Hamilton, James 1 2a 3a 4a

Birth Name Hamilton, James
Gender male
Age at Death 43 years, 4 months

Events

Event Date Place Description Sources
Birth 1398 Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland   5a
Death 1441-05-00 Midlothian, Scotland   5b

Age: 43y

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Hamilton, John13711402-09-14
Mother Douglas, Janet1378
    Brother     Hamilton, Thomas 1392
         Hamilton, James 1398 1441-05-00
    Brother     Hamilton, Walter 1404
    Sister     Hamilton, Catherine 1406
    Brother     Hamilton, David 1413

Families

Family of Hamilton, James and Livingstone, Janet

Married Wife Livingstone, Janet ( * 1400 + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Sources
Marriage 1422-10-20 Stirlingshire, Scotland   5c
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Hamilton, Agnesabout 1412
Hamilton, James1415-05-161479-11-06
Hamilton, Mary1417
Hamilton, Andrew1418
Hamilton, Elizabeth14201517-03-00
Hamilton, William1423
Hamilton, Marjory14241479
Hamilton, Margaretha14251460
Hamilton, Alexander14261479
Hamilton, Johnabout 14261455-10-23
Hamilton, Gavin14301493-05-29
Hamilton, Janet1434

Source References

  1. Errol Bevan: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=PED&db=bevangenealogy&id=I32435&style=TABLE @ RootsWeb Ancestries of Errol S. BEVAN and Hollie C. ATKINSON BEVAN to ADAM and EVE including REINHARDT and BLOCKER Cousins and more
  2. Errol Bevan: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bevangenealogy&id=I32513 @ RootsWeb Ancestries of Errol S. BEVAN and Hollie C. ATKINSON BEVAN to ADAM and EVE including REINHARDT and BLOCKER Cousins and more
      • Source text:

        ID: I32513
        Name: James HAMILTON
        Surname: HAMILTON
        Given Name: James
        Sex: M
        Birth: ABT 1398 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Death: BEF May 1441
        Ancestral File #: 8HHR-4P
        LDS Baptism: 27 Sep 1994 Temple: SDIEG 1
        Endowment: 3 Oct 1995 Temple: SDIEG 1
        Sealing Child: 19 Jan 1962 Temple: LANGE 1 2
        Change Date: 3 Apr 2007 at 01:00:00

        Father: Sir John HAMILTON b: ABT 1371 in , Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Mother: Jacoba (Janet) DOUGLAS b: BEF 1378 in Of Dalkeith, Mid Lothian, Scotland

        Marriage 1 Janet LIVINGSTONE b: ABT 1400 in Of Callendar, Scotland
        Married: BEF 20 Oct 1422
        Children
        Mary (Or Marjory) HAMILTON b: ABT 1417 in Of Hamilton, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        James Baron HAMILTON b: ABT 1423 in Of Hamilton, Lanarkshire, Scotland c: in Also Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Alexander HAMILTON b: ABT 1426 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        John HAMILTON b: ABT 1428 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Gavin HAMILTON b: ABT 1430 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Elizabeth HAMILTON b: ABT 1434 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
        Agnes HAMILTON b: ABT 1432 in Of Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

        Sources:
        Repository:
        Name: Family History Library
        Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

        Title: Ordinance Index (TM)
        Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
        Repository:
        Name: Family History Library
        Salt Lake City, Utah 84150 USA

        Title: Ancestral File (R)
        Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
        Publication: Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998

         

      • Citation:

        bevangenealogyservices@hotmail.com

  3. Peerage - James Hamilton
      • Source text:

        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow1
        M, #109392, d. before May 1441
        Last Edited=16 Sep 2023
        Consanguinity Index=0.01%
        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas. He married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422.2 He died before May 1441.1
        Note that DNA evidence from the Hamilton DNA project suggests that John was not the biological father of James. Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland.1 He was appointed Knight in 1430.1 He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, ScotlandG.1
        Children of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow and Janet Livingston
        Mary Hamilton3
        Agnes Hamilton+3
        Elizabeth Hamilton3
        James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton+1 b. c 1415, d. 6 Nov 1479
        Alexander Hamilton, 1st of Silvertonhill+2 b. a 1415
        John Hamilton+2 b. a 1416, d. b 23 Oct 1455
        Child of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow
        Gavin Hamilton+2 b. c 1440, d. b May 1493
        Citations
        [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VI, page 254. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
        [S8] BP1999 volume 1, page 4. See link for full details for this source. Hereinafter cited as. [S8]
        [S6286] Clan MacFarlane and associated clans genealogy, online http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info. Hereinafter cited as Clan MacFarlane.

