John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Atholl
John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Atholl was the son of John Stewart, 2nd Earl of Atholl and Lady Janet Campbell, a daughter of Archibald Campbell, 2nd Earl of Argyll and Elizabeth Stuart.
The Scottish chronicle writer Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie recorded that John Stewart built a lavish temporary palace near Pitlochry to entertain James V of Scotland and his mother Margaret Tudor while hunting. The Palace was made of tree branches, but moated and hung with tapestry and silk inside with glass windows and the lavish food for three days cost £1000. When the royal party left, the Earl's Highland men burnt the lodging to the astonishment of the Italian Papal envoy present who was told that this was local custom.
In July 1536, James V granted the Earl a free barony of the lands of Glenlochy in Perthshire. The Earl was involved in promoting royal rule in Perthshire. He became involved in the Campbell family struggle with the MacGregors, and in October 1530 expelled the MacGregors from the house of the Isle of Loch Rannoch. The Earl was also a rival of the Menzies family who held lands in the same region. A recent historian, Jamie Cameron, suggests that the King's hunting trip described by Pitscottie was a royal visit to the area in September 1532 recorded in official documents, in part to adjudicate on local issues.
John Stewart died in 1542, possibly from a fever caught during the military campaign on the English border that lead to the Battle of Solway Moss.Marriage and children
He married Grizzel Rattray and was succeeded as Earl by their son John Stewart, 4th Earl of Atholl.