Kings and Queens of Scotland
See also Mary, Queen of Scots.
According to tradition, the Scottish nation was founded in 843 by Cináed mac Ailpín (Kenneth MacAlpin – literally,
the son of Alpin). Kenneth was a Gael, who is thought to have become King of the Picts by matrilineal descent (as was the custom). (The Picts had inhabited
northern and eastern Scotland since Roman times; the Gaels spread into Scotland from Ireland some time around the 5th century AD.)
Kenneth was succeeded by his brother Donald I, who in turn was succeeded by his son Giric. All subsequent kings (and sovereign queens)
of Scotland were descended from Kenneth.
For comparison: England was ruled from 839 to 856 by Æthelwulf, the father of Alfred the Great. Alfred ruled from 871 to 899
(following three of his elder brothers in turn).
The following diagram shows how the first 23 kings of Scotland came from just 10 generations of the descendants of Alpin.
After David I, the succession was generally more orthodox.
The remainder of this page shows much of the same information, but in the more familiar "question and answer"
format – and brings us up to James VI, who was also James I of England.
First King of Scotland | 843–858 |
|
Kenneth I (MacAlpin) |
Brother of Kenneth I | 858–862 |
|
Donald I |
Son of Kenneth I | 862–877 |
|
Constantine I |
Son of Constantine I | 889–900 |
|
Donald II |
Son of Aed, grandson of Kenneth I, nephew of Constantine I, cousin of Donald II |
900–943 |
|
Constantine II |
Son of Donald II | 943–954 |
|
Malcolm I |
The kingdom of England was united under Edgar in 959.
Son of Malcolm I | 971–995 |
|
Kenneth II |
| 995–997 |
|
Constantine III |
| 997–1005 |
|
Kenneth III |
Son of Kenneth II; grandfather of Duncan I and Macbeth | 1005–34 |
|
Malcolm II |
Defeated in battle, and killed, by his cousin Macbeth | 1034–40 |
|
Duncan I |
Grandson of Malcolm II; married Princess Gruoch, a descendant of Malcolm I – the model for Lady Macbeth |
1040–57 |
|
Macbeth |
Macbeth's stepson (son of Gruoch) | 1057–58 |
|
Lulach |
Son of Duncan; killed Macbeth in battle; known as 'Canmore' (Big Head); killed at Alnwick while invading Northumberland |
1058–93 |
|
Malcolm III |
Consort of Malcolm III, a member of the English royal family: died 1093, three days after the deaths in battle
(at Alnwick) of her husband and eldest son; canonised 1250. Queensferry on the Firth of Forth (between the two bridges) is named after her |
|
|
Saint Margaret |
Malcolm III was King of Scotland at the time of the Norman Conquest of England.
Brother of Malcolm III | 1093–94 |
|
Donald Bane |
Eldest son of Malcolm III (by his first wife Ingiborg Finnsdottir) | 1094 |
|
Duncan II |
(restored) | 1094–97 |
|
Donald Bane |
Eldest surviving son of Malcolm III and St. Margaret | 1097–1107 |
|
Edgar |
Third son of Malcolm III and St. Margaret; known as 'the Fierce' | 1107–24 |
|
Alexander I |
Fourth (youngest) son of Malcolm III and Margaret; brought up in the court of Henry I of England |
1124–53 |
|
David I |
Eldest son of Henry, son of David I | 1153–65 |
|
Malcolm IV |
Younger brother of Malcolm IV; father of Alexander II | 1165–14 |
|
William (the Lion) |
Supported the English barons in their struggle with King John; acknowledged Henry II of England as his liege lord
by the Treaty of Newcastle, 1244 | 1214–49 |
|
Alexander II |
Son of the above: gained influence over the Western Isles, from Norway, 1263 |
1249–86 |
|
Alexander III |
Grand–daughter of the above: succeeded aged 3 (her mother, Margaret of Norway, having died during or
shortly after her birth) | 1286–90 |
|
Margaret of Norway |
13 people laid claim to the throne after Margaret, 'The Maid of Norway' died on her way to Scotland |
1290–92 |
|
Interregnum |
Great–grandson of David of Huntingdon, younger brother of William the Lion – selected by Edward I of
England | 1292–96 |
|
John Balliol |
Scots barons rebelled at Edward I's influence over John Balliol, who then abdicated; Edward declared himself
King of Scotland, capturing the Stone of Scone | 1296–1306 |
|
Interregnum |
Crowned at Scone after the execution of William Wallace; defeated Edward I at Bannockburn (1314); said to have
been inspired to try again by watching a spider building its web | 1306–29 |
|
Robert I (the Bruce) |
Son of Robert the Bruce; married Joanna, daughter of Edward II of England, at age 4; captured at the Battle of
Neville's Cross | 1329–71 |
|
David II |
First Stuart King of Scotland; son of Walter, Steward of Scotland, and Marjory, daughter of Robert I |
1371–90 |
|
Robert II |
Son of Robert II | 1390–1406 |
|
Robert III |
Robert, Duke of Albany, was regent to 1424, when James was crowned; murdered by Sir Robert Graham, 1437 |
1406–37 |
|
James I |
Assumed power 1449; killed while besieging Roxburgh Castle, 1460; banned golf and football, 1457, because they
distracted his subjects from archery | 1437–60 |
|
James II |
Assumed power 1469; murdered 1488 | 1460–88 |
|
James III |
The last British king to be killed in battle: Flodden Field, 1513 – defeated by Henry VIII's English army |
1488–1513 |
|
James IV |
Married Margaret Tudor, sister of Henry VIII – resulting in the claim of his grand–daughter, Mary,
to the English throne |
Died three weeks after his defeat by Henry VIII's army at Solway Moss | 1513–42 |
|
James V |
Became Queen of Scots aged 6 days, following the death of her father (see above); forced to abdicate in favour of
her one–year–old son, 25 years later, after the Scottish peers turned against her and her third husband (James Hepburn, 4th Earl
of Bothwell); executed at Fotheringay Castle following the Babington plot; reputedly haunts Borthwick Castle, in the Borders, where she and
Bothwell were beseiged following their marriage |
1542–67 |
|
Mary |
Son of the above, and her second husband Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley (both great–grandchildren of Henry VII
of England via his daughter Margaret (see above); assumed power in 1583; became James I of England in 1603 |
1567–1625 |
|
James VI |
Target of the Gowrie Conspiracy (or Plot) – which resulted in the murders of John Ruthven, 3rd Earl of Gowrie,
and his younger brother Alexander, ostensibly in defence of the King |
© Haydn Thompson 2017–22