      • Citation:

        https://www.thepeerage.com/p10940.htm#i109392

  4. Wikipedia - Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow
      • Source text:

        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (before 1397 – c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        Biography
        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and his wife, Jacoba Douglas,[1][2] James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father Sir John Hamilton granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        Marriage and children
        James Hamilton married Janet Livingston before 1422, when he received a charter of the lands of Schawis from his father-in-law, Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar.[3] By Janet Livingston, Hamilton had six children:

        *James Hamilton, 6th Laird of Cadzow - later made a Lord of Parliament as 1st Lord Hamilton
        *Alexander Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Silvertonhill
        *John Hamilton
        *Gavin Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Dalzell
        *Agnes Hamilton - married Sir James Hamilton of Preston
        *Elizabeth Hamilton - married Chalmers of Gadgirth

        References
        Burke's Peerage, 1938 Edition, 59
        The Scots Peerage, Vol. IV, edited by Sir James Balfour Paul, p. 346
        "The Scot's Peerage". 1907. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
        Balfour Paul, Sir James, The Scots Peerage Vol IV. Edinburgh 1907

      • Citation:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

      • Source text:

        As for the confusion concerning the Hamilton Y-DNA and the Douglas Y-DNA.
        In one instance of the Douglas Y-DNA: Y-DNA I-L338 (Y-DNA I-L1237 SNP L-338) for all of Walter Hamilton of Darngaber's male line? (Possibly, as he was my Great-grandfather, on my Grandmother's side) Y-DNA is possibly I-Y6635 per Descendent of Walter Hamilton of Darngaber, (potentially one of my FTDNA matches). BOTH I-L338 (also known as I1a2a1a1a) and related I-Y6635 (also known as I1a3a1a1a1, Parent Branch: I-Y6624) are of Haplogroup I-M253 also known as I1 (a Y chromosome haplogroup). I-L338 is a well-known Haplogroup of the Douglases. (I-L1237 of Y6633)

        Walter Hamilton of Darngaber (clearly not "of Cadzow") BIRTH 1392 • Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, DEATH 20 MAY 1441 • Trabzon, Trabzon, Turkey and his descendants were descended from the Douglases and not the Hamiltons.

        Sources:

        http://dgmweb.net/DNA/Thompson/ThompsonDNA-results.html
        https://www.familytreedna.com/public/Douglas?iframe=yresults
        http://www.yseq.net/product_info.php?products_id=21060
        https://haplogroup.org/ystory/i-y6635/
        http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/g/a/gah4/HamDNA/B1.pdf
        (And it is not unreasonable to, at least, consider the uncle of Walter Hamilton (of Darngarber, not "of Cadzow"), John Hamilton of Fingalton as not being a Hamilton either as their Y-DNA has been compared. Assumptions to the contrary are very risky.)

        James Hamilton 5th Baron of Cadzow was the son of Sir John Hamilton 4th of Cadzow, but his paternity was considered uncertain (by some people who had ulterior motives). DNA testing of specifically selected alleged Hamilton descendants (not proven) in the Hamilton Surname DNA Project (even though the Hamilton Surname DNA Project has shown possible flaws in research and in Wikitree coordination, as noted by those who object to his paternity) seemingly suggested to some that Sir John 4th of Cadzow (who chose James to be the 5th of Cadzow) was not his biological father. The male-line descendants of James' possible brother Walter Hamilton of Darngaber (who might not be a Hamilton) and his possible uncle John Hamilton of Butterknock (who also might not be a Hamilton) are similar while the descendants of James the 4th are distinct (R1b (R-M343); ‎R-M269, Y-DNA R1b1a1a2), possibly suggesting to some that his biological father was not a Hamilton. Or suggesting to others that the 5th of Cadzow was the son of the 4th of Cadzow, but Walter Hamilton of Darngaber and Walter's uncle John Hamilton of Butterknock were born of unknown fathers of the same Clan. And yes this applies to Alexander Hamilton, first Secretary of the USA Treasury also, whose father is possibly unknown (has been debated for years) but whose actual father could have been from the same Clan as the father of Walter Hamilton of Darngaber. (By the way, all of the ancient ancestors of the Hamiltons of Cadzow were Y-DNA R1b (R-M343); ‎R-M269, Y-DNA R1b1a1a2) including Ivar Ragnarsson King of Dublin and York "Ivar the boneless").
        https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/75649477/person/44323376800/facts
        This study is incorrect: http://www.personal.psu.edu/users/g/a/gah4/HamDNA/Results.html
        This wikitree page is incorrect: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hamilton-1093
        This Wikipedia page was incorrect, but has now been corrected: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow
        https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/75649477/person/44323376800/facts

