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  1. Thomas de Brus. Sir Thomas de Brus (c. 1284, Carrick, Ayrshire – 17 February 1307) was a son of Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale and Margaret, Countess Of Carrick and thus a younger brother of King Robert I of Scotland. He supported his brother in the struggle against the English conquest, ultimately being captured by the ...

  2. 17 de dic. de 2023 · Sir Thomas de Brus (c. 1284 – 9 February 1307) was a younger brother of King Robert I of Scotland, who supported his brother in the struggle for the crown of Scotland. He was captured by forces at Loch Ryan, Galloway, Scotland and later executed as a traitor.

  3. Sir Thomas Bruce, 1st (feudal) Baron of Clackmannan (died before 1348) [1] was the first Baron of Clackmannan . King David II of Scotland, near the end of his life, appears to have regarded Thomas as the next most senior member of the Bruce family [citation needed], meaning that he was believed to be a male line descendant of Robert ...

  4. Sir Thomas de Brus (c. 1284 - 17 de febrero de 1307) fue un hermano menor y partidario del rey Roberto I de Escocia, en la lucha contra la conquista inglesa. Fue capturado por los MacDoualls en Loch Ryan , Galloway , Escocia y luego ejecutado por los ingleses.

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    Thomas de Brus was executed with his brother, Alexander, on 17 Feb 1307 at Carlile. Whilst fortune had so far been favourable to Bruce, intelligence reached him of the terrible fate of his brothers, "Thomas and Alexander." They hadsucceeded in raising 7000 men in Ireland, and had reached Loch Ryan, wherethey were about to disembark, when Macdowall,...

    Named in Scots Peerage as married to Helen, daughter of Sir John Eskine of that IlkElectric Scotland and Red Book of Scotland call her Mary.
    The Scots Peerage : Founded On Wood's Ed. Of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage Of Scotland; Containing An Historical And Genealogical Account Of The Nobility Of That Kingdom : Paul, James Balfour, Sir,...
    ↑M. E. CUMMING BRUCE. Family records of the Bruces and the Cumyns, with an historical introduction and appendix, etc. [With genealogical tables.] Published 1870, William Blackwood and Sons Edinburg...
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  5. The Lordship of Annandale was a sub-comital lordship in southern Scotland established by David I of Scotland by 1124 for his follower Robert de Brus. The following were holders of the office: Extent of Lordship of Annandale

  6. 12 de sept. de 2012 · Summary. The first Robert de Brus, the ‘ conquisitor of Cleveland, Hartness and Annandale’, founder of the Augustinian priory of Guisborough and progenitor of both the English and Scottish branches of the family, came into England from the west of Normandy among the followers of Henry I in or around the year 1100.