![](https://assets10.geni.com/images/external/x_com_black_16.png?1728062893)
![](https://assets12.geni.com/images/facebook_white_small_short.gif?1728062893)
Not the husband of Matilda de Arnot
Alexander of Menteith (d. bef. 1306), a Scottish nobleman and member of the Stewart family, was the Earl of Menteith.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (previous version of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander,_Earl_of_Menteith)
Alexander of Menteith (d. 1297 x 1304), son of Mary I, Countess of Menteith and Walter Bailloch Stewart, her husband, was a Mormaer or Earl of Menteith for a most of the 1290s. He is first noted with his brother John de Menteith in a compact between Bruce and the Stewarts on September 20, 1286, at Turnberry, Carrick.[1] In another writ, of uncertain date, granted by their father to Kilwinning Abbey, he and his brother are styled Alexander and John de Menteith.[2] They had therefore dropped the name Stewart for the name Menteith.
Alexander joined with his father in a charter granting the church of Kippen to the Cambuskenneth Abbey to secure themselves a place of burial. This writ is said to be dated in 1286.[3] He was at Norham in 1291, and swore fealty to Edward I, while he also appears in other matters before his succession, the date of which is uncertain, but was probably between 1292 and 1295. In any case he was the Earl of Menteith who with the Earls of Atholl, Ross, and others gathered a force and invaded England in revenge for Edward's savage attack on Berwick. Their army was defeated at the Battle of Dunbar on April 27, 1296, and on that or the following day Menteith and others who had fled to Dunbar Castle were taken captive, and he was committed to the Tower.
He was not, however, detained long as a prisoner, but was liberated either before or shortly after a promise of service made by him to the English King, and dated at Elgin July 27, 1296. He repeated this promise, and swore fealty at Berwick a month later, on 28 August.[4] He then left two of his sons in the King's hands as hostages.[5] Perhaps this fact influenced his future movements, for, excepting some transactions dealing with the estates of Alexander de Abernethy, and also of Alexander of Argyll and his son, of which he was appointed guardian by Edward,[6] he seems to have taken no part in public affairs. At least nothing is recorded about him, except a letter to him from the English King on September 26, 1297,[7] and the date of his death is not known.
He married a lady named Matilda,[8] whose surname has not been discovered, and had the following children: ....
Updated April 2021
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander,_Earl_of_Menteith
He married a lady named Matilda (Maud),[7] a daughter of Robert, Earl of Strathearn,[8] and together they had the following children:
Footnotes:
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SCOTTISH%20NOBILITY%20LATER.htm#_To...
Earl Walter & his wife had two children:
1. ALEXANDER Stewart (-[26 Sep 1297/before 1306]). Knighted [13 Jun 1291/Feb 1293]. He succeeded his father in [1295] as Earl of Menteith. The Ragman Roll names "Alexander earl of Menetethe" among those who swore allegiance to Edward I King of England at Elgyn in Moray 27 Jul 1296[89]. He unsuccessfully besieged Carlisle spring 1296, captured and imprisoned at Dunbar, later in the Tower of London. He supported Edward I King of England from 1296[90].
m MATILDA, daughter of ---.
Earl Alexander & his wife had four children:
1240 |
1240
|
Clydesdale, Crawford, Lanarkshire, Scotland (United Kingdom)
|
|
1275 |
1275
|
||
1280 |
1280
|
Menteith, Perthshire, Scotland
|
|
1285 |
1285
|
Abernethy, Perth and Kinross, Scotland (United Kingdom)
|
|
1306 |
1306
Age 66
|
Menteith, Perthshire, Scotland (United Kingdom)
|
|
???? | |||
???? |
Menteith, Scotland
|
||
???? |
Menteith, Scotland
|
||
???? |
Menteith, Scotland
|