William Comyn, Lord of Badenoch
William Comyn (1163 - 1233) was Lord of Badenoch and Earl of Buchan. He was one of the seven children of Richard Comyn, Justiciar of Lothian, and Hextilda of Tynedale. Born in Altyre, Moray, Scotland, he died in Buchan and is buried in Deer Abbey. William made his fortune in the service of King William I of Scotland fighting the Meic Uilleims in the north. William witnesses no fewer than 88 charters of the king. William was sheriff of Forfar (1195–1211), Justiciar of Scotia (1205–1233) and warden of Moray (1211–12). Between 1199 and 1200, William was sent to England to discuss important matters on King William's behalf with the new king, John. William was appointed to the prestigious office of Justiciar of Scotia, the most senior royal office in the kingdom, in 1205. Between 1211 and 1212, William, as Warden of Moray (or Guardian of Moray) fought against the insurgency of Gofraid mac Domnaill (of the Meic Uilleim family), whom William beheaded in Kincardine in 1213. Upon finally destroying the Meic Uilleims in 1229, he was given the Lordship of Badenoch and the lands it controlled. From an unknown date, William held the title Lord of Kilbride. He helped oversee the construction of St Mungo's Cathedral in Glasgow and after his death, Marjory continued his work there. Earl of BuchanDuring his time as Warden of Moray, Comyn's success may have been a reason for his marriage to Marjory (a.k.a. Margaret), Countess of Buchan, sometime between 1209 and 1212. Her father, Fergus, Earl of Buchan (died c.1214), had no male heirs and so in marrying his daughter to William he ensured a suitable line for his titles before his death. Through this marriage, William took management of the mormaerdom (earldom) of Buchan. Deer AbbeyFounded in 1219 by Comyn as a Cistercian house,[1][2] Deer Abbey later a monestary, bringing "Cistercian monks from Kinloss Abbey near Elgin to establish the new monastery."[3] After the Reformation of 1560, the abbey was secularized, becoming the barony or Altrie.[3] Family treeThe marriage of William and Sarah Fitzhugh, William's first marriage, is believed to have produced six children. This marriage is associated with the Lordship of Badenoch. The marriage of William and Marjory, Countess of Buchan, produced seven children and is associated with the Earldom of Buchan.[4] For the historian Alan Young, William's life, and particularly his marriage to the Countess of Buchan, marks the beginning of the "Comyn century". {{Citation needed}} NB. Children are ranked according to either accounts showing a specific rank in the order of Williams children's birth or according to the earliest available date the child was thought to have been born.
DeathComyn died in 1233 in Aberdeenshire, Scotland and was buried in the new church at Deer Abbey.[3] Notes
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