Walter de Berkeley
Sir Walter de Berkley 8th of Gartly was a 13th-14th century Scottish noble.
Walter was the son of John de Berkley, 7th of Gartly. He was a supporter of Robert de Brus.
He did homage to King Edward I of England at Berwick on 28 August 1296. With John Comyn, Lord of Badenoch he held out against the invasion of Edward I until forced to surrender in February 1304. He again swore fealty and homage to King Edward I of England on 14 March 1304 at St Andrews. Walter was appointed Sheriff of Banff by Edward I in September 1305.[1]
Walter played an important part in the northern campaign of 1307 with King Robert I of Scotland.[2] He also witnessed the submission of William, Earl of Ross in 1308.[3]
Family
Walter is known to have had the following issue:
- Andrew de Berkley, 9th of Gartly
Citations
- Barron, p.210
- Barron, p.304
- Barron, p.349
gollark: You can sometimes see black holes through gravitational lensing.
gollark: What does it look like?
gollark: Just look at the sky in some sky viewer and find all the black parts.
gollark: "Space" is mere decoration on the crystal sphere.
gollark: But nobody else will.
References
- Barron, Evan Macleod (1914). The Scottish war of independence; a critical study by Evan Macleod Barron. J. Nisbet.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.