Immediate Family
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daughter
About Ross, Prior of Monymusk
From the English Wikipedia list of Priors of Monymusk:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prior_of_Monymusk
List of priors
- Máel Brigte (Bricius), 1210x1211-1222x[1]
- Unknown abbots
- Alan, fl. 1268
- Unknown abbots
- Bernard, fl. 1345
- Andrew Cant, 1357-1365
- Unknown abbots
- David de Kynnard, x 1420
- Richard de Donery, 1420-1426
- Robert de Kilconkar, 1424-1429
- Robert de Paisley, 1427-1429 x 1430
- John de Tulach, 1429
- William de Cupar, 1430-1444 x 1450
- William Crannach, 1430[2]
- William Couys (Cowes), 1430-1434
- Laurence de Cupar, 1430
- Robert de Keith, 1434
- John de Luoris (Luchris), 1444
- David Hay, 1450-1464 x 1469
- Thomas Straton, 1469
- Alexander Spens, 1469-1489 x 1491
- John Dugut, x1489
- William Kermichael (Carmichael), 1489
- Robert Fairweather, 1486-1490
- Laurence Valles, 1490
- Bartholomew de Putellis, 1491
- Richard Strathauchin, 1497-1499 x 1509
- John Aitkenheid, 1509-1523
From the Gazeteer for Scotland entry on Monymusk:
http://www.scottish-places.info/towns/townfirst4089.html
Monymusk, Aberdeenshire: A planned village in mid-Aberdeenshire, Monymusk lies just south of the River Don, 7 miles (11 km) west of Kintore and 17 miles (25 km) northwest of Aberdeen. In 1170 a community of Augustinian canons was established here by Gilchrist, Earl of Mar, on the site of an earlier Celtic foundation. This was said to have been established by Malcolm Canmore in 1078 while on a military mission against the rebels of Moray. The present church of St Mary's dates from the late 12th-early 13th Century and contains monuments to successive Grant lairds as well as a Pictish symbol stone known as the Monymusk Stone. Sir Archibald Grant of Monymusk replaced the old Kirkton of Monymusk in the 18th century with a planned village designed for estate workers and craftsmen. It was almost entirely rebuilt in 1840.
Ross, Prior of Monymusk's Timeline
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Monymusk, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, (Present UK)
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