AVENEL,
a surname now scarcely known, except in the pages of romance. Like
Umfraville, de Morville, and others, it was once borne by high and
powerful barons, whose descendants, if any now exist, have long
ceased to be called by the name of their progenitors. Among the
Anglo-Norman knights introduced into Scotland by David the First,
was Robert Avenel, who, in reward of military services, received
Upper and Lower Eskdale, and flourished during the reigns of
Malcolm the Fourth and William the Lion, whose charters he
witnessed. He officiated as Justiciary of Lothian for a short time
after the accession of William, in 1165. His latter years were
spent in the monastery of Melrose, to which he granted a large
portion of his estates, and where he died in 1185. His son and
heir, Gervase, confirmed the grant. Roger Avenel, the successor of
Gervase, had a serious dispute with the monks regarding the game
on the lands. The king, Alexander the Second, at his request
interfered, and "found that the monks were entitled to the soil,
but not to the game, which belonged to the Avenels, as lords of
the manor." For several generations the Avenels continued among
the most powerful families on the Borders; and in the Tales of the
‘Monastery,’ and the ‘Abbot,’ they have been introduced with
singular success by Sir Walter Scott. The family of Avenel merged,
like many others, in an heiress, who married Henry, the son of
Henry de Graham of Abercorn and Dalkeith, and the property of the
Avenels thus passed into other families.