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  1. Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, Strathearn and Caithness (c. 1360 – 26 March 1437) was a Scottish nobleman, the son of Robert II of Scotland. Stewart advocated for the ransom and return to Scotland of the future king in exile, James I, in 1424.

  2. 21 de may. de 2023 · Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, Strathearn and Caithness (c. 1360 – 26 March 1437) was a Scottish nobleman, the son of Robert II of Scotland. Stewart advocated for the ransom and return to Scotland of the future king in exile, James I, in 1424.

  3. Lord of Brechin until 1402, Walter Stewart acquired the earldom of Caithness [S] in that year, and that of Atholl [S] and the lordship of Methven in 1404. His main territorial ambitions centred on the earldom of Strathearn [S], which he received in life-rent from his nephew James I in 1427.

  4. In 1437, Walter Stewart, earl of Atholl was a unique figure in the Scottish political community. He was the youngest and only sur viving legitimate son of Robert II and had nearly sixty years of political experience behind him.2 Atholl also had the distinction of being the king's closest adult kinsman, and as James's 'very dear

  5. 26 de mar. de 2017 · On this date in 1437, the Earl of Atholl finally reached the end of a three-day carnival of public tortures and lost bowels, heart, and head for assassinating the King of Scotland.

  6. earl of Atholl, Walter Stewart. (c. 1360—1437) Quick Reference. ( c. 1360–1437). Second son of Robert II's marriage to Euphemia Ross. Lord of Brechin until 1402, Walter Stewart acquired the earldom of Caithness [S] in that year, and that of Atholl [S] and the lordship of Methven in 1404.

  7. When Walter Stewart 1st Earl of Atholl was born in 1360, in Kyle, Ayrshire, Scotland, United Kingdom, his father, King of Scots Robert II The Steward, was 44 and his mother, Euphemia De Ross, was 31. He married Margaret Barclay, Lady of Brechin before 1375.