Gregory Grant, 1st of Stratherick

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Gregory Grant of Stratherrick

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Scotland
Death: 1249 (44-53)
Immediate Family:

Son of Alan Grant and Darvagilla of Fife
Husband of Maria Fraser and Janet Grant
Father of Sir Robert le Grant,del counte de Fyfe; Sir Laurence Grant, 2nd of Stratherrick and Alexander le Grant
Brother of Isobell Grant; Patrick Grant; Lawrence Grant, Bishop of Moray; Robert Grant and Malcolm (Mitchell) Grant, Lieutenant of north Scotland

Occupation: 1st Lord of Stratherrick, Sheriff of Inverness
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Gregory Grant, 1st of Stratherick

The first of the name on record in Scotland is Gregory de Grant, who, in the reign of Alexander II (1214-1249), was sheriff of the shire of Inverness, which then, and till 1583, comprehended Ross, Sutherland, and Caithness, besides what is now Inverness-shire. By his marriage with Mary, daughter of Sir John Bisset of Lovat, he became possessed of the lands of Stratherrick, at that period a part of the province of Moray, and had two sons, namely, Sir Lawrence, his heir, and Robert, who appears to have succeeded his father as sheriff of Inverness.


Grant

Mr Skene says of the clan Grant, "Nothing certain is known regarding the origin of the Grant. They have been said to be of Danish, English, French, Norman, and of Gaelic extraction; but each of these suppositions depends for support upon conjecture alone, and amidst so many conflicting opinions it is difficult to fix upon the most probable. It is maintained by the supporters of their Gaelic origin, that they are a branch of the Macgregors, and in this opinion they are certainly borne out by the ancient and unvarying tradition of the country; for their Norman origin, I have upon examination entirely failed in discovering any further reason than that their name may be derived from the French, grand or great, and that they occasionally use the Norman form of de Grant. The latter reason, however, is not of any force, for it is impossible to trace an instance of their using the form de Grant until the 15th century; on the contrary, the form invariably Grant or le Grant, and on the very first appearance of the family it is 'dictus Grant'. It is certainly not a territorial name, for there was no ancient property of that name, and the peculiar form under which it invariably appears in the earlier generations, proves that the name is derived from a personal epithet. It so happens, however, that there was no epithet so common among the Gael as that of Grant, as a perusal of the Irish annals will evince; and at the same time Ragman's Roll shows that the Highland epithets always appear among the Normal signatures with the Norman 'le' prefixed to them. The clan themselves unanimously assert their descent from Gregor Mor Macgregor, who lived in the 12th century; and this is supported by their using to this day the same badge of distinction. So strong is this belief in both the clans of Grant and Macgregor, that in the early part of the last century a meeting of the two was held in the Blair of Athole, to consider the policy of re-uniting them. Upon this point all agreed, and also that the common surname should be Macgregor, if the reversal of the attainder of that name could be got from the government. If that could not be obtained it was agreed that either MacAlpine or Grant should be substituted. This assembly of the clan Alpine lasted for fourteen days, and was only rendered abortive by disputes as to the chieftainship of the combined clan. Here then is as strong an attestation of a tradition as it is possible to conceive, and when to this is added the utter absence of the name in the old Norman rolls, the only trustworthy mark of a Norman descent, we are warranted in placing the Grants among the Siol Alpine".

With Mr Smibert we are inclined to think that, come the clan designation whence it may, the great body of the Grants were Gael of the stock of Alpine, which, as he truly says, is after all the main point to be considered.

http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/dtog/grant2.html

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