Everything about David Ii Of Scotland totally explained
David II, King of Scots (
5 March,
1324 –
22 February,
1371)
King of Scots, son of King
Robert the Bruce by his second wife,
Elizabeth de Burgh (d. 1327), was born at
Dunfermline Palace,
Fife.
In accordance with the terms of the
Treaty of Northampton he was married on
17 July 1328 to (as his first wife)
Joan of the Tower (d.
1362), daughter of
Edward II of England and
Isabella of France, at
Berwick-upon-Tweed. They had no issue.
David became king of Scotland upon the death of his father on
7 June,
1329, aged 5 years, 3 months, and 3 days. David and his Queen were crowned at
Scone on
November 24,
1331.
Sir
Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, by the Act of Settlement of 1318, became
Guardian of Scotland until his death on
July 20,
1332. He was replaced as Guardian by Donald, Earl of Mar, by an assemblage of the magnates of Scotland, at
Perth,
August 2,
1332. However, Mar fell at the
Battle of Dupplin Moor ten days later, following which Sir Andrew Moray of Bothwell, who had married (her third husband) Christian, sister of King
Robert I, was chosen the new Guardian. He was taken prisoner by the English at
Roxburgh in April 1333. He was thence replaced as Guardian by Sir Archibald Douglas, 'Tyneman', who fell at Halidon Hill that July.
Following the Scots' defeat at Dupplin,
Edward Balliol was crowned King of the Scots by the English and his adherents, at Scone,
September 24,
1332. However, by December he'd fled to England.
Owing to the victory of
Edward III of England and his protégé, Edward Balliol, at the
Battle of Halidon Hill in July 1333, David and his Queen were sent for safety into France, reaching
Boulogne on
May 14,
1334, and being received very graciously by the French king,
Philip VI. Little is known about the life of the Scottish king in France, except that
Château-Gaillard was given to him for a residence, and that he was present at the bloodless meeting of the English and French armies in October 1339 at Vironfosse, now known as
Buironfosse, in the
Arrondissement of Vervins.
Meanwhile his representatives had obtained the upper hand in Scotland, and David was thus enabled to return to his kingdom, landing at
Inverbervie in
Kincardineshire on
June 2,
1341, when he took the reins of government into his own hands.
In 1346 under the terms of the
Auld Alliance, he invaded England in the interests of France, but was defeated and taken prisoner by John Coupeland at the
Battle of Neville's Cross on
October 17,
1346, and remained in England for eleven years, living principally in London, at
Odiham Castle in
Hampshire and
Windsor Castle in
Berkshire. His imprisonment wasn't a rigorous one, and negotiations for his release were soon begun.
Eventually, on
October 3,
1357, after several interruptions, a treaty was signed at
Berwick-upon-Tweed by which the Scottish estates undertook to pay 100,000
marks as a ransom for their king. This was ratified by parliament at Scone on
November 6,
1357.
David returned at once to Scotland; but owing to the poverty of the kingdom it was found impossible to raise the ransom. A few instalments were paid, but the king sought to get rid of the liability by offering to make Edward III, or one of his sons, his successor in Scotland. In 1364 the Scottish parliament indignantly rejected a proposal to make
Lionel,
Duke of Clarence, the next king; but David negotiated secretly with Edward III over this matter, after he'd suppressed a rising of some of his unruly nobles.
The king died in
Edinburgh Castle on
February 22,
1371 and was buried in
Holyrood Abbey.
He remarried about
February 20,
1364,
Margaret Drummond, widow of Sir John Logie, Knt., and daughter of Sir Malcolm Drummond, Knt. He divorced her about
March 20,
1370. They had no issue. Margaret, however, travelled to
Avignon and made a successful appeal to the Pope to reverse the sentence of divorce which had been pronounced against her in Scotland. She was still alive in January 1375.
At the time of his death he was planning to marry his
mistress Agnes Dunbar, daughter of
Agnes Dunbar, 4th Countess of Moray. He left no children and was succeeded by his nephew,
Robert II. He was the last male of the whole
House of Bruce.
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