Annabella of Scotland
Annabella Stewart (ca. 1436 – 1509) was the youngest daughter of King James I and Joan Beaufort.
Early life
Annabella was presumably named after her father's mother, Annabella Drummond. She was the youngest of the six daughters and two sons of James I and Joan Beaufort. Her sisters were Margaret, Isabella, Eleanor, Mary and Joan, and her brothers were James II of Scotland and his twin brother Alexander, who died in infancy.
First marriage
Her first husband was Louis of Savoy, Count of Geneva whom she married in 1447 on either 1 April or 14 December. However, in the year 1458 they separated, divorced and the marriage was annulled upon the request of Charles VII of France.
Second marriage
Annabella returned to Scotland and married George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntly. Notwithstanding this alliance, her ill fate pursued her, and she was legally divorced from her second husband by a sentence pronounced in the year 1471 which proceeded on the ground of consanguinity with his first wife, Elizabeth Dunbar, 8th Countess of Murray, as the two ladies were within the third and fourth degrees of relation.
Issue
Annabella and her second husband, the Earl of Huntly had issue:
- Isabella (d. 1485), wife of William Hay, 3rd Earl of Erroll (d. 1507).
- Alexander (d. 1523), 3rd Earl of Huntly (as established in The Dictionary of National Biography, 1921–22).
She was thought also to have been mother to another four of his children, however this has not been proved nor disproved.
Lord Byron claimed descent from Princess Annabella through his mother, Catherine, daughter of George Gordon, 12th Lord of Gight. Byron wrote: "By her [Annabella] he [the 2nd Earl of Huntly] left four sons: the third, Sir William Gordon, I have the honour to claim as one of my progenitors."
Ancestry
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References
- ^ McAndrew, Scotland's Historic Heraldry, p 173
- ^ http://thepeerage.com/p10210.htm#i102098
External links