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    Walter Stuart, conde de Atholl

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  1. Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, Strathearn and Caithness (c. 1360 – 26 March 1437) was a Scottish nobleman, the son of Robert II of Scotland. Stewart advocated for the ransom and return to Scotland of the future king in exile, James I, in 1424.

  2. The Oxford Companion to British History. Atholl, Walter Stewart, earl of [S] (c.1360–1437). Second son of Robert II's second marriage, to Euphemia Ross, and the only one of Robert's sons not to acquire an earldom in his father's lifetime.

  3. earl of Atholl, Walter Stewart. (c. 1360—1437) Quick Reference. ( c. 1360–1437). Second son of Robert II's marriage to Euphemia Ross. Lord of Brechin until 1402, Walter Stewart acquired the earldom of Caithness [S] in that year, and that of Atholl [S] and the lordship of Methven in 1404.

  4. 21 de mai. de 2023 · Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, Strathearn and Caithness (c. 1360 – 26 March 1437) was a Scottish nobleman, the son of Robert II of Scotland. Stewart advocated for the ransom and return to Scotland of the future king in exile, James I, in 1424.

    • Margaret Barclay
    • Dundonald, Ayrshire, Scotland
    • 1341
  5. 26 de mar. de 2017 · On this date in 1437, the Earl of Atholl finally reached the end of a three-day carnival of public tortures and lost bowels, heart, and head for assassinating the King of Scotland.

  6. The most important of those executed in with the assassination was Walter Stewart, earl of Atholl, the. uncle. Although he took no part in the actual killing ofjames, was held to be the man behind the murder by all fifteenth-and. sixteenth-century Scottish chroniclers. From the earliest of these Scottish writers onwards, Atholl.

  7. Walter Stewart, Earl of Atholl, Strathearn and Caithness (c. 1360 – 26 March 1437) was a Scottish nobleman, the son of Robert II of Scotland. Stewart advocated for the ransom and return to Scotland of the future king in exile, James I, in 1424.