Everything about Freskin totally explained
Freskin was a minor nobleman active in the reign of King
David I of Scotland. His name appears only in a charter by King
William to Freskin's son, William, granting Strathbrock in
West Lothian and
Duffus, Kintrae, and other lands in Moray, "which his father held in the time of King David". The name Freskin is Flemish, and in the words of
Geoffrey Barrow "it is virtually certain that Freskin belonged to a large group of Flemish settlers who came to Scotland in the middle decades of the 12th century and were chiefly to be found in West Lothian and the valley of the Clyde". Freskin's land acquisition doesn't appear to be unique, and may have been part of a royal policy in the aftermath of the defeat of king
Óengus of Moray. For instance, on
December 25 1160, a charter was issued by King
Máel Coluim IV to Berowald the Fleming, who seems to have controlled
Bo'ness in West Lothian, granting him the lands of Innes and "Nether Urquhart" [=Etherurecard] in the "province of Elgin"; notably, one of the three witnesses to the charter which granted "Berowald Flandrensis" these lands, was "Wilhelmus filius Frisgin", William, Freskin's son. Freskin appears to be the progenitor of the "de Moravia" or "
Murray" family who were lords of Duffus in the later
12th century and early
13th century and who rose to become the
earls of Sutherland (southern Caithness), although it wasn't until the
13th century that we can be certain they took the surname "de Moravia".
The Douglas Connection
It is also quite possible that the
House of Douglas arose from the same stock. The first recorded Lord of Douglas,
William de Douglas, is attested to in various charters of
William the Lion. Five of his six sons became clerics, the eldest of which
Bricius de Douglas became
Bishop of Moray in 1203. Alexander, Henry and Hugh de Douglas all became Canons of
Spynie. It appears that the youngest,
Freskin de Douglas, remained in
Lanarkshire as parson of the parish of Douglas, before being appointed Dean of Moray.
The similarity between the heraldry of the Morays and Douglases with the use of "Argent, on a chief azure, three stars of the field" for Douglas, and "Azure, three stars argent, two and one" for Moray, makes this compelling.
Belief in the common descent of the Morays and Douglases was certainly extant in the early 1400s:
» "Of Murrawe and the Douglas,
How that thare begynnyng was,
» Syn syndry spekis syndryly
I can put that in na story. » But in thare armeyis bath thai bere
The sternys[stars] set in lyke manere; » Til mony men it's yhit sene
Apperand lyk that had bene » Of kyn be descens lyneale
Or be branchys collaterele Andrew of WyntounFurther Information
Get more info on 'Freskin'.
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