Walter was a member of the
Fitz Alan family. He was born in about 1110. Walter was a son of
Alan fitz Flaad (died 1121
×) and Avelina de Hesdin. Alan and Avelina had three sons: Jordan,
William and Walter. Walter's father was a
Breton knight who was granted lands in
Shropshire by
Henry I, King of England. Previous to this, Alan had acted as
steward to the
bishops of Dol in
Brittany. Walter was a minor English landholder. He held
North Stoke, north of
Arundel, by way of a grant from his brother, William. There is reason to suspect that Walter also held
Manhood, south of
Chichester. He also held land at "Conelon" or "Couten", a place that possibly refers to
Cound in Shropshire. Walter appears to have arrived in Scotland in about 1136, during the reign of
David I, King of Scotland. Following Henry's death in 1135, the Fitz Alans evidently sided with David in his support of the
contested English royal claims of Henry's daughter,
Matilda. Certainly, both William and Walter witnessed acts of Matilda in 1141. In any event, the date of Walter's introduction into Scotland may be marked by the original part of the so-called "foundation charter" of
Melrose Abbey, which records Walter as a witness. as he is depicted in a mid-twelfth-century royal charter Walter served as David's or (steward). He served in this capacity for three successive Scottish kings: David,
Malcolm IV and
William I. Walter is increasingly attested by royal charters from about 1150, and it is possible that it was at about this time that David granted him the stewardship to be held heritably. As the king's steward, Walter would have been responsible for the day-to-day running of the king's household. Whilst the
chamberlain was responsible for the king's sleeping compartments, the steward oversaw the king's hall. It is possible that David sought to replace the Gaelic office of ("food-divider") with that of the steward. This office certainly appears to have been a precursor to the stewardship. Walter's ancestors were stewards to the Breton lords of Dol. In fact, his elder brother, Jordan, inherited this stewardship from their father, and held this office at the time of Walter's own establishment in Scotland. As such, it is probable that Walter possessed a degree of experience in the profession. Walter's domain included the depicted regions of
Strathgryfe,
Renfrew, Mearns and
North Kyle.
Clydesdale and
South Kyle were royal lordships, whilst
Cunningham was a Morville lordship. Walter lived during a period in history when Scottish monarchs sought to attract men to their kingdom by promising them gifts of land. To such kings, royal authority depended upon their ability to give away territories in the peripheries of the realm. Although the twelfth-century Scottish monarchs did not create any new
earldoms for the incoming
Anglo-Norman magnates, they did grant them provincial lordships. The most important of these mid-century colonial establishments were:
Annandale for
Robert de Brus; Upper
Eskdale and Ewesdale for
Robert Avenel;
Lauderdale and
Cunningham for
Hugh de Morville;
Liddesdale for
Ranulf de Sules; and Mearns,
Strathgryfe,
Renfrew and
North Kyle for Walter himself. As a result of their tenure in high office, and their dominating regional influence, these provincial lords were equal to the native Scottish earls in all but rank. ,
Legerwood and Mow from
Malcolm IV, King of Scotland In 1161×1162, Malcolm confirmed Walter's stewardship, and confirmed David's grants of Renfrew,
Paisley,
Pollock, "Talahret",
Cathcart, Dripps, Mearns,
Eaglesham,
Lochwinnoch and
Innerwick. He also granted Walter West
Partick,
Inchinnan,
Stenton, Hassenden,
Legerwood and
Birkenside, as well as a toft with twenty acres in every
burgh and
demesne in the realm. For this grant, Walter owed his sovereign the service of five
knights. The grant of lodgings in every important royal settlement would have only been entrusted to people particularly close to the king, and to those who were expected to travel with him. The impressive list of twenty-nine eminent men who attested this transaction appears to be evidence that the proceedings took place in a public setting before the royal court. At some point during his career, Walter received North Kyle from either David or Malcolm. Also in 1161×1162—perhaps on the same date as Malcolm's aforesaid charter to Walter—the king granted Walter the lands of Mow for the service of one knight. There is reason to suspect that David's original grant of lands to Walter took place in 1136. Certainly in 1139×1146, Walter witnessed a charter of David to the cathedral of
Glasgow in which the king invested the cathedral with assets from
Carrick, Cunningham, Strathgryfe and
Kyle. In 1165, Walter is stated to have held lands worth two
knight's fees in Shropshire. As such, the vast majority of his holdings were located north of the
Anglo-Scottish border. ==Ecclesiastical actions==