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Hugh Munro, I of Foulis

Hugh Munro, I of Foulis

Male 1050 - 1126  (76 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Hugh Munro, I of Foulis was born in 1050 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland (son of George Munro, of Foulis and Unknown); died in 1126 in Dingwall, , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland.

    Notes:

    Hugh purchased the lands of Wester Logie and Findon and added them to the estate of Foulis. He was the first Munro Chief to be designated Baron of Foulis, however, R.W. Munro believed that Hugh may be "more or less mythical".

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    Foulis Castle

    Family/Spouse: Lady MacDonald. was born in 1070 in , , , Scotland; died in in Foulis Easter, , , Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Robert Munro, II of Foulis was born in 1110 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in 1164 in Dingwall, , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; was buried in Fortrose, , Ross And Cromarty, Scotland.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Munro, of Foulis was born about 1025 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland (son of Donald Munro and Unknown); died in 1101 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland.

    Notes:

    George (or Georgius de Munro) assisted King Malcolm III in his fight against Macbeth, the Usurper 1054-1057. He was invited to the coronation of King Malcolm III in 1057 and was rewarded at the Parliament at Forfar where he was confirmed in his lands of Ferindonald, to which he had succeeded in 1039.

    The existence of this person is improbable because the name, George, is not found anywhere else in Scotland for the next 300 years, and George is supposed to have lived long before that name took root even in England. George's existence cannot be verified by any surviving documentation.

    Tradition says that he died at an advanced age.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    George married Unknown. Unknown was born about 1030 in , , , Scotland; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Unknown was born about 1030 in , , , Scotland; and died.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. 1. Hugh Munro, I of Foulis was born in 1050 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in 1126 in Dingwall, , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Donald Munro was born in 990 in Foyle Lough, , , Ireland (son of Occaan, Prince of Fermonach and Unknown); died in 1039 in , , , Scotland.

    Notes:

    Error alert: Some references say Donald had a sister, Ann (or Anna or Aine) who married Angus MacDonald of Ylla, Lord of the Isles. But Angus fought at Bannockburn in 1314, over three centuries after Donald so Ann could not have been a sister of Donald.

    Donald supposedly lived in County Derry, Ireland near Lough Foyle (Lake Feowl) on the River Ro. He left Ireland with his followers in 1025 to come to the aid of King Malcolm II in his war against the invading Danes. The Danish King Sweyn Forkbeard had conquered England and had become its king by 1013, but died in 1014. His son, Canute succeeded to the throne.

    At a Parliament at Scone, Donald was given the lands north of Inverness bordering the north shore of the Cromarty Firth as a reward for his help. These lands were known in Gaelic as "Fearainn Domhnuill" and anglicised to Ferindonald, or "Donald's land". The estate has been in possession of the Chief of the Munro Clan continuously for nearly a thousand years.

    There is some evidence that Donald lived somewhat later than 1025. For one thing, the royal grant of Ferindonald occured more than a century after Donald's death in 1039 or 1053. Some traditions state that he came to Scotland with his sister, Ann, who was married to Angush Macdonald of Isla, Lord of the Isles. The only early Macdonald Chiefs named Angus were Angus Mor Macdonald who ruled 1255-1300, and Angus Og Macdonald who ruled 1303-1329. Angus Og married Margaret, daughter of Guy O'Cathan of Ulster, the tocher being seven score men out of every surname under O'Kain. Several of these Irishmen are said to have become the heads of clans or septs in Scotland and among them is specifically mentioned the Munros, so-called because they came from the Innermost Roe-Water in the county of Derry, their names being formerly O'Millans.

    Several of the generations following Donald cannot be verified by surviving documents and since it is human nature to want the founding father to be as ancient as possible, it is quite possible that Donald Munro lived several hundred years after he is claimed to have founded the Clan Munro.

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    "His [Ocaan's] son, Donald Munro, led his clan back to Scotland, fought for King Malcolm II A.D. 1025, and at a Parliament at Scone he was granted a Barony, which he named Foyle or Foulis after the Lough from whence he came.

    "Donald died in 1053 and was succeeded by his eldest son, George Munro, who died in

    1101. George was succeeded by his son, Hugh, who became the First Baron of Foulis."

    (William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine - Vol. XIII #4 - p. 231-241)
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    [Kelley] «i»presents a lineage based on oral tradition regarding the kings of Tara, first known rulers of Ireland. The first eight generations are not adequately established but the first known name is that of Tuathal Techtmar who led an invasion of Ireland which must have occurred in the third century. From this point through seven more speculative and 26 more established generations, Kelley leads us to the advent of one Domnall Abunro, brother of Aine, wife of Angus Og MacDonald, Lord of the Isles and uncle of John, Lord of the Isles. «/i»[Domnal]«i» was the son of one Cumhaige na nGall O'Cathain, probably King of Craobh, Cianachta and Fir Li. ...

