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  1. 21 de dic. de 2013 · Some of the monuments she had constructed are still standing as she built them in stone in Dumfries and Galloway. The best guess for Dervorguilla’s birth date is the year 1210. She was the daughter of Alan, the Lord of Galloway. At the time she was born, Galloway was a part of Celtic Scotland and the people spoke Gaelic.

  2. 27 de sept. de 2013 · Dervorguilla's parents were Alan, Lord of Galloway, and Margaret, great-granddaughter of King David I of Scotland. She married John Balliol in 1233, a loyal lord to King Henry III of England.

  3. 29 de sept. de 2021 · Devorgilla, Lady of Galloway. Devorgilla, Lady of Galloway, lived from 1210 to 28 January 1290. Her name is also sometimes given as Dervorguilla, Dearbhfhorghaill, Derborgaill or Dearbhorghil. One of the most powerful women of the age, she was hugely influential in her own right, and was the mother of one Scottish King, John Balliol, and the ...

  4. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 3381. Source citation. Scottish Royalty. Born the daughter of Alan de Galloway, Lord of Galloway and Margaret of Huntingdon sometime between 1210 and 1225. She married John de Balliol in 1233. The couple had at least eight children including John Balliol, who was crowned King of Scotland on November 30, 1292.

  5. Dervorguilla de Galloway (c. 1210 – 28 de enero de 1290) fue una 'señora de sustancia' en la Escocia del siglo XIII, esposa desde 1223 de Juan I de Balliol, V Lord Balliol, y madre de Juan I, futuro rey de Escocia . El nombre Dervorguilla o Devorgilla es una latinización del gaélico Dearbhfhorghaill (ortografías alternativas, Derborgaill ...

  6. 24 de ene. de 2022 · After his death, his widow, Dervorguilla of Galloway, took the reins as patroness, making her husband’s endowment permanent. ‘ Dervorguilla was a powerful woman, wealthier than her husband, and whose lineage was the basis of her son’s claim to the throne of Scotland.

  7. Although Dervorguilla was the lord of Galloway's third daughter, and the second of his marriage to Margaret, the fact that Margaret was herself an eldest daughter was adjudged to give Dervorguilla's son, John, the stronger right to the vacant throne of Scotland over the claims of Robert (V) de Brus, son of Margaret's younger sister, Isabel.