Individual Details

William de Moravia, Lord of Duffus, and Strathbrock

( - 1203)

According to Wikipedia:

William, son of Freskin (died c. 1203), Lord of Duffus and Strathbrock, was a Scoto-Flemish noble.
He was the eldest son of Freskin, a Flemish settler who arrived in Scotland in the reign of King David I of Scotland.[1] William obtained a grant from King William I of Scotland, of the lands of Strathbrock in West Lothian, as well as Duffus, Roseisle, Inchkeil, Machir and Kintrae in Moray, between 1165 and 1171.[2]
Map of medieval Moray from A History of Moray and Nairn by Charles Rampini, Edinburgh, 1897Marriage and issue[edit]

William is known to have had the following issue:
Hugh de Moravia of Duffus and Strathbrock, had issue.
William de Moravia of Petty, Bracholy, Boharm and Arteldol (died c. 1226), married a daughter of David de Olifard, had issue.
Andrew de Moravia, parson of Duffus.References[edit]

^
 G.W.S. Barrow, "Badenoch and Strathspey, 1130-1312: 1. Secular and Political" in Northern Scotland, 8 (1988), p. 3.
^ Paul, Sir James (1909). The Scots Peerage8. Edinburgh: David Douglas. p. 319.

Events

Death1203

Families