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Douglas Name Study

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Surnames/tags: Douglas Douglass Douglase
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Contents

The Historic Family of Douglas

Extract from The Great Historic Families of Scotland, By James Taylor, M.A., D.D., F.S.A and published in 1887

In the story of Scotland,’ says Mr. Froude, ‘weakness is nowhere; power, energy, and will are everywhere;’ and this national vigour, determined will, and indomitable resolution seem to have culminated in the ‘Doughty Douglases.’ Their stalwart and tough physical frames, and the strong, resolute, unbending character of such men as ‘William the Hardy,’ ‘Archibald the Grim,’ and ‘Archibald Bell-the-Cat,’ the types of their race, eminently fitted them to be ‘premier peers‘-leaders of men. From the War of Independence down to the era of the Reformation, no other family played such a conspicuous part in the affairs of Scotland as the Douglases. They intermarried no less than eleven times with the royal family of Scotland, and once with that of England. They enjoyed the privilege of leading the van of the Scottish army in battle, of carrying the crown at the coronation of the sovereign, and of giving the first vote in Parliament. ‘A Douglas received the last words of Robert Bruce. A Douglas spoke the epitaph of John Knox. The Douglases were celebrated in the prose of Froissart and the verse of Shakespeare. They have been sung by antique Barbour and by Walter Scott, by the minstrels of Otterburn and by Robert Burns.’ A nameless poet who lived four hundred years ago eulogised their trustiness and chivalry. Holinshed, in the next century, speaks of their ‘singular manhood, noble prowess, and majestic puissance.’ They espoused, at the outset, the patriotic side in the War of Independence, and they contributed greatly to the crowning victory of Bannockburn. They sent two hundred gentlemen of the name, with the heir of their earldom, to die at Flodden. There was a time when they could raise thirty thousand men, and they were for centuries the bulwarks of the Scottish borders against our ‘auld enemies of England.’ They have gathered their laurels on many a bloody field in France, where they held the rank of princes, and in Spain and in the Netherlands, as well as in England and Scotland, and - 'In far landes renownit they have been'

They have produced men not only of ‘doughty’ character, but of the gentle and chivalric type also, like the ‘Good Sir James,’ and the William Douglas who married the Princess Egidia, justifying the exclamation of the author of the ‘Buke of the Howlat ‘- 'O Douglas, Douglas! Tender and true !'

On the other hand, it cannot be denied that their haughtiness and turbulence and ambition often disturbed the peace of the country, and imperilled the stability of the throne. On the whole, however, setting the good and the evil against each other, it may be said, in lines which were old in the days of Godscroft, and were then, he says, ‘common in men’s mouths ‘- 'So many, so good, as of the Douglases have been, Of one sirname were ne’er in Scotland seen'

Origins

Extract from The Great Historic Families of Scotland, By James Taylor, M.A., D.D., F.S.A and published in 1887

The cradle of the race was in Douglasdale, but their origin is hid in obscurity. ‘We do not know them,’ says Godscroft, in his ‘History of the House and Race of Douglas and Angus,’ ‘in the fountain, but in the stream; not in the root, but in the stem: for we know not who was the first mean man that did raise himself above the vulgar.’ The traditionary account of the descent of the family from ‘a dark-grey man’ (Sholto-Dhu-Glas), who rescued Solvathius, a mythical king of the Scots in the eighth century, from imminent danger of defeat in a battle with Donald Bane, is evidently fabulous. It is alleged by Chalmers that the founder of the family came from Flanders, about the year 1147, and was named Theobald the Fleming, and that he received from Arnold, Abbot of Kelso, a grant of lands on Douglas Water (Dhu-Glas), the dark stream, from which the family name was derived. But this is mere conjecture, not supported by any evidence; and it has been ascertained that the lands granted to Theobald are not those of which the first known Douglas, in the next generation, was in possession, and that these lands never formed a part of the barony of that name. Wyntoun is of opinion that the Douglases had the same origin as the Murrays, either by lineal descent or by collateral branch, as they have in their arms the same stars set in the same manner.

How to Join

Please contact the project leader Chris Douglas or post a comment at the foot of the page. If you have any questions, just ask. Thanks!

Goals

This is a One Name Study with the goal of documenting and connecting all the descendents of Laird William Douglas, who is the first historical Douglas that can be found in records. It is possible however that there are other Douglas lines that do not descend from William, and should this be the case, they should also be documented and connected. The hope is that eventually all William's descendants and all Douglas lines are connected and documented and that other researchers like you will join our study to help make it a valuable reference point for people studying lines that cross or intersect.

Task List

  • Identify and connect all people bearing the surname Douglas or variations of it.
  • If there is a known connection to Laird William Douglas, put the profile in the category Descendants of Laird William Douglas, Name Study.
  • If there no known connection to Laird William Douglas, put the profile in the category Douglas Name Study.

Name Variations

Dawglas, Dawglass, Dawgless, Dawgliss, Dogles, Douglas, Douglase, Douglass, Dougles, Dougless, Douglis, Dougliss, Douglles, Dowglas, Dubhghlas, Dueglas, Duglas, Duglass, Dugless, Dugliss, Dulglace, Dulglas, Dulglass, Dulgless, Dulgliss, Duueglas[1]

Associated Projects

You may wish to join the Scottish Clans Project also. This is their template for Clan Douglas. I recommend this be put on Douglas profiles.

Image:Clan Tartans-2.png
... ... ... is a member of Clan Douglas.
Join: Scottish Clans Project
Discuss: scottish_clans

Useful Links and References

  • Johnston, George Harvey. "The Heraldry of the Douglases: With Notes on All the Males of the Family, Descriptions of the Arms, Plates and Pedigrees." Edinburgh: W. & A.K. Johnston, Limited, 1907. Print. https://archive.org/details/heraldryofdougla00john
  1. http://www.douglashistory.co.uk/history/Septs/name_variations.htm




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Comments: 3

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Added https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Douglas-16431 to the name study and will continue to add my grandfather's ancestors form Arkansas and Tennessee.
Re: A Douglas tintype. I am a Dame in Gilford, NH with a greatgrandmother Fannie Frye from Portsmouth, NH who died of consumption here in Gilford in 1881. I have a tintype of a mid 20's man with the following comment: "Mr Douglass having traveled 40 miles on foot feels tired, hungry, but happy.

For Fannie Taken in the days of shadows"

It appears that there may have been a signature that was scissored out. I know of no Douglass in my tree. I am willing to share.

posted by Barry Dame
Hi I found these Douglas in connection with my cousins I added Him and his kids to the Name Study.

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Douglass-4675

Billie