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Biography of Thomas Bruce 1284-1307

Paternal Family Tree: Bruce of Annandale

Maternal Family Tree: Adela Valois Countess Blois and Vermandois

1306 Robert "The Bruce" murders John "Red" Comyn

1307 Battle of Loch Ryan and the Execution of the Bruce Brothers

In 1271 [his father] Robert Bruce Earl Carrick (age 27) and [his mother] Marjorie Carrick 3rd Countess Carrick (age 18) were married at Turnberry Castle. He by marriage Earl Carrick. She the daughter of [his grandfather] Niall Carrick 2nd Earl Carrick and [his grandmother] Margaret Stewart Countess Carrick. They were third cousins. He a great x 4 grandson of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England.

Around 1284 Thomas Bruce was born to Robert Bruce Earl Carrick (age 40) and Marjorie Carrick 3rd Countess Carrick (age 31).

Before 9th November 1292 [his mother] Marjorie Carrick 3rd Countess Carrick (age 39) died.

Before 4th March 1304 [his father] Robert Bruce Earl Carrick (age 60) died. He was buried at Holme Cultram Abbey, Cumberland [Map].

Robert "The Bruce" murders John "Red" Comyn

Chronicle of Walter of Guisborough. In the year of our Lord 1306, [his brother] Robert de Brus (age 31), the fifth son of the son of that Robert de Brus who, as mentioned above, disputed with John de Balliol before the King of England over the kingdom of Scotland, and was, as has been shown, judicially dismissed from his claim, relying on wicked counsel, aspired to the kingdom of Scotland. Fearing Lord John Comyn (age 37), Earl of Badenoch, who was a powerful man in that land and loyal to the lord King of England, to whom he had done homage, and knowing that he could be hindered by him, sent to him deceitfully two of his brothers, namely Thomas de Brus (age 22) and [his brother] Nigel (age 21), asking that he would deign to come to him at Dumfries to discuss certain matters which concerned them both. Now the justices of the lord King of England were sitting that same day in the castle, namely, on the fourth day before the Ides of February [10th February 1306] Comyn, suspecting no evil, came to him with a few companions, and they exchanged the kiss [of greeting], but not of peace, in the cloister of the Friars Minor [Franciscans] [Map]. When they were speaking together, in words that appeared peaceable, [Bruce] suddenly turned his face, twisted his words, and began to reproach him for his treachery, that he had accused him before the King of England and worsened his position to his harm. Comyn, speaking calmly and making excuses for himself, was not listened to; but Bruce, as he had conspired, struck him with his foot and sword, and stepped back. Then his men, following him, threw Comyn down on the floor of the altar, leaving him for dead. But a certain knight of Comyn's, Lord Robert Comyn, his uncle, ran to bring him aid; yet Christopher Seton (age 28), who had married the [his sister] sister (age 33) of Lord Robert de Brus, met him and struck his head with a sword, and he died. Lord Robert de Brus then went out, and seeing Comyn's fine warhorse, mounted it; his men mounted likewise and they went on to the castle and seized it. When what had happened became known, the Scots flocked to him. The justices, fearing for themselves, shut the doors of the hall in which they sat with the few English who were with them. Hearing this, Bruce ordered fire to be set to it unless they at once surrendered; and they gave themselves up, asking for their lives and safe departure from the land, which he granted. When these things had been done, certain ill-wishers told him that Lord John Comyn was still alive; for the friars had carried him into the vestibule of the altar to tend to him and hear his confession. When he had confessed and was truly penitent, by order of the tyrant he was dragged from the vestibule and killed on the steps of the high altar, so that his blood touched the altar slab and the altar itself. After this Bruce went around the greater part of Scotland, occupying and fortifying castles and plundering the lands of the dead man; and the relatives of the deceased fled from his face, and all the English returned to their own land.

