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David Guthrie

Birthdate:
Death: September 09, 1513
Branxton, Northumberland, England (Killed alongside his father at the Battle of Flodden)
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Alexander Guthrie, 2nd of Guthrie and 3rd of Kincaldrum and Margaret Lyon
Husband of Daughter of Ferquherd Macintosh
Father of Andrew Guthrie, 3rd of Guthrie
Brother of Elizabeth Guthrie; Alexander Guthrie, 4th of Kincaldrum; George Guthrie of Kincreich; William Guthrie; RIchard Guthrie and 1 other
Half brother of James Rhind of Carse

Managed by: Private User
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About David Guthrie

Clan Guthrie From Wikipedia

David Guthrie (Lord Treasurer)

Sir David Guthrie (fl. 1479), was lord treasurer of Scotland in 1461.

Guthrie was the son of Alexander Guthrie of Kincaldrum. From 25 March 1466, when David Guthrie recovered the barony and estates of Guthrie granted to his family by David II but afterwards sold, his full title was Sir David Guthrie of Guthrie and Kincaldrum. In 1457 he was Sheriff of Forfar. From his youth he was bred up about the court, and became armour-bearer to James II, afterwards rising high in favour with James III. During James III's minority Guthrie was made lord treasurer (in 1461) by the queen-mother. On 15 October 1466 Sir David Guthrie became comptroller of the household. In March 1467 he again appears in the official deeds as treasurer, and in November as comptroller, his name occurring in the royal charters for 1468 in the same position as when treasurer, but without the designation, the probability being that he continued to hold both posts.[1]

On 10 August 1468 Sir David Guthrie appears as clerk of the register, and the next year, owing to a change in the ministry, was made master of the rolls, his name again appearing as comptroller in November 1470. In April 1472 he went as one of the Scottish plenipotentiaries to meet the English commissioners at Newcastle, where a truce to last from 20 April 1472 till July 1483 was concluded. He was appointed lord chief justice of Scotland in 1473; the last official mention of his name is as justiciary in 1474, but he certainly survived till 1479. 'In the time of his greatness he much enlarged his estate',[2] and founded and endowed a collegiate church at Guthrie for a provost and three prebends (increased by his eldest son to eight), and confirmed by a bull from Sixtus IV, dated at Rome 14 June 1479.

Sir David Guthrie married twice, first a daughter of Sir Thomas Maule of Panmure, and secondly one of the Dundases. His eldest son, Alexander Guthrie, a grandson, three sons-in-law, and a nephew were all slain at Battle of Flodden, 1513.

Origins of the clan
The family of Guthrie took their name from the lands of the same name in the county of Angus and their name is one of the oldest in that county.[3] The origin of the name Guthrie is not known, although there is a tradition that the lands were named Guthrie by an early king of Scots, after a fisherman gut three fish to serve his hungry monarch.[3]

In about 1178 William the Lion granted the lands of Gutherin to Arbroath Abbey.[3] The family were royal falconers and subsequently purchased these lands.[3]

Killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513.

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David Guthrie's Timeline

1513
September 9, 1513
Branxton, Northumberland, England
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