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Joan Stewart, Countess of Morton

Princess Joan Stewart, Countess of Morton, also called Joanna, was the daughter of James I, King of Scotland, and the wife of James Douglas, 1st Earl of Morton. She was known, in Latin, as the muta domina [mute lady] of Dalkeith.

Life
Born in Scotland 1428, she was the third daughter of James I of Scotland and Joan Beaufort. Joan had two younger brothers, including the future king of Scotland, James II, and five sisters. and was known as muta domina or "the mute lady". Joan was reported to have used sign language to communicate, even in public (although it was considered at that time to be impolite). Joan was originally contracted to marry her cousin, James Douglas, 3rd Earl of Angus, when she was 13 years old. James was born on 18 October 1440, but he died (without issue) in 1446 before the marriage could take place. In 1445 Joan was sent to France and did not return home to Scotland until 1457. Joan married another James Douglas, the 4th Baron Dalkeith, before 15 May 1459, who at the time of their marriage was raised to the peerage as the first Earl of Morton. They were granted a dispensation on 7 January 1463/4 for being consanguineous in the second and third degrees. Joan and her husband James were both aware of their close relationships but were persuaded to marry by her brother King James II of Scotland and applied for the dispensation to legitimize their marriage. Countess Joan died in 1493, predeceasing her husband, James, by four months. They had four children. ==Children==
Children
Together Joan and her husband James had four children: • Sir John Douglas, 2nd Earl of Morton (bef. 1466 – 1513), married to Janet Crichton, daughter of Patrick Crichton of Cranston-Riddel. • James, (d. aft. 1480) appeared in several writs 1466–1480. • Janet, married bef. 1 February 1480–81 to Sir Patrick Hepburn, 1st Earl of Bothwell. • Elizabeth, mentioned in a charter of 1479 after which nothing further is known of her. ==The Morton Monument==
The Morton Monument
The Earl and Countess of Morton were buried together in the choir of the parish church of St. Nicholas Buccleuch, known as the Dalkeith Collegiate Church, in Dalkeith, south of Fife and east of Edinburgh, in Midlothian, Scotland. Known as the Morton Monument, their tombs are covered with their stone effigies, complete with their armorial bearings. This is believed to be the world's oldest image of a known deaf person. ==Ancestry==
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