Anno Domini MCCCV Robertus de Brus, quintus filius filii illius Roberti de Brus qui, ut supradictum est, disceptavit cum Johanne de Balliolo coram rege Angliæ circa regnum Scotia, et judicialiter, ut supra patet, a sua petitione absolutus est, perverso fretus consilio ad regnum Scotia aspiravit; timensque dominum Johannem Cumyn, comitem de Badenach, qui erat homo potens in terra illa, et fidelis domino regi Angliæ, cui homagium fecerat; et sciens se impediri posse per eum, misit ad eum in dolo duos ex fratribus suis, Thomam videlicet de Brus et Nigellum, rogans ut dignaretur venire ad se apud Dunfres, super quibusdam negotiis tractaturus cum eo quæ tangebant utrosque. Sedebant enim justitiarii domini regis Angliæ eodem die in castro, IV scilicet idus Februarii. Qui, nihil mali suspicans, venit ad eum cum paucis, et mutuo se receperunt in osculum, sed non pacis, in claustro fratrum Minorum. Cumque mutuo loquerentur ad invicem, verbis, ut videbatur, pacificis, statim convertens faciem, et verba pervertens, cœpit improperare ei de seditione sua, quod eum accusaverat apud regem Angliæ, et suam conditionem deterioraverat in damnum ipsius. Qui cum pacifice loqueretur et excusaret se, noluit exaudire sermonem ejus, sed, ut conspiraverat, percussit eum pede et gladio, et retrorsum abiit. At sui extunc insequentes eum, prostraverunt eum in pavimento altaris, pro mortuo dimittentes. Cucurrit autem quidam miles ex suis, dominus Robertus Comyn avunculus ejus, ut auxilium ferret ei; sed occurrit ei Christoforus de Sethon, qui sororem domini Roberti de Brus duxerat in uxorem, et percussit caput ejus in gladio, et mortuus est. Egressusque est dominus Robertus de Brus, et videns dextrarium domini Johannis elegantem, ascendit in eum; ascenderuntque sui cum eo, et profecti sunt usque in castrum, et ceperunt illud. Cumque divulgaretur quod factum fuerat, cucurrerunt ad eum Scoti. Et justitiarii timentes sibi, clauserunt ostia aulæ in qua sedebant cum paucis Anglicis qui erant cum eis: quod audiens ipse, jussit ignem apponi, nisi confestim redderent eos; at illi dederunt se, vitam postulantes et salvum egressum a terra, quod et ipse concessit eis. Quibus ita gestis, nunciaverunt ei quidam malevoli quod dominus Johannes Comyn adhuc viveret; fratres enim asportaverant eum infra vestibulum altaris, ut medicarentur ei et confiteretur peccata sua. Qui cum confessus esset et vere pœnitens, jussu tyranni extractus est a vestibulo, et in gradibus majoris altaris interfectus, ita quod sanguis ipsius tabulam altaris tetigit, et etiam ipsum altare. Circuivit extunc the principal terram Scotia, occupando et muniendo castra, et deprædando terras mortui, fugeruntque a facie ipsius parentes defuncti, et omnes Anglici reversi sunt in terram suam.

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Chronicle of Walter of Guisborough. Around the Feast of Saint Michael [29th September 1306], the new king [Robert the Bruce] returned from the islands of Scotland to which he had fled, bringing with him many Irish and Scots, and remained in Kintyre. He sent some of his men into Carrick, and there they collected his rents for the term of Saint Martin. Hearing of this, Lord Henry de Percy went there, but the new king, arriving there unexpectedly at night, attacked the said Lord Henry, killed a few of his household, seized his warhorses and silver vessels, and besieged him in the castle of that place until the lord king of England, sending a strong force, freed him. From then on, the new king ranged through the land of Scotland, and all the strong and able-bodied men who refused to follow him he put to death by the sword, and he inflicted many evils upon the people. In the following Lent, he sent away from himself, with part of his army, his two brothers, namely Lord Thomas de Brus (age 22), who had always hated the English, and [his brother] Lord Alexander (age 21), a cleric1, who were taken unexpectedly at night by our forces, and, after judgment, drawn and hanged. From that time onward the new king kept himself in the farthest ends of the land.

Circa festum Sancti Michaelis reversus est novus rex ab insulis Scotiæ ad quas fugerat, cum multis Hibernicis et Scotis, mansitque in Kentyr, misitque aliquos ex suis in Karryk, et levaverunt ibi firmas suas de termino Sancti Martini. Quod audiens dominus Henricus de Percy, declinavit ibidem, et ex improviso superveniens novus rex irruit nocte in prædictum dominum Henricum, et occidit paucos de familia ejus, cepitque equos suos dextrarios et vasa argentea, et obsedit eum in castro ejusdem loci, quousque dominus rex Angliæ misso robore exercitus liberavit eum. Extunc circuivit terram Scotiæ ille novus rex, et omnes potentes atque robustos qui contempserunt sequi eum peremit gladio, fecitque multa mala in populo illo. In Quadragesima vero sequente misit a se cum parte and exercitus sui duos fratres suos, dominum scilicet Thomam de Brus, qui Anglicos semper odio habuerat, et dominum Alexandrum clericum, qui ex improviso a nostris de nocte capti sunt, et judicialiter tracti et suspensi. Tenuitque se extunc novus rex in extremis finibus terræ.

