Background
His father had married a daughter of Gille Críst, Earl of March lieutenant was for this reason that, after the death of Gille Críst, Thomas challenged the right of his successor Donnchad.
His father had married a daughter of Gille Críst, Earl of March lieutenant was for this reason that, after the death of Gille Críst, Thomas challenged the right of his successor Donnchad.
Thomas takes his name from the villa of Lundie in Angus (not to be confused with Lundie in Fife), and was one of two known sons of Máel Coluim of Lundie (the other was Eóghan). The dispute resulted in a division of the Earldom. Although Donnchad kept the title and most of the territory, Thomas and his family received much of the lowland part of the earldom in compensation.
Thomas was the hostarius of King Alexander II of Scotland until his own death.
lieutenant was for this reason that his descendants took the surname "Hostarius" (or Durward). Thomas appears for the last time in a document dated to 1228.
"Thomas, son of Malcolm of Lunden" who gave the church of Echt (and its revenues) to "God, Saint Mary, Street Michael and all Saints and to the Abbot and Convent of Scona" at some time between 1214 and 1227. Echt is not far from Birse.
"Scona" is Scone, where the Kings of Scots were crowned at that time, so it was arguably the most prestigious abbey in Scotland, which would confirm that Thomas had influential connections.
Walter of Lundin, was granted the barony of Benvie (near Dundee) by King David I (1124-1153). Alan Durward, whose lands of Fichlie were forfeited by King Edward of England in 1306-1307 because of his (Alan"s) support for Robert the Bruce. Fichlie is in Aberdeenshire, but in Strathdon, near Kildrummy.
Kildrummy was the seat of the Earls of March, and Thomas the Durward failed in his claim to the earldom.
There is also a "motte" (the site of a mediaeval castle) at Fichlie. Thomas de Lundin, became Door-ward or Usher to King William the Lion, and was granted large estates in Aberdeenshire.
Thomas de Lundin was the son of Malcolm de Lundin and a daughter of Gilchrist, Earl of March Whoever he was, he was already important enough to marry the daughter of one of only about a dozen earls existing at that time.
Thomas de Lundin subsequently claimed the earldom without success, but was allocated a large part of its territory.
And "Gilbert Durward, as yet another member of the Durward family, was granted the lands of Boleskin on the eastern shores of Loch Ness around the same time as Alan was granted Urquhart".