    The Gaelic name for the Munro clan is Rothach or Rothich and the motto is "Dread God," a term which might more aptly be described as "Stand in awe of God." The battle shout of the clan is "Caisteal Foulis'n a theine," wich translates: "Foulis Castle in flames," a call designed to rouse to arms all members of the clan. It evidently was meant to rouse the clansmen to fury at the mere prospect, not from a burning of the original castle. This castle, described in old documents as "the eagle's nest,: was accidently burned down in 1750 after having been garrisoned for the government and suffering at the hands of the Jacobites in two uprisings.
    «/i»
    ("The Monroe Book" by J. L. Guilford)
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    Error alert: The Paula Monroe reference says Donald was the son of Robert Munro who was born about 980 in Fowlis, Ross, Ross and Cromarty, Scotland and died 1041 in Scotland. He married O Cathan who was born about 984 at Fowlis.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Donald married Unknown. Unknown was born est 995 in , , , Scotland; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Unknown was born est 995 in , , , Scotland; and died.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. 2. George Munro, of Foulis was born about 1025 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in 1101 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Occaan, Prince of Fermonach was born about 935 in , , , Ireland; and died.

    Notes:

    Occaan is a shadowy, legendary figure who is called by several different names and titles, some of which are: Occaan, Oraan; Chief of O Caan, Ocaan, or O'Cathan; and Prince of Fermonaugh, Fermonach, Farmonach or Fermangh.

    He was supposedly a prince or clan chief in County Derry, Ireland (or king of Craobh, Cianachta and Fir Li) whose castle was on the Roe (or Ro) Water near Loch (or Lough) Foyle (or Feoil or Fowle or Feowl). The Munro name is said to come from the Roe River in Ireland and Foulis (or Fowlis) Castle is named for Loch Foyle.

    Foulis or Fowlis is actually a local and personal name common in Scotland. There are parishes of Fowlis-Easter and Fowlis-Wester in Perthshire, and a family of Fowlises or Foulises were the owners from whom the ancestor of Lord Linlithgow in the reign of Charles I, acquired by marriage the valuable mining property of Leadhills in Lanarkshire.

    There are several theories about the origins of the Munro Clan. The most popular theory states that they were Ancient Scots who were banished to Ireland and the Western Islands by the Romans in about 357 AD, but returned to Scotland in the eleventh century under the leadership of Donald, son of Occaan.

    The Eyre-Todd reference calls this story "far-fetched" and says that it seems much more likely that the cognomen had the same origin as the name of Montrose on the east coast of Scotland, which was originally known as Munros--"the hill promontory" or "the moss promontory." This would agree with the location of the territory of the chiefs on the south of Ben Wyvis in Ross-shire, the "promontory country," on the northern shore of the Cromarty Firth. The first known person of the clan is said to have been Donald O'Ceann, in the time of Macbeth. The patronymic, O'Ceann, Skene, in his "Highlanders of Scotland," ingeniously converts into O'Cathan, and so makes out that the clan is a branch of the great Clan Chattan or Siol O'Cain. It seems much more likely, however, that the name Donald O'Ceann is simply what it says--Donald, son of the Chief. The Munroes are also known among the Highlanders as Clan Rothich or Roich.

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    «i»"The origin of the Munros is lost in the dim annals of antiquity, and it is now quite impossible to trace. Sir Robert Douglas says in his Baronage, page 79, that he saw a manuscript history of the family in which it was stated that "they were of the Ancient Scots, who, being banished from this country by the Romans, fled to Ireland and the Western Islands about the year 357, from whence they returned some centuries thereafter," after a residence there of seven hundred years. Sir George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh in his "MS. Ordinary of Arms," preserved in the British Museum, among the Harleian MSS., No. 3740, says that "the progenitors of the family came from Ireland with the Macdonalds, on whom they constantly had a depending when they were Earls of Rosse," and that their place of origin there was "the mountain on the River Roe, whence they have their surname." A "Chronological Account" of the clan, printed at Inverness in 1805, said to have been from a manuscript written in 1716 by one of the Munros of Coul, states that they were "descended lineally and lawfully of Donald, lawful son of the Chief of Ocaan (O'Cathan) in Ireland, called the Prince of Fermonach (Fermanagh). The same (Donald) came to Scotland with his sister Ann, married to Angush Macdonald of Isla, Lord of the Isles." Angus Mor Macdonald ruled from 1255 to 1300, and his second son, Angus Og, from 1303 to 1329. They were the only Chiefs of the Macdonalds at that early period so named.

