SCOTLAND, Malcolm I of

SCOTLAND, Malcolm I of

Male 895 - 954  (59 years)

 Set As Default Person    

Personal Information    |    Media    |    Notes    |    All    |    PDF

  • Name SCOTLAND, Malcolm I of 
    Birth 895 
    Gender Male 
    Relation to Me 34 GGF 
    Royalty & Nobility Between 943 and 954 
    King of the Scots 
    Death 954 
    Person ID I7313  My Genealogy | Laviolette Ancestry
    Last Modified 4 Feb 2024 

    Father SCOTLAND, Donald II of,   b. 860   d. 900 (Age 40 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F1808  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Children 
    +1. SCOTLAND, King Kenneth II of,   b. 925   d. 995 (Age 70 years)  [Father: natural]
    Family ID F1807  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 4 Feb 2024 

  • Photos
    Malcolm_I
    Malcolm_I

    Documents
    Malcolm I of Scotland - Wikipedia
    Malcolm I of Scotland - Wikipedia

    Albums
    Royal Connections
    Royal Connections (3)
    When you find a Gateway Ancestor in your family tree, it is almost impossible not to go down a rabbit hole of ancestry leading to connections with countless ancestors of the royal and noble classes. These lines have been extensively researched and documented by historians, so it is really just a matter of following the line. I've spent countless hours engrossed in the stories these royal lines have uncovered. In this album, I will link to ancestors who were members of the Royal class. Royalty refers to the ruling monarch and their immediate family. This includes kings, queens, princes, and princesses. The monarch is typically the highest authority in the land and has the power to grant titles of nobility.

    Keep in mind that it is not necessarily unusual to be descended from royalty. After all, many of these connections go back to my 25th great grandparents and beyond. Theoretically, we have 67,108,864 sets of 25th great grandparents (In reality, due to a phenomenon known as pedigree collapse, where ancestors appear in the family tree multiple times in different generations due to intermarriage within a community, the actual number of unique 25th great-grandparents a person has is likely to be much lower). With this many, it might be more unusual NOT to descend from royalty. However, what makes our ancestry so unique is that we can TRACE it that far back, person to person to person. Since my fascination with our ancestry lies in my curiosity about the stories of the individual people, this is beyond compelling to me. It is like getting lost in a series of medieval novels in which I have an actual connection to the characters. It brings history to life.

  • Notes 
    • Malcolm succeeded to the crown when his cousin Constantine II entered a monastery (943). He annexed Moray to the kingdom for the first time. After driving the Danes from York, the English king Edmund turned Cumbria over to Malcolm, apparently as a fief or seal of alliance. Later, when Norsemen again invaded the land, the Scots sent raids against the English, and in 954 the West Saxon king Eadred reunited the northern counties to his dominions. Malcolm was slain the same year during a rebellion in Moray.


Go to Top