Note 1. The Chronicle of Lanercost.

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Battle of Loch Ryan and the Execution of the Bruce Brothers

On 9th February 1307 the Battle of Loch Ryan was a victory of local forces, led by Dungal MacDowall, supporter of King Edward I, over a force consisting of 1000 men and eighteen galleys led by Thomas Bruce (age 23) and [his brother] Alexander Bruce (age 22), brothers of [his brother] King Robert the Bruce I of Scotland (age 32), supported by Malcolm McQuillan, Lord of Kintyre, and Sir Reginald Crawford. Only two galleys escaped. Malcolm McQuillan was captured an summarily executed.

Thomas Bruce, Alexander Bruce and Reginald Crawford were hanged (possibly hanged, drawn and quartered) at Carlisle, Cumberland [Map].

Scalaronica. [9th February 1307]. The King and his son moved to the Marches of England. Aymer de Valence (age 32) remained the King's lieutenant in Scotland. [his brother] Robert de Brus (age 32) resumed [his] great conspiracy; he sent his two brothers Thomas (age 23) and [his brother] Alexander (age 22) into Nithsdale and the vale of Annan to draw [to him] the hearts of the people, where they were surprised by the English and captured,1 and taken by command of the King to Carlisle, and there hanged, drawn and decapitated. Robert de Brus had assembled his adherents in Carrick.

Note 1. On the shore of Loch Ryan,9th February, 1307.

Lanercost Chronicle. After this, two brothers of Robert de Brus, Thomas (deceased) and [his brother] Alexander (deceased), Dean of Glasgow, and Lord Reginald de Crawford, wishing to take revenge on the Galwegians, entered their land on the eve of Saint Scholastica the Virgin [10th February 1307] in eighteen ships and galleys, along with a certain petty king from Ireland, the lord of Kintyre, and many other companions. Meeting them was Dungal MacDouall, a noble among the Galwegians, who with his countrymen overcame them and captured all except for a few who fled in two galleys. He ordered the petty king from Ireland, the lord of Kintyre, and two other nobles to be beheaded, and had their heads carried to the King of England at Lanercost. Thomas de Brus, Alexander his brother, and Lord Reginald de Crawford, who had been badly wounded in the capture by lances and arrows, were likewise brought alive to the king, who spoke with them about judgment. Thomas he caused to be drawn at the tails of horses at Carlisle on the Friday after the first Sunday in Lent [17th February 1307], and then hanged and afterwards beheaded; the other two he ordered to be hanged and afterwards beheaded the same day. The heads of these two, together with the heads of the four mentioned earlier, were hung on three gates of Carlisle, and the head of Thomas de Brus on top of the tower of Carlisle. Nigel, the third brother of Robert, had previously been hanged at Newcastle.

Post hac, duo fratres germani Roberti de Brues, Thomas, et Alexander decanus Glascuensis, et dominus Reginaldus de Crauforde, vindicare se volentes de Galwithiensibus, terram eorum intraverunt in vigilia sanctæ Scholasticæ virginis in octodecim navibus et galeis, cum quodam regulo de Hybernia, et domino de Kentire, et magna alia comi- tiva; quibus occurrens Dungallus Machduel, id est filius Duelis, nobilis inter Galwithienses, cum compatriotis suis, prævaluit in eos, et accepit omnes præter paucos, qui ad duas galeas fugerunt. Regulum autem Hybernia, et dominum de Kentire, et alios duos nobiliores, decollari præcepit, et capita eorum regi Angliæ usque Lanercost deportari. Thomam autem de Brus, et Alexandrum fratrem ejus, et dominum Reginaldum de Craufor, graviter in captione vulneratos cum lanceis et sagittis, vivos similiter ad regem adduxit, qui locutus est cum eis judicia, et Thomam quidem fecit trahi ad caudas equorum apud Karleolum die Veneris poft dominicam primam quadragefima, et deinde suspendi et postea decollari; alios etiam duos jussit eodem die suspendi et postea decollari, alios etiam duos jussit eodem die suspendi et postea decollari; quorum duorum capita, cum capitibus quatuor prædictorum, suspenfa sunt in tribus portis Karleoli, et caput Thoms de Bruse supra turrim Karleoli. Nigellus autem tertius frater Roberti ante fuit suspensus apud Novum Castrum.

