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15<br />

THE DOUGLAS FAMILY.<br />

HERE are many legends of the origin of this powerful family, but the first recorded<br />

ia William of Douglas, the name being derived from the wild pastoral dale he possessed.<br />

He appears as a witness to charters by the King and the Bishop of Glasgow<br />

between 1175 and 1213. He was either the brother or the brother-in-law of Sir<br />

Freskin of Murray, and had six sons, of whom Archibald, or Erkenbald, was his<br />

heir, and Brice rose to be Bishop of Moray. Archibald is a witness to charters<br />

between 1190 and 1232, and was knighted. Sir William of Douglas, apparently the<br />

son of Sir Archibald, figures in records from 1240 to 1273. His second son, distinguished<br />

in family traditions as William the Hardy, spoiled the monks of Mehose,<br />

and deforced the King's officers in the execution of a judgment in favour of his<br />

. _ mother. He ioined Wallace in the rising against the English in 1297. He possessed<br />

lands in one English and seven Scottish counties. His son, the Good Sir James, is<br />

known as the greatest captain of Bruce in the long war of independence. "The Black Douglas," as<br />

he was called, was victor in fifty-seven fights, his name became a terror to the border country. In<br />

1330, when on his way to Jerusalem, there to deposit the heart of his royal friend Bruce, he was<br />

killed fighting against the Moors in Andalusia. His son William fell at Halidon Hill, and the next<br />

Lord of Douglas, Hugh, brother of Lord James, and a canon of Glasgow, made over the great<br />

estates of the family in 1342 to his nephew Sir William. The Douglases had, since the time of<br />

William the Hardy, held the title of Lords of Douglas ; but in 1357, Sir William, who had fought<br />

at Poitiers, was made Earl of Douglas, and by marriage became Earl of Mar. In 1371 he disputed<br />

the succession of the Scottish crown with Robert II., claiming as a descendant of the Baliols and<br />

Comyns. He died in 1384. His son James, second Earl of Douglas and Mar, the conqueror of<br />

Hotspur, fell at Otterburn in 1388, and as he left no legitimate issue, the direct male line of William<br />

the Hardy and the Good Sir James now came to an end. His aunt had married for her second<br />

husband one of her brother's esquires, James of Sandilands, and through her Lord Torphichen,<br />

whose barony was a creation of Queen Mary in 1564, is now the heir general and representative<br />

at common law of the House of Douglas.<br />

William of Douglas was father of Sir Archibald Douglas, who had two sons ; from the younger,<br />

Sir Andrew, descended the Earls of Morton, Viscount Belhaven, and Baron Penrhyn ; and the elder,<br />

Sir William, was the father of another Sir William, who had three sons: (1) the Good Sir James,<br />

from whom descended the third (illegitimate), fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth Earls<br />

of Douglas, first and second Dukes of Touraine, Earl of Ormond ; (2) Hugh ; (3) Archibald, who was<br />

the father of William, first Earl of Douglas, who was father of James, second Earl. This second<br />

Earl had two natural sons : (a) William, from whom descended the Dukes of Qiieensberry and<br />

Dover, Earls of March, Ruglin, and Solway, etc. ; (6) Archibald, from whom descended Douglas of<br />

Caver*. William, the first Earl of Douglas, had also a natural son, George, Earl of Angus, from<br />

whom descended the Dukes of Douglas, Hamilton, Brandon, and Chatellerault, Marquesses of<br />

Douglas, Earlu of Selkirk, Ormond, Forfar, Dumbarton, and Barons Glenbervie, etc.

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