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  1. The Mormaer ( / mɔːrˈmɛər /) or Earl of Buchan ( / ˈbʌxən /) was originally the provincial ruler of the medieval province of Buchan. Buchan was the first Mormaerdom in the High Medieval Kingdom of the Scots to pass into the hands of a non-Scottish family in the male line.

  2. Most had developed from the mormaerships (provincial governorships) ofpre feudal Scotland north of the Forth-Clyde line. Eight of the thirteen certainly existed by about 1150: Fife, Strathearn,...

  3. freepages.rootsweb.com › ~mcneillyandco › genealogyCainneach - RootsWeb

    Wikipedia shows-. The Mormaer or Earl of Buchan was originally the provincial ruler of the medieval province of Buchan. Buchan was the first Mormaerdom in the High Medieval Kingdom of the Scots to pass into the hands of a non-Scottish family in the male line.

  4. The areas remaining within individual provincial lordships ranged from the 55 parishes of Galloway to the 2 parishes each of Liddesdale and Eskdale; in comparison the remaining areas of earldoms ranged from the 46 parishes of Moray to the 3 parishes of Buchan. [3]

  5. By this point, however, Buchan was drastically truncated and no longer a provincial lordship. 1469 creation. In 1469 the earldom was conferred on James Stewart. He was made Lord Auchterhouse at the same time, also in the Peerage of Scotland.

  6. The Mormaer ( / mɔːrˈmɛər /) or Earl of Buchan ( / ˈbʌxən /) was originally the provincial ruler of the medieval province of Buchan. Buchan was the first Mormaerdom in the High Medieval Kingdom of the Scots to pass into the hands of a non-Scottish family in the male line. The earldom had three lines in its history, not counting passings ...

  7. By the early 1430s all other sources of provincial lordship in the north-east had been eclipsed. The earldoms of Ross and Buchan had been annexed by the crown, in whose name Mar acted, while the young heiresses to the earldom of Moray may well have been in his charge.

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