

Amabilie sorori [Malisius comes Strahern] (X 1289) Anable qe su la femme Patrik de Graham (1296) Annabella quae suit uxor Patricii de Graham (1296)
Annabella of Strathearn is reported to be the daughter of Robert, fourth Earl of Strathearn. The name of her mother has not been identified. The Scots Peerage VIII: 245 She was the sister of Malise, Earl of Strathearn, who gave her the lands of Kincardine. Inchaffrey Liber: pp. xxxii-iii
A date and place of death has not been identified for Annabella of Strathearn. She was alive on 28 August 1296, when her homage was received at Berwick on Tweed by King Edward I of England: "Anable qe su la femme Patrik de Graham". Instrumenta Publica: p. 146 and she appears still to have been alive on 3 September 1296, when King Edward I of England seized her lands because her husband had opposed him at Dunbar. Stevenson's Documents II: p. 92
Annabella of Strathearn married Patrick Graham. Instrumenta Publica: p. 146 Her husband is reported to have been killed in action at the battle of Dunbar on 27 April 1296. The Scots Peerage VIII: 245
Malise, the younger son, got from King William the lands of Kincardine, to be held of his brother, Earl Robert, and through the marriage of his niece, Annabella, elder daughter of Earl Robert, to Graham, ancestor of the duke of Montrose, they afterwards came into that family.
Notes
Sources
Annabella Strathearn Born 1212 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotlandmap Daughter of Robert Strathearn and Matilda Strathearn Sister of Malise De Strathearn Wife of David Graham — married [date unknown] [location unknown] Mother of David Graham Died 1263 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotlandmap
Father Robert, 4th Earl of Strathearn Disputed
Family 1
Family 2
Children
1274 |
1274
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Old Montrose, Angus-shire, Scotland
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1296 |
August 28, 1296
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Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland
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