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James Mor Stewart
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James Mor Stewart : ウィキペディア英語版
James Mor Stewart

James Mor Stewart, called James the Fat, ((スコットランド・ゲール語:Seamas Mór)) (c. 1400–1429 or 1449) was the youngest son of Murdoch Stewart, Duke of Albany and Isabella of Lennox. When his father and brothers were executed by King James I for treason in 1425, James led a rebellion against the king, taking the town of Dumbarton and killing the keeper of Dumbarton Castle. His success was short lived and he soon fled to Ireland, where he would spend the remainder of his life in exile. A second attempt at rebellion in 1429 saw a fleet sail to Ireland to collect James "to convey him home that he might be king", but he died before the attempt could be made.
James's eldest son James "Beg" Stewart was able to secure a royal pardon and return to Scotland, and was the ancestor of the Stewarts of Ardvorlich on Lochearnside, whose family history is recounted by Sir Walter Scott in A Legend of Montrose. His youngest son Andrew Stewart, 1st Lord Avondale became Lord Chancellor of Scotland in 1459, becoming one of the leading servants of King James III of Scotland.
==Biography==

Little is known of James's life before the arrest of his father, the Duke of Albany, and his eldest son Alexander, for treason by King James I of Scotland on 21 March 1425, on the 9th day of the March parliament.〔(Campbell, Alastair, p. 113, ''A History of Clan Campbell, Volume 2'' ) Retrieved November 2010〕 The family properties of Doune Castle and Falkland Palace were captured, and 〔 Duke Murdoch and two of his sons were imprisoned and held pending trial. James soon became a rallying point for enemies of the King, raising a large rebellion against the crown. Initially at least, events moved in his favour. He received the support of his mother's supporters in the Lennox, and also from Fionnlagh MacCailein, Bishop of Argyll, a long-standing supporter of the Albany Stewarts.〔 James marched on the town of Dumbarton, burned it, and killed the keeper of the royal castle there, Sir John Stewart of Dundonald, who was the King's uncle.〔(McAndrew, Bruce A., p.5, ''Scotland's Historic Heraldry'' ) Retrieved November 2010〕 However, the castle itself, commanded by John Colquhoun, successfully held out against James's men.〔
Among other supporters were the Clan Galbraith, in particular the ninth chief James Galbraith of Culcreuch who joined Stewart's rebellion. As many as 600 members of the clan were forced to flee after the failure of the revolt, exiled to Kintyre and the Isle of Gigha, where they adopted the new name of MacBhreatneaich of M'Vretny ("son of the Briton") . 〔(Dewar, Peter Beauclerk, p.482, ''Burke's Landed Gentry of Great Britain'' ) Retrieved November 2011〕

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