Thanks to Ray Isbell for the
following information
Ralph de Vere was the first
of the name on record in Scotland when he was captured with William the Lion
at Alnwick 1174, though some accounts state that he went to Scotland as
early as 1165. He is also called Ralfredus de Vere and Baltredus de Vere in
various references, but is not to be confused with his grandson Radulphus de
Vere, also called Ralph.
Several sources mistakenly
refer to Ralf (Ralfredus) de Vere and Baltredus de Vere as two different
immigrants to Scotland, one a Dane and one an Englishman of Danish
extraction. He is called "Ralph de Vyer" in THE WIER-BRITT GENEALOGY (1910)
and in TEN TRIBES OF WIER IN AMERICA (1933) by William S. Wier, who
described Ralph de Vyer as "a Dane of great wealth" and an "ancestor of the
Wiers", while referring to Baltredus de Vere as a different immigrant and an
ancestor of "the Weirs of Blackwood," as though two distinct and different
families. But that is typical of the confusion found in so much of the
published information on the Weirs.
Alberic de Vere (also called
"Aubrey"), a descendant Charlemagne's sister, came from Normandy to England
in 1066; his son:
Aubrey de Vere II (1062-1141) of Hedingham Castle, Great Lord Chamberlain of
England,
married Adeliza (Alice) de Clare; their son:
Aubrey de Vere III, 1st Earl of Oxford (1110-d 1194) m. Alice of Essex;
He was succeeded by his eldest son,
Aubrey de Vere IV, 2nd Earl of Oxford (succeeded 1192, d 1214), who was
succeeded in 1214 by his brother:
Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford (d. 1221)
Aubrey de Vere III, first earl of Oxford, was also the father of the Ralf de
Vere who is identified by a number of sources as the Ralfredus de Vere of
Scotland. Some accounts show him as a younger son, while otherssay he was
the second son and in line to become the third earl of Oxford upon the death
of his brother Aubrey IV, second earl of Oxford, had he not been an enemy of
Henry II of England and disinherited so that the earldom passed to his
younger brother, Robert. Whether correct or not, it is known that his
brother Robert de Vere of England witnessed a charter for Ralph de Vere in
Scotland.
Ralph de Vere was an adherent
to Conan IV, Duke of Brittany, who laid claim to the throne of England as a
great-grandson of King Henry I. So when Henry II gained control of
Brittany, Conan and his followers fled to Scotland. Conan married the
sister of William I, King of Scotland from 1165-1214. Ralph de Vere was
awarded vast tracts of land in Lanarkshire. He was captured along with
King William at Alnwick in Northumbria in 1174. As Radulphus de Weir, he
witnessed a Charter of King William (c1174-84), and as Radulph de Veir he
gave land in Roxburgh to Kelso Abbey. As Radalphus de Vere he witnessed
another Charter by King William to the Abbey of Lindores.
The estate of Blackwood was
confirmed by charter to Rothald Weir in 1400, but had been held by the
family for some time previous to that charter. The Weir succession from
Ralph de Vere down to Rothald Weir of Blackwood can be followed through each
generation's continued patronage to Kelso Abbey and is explained in the
following references: Burke's THE COMMONERS OF GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND,
vol. III, pp. 319-22; Burke's EXTINCT & DORMANT BARONETCIES; PEERAGE &
BARONETAGE (1970); and Burke's LANDED GENTRY OF IRELAND (1899), pp 475-6 and
(1958) pp 474-5, and in particular detail in THE UPPER WARD OF LANARKSHIRE
(Glastow, 1864) by George Vere Irving, as well as other sources.
1 Ralph de Vere (Ralf, Ralfredus, Radulphus, Baltredus) came to Scotland
from England (1165-1174); had 2 sons and 1 daughter; his heir:
2 Walter de Vere, was the father of Robert and Ralph:
3 Radulph (Radulphus) (Ralph) de Vere who lived in Lanarkshire in 1296
(grandson of the Ralph de Vere on record in 1174); father of
4 THOMAS de Vere, father of
5 RICHARD de Vere/Were, father of
6 THOMAS de Vere/Wer/Were (apparently the Thomas de Vere who was the laird
of Stonebyres Castle in 1300, according to TALES AND LEGENDS OF THE UPPER
WARD OF LANARKSHIRE, published in 1860); he was the father of:
7 BUAN de Vere, father of
8 ROTHALD (Rothaldus) de Vere/WEIR OF BLACKWOOD, on record in 1398; Bailie
of Lesmahagow; had a charter confirming his father's ownership of Blackwood,
1400; usually styled "first laird of Blackwood"; father of George and
Thomas:
9 THOMAS WERE/WEIR second laird of Blackwood (c1432), father of Robert and
Ralph (who m. Marie Sommerville in 1647);
10 ROBERT VERE/WEIR of Blackwood born about 1430, father of
11 THOMAS WEIR of Blackwood, born about 1460 who married 1483 Aegidia
Somerville, daughter
of the third Lord Somerville; had son
12 JAMES WEIR OF BLACKWOOD (1495-1595) married Euphemia Hamilton.
The Weirs/Veres of Stonebyres
and Mossminion were offshoots of the Weirs of Blackwood, and the Weirs of
Auchtyfardle and Kirkton descended from the Weirs of Stonebyres. In 1592 a
century-old feud between the Weirs of Blackwood and the Veres of Stonebyres
was ended when the Veres swore allegiance to James Weir of Blackwood and
acknowledged him their chief. Numerous branches of the same family existed
in Lanark, and at one time or another a Weir or Vere owned nearly all of the
major estates there. Most all of these, and the Weirs of Ayreshire, are
believed to be of the same blood.
However, some MacNairs in
Cowal later took the name Weir, some of them settling in Perth. David Wier
from Lanark settled in Perth in the 1500s also.