      • Citation:

        https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/126486535?p=52671518&returnLabel=Sir%20James%20Hamilton%205th%20of%20Cadzow%20(LTY1-9QL)&returnUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.familysearch.org%2Ftree%2Fperson%2Fmemories%2FLTY1-9QL

  5. LTY1-9QL FamilySearch.org
      • Source text:

        About Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow
        JAMES HAMILTON OF CADZOW
        Evidence from the National Records of Scotland
        18 April 1426: REX concessit JACOBO DE HOMMYLTOUN, filio et apparenti heredi Jac. de H. de Cadiou, terras de Dalserf, in baronia de Machane, vic. Lanark; - ad regem spectantes ratione eschaete - ex eo quod predictus Jac. de H. dictas terras fe facto contulit David de H, fratri suo, per cartam sub sigillo suo, ac ipsum saisiri fecit corporaliter in eisdem, absque consensu regis seu gubernatoris in absentia regis, sive confirmatione quacunque debita de eisdem : - Tenend. dicto Jac. et heredibus ejus in feodo. Test. Patricius, Comes de Boithuile, Johannes, Dominus Drummond, Willelmus, Episcopus Aberdonensis, David, Dux de Montrose. Registrum Magni Sigilli Regum Scotorum. The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland, A.D. 1424-1513: charter number 44 on p. 8

        From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        http://thepeerage.com/p10940.htm#i109392

        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow [1]

        M, #109392,
        d. before May 1441
        Last Edited=6 Jan 2011
        Consanguinity Index=0.02%
        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422.[2]

        He died before May 1441.[1]

        He was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland.[1]
        He was invested as a Knight in 1430.[1]
        He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.[1]
        Child of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        1. Mary Hamilton+
        Children of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow and Janet Livingston

        1. James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton+1 b. c 1415, d. 6 Nov 1479
        2. Alexander Hamilton2 b. a 1415
        3. John Hamilton+2 b. a 1416, d. b 23 Oct 1455
        4. Gavin Hamilton+2 b. a 1417
        Citations

        1. [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VI, page 254. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
        2. [S8] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition, 2 volumes (Crans, Switzerland: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 1999), volume 1, page 4. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition.
        From the English Wikipedia page on James Hamilton of Cadzow:

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and Janet Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        ---

        James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        One of the hostages for the ransom of King James I. In 1424 he was created 1st lord hamilton in 1445.

        James Hamilton Birth: circa 1396 Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, (Present UK) Death: circa 1440 (44) Kinneil House, Boness, West Lothian, Scotland, (Present UK) Immediate Family: Son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Jacoba Hamilton (Douglas)
        Husband of Janet Bruce Father of James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton; Alexander Hamilton; John Hamilton; Gavin Hamilton, Provost of the Collegiate Church of Bothwell and Sir James Hamilton, Baron of Cadzow Brother of David Hamilton; Katherine Baillie (Hamilton); Walter Hamilton of Darngaber; Thomas Hamilton; John Hamilton ; and Alexander Hamilton « less
        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and his wife, Janet Douglas, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father Sir John Hamilton granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        He was the son of Janet (or Jacoba) Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, but his paternity is uncertain. Douglas's husband was Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and it was long thought that he was James's father. However DNA testing of Hamilton descendants in the Hamilton Surname DNA Project suggests that Sir John was not his biological father.[1] The male-line descendants of James' brother Walter and his uncle John are similar while the descendants of James are distinct, suggesting his biological father was not a Hamilton.

        James Hamilton married Janet Livingston before 1422, when he received a charter of the lands of Schawis from his father-in-law, Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar. By Janet Livingston, Hamilton had six children: James Hamilton, 6th Laird of Cadzow - later made a Lord of Parliament as 1st Lord Hamilton Alexander Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Silvertonhill John Hamilton Gavin Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Dalzell Agnes Hamilton - married Sir James Hamilton of Preston Elizabeth Hamilton - married Chalmers of Gadgirth

        James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas. He married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422. He died before May 1441.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland. He was invested as a Knight in 1430. He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.

