John Lyon, 8th Lord Glamis renounced his allegiance to Mary, Queen of Scots and served under the Regents Moray and Lennox. The king had taken possession of Glamis Castle and plundered it. Her young son was also sentenced to death when he came of age, however the king died before he had grown up and so he avoided the death sentence and was released. Lady Glamis was accused of witchcraft and despite speaking boldly in her own defense, she was burnt at the stake on castle hill in Edinburgh on 3 December 1540. He married Janet Douglas, Lady Glamis, granddaughter of Archibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Angus who was known as Bell the Cat, and after Douglas died she suffered terribly for the hatred that James V of Scotland had towards all of the name of Douglas. John Lyon, 6th Lord Glamis was a quarrelsome man with a quick temper. He had previously been sent to England as a hostage in 1424 for the ransom of James I of Scotland. He became Master of the Household of Scotland and a Privy Councillor. John's son, Patrick Lyon was created Lord Glamis in 1445. Sir John Lyon's son, another John Lyon further strengthened the royal ties by marrying a granddaughter of Robert II. Lyon was also granted the barony of Kinghorn, however he was later killed in a quarrel with Sir James Lindsay of Crawford. Sir John Lyon married king Robert's daughter, Princess Jean Stewart which brought him the lands of Tannadice on the River Esk. Robert II of Scotland granted to Sir John Lyon, who was known as the White Lyon due to his complexion, the thanage of Glamis and five years later he was made Chamberlain of Scotland. In 1105 Roger de Leonne witnessed a charter from Edgar to Dunfermline Abbey. Edgar was victorious and the de Leons received lands that were later called Glen Lyon in Perthshire. At the end of the eleventh century the de Leons had come north with Edgar, son of Malcolm III of Scotland to fight against his uncle, Donald Bane. However it is more generally accepted that the Lyons descend from a French family called de Léon. Genealogist Sir Iain Moncreiffe stated that the Lyons were a family of Celtic origin and that they were descended from a younger son of the Clan Lamont.
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