Niall, Earl of Carrick

Níall of Carrick (also Neil) was the second man to bear the title Mormaer, or Earl, of Carrick. He was successor of mormaer Donnchadh of Carrick. He may have been Donnchadh's son, or else as suggested by one recent genealogical theory, his grandson. It has been argued that Niall's father was Nichol (Cailean or Colin), son of mormaer Donnchadh by the daughter of Niall Ruadh, briefly king of Tir Eoghain.[1]

On 12 September 1255 Níall, having no male heirs, granted the chiefship of the clan to his nephew Roland and his heirs, giving them all the powers in respect to the ceann ceneóil (head of kin). This grant was confirmed by King Alexander III at Stirling in 1276.[2]

Niall was succeeded by his daughter Marjory, who took the title 3rd Countess of Carrick.[3] The latter passed the mormaerdom on to her son Robert the Bruce, who became King Robert I of Scotland.[4]

Preceded by
Donnchad
Mormaer of Carrick
1250–1256
Succeeded by
Marjory

Notes

  1. Barrow, Robert Bruce, 3rd ed., p. 430, n. 26
  2. United Kingdom Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, 5th Report. p. 613.
  3. Lundy, Darryl. "Margaret, Countess of Carrick". The Peerage. Retrieved 14 Aug 2016.
  4. "The Ancestry of Robert the Bruce". Baronage. Retrieved 14 Aug 2016.
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References

  • Barrow, G. W. S., Robert Bruce and the community of the realm of Scotland, 3rd ed., (Edinburgh, 2005)
  • MacQueen, Hector L., "Survival and Success: the Kennedys of Dunure," in Steve Boardman & Alasdair Ross (eds.) The Exercise of Power in Medieval Scotland 1200-1500, (Portland, 2003), pp. 67–94
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