

The name of Simon, brother of Walter son of Alan, is noticed in the witness list of a charter by which Walter son of Alan, the first hereditary steward of Scotland, announces his intention to found a priory at Paisley in Scotland. Paisley Registrum: pp. 1-2
Simon fitz Alan (died c. 1200) was a 12th-century noble who was the ancestor of the Boyds. Simon was the third son of the Breton knight, Alan fitz Flaad, feudal lord of Oswestry, by his spouse Aveline, daughter of Ernoulf de Hesdin.[1][2]
Simon followed his brother Walter fitz Alan into Scotland in the service of King David I. Simon witnessed Walter's foundation charter to the monastery of Paisley Abbey in 1160, in which he is designated as "frater Walterii, filii Alani, dapiferi".
He had a son Robert, who styled himself Boyt.
Does not appear in the Scots Peerage
The Scots peerage founded on Wood's ed. of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage of Scotland; containing an historical and genealogical account of the nobility of that kingdom.Published 1904 by D. Douglas in Edinburgh . Vol Vl, page 10
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1114
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Dol, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France
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1140 |
1140
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Scotland, United Kingdom
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1163 |
1163
Age 49
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Scotland (United Kingdom)
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1164
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Renfrew, Scotland
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