Lady Marion Stewart (1457–1529) • FamilySearch

Lady Marion Stewart

Brief Life History of Marion

When Lady Marion Stewart was born in 1457, in The Lennox, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, her father, Sir John Stewart 1st Earl of Lennox, was 32 and her mother, Margaret Montgomery Countess of Lennox, was 33. She married Robert Crichton of Kinnoull in 1472. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 1 daughter. She died on 9 December 1529, in her hometown, at the age of 72, and was buried in The Lennox, Dunbartonshire, Scotland.

Photos and Memories (3)

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Family Time Line

Robert Crichton of Kinnoull
1457–1491
Lady Marion Stewart
1457–1529
Marriage: 1472
Elizabeth Crichton Of Kinnoull
1472–1524
Sir Robert Crichton, Second Lord Crichton of Sanquhar
1472–1513

Sources (4)

  • Medieval Lands
  • Scots Peerage
  • The peerage of Scotland: containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that Kingdom

Name Meaning

Scottish (Lanarkshire) and English: originally an occupational name for an administrative official of an estate, from Middle English stiward, Old English stigweard, stīweard, a compound of stig ‘house(hold)’ + weard ‘guardian’. In the Anglo-Saxon period this title was used of an officer controlling the domestic affairs of a household, especially of the royal household; after the Norman Conquest it was also used more widely as the native equivalent of Seneschal, for the steward of a manor or manager of an estate. In Scotland the term was also used of a magistrate originally appointed by the king to administer crown lands, forming a stewartry.

History: Stuart or Stewart is the surname of one of the great families of Scotland, the royal family of Scotland from the 14th century, and of England from 1603, when James VI of Scotland acceded to the English throne as James I. There were many minor branches of the family left in Britain after the flight of James II in 1688, but not every bearer of the surname can claim relationship with the royal house, even in Scotland. Every great house in medieval England and Scotland had its steward, and in many cases the office gave rise to a hereditary surname. The fall of the house of Stuart in Britain, conversely, led to the establishment of several highly placed branches bearing this surname in continental Europe, which are in most cases related to the old Scottish royal family.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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