1295 – d. 17 October 1346 at the Battle of Neville's Cross, Durham, England),[9] in turn son of Sir Malcolm Drummond, 9th Thane of Lennox, Chief of Clan Drummond (b. after 1270, d. 1325), who fought in the Battle of Dunbar in 1296, where he was captured by the English, and in 1301 was again captured by the English, by his wife ... de Graham, daughter of Sir Patrick de Graham of Kincardine.
[citation needed] She married John Stewart (the future Robert III of Scotland) before 31 May 1367, after they obtained a papal dispensation allowing their marriage on 13 March 1366.
A parliament at Scone assigned Annabella an annuity of 2500 merks from the great customs of several Scottish burghs to support her royal household, in 1891.
[3] King Robert, an invalid since 1384 as a result of a riding accident, grew increasingly despondent and incompetent throughout his reign and was not capable of governing.
Her presence is still recalled in the sandstone font, decorated with angels and heraldry, which she presented to the parish church of the town, one of Scotland's finest surviving pieces of late medieval sculpture.