    "There is, however, no doubt that Angus Og of the Isles, who succeeded his elder brother Alexander in 1303, married Margaret, daughter of Guy O'Cathan, anglicised O'Kaine, of Ulster, the tocher being, according to Hugh Macdonald the "Sleat Seannachaidh," seven score men out of every surname under O'Kain. Of these Irishmen several are said to have become the heads of clans or septs in Scotland, and among them Macdonald specially mentions "the Munros, so-called because they came from the Innrrmost Roe-Water in the county of Derry, their names being formerly O'Millans." The value of this fable may be estimated by the fact that the author of it derives the Roses of Kilravock, the Dingwalls, Beatons, and other well-known Highland families from the same source. The author of the "Chronological Account" already quoted adds that "the people then being much addicted to call men patronimically, or from the places whence they came, always called Donald, O'Caan's son, Donald Munro, and his successors Munro, as Irish wrytes yet extant testifie, and were called in English and Latin de Monro, and that in respect that O'Caan's residence and castle was on the Ro water; and it is informed the said Donald called the place he took in Scotland Foules, after a land so-called in Ireland, near Loch Fowle." It may be stated that there is a "Lough Foyle" in county Derry into which the River Roe still empties itself, and this may be said to lend a certain modicum of plausibility to the tradition which connects the ancestors of the Munros with that locality. There have been several other more or less fanciful theories as to the origin of the family which are even more far-fetched than those here referred to."

    The late well-known and distinguished author of Celtic Scotland, Dr W. F. Skene, discusses the subject in an earlier work in which he expresses the opinion that the Munros came originally into Ross from the Province of Moray. Under the heading of "Siol O'Cain" he says that "in enquiring into the existence of any descendants of the ancient inhabitants of the north of Moray, we should expect to find them either as isolated clans in the neighbourhood, whose traditionary origin showed some connection with those of the tribe of Moray, or situated in districts whose situation displayed evident marks of the violent removal effected by Malcolm IV. Of the latter we find instances in the Macnachtons and Macleans; of the former we discover it in those clans whom tradition deduces from the O'Cains, and which consist principally of the Munros, Macmillans, and Buchanans. These clans, like most of the other Highland clans, have been supposed to be derived from the Irish, but their traditionary origin clearly points out their connection with the tribe of Moray." He then expresses the belief that the family of O'Cain and the Clan Chattan have the same origin, both, according to the Seannachies, from the same part of Ireland, but that fabulous tradition as to their origin Skene maintains to be as untenable in the case of the Munros as it has been proved to be in that of Clan Chattan.

    The same high authority, after pointing out where the possessions of the Munros lie, says that their lands are known in the Highlands by the name of "Fearann Donald," a name "derived from the progenitor Donald, who bore the patronymic O'Cain; but as they originally formed a part of the tribe of Moray, it seems clear that their earliest seats must have been in that part of Moray from which they were driven out by the Bissets. The first of the Munros for whom we have distinct authority is George Munro of Fowlis, who is said to be mentioned in a charter of William, Earl of Sutherland, so early as the reign of Alexander II." Dr Skene then gives a brief account of the battle of Beallach-nam-Brog, in which "a hundred and forty of the Dingwalls, and eleven of the house of Foulis, who were to succeed each other, were killed, and that accordingly the succession fell to an infant." This engagement will be found fully described later on in its proper place and under its correct date.«/i»

    «i»The first feudal titles obtained by the family of Fowlis were acquired about the middle of the fourteenth century from the Earl of Ross as their feudal superior. The reddendo of one of these charters, granting the lands of Pitlundie, declares that Munro holds them "blench of the Earl of Ross for payment of a pair of white gloves, or three pennies Scots, if required, alternately." In another charter by the same Earl granting the lands of Easter Fowlis, it is expressly declared "that these lands had belonged to his predecessors since the time of Donald,the first of the family." Ever since the date of this charter the Munros appear to have remained possessors of their original territory without making any additions to them or suffering diminution from them. They continued to hold a high position throughout among the other Higland clans, as will fully appear in the course of this work.«/i»

    ("History of the Munros" by Alexander Mackenzie)
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    «i»"The Monroe or Munro family was founded by Ocaan, Prince of Fermangh, chief of a clan of Scots who in the fourth century had been driven by the Romans to Ireland. He dwelt by Lough Foyle on the Roe water, about 1000 A.D., from whence the name Munro is derived." «/i»

    (William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine - Vol. XIII #4 - p. 231-241)
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    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    married Unknown. Unknown was born est 950 in , , , Ireland; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Unknown was born est 950 in , , , Ireland; and died.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. 4. Donald Munro was born in 990 in Foyle Lough, , , Ireland; died in 1039 in , , , Scotland.