rey David I) y de Marjorie, Condesa de Carrick, hija de Niall (o Neil), nacido el 12 de octubre de 1286, Conde de Carrick. Por lo tanto Bruce heredó de su madre el Condado de Carrick y de ...

  4. The Elliots and Robert Bruce’s recolonization of Liddesdale: a Scots-Breton clan with lands in Angus, restored as the thanage of Alyth following their resettlement in the Borders. Keith Elliot Hunter Introduction. Around a thousand Breton mercenaries fought at the battle of Hastings in 1066, and many were awarded with lands in England.

  5. Sir Robert Bruce, Lord of Liddesdale (died 11 August 1332) was an illegitimate son of King Robert the Bruce and an unknown mother. He was knighted and awarded the royal arms at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.

  6. 11 de oct. de 2023 · Additionally, he fathered Robert Bruce, later Lord of Liddesdale, out of wedlock with an unknown woman. Another illegitimate child thought to be fathered by Robert the Bruce is Niall Bruce of Carrick. King Robert the Bruce’s son David became King David II of Scotland at the age of 5 after his death, and he held the crown between 1329 and 1371.

  7. What he came to witness were as yet only the beginnings of expansion into the future great Douglas Marcher satrapy, although the lordship of Liddesdale itself would in due course be handed to Bruce’s bastard son, Sir Robert, whose death would come in battle at Dupplin Moor in 1330 at the hands of the ‘disinherited’, some of whom may have been involved in the 1320 plot.