The Scotsman

Sealed the deal: Rare Robert the Bruce document is auctioned

- GEORGE MAIR

Arare document featuring the seal of King Robert the Bruce, granting swathes of land to a loyal supporter nearly 700 years ago, has fetched £25,250 at auction.

King Robert authorised the letters patent during a gathering at Scone, in Perthshire, on 20 March 1326, six years after the Declaratio­n of Arbroath.

Written in Latin on velum and featuring the King's Great Seal, it granted lands at "Uthirtyre" (Auchtertyr­e) in the Sheriffdom of Forfar to Sir William Oliphant, a knight, in return for the feudal service of three archers in the King's Scottish army.

The document, which was known to scholars but lost for almost a century, went under the hammer at Bonhams, where it was bought by an unnamed online bidder.

The letters patent, which had been in a private collection in England, was witnessed 695 years ago by a number of major figures of the period, offering a clue as to the importance of the meeting at which it was issued.

These witnesses included the Bishop of St Andrews, William Lamberton; the Bruce's son-in-law Walter Stewart, the High Steward of Scotland; the earls of Strathearn and Fife; and Sir Gilbert de la Haye, the Lord High Constable and supreme officer of the Scottish army.

Sarah Lindberg, Bonhams' manuscript specialist, said: "This is a very important document, not only for its age and what it contains but also for its rarity.

"There are several documents pertaining to Robert the Bruce in institutio­ns in Scotland but it is very rare to see something like this come onto the market.

"Sir William Oliphant was a member of Robert the Bruce's inner circle, present with the King on several occasions, and he put his seal on the Declaratio­n of Arbroath.

"This document has been in a private collection south of the Border but it is a piece of important national heritage for Scotland."

Sir William Oliphant of Dupplin and Aberdalgie was a veteran of the Battle of Dunbar of 1296 and the siege of Stirling Castle in 1304 when his cousin, also William Oliphant, was governor.

He was twice imprisoned by the English before returning to Scotland in 1313 and swearing allegiance to the Bruce, possibly after the Battle of Bannockbur­n.

Oliphant was also among the nobles who put their seals to the Declaratio­n of Arbroath in 1320.

He was present at the Bruce's Parliament held at Holyrood on 8 March 1326, just a few days before the gathering at Scone.

The lands he received, along with those acquired by inheritanc­e and marriage alliances, meant that his family held swathes of property across Perthshire and Forfarshir­e as well as estates in Fife, Kincardine­shire and Midlothian.

Historian Dr Fiona Watson, an expert on Robert the Bruce, said: "This is a legal document showing the King's authority to grant this land to Oliphant, who was part of a key cohort of followers of Bruce.

"It would have been written by a royal clerk and issued on behalf of the King, using King Robert's Great Seal .

"I would love to see it stay in Scotland. These people played a part in such a pivotal time in history, so to have a document that they were party to would be great because we have so few."

 ?? ?? The Robert the Bruce statue at the Battle of Bannockbur­n Visitor Centre
The Robert the Bruce statue at the Battle of Bannockbur­n Visitor Centre

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