Dunbar History
The town and port of Dunbar
has figured prominently at various points in
Scottish history and the family whose name It
bears is of ancient Celtic origin. Gospatrick
Earl of Northumberland, received the lands of
Dunbar and other parts of Lothian from Malcolm
III. His son witnessed the foundation of the
great Abbey of Holyrood Rouse in 1128, and was
accorded the rank of earl. He made donations to
the Abbey of Kelso and is recorded in various
charters. Patrick of Dunbar married Ada, natural
daughter of William the Lion, around 1184 and was created justiciar of Lothian. Earl
Patricks daughter received as part of her
dowry the lands of Home, establishing the line
that was later to be created Earls of Home in the seventeenth century. Her brother, Patrick, went
to the Crusades, and died in 1248 at the siege of
Damietta in Egypt. Patrick "Black
Beard", Earl of Dunbar, was one of the
competitors for the Crown of Scotland at Berwick
in 1291 through his royal great-grandmother, Ada.
His wife was a Comyn and held Dunbar Castle for
Balliol, but was forced to surrender it in April
1296. The tenth Earl, another Patrick, sheltered
Edward II of England at Dunbar after his flight
from the field of Bannockburn in 1314. Historians
have suggested that if the king had been seized
by Dunbar he might have been forced to make peace
with Robert the Bruce, thereby preventing further
years of bloodshed. Despite his apparent
treachery, the earl made his peace with his
cousin the king, and was present at the
Parliament at Ayr in 1315 which settled the
succession of the Scottish throne. He was
appointed governor of Berwick, where he was
besieged by Edward III. He surrendered to the
English and the town was refortified and
garrisoned by English troops. Dunbar renounced
any allegiance to the English king, as a result
of which his castle was besieged by the Earl of
Salisbury. Command of the castle fell to
Dunbars wife, commonly called "Black
Agnes", who per-formed her task with vigour.
The English attacked the castle with all the
technology of fourteenth-century siege craft, and
when they brought up a machine which, from its
shape was called the sow, she personally
directed its destruction by rocks hurled from the
castle walls. As the English fled for their lives
she is said to have scoffed, "behold the
litter of English pigs". The siege lasted
nineteen weeks and Salisbury eventually retired,
leaving Black Agnes in possession of her
husbands fortress. The tenth Earl was one
of the most powerful nobles in Scotland, with
vast estates. In 1388 he accompanied the Earl of
Douglas into England and fought at the Battle of
Otterburn. He had arranged a marriage for his
daughter with the Duke of Rothesay, son of Robert
III, but through the influence of the Douglases
the marriage did not take place. The earl was
incensed by this slight to his family pride, and
retired to his estates in England. He was eventually reconciled with the Douglases and
returned to Scotland in 1409. George, the
eleventh Earl, succeeded to his fathers
title and vast estates in 1420, and was prominent
in public affairs. His wealth, however, was to be
his undoing: James I coveted the Dunbar estates
and imprisoned the earl on trumped-up charges of
treason, so the earldom and the estates were
forfeited to the Crown. The last earl died in
England in 1455.
The family had established a
number of branches, including the Dunbars of
Mochrum (to which house the present chief
belongs), of Northfield, Hempriggs, Durn and
Both. It is a tribute to the distinction of this
name that each of these five branches achieved
the rank of baronet. Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of
Glasgow and Lord High Chancellor of Scotland in
the reign of James V, was a younger son of Sir
John Dunbar of Mochrum He distinguished himself
at the University of Glasgow and in 1514 became
Dean of Moray In 1524 he was appointed Archbishop
of Glasgow. He weathered the first storms of the
Reformation and although reckoned a good and
learned man, was criticised for his participation
in the persecution of Protestants instigated by
Cardinal Beaton. Sir James Dunbar of Mochrum was
created a Baronet of Nova Scotia in March 1694
with a special royal honour of a grant of
supporters "Imperially Crowned". The
second Baronet served in the Duke of
Marlboroughs cavalry with great
distinction. He was recognised as chief on the
death of Ludovic Dunbar in 1744.Sir William
Dunbar, ninth Baronet, was Registrar General from
1902 to 1909. The title of the present chief was
established only after a celebrated court case in
1990 first heard before the Lord Lyon, King of
Arms, then appealed to the Supreme Court in
Edinburgh and finally concluded in the House of
Lords in London.
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