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Robert de Brus, 2nd Lord of Annandale; Robert de Brus, 1st Lord of Annandale; Robert de Brus, 4th Lord of Annandale; Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale; Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale; William de Brus, 3rd Lord of Annandale
Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale, 1292-1295; John Comyn III of Badenoch, 1295–1296; Annandale seized and granted to John on Robert's refusal to attend the Scottish host. Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale, 1296-1304; Robert de Brus, 7th Lord of Annandale (King Robert), 1304-1312; Thomas Randolph, 8th Lord of Annandale, 1312–32
Robert V de Brus (Robert de Brus), 5th Lord of Annandale (ca. 1215 – 31 March or 3 May 1295 [1]), was a feudal lord, justice and constable of Scotland and England, a regent of Scotland, and a competitor for the Scottish throne in 1290/92 in the Great Cause. He is commonly known as "Robert the Competitor".
Robert I de Brus, 1st Lord of Annandale (c. 1078 –1141) was an early-12th-century Anglo-Norman lord and the first of the Bruce dynasty to hold lands in Scotland. A monastic patron, he is remembered as the founder of Gisborough Priory in Yorkshire, England, in present-day Redcar and Cleveland, in 1119.
The Noveritis, also variously known as the Announcement of Easter and the Moveable Feasts (in the post-1970 Roman Missal) or the Epiphany proclamation, is a liturgical chant sung on the Feast of Epiphany that contains a summary of liturgical dates of moveable feasts in the year ahead. Noveritis comes from the incipit of the chant.
Robert de Brus (July 1243 – before April 1304 [1]), 6th Lord of Annandale, jure uxoris Earl of Carrick [2] (1252–1292), Lord of Hartness, [3] Writtle and Hatfield Broad Oak, was a cross-border lord, [a] and participant of the Second Barons' War, Ninth Crusade, Welsh Wars, and First War of Scottish Independence, as well as father to the future king of Scotland Robert the Bruce.
William de Brus, 3rd Lord of Annandale (died 1212) Robert de Brus, 4th Lord of Annandale (c. 1195–1245) Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale (c. 1215–1295) Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale (1243 – c. 1304) Charles Annandale (1843–1915), British editor; David Annandale (born 1967), Canadian speculative fiction author
In 1390 he obtained from King Robert II a grant of his ward-relief and marriage for the Earldom of March and lordship of Annandale; and he acted as a Commissioner for liberating from English captivity Murdoch, son of the Regent Albany, on 7 December 1411, [6] and in 1415. "George de Dounbar, son and heir of the Earl of the Marches of Scotland ...