-
Andrew Wyntoun,
known as
Andrew of
Wyntoun (c. 1350 – c. 1425), was a
Scottish poet, a
canon and
prior of Loch
Leven on St Serf's Inch and, later, a canon...
- Sir Alan de
Wyntoun (died c. 1347) was a
Scottish soldier and crusader. He was the
progenitor of
three Scottish clans,
being the
ancestor of the Earls...
- of his
character in his
reprisals in the
Province of Moray.
Andrew of
Wyntoun's Orygynale Cronykil of
Scotland says that
Alexander was
holding court at...
- Lord
Seton (d. c. 1410),
created 1st Lord
Seton in 1371. (son of Alan de
Wyntoun and
Margaret de Seton). Sir John Seton, 2nd Lord
Seton (c. 1441) William...
- 7 (11th ed.).
Cambridge University Press. p. 860. Endnotes:
Andrew of
Wyntoun, The
orygynale cronykil of Scotland,
edited by D.
Laing (Edinburgh, 1872–1879);...
-
Tower of London,
where he died on 8
April 1298.
According to
Andrew of
Wyntoun, Sir
Andrew Moray married a
daughter of John I Comyn, Lord of Badenoch...
-
earliest Scots literature is John Barbour's Brus (fourteenth century),
Wyntoun's Cronykil and
Blind Harry's The
Wallace (fifteenth century). From the fifteenth...
- 1348-died 1410), born
William de
Wyntoun, was a 14th–15th-century noble.
William was the
eldest son of Alan de
Wyntoun and
Margaret Seton,
heiress of Seton...
- stories, and in one of the
earliest references to
Robin Hood by
Andrew of
Wyntoun in 1420 and by
Walter Bower in 1440.[citation needed] In the
early tales...
- Late
Middle Ages.
Scots chroniclers such as John of Fordun,
Andrew of
Wyntoun,
Hector Boece and the
humanist scholar George Buchanan wrote of
Giric as...