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  1. 27 de may. de 2024 · John de Balliol (died 1268), married Dervorguilla of Galloway, had issue. Their son become King John I of Scotland. Eustace de Balliol (died 1274), married firstly Helewise, daughter of Ranulph de Levington and Ada de Gernon. He married secondly Agnes, daughter of William de Percy and Joan Briwere. Jocelin de Balliol; Hugh de Balliol ...

    • Abderdeen, Scotland
    • Hugh de Balliol, of Bywell & Barnard Castle
    • Scotland
    • " (Cicely)"
  2. Hace 5 días · In 1233, Dervorguilla, a younger daughter from Alan's second marriage, married John de Balliol, Lord of Barnard Castle. Alan had a son named Thomas. A product of Alan's second marriage, he was his only known legitimate male offspring. Although the date of this son's death is unknown, he may have lived into in the 1220s.

  3. Hace 6 días · He picked the weak John Balliol, a distant descendant of the great Scottish king David I, in the expectation that he would do Edward’s bidding. The English king, however, was quickly disabused of this idea when Balliol refused to join him on campaign in France and, in 1295, signed an alliance with France, England’s traditional enemy.

  4. Hace 5 días · Balliol was started as a house for poor scholars, which was supported by the payments of John of Balliol, lord of Barnard Castle. These payments, which began a few years before 1266, were part of a penance imposed on John Balliol by the Bishop of Durham. John Balliol died in 1269, but the payments were continued by his widow, Dervorguilla.

  5. 18 de may. de 2024 · When the honor was divided after 1237, that fee was assigned c. 1244 to Dervorguilla and her husband John de Balliol, whose heirs retained it until the 1290s. After the Balliol forfeiture the manor was said until the 17th century to be held of the Crown as of the honor of Huntingdon.

  6. 21 de may. de 2024 · John de Balliol was the last Scottish king crowned on it, in 1292, before Edward I of England invaded Scotland in 1296 and moved the stone (and other Scottish regalia) to London. There, at Westminster Abbey in 1307, he had a special throne, called the Coronation Chair, built so that the stone fitted under it.

  7. 26 de may. de 2024 · In 1231 John de Balliol came to an agreement with the bishop by which he was in future to hold it as to one moiety by the fourth part of a knight's fee and as to the other moiety by a rent of £10. (fn. 7) This did not end the disputes, for in 1254 some of Balliol's men seized the church of Long Newton and were excommunicated and ...