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[his father] Robert Bruce Earl Carrick and Matilda aka Maud Fitzalan were married. She the daughter of John Fitzalan 7th Earl of Arundel and Isabella Mortimer Countess Arundel. They were second cousin once removed. He a great x 4 grandson of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England. She a great x 3 granddaughter of King John of England.

Thomas Bruce 1284-1307 appears on the following Descendants Family Trees:

Royal Ancestors of Thomas Bruce 1284-1307

Kings Wessex: Great x 7 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings England: Great x 5 Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Kings Scotland: Great x 6 Grand Son of King Duncan I of Scotland

Kings Franks: Great x 15 Grand Son of Louis "Pious" King Aquitaine I King Franks

Kings France: Great x 7 Grand Son of Robert "Pious" II King France

Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 12 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine

Ancestors of Thomas Bruce 1284-1307

Great x 3 Grandfather: William Bruce 2nd Lord Annandale

Great x 4 Grandmother: Agnes Paynel Lady Annandale Lady Skelton

Great x 2 Grandfather: William Bruce 3rd Lord Annandale

Great x 3 Grandmother: Euphemia Crosebi Lady Annandale

Great x 1 Grandfather: Robert Bruce 4th Lord Annandale

Great x 2 Grandmother: Christina Unknown Lady Annandale

GrandFather: Robert Bruce 5th Lord Annandale 4 x Great Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 1 Grandmother: Isabel "the Scot" Dunkeld Lady Annandale 3 x Great Grand Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Ranulf Gernon 4th Earl Chester

Great x 3 Grandfather: Hugh de Kevelioc Gernon 5th Earl Chester Great Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Matilda Fitzrobert Countess Chester Grand Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 2 Grandmother: Matilda Gernon Countess Huntingdon 2 x Great Grand Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 3 Grandmother: Bertrade Montfort Countess Chester

Great x 4 Grandmother: Mathilde Unknown Countess Évreux

Father: Robert Bruce Earl Carrick 4 x Great Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Richard de Clare

Great x 3 Grandfather: Roger Clare 2nd Earl Hertford

Great x 4 Grandmother: Alice Gernon

Great x 2 Grandfather: Richard Clare 3rd Earl Hertford

Great x 3 Grandmother: Maud St Hilary Countess Hertford

Great x 1 Grandfather: Gilbert Clare 5th Earl Gloucester 4th Earl Hertford 2 x Great Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Robert Normandy 1st Earl Gloucester Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 3 Grandfather: William Fitzrobert 2nd Earl Gloucester Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Mabel Fitzhamon Countess Gloucester

Great x 2 Grandmother: Amice Fitzrobert Countess Hertford Great Grand Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Robert Beaumont 2nd Earl of Leicester

Great x 3 Grandmother: Hawise Beaumont Countess Gloucester

Great x 4 Grandmother: Amice Gael Countess Leicester

GrandMother: Isabel Clare Lady Annandale 3 x Great Grand Daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Gilbert Giffard

Great x 3 Grandfather: John Fitzgilbert

Great x 2 Grandfather: William Marshal 1st Earl Pembroke

Great x 3 Grandmother: Sybil of Salisbury

Great x 4 Grandmother: Sybilla Chaworth Baroness Chitterne

Great x 1 Grandmother: Isabel Marshal Countess Cornwall, Gloucester and Hertford

Great x 2 Grandmother: Isabel Clare Countess Pembroke

Great x 4 Grandfather: Diarmait Macmurrough

Great x 3 Grandmother: Aoife ni Diarmait Macmurrough Countess Pembroke and Buckingham

Thomas Bruce 5 x Great Grand Son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England

GrandFather: Niall Carrick 2nd Earl Carrick

Mother: Marjorie Carrick 3rd Countess Carrick

Great x 3 Grandfather: Walter Fitzalan 1st High Steward

Great x 2 Grandfather: Alan Fitzwalter 2nd High Steward

Great x 1 Grandfather: Walter Stewart 3rd High Steward

GrandMother: Margaret Stewart Countess Carrick

Great x 2 Grandfather: Gille Críst Angus 4th Earl Angus

Great x 1 Grandmother: Bethóc Angus