      • Citation:

        https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LTY1-9QL

      • Source text:

        About Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow
        JAMES HAMILTON OF CADZOW
        Evidence from the National Records of Scotland
        18 April 1426: REX concessit JACOBO DE HOMMYLTOUN, filio et apparenti heredi Jac. de H. de Cadiou, terras de Dalserf, in baronia de Machane, vic. Lanark; - ad regem spectantes ratione eschaete - ex eo quod predictus Jac. de H. dictas terras fe facto contulit David de H, fratri suo, per cartam sub sigillo suo, ac ipsum saisiri fecit corporaliter in eisdem, absque consensu regis seu gubernatoris in absentia regis, sive confirmatione quacunque debita de eisdem : - Tenend. dicto Jac. et heredibus ejus in feodo. Test. Patricius, Comes de Boithuile, Johannes, Dominus Drummond, Willelmus, Episcopus Aberdonensis, David, Dux de Montrose. Registrum Magni Sigilli Regum Scotorum. The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland, A.D. 1424-1513: charter number 44 on p. 8

        From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        http://thepeerage.com/p10940.htm#i109392

        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow [1]

        M, #109392,
        d. before May 1441
        Last Edited=6 Jan 2011
        Consanguinity Index=0.02%
        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422.[2]

        He died before May 1441.[1]

        He was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland.[1]
        He was invested as a Knight in 1430.[1]
        He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.[1]
        Child of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        1. Mary Hamilton+
        Children of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow and Janet Livingston

        1. James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton+1 b. c 1415, d. 6 Nov 1479
        2. Alexander Hamilton2 b. a 1415
        3. John Hamilton+2 b. a 1416, d. b 23 Oct 1455
        4. Gavin Hamilton+2 b. a 1417
        Citations

        1. [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VI, page 254. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
        2. [S8] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition, 2 volumes (Crans, Switzerland: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 1999), volume 1, page 4. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition.
        From the English Wikipedia page on James Hamilton of Cadzow:

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and Janet Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        ---

        James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        One of the hostages for the ransom of King James I. In 1424 he was created 1st lord hamilton in 1445.

        James Hamilton Birth: circa 1396 Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, (Present UK) Death: circa 1440 (44) Kinneil House, Boness, West Lothian, Scotland, (Present UK) Immediate Family: Son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Jacoba Hamilton (Douglas)
        Husband of Janet Bruce Father of James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton; Alexander Hamilton; John Hamilton; Gavin Hamilton, Provost of the Collegiate Church of Bothwell and Sir James Hamilton, Baron of Cadzow Brother of David Hamilton; Katherine Baillie (Hamilton); Walter Hamilton of Darngaber; Thomas Hamilton; John Hamilton ; and Alexander Hamilton « less
        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and his wife, Janet Douglas, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father Sir John Hamilton granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        He was the son of Janet (or Jacoba) Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, but his paternity is uncertain. Douglas's husband was Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and it was long thought that he was James's father. However DNA testing of Hamilton descendants in the Hamilton Surname DNA Project suggests that Sir John was not his biological father.[1] The male-line descendants of James' brother Walter and his uncle John are similar while the descendants of James are distinct, suggesting his biological father was not a Hamilton.

        James Hamilton married Janet Livingston before 1422, when he received a charter of the lands of Schawis from his father-in-law, Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar. By Janet Livingston, Hamilton had six children: James Hamilton, 6th Laird of Cadzow - later made a Lord of Parliament as 1st Lord Hamilton Alexander Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Silvertonhill John Hamilton Gavin Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Dalzell Agnes Hamilton - married Sir James Hamilton of Preston Elizabeth Hamilton - married Chalmers of Gadgirth

        James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas. He married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422. He died before May 1441.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland. He was invested as a Knight in 1430. He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.

      • Citation:

        https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LTY1-9QL

      • Source text:

        About Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow
        JAMES HAMILTON OF CADZOW
        Evidence from the National Records of Scotland
        18 April 1426: REX concessit JACOBO DE HOMMYLTOUN, filio et apparenti heredi Jac. de H. de Cadiou, terras de Dalserf, in baronia de Machane, vic. Lanark; - ad regem spectantes ratione eschaete - ex eo quod predictus Jac. de H. dictas terras fe facto contulit David de H, fratri suo, per cartam sub sigillo suo, ac ipsum saisiri fecit corporaliter in eisdem, absque consensu regis seu gubernatoris in absentia regis, sive confirmatione quacunque debita de eisdem : - Tenend. dicto Jac. et heredibus ejus in feodo. Test. Patricius, Comes de Boithuile, Johannes, Dominus Drummond, Willelmus, Episcopus Aberdonensis, David, Dux de Montrose. Registrum Magni Sigilli Regum Scotorum. The Register of the Great Seal of Scotland, A.D. 1424-1513: charter number 44 on p. 8

