

Died in 1270 during the 8th Crusade.
Adam of Kilconquhar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_of_Kilconquhar
Adam of Kilconquhar (died 1271) was a Scottish noble from the 13th century. Of Fife origin, he is notable for becoming the husband of the countess of Carrick and participating in Crusade with Louis IX.
Evidence indicates that Adam was from Mac Duibh family; he was probably the son of Donnchadh of Kilconquhar, son of Adam (son of Donnchadh I, Earl of Fife), who appears frequently as a witness in the documents of St Andrews Cathedral Priory as Adam frater comitis, i.e. brother of Earl Donnchadh II.[1] It is likely that Adam's mother was from the Comyn family:[2] his brother, William of Kilconquhar was called 'Comyn' in his papal letter of appointment as bishop of Brechin.[3]
Kilconquhar in south-east Fife was the seat of this family's holdings. The feudal arrangement that evolved in the 12th- and 13th-centuries was complicated, in that although the Kilconquhar was held of the bishop of St Andrews, the bishop in turn held it from the earl.[4]
Adam appears to have enjoyed the favour of the Scottish king Alexander III, and married Marjory of Carrick daughter and heiress of Niall, the earl of Carrick.[5] He was able to use the title of earl in his wife's name, but it is unlikely that he had much role ruling the province, as Earl Niall had left the position of kindred chief (ceann cineil) to his nephew Lachlan.[6] Although they had no son to take over the earldom for the Kilconquhar family (that went to the Bruces), their daughter was the mother of Robert Bruce's companion in arms Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray.[7]
He died at Acre in 1271, while on crusade.[8] According to material in the Chronicle of John of Fordun, he had been a participant in the Eighth Crusade.[6] He had been one of a small Scottish contingent that attacked Tunis in 1270, where fellow-Scot and fellow-MacDuff David I Strathbogie, Earl of Atholl died.[9] Adam survived, and withdrew with the rest to winter in Sicily.[9] The following spring the contingent joined with the army of Lord Edward and proceeded to Acre, where Adam was taken by disease.[9]
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_crusade8th.html
The last major crusade aimed at the Holy Land, and an failure that well symbolises the end of the crusades. In the previous twenty years, the remaining crusader states had become increasingly powerless pawns while tides of Mongol and then Mameluke conquests swept across the area. Louis IX of France attempted to restore the situation. Louis then died in an epidemic, to be replaced by his brother Charles of Anjou, king of Sicily, and a reluctant crusader, who negotiated terms with the Bey, who paid tribute to him and France, after which the crusade ended. After the crusade was over, the future Edward I of England arrived, and finding the crusade over, journeyed on himself to the Holy Land, where the powerful crusader fortress of Krak had just been captured by Baibars, where he campaigned until 1272, when the death of his father Henry III forced him to return to England. The crusading era in the Holy Land ended in 1291, with the fall of Acre, the last crusader base in Palestine.
1232 |
1232
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Carrick, Ayrshire, Scotland (United Kingdom)
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1270 |
1270
Age 38
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Acre, Palestine
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Carrick, Galloway, Argyllshire, Scotland (United Kingdom)
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