Charter of David, 5th Earl of Crawford

This material is held atUniversity of Dundee Archive Services

Scope and Content

Charter (in Latin) , with seal, and partial transcript

Administrative / Biographical History

David Lindsay (1440-1495) was the son of Alexander, 4th Earl of Crawford and succeeded his father as Earl in 1453. He was created Duke of Montrose in 1488 by James III whom he supported during that year's rebellion against the king by supporters of the Duke of Rothesay. He fought for James at the Battle of Sauchieburn which resulted in the death of James III and the succession of Rothesay (James IV). The new king stripped Lindsay of his dukedom, although it was restored to him for his lifetime in 1489. He died in 1495 and was succeeded as Earl of Crawford by his son John

Arrangement

Usually chronological within series.

Access Information

Open for consultation subject to preservation requirements. Access must also conform to the restrictions of the Data Protection Act (2018), General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR, 2018) and any other relevant legislation or restrictions. Clinical information is closed for 100 years.

Acquisition Information

Given to the Archives by Alan MacDonald who thought it was the most appropriate place for it to go.

Note

David Lindsay (1440-1495) was the son of Alexander, 4th Earl of Crawford and succeeded his father as Earl in 1453. He was created Duke of Montrose in 1488 by James III whom he supported during that year's rebellion against the king by supporters of the Duke of Rothesay. He fought for James at the Battle of Sauchieburn which resulted in the death of James III and the succession of Rothesay (James IV). The new king stripped Lindsay of his dukedom, although it was restored to him for his lifetime in 1489. He died in 1495 and was succeeded as Earl of Crawford by his son John

Archivist's Note

Description compiled by Kenneth Baxter, April 2018

Conditions Governing Use

Reproduction is available subject to preservation requirements. Charges may be made for this service, and copyright and other restrictions may apply; please check with the Duty Archivist.

Custodial History

The document was given to the Rev. Dr. Janet Foggie and her husband Dr Alan MacDonald by a friend of Janet's family, a now-retired Edinburgh lawyer called Randolph Murray. It had likely been left in a lawyer's office. Alan MacDonald began a transcript of the document

Accruals

Not expected

Additional Information

Published

Catalogued

MS 421