        From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        http://thepeerage.com/p10940.htm#i109392

        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow [1]

        M, #109392,
        d. before May 1441
        Last Edited=6 Jan 2011
        Consanguinity Index=0.02%
        Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422.[2]

        He died before May 1441.[1]

        He was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland.[1]
        He was invested as a Knight in 1430.[1]
        He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.[1]
        Child of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow

        1. Mary Hamilton+
        Children of Sir James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow and Janet Livingston

        1. James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton+1 b. c 1415, d. 6 Nov 1479
        2. Alexander Hamilton2 b. a 1415
        3. John Hamilton+2 b. a 1416, d. b 23 Oct 1455
        4. Gavin Hamilton+2 b. a 1417
        Citations

        1. [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume VI, page 254. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
        2. [S8] Charles Mosley, editor, Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition, 2 volumes (Crans, Switzerland: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 1999), volume 1, page 4. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 106th edition.
        From the English Wikipedia page on James Hamilton of Cadzow:

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and Janet Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hamilton_of_Cadzow

        ---

        James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        One of the hostages for the ransom of King James I. In 1424 he was created 1st lord hamilton in 1445.

        James Hamilton Birth: circa 1396 Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland, (Present UK) Death: circa 1440 (44) Kinneil House, Boness, West Lothian, Scotland, (Present UK) Immediate Family: Son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Jacoba Hamilton (Douglas)
        Husband of Janet Bruce Father of James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton; Alexander Hamilton; John Hamilton; Gavin Hamilton, Provost of the Collegiate Church of Bothwell and Sir James Hamilton, Baron of Cadzow Brother of David Hamilton; Katherine Baillie (Hamilton); Walter Hamilton of Darngaber; Thomas Hamilton; John Hamilton ; and Alexander Hamilton « less
        Sir James Hamilton of Cadzow, 5th Laird of Cadzow (b. bef. 1397 – d. c. 1440) was a Scottish nobleman and royal hostage.

        The son of Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and his wife, Janet Douglas, James Hamilton is first attested to in 1397. In a writ of that year, his father Sir John Hamilton granted him the lands and privileges of Kinneil, in return for the superiority of all property that had been promised to him through his marriage after his attainment of majority.

        Hamilton next comes to notice in a Safe-conduct issued by Henry V of England to travel to Calthorpe Castle in Lincolnshire.

        In 1424, Hamilton was one of the Scottish Lords allowed passage to Durham to visit the captive James I of Scotland. In the same year, he was one of many Scots hostages given to the English as security for the payment of the ransom of the newly freed King of Scots. His estate was valued at 500 merks.

        Hamilton was confined first at Fotheringay Castle, then at Dover Castle. He appears to have been released by 1426. He was invested as a knight before 1430.

        Hamilton died not later than 1441, when his son is described as Lord of Cadzow.

        He was the son of Janet (or Jacoba) Douglas, daughter of Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Dalkeith, but his paternity is uncertain. Douglas's husband was Sir John Hamilton of Cadzow and it was long thought that he was James's father. However DNA testing of Hamilton descendants in the Hamilton Surname DNA Project suggests that Sir John was not his biological father.[1] The male-line descendants of James' brother Walter and his uncle John are similar while the descendants of James are distinct, suggesting his biological father was not a Hamilton.

        James Hamilton married Janet Livingston before 1422, when he received a charter of the lands of Schawis from his father-in-law, Sir Alexander Livingston of Callendar. By Janet Livingston, Hamilton had six children: James Hamilton, 6th Laird of Cadzow - later made a Lord of Parliament as 1st Lord Hamilton Alexander Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Silvertonhill John Hamilton Gavin Hamilton - ancestor of the Hamiltons of Dalzell Agnes Hamilton - married Sir James Hamilton of Preston Elizabeth Hamilton - married Chalmers of Gadgirth

        James Hamilton, 5th of Cadzow was the son of Sir John Hamilton, 4th of Cadzow and Janet Douglas. He married Janet Livingston, daughter of Sir Alexander Livingston and Janet Dundas, circa 20 October 1422. He died before May 1441.

        Between 1424 and 1426 he was held as a hostage for the ransom of King James I of Scotland. He was invested as a Knight in 1430. He lived at Cadzow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.

      • Citation:

        https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LTY1-9QL