Prince
David of Scotland held Cotentin in northern France, given to him by King
Henry I of England some time after 1106. Soon after, Hugh de Morville joined David's small military retinue in France. In 1113, following his marriage, Prince David was made
Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton, and also became Prince of the Cumbrians, having forced his brother King
Alexander I to hand over territory in southern Scotland David achieved this with the help of his French followers David endowed Hugh with the estates of
Bozeat and
Whissendine, within his
Huntingdon earldom as his wife's dowery. During David's conquest of northern England after 1136, Hugh was also given the lordship of
Appleby, essentially northern
Westmorland. These lands later formed the
feudal barony of Appleby. After the death of
Edward,
Constable of Scotland, almost certainly in 1138 at the
Battle of the Standard, Hugh was awarded that office. In addition "he obtained land and lordships which placed him in the very first rank of the Anglo-Norman nobility in Scotland. These comprised the Lordship of the Regality of Lauderdale, together with detached estates at Saltoun,
Haddingtonshire, Nenthorn and Newton Don,
Berwickshire, at Dryburgh on the Tweed opposite Old
Melrose, and probably also at Heriot in
Midlothian. In the west of Scotland he was given the whole of the Lordship of Cunningham, the northernmost third of Ayrshire. Lauderdale, with a
castle at Lauder, was held, it seems, for six knights' service; Cunningham possibly for two, with a castle at Irvine." In 1316-20 Cunningham was granted to Robert Stewart for three knight's service. In 1150 Hugh made a further mark on the history of southern Scotland by founding
Dryburgh Abbey for
Premonstratensian canons regular, where he died as a canon in 1162. ==Marriage and children==