Duke of Gordon
The Duke of Gordon is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, created on 13 January 1876 for Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond, 6th Duke of Lennox, and 3rd Duke of Aubigny, in recognition of the Gordon family's historical estates in Scotland.[1] This second creation merged the title with the Richmond and Lennox peerages through inheritance, and it is presently held by Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 11th Duke of Richmond, 6th Duke of Gordon (born 1955), who resides at Goodwood House in Sussex.[2] An earlier iteration of the dukedom existed in the Peerage of Scotland from 1684 until its extinction in 1836, originating with George Gordon, 4th Marquess of Huntly, whose family wielded considerable influence in northeastern Scotland as chiefs of Clan Gordon.[3][4] The Scottish Dukes of Gordon were notable for their involvement in national affairs, including military leadership and estate management, with figures such as the 4th Duchess, Jane Gordon, renowned for her energetic recruitment of Highlanders into British regiments during the Napoleonic era and her patronage of Edinburgh's intellectual circles.[5] Successive holders contributed to the formation of the Gordon Highlanders infantry regiment, reflecting the family's martial tradition rooted in the clan's historical feuds and alliances.[6] The extinction of the original line in 1836 stemmed from the 5th Duke's lack of legitimate male issue, leading to the dispersal of estates primarily to female descendants, which facilitated the later revival through the Gordon-Lennox lineage.[4]Origins of the Title
Clan Gordon Heritage
The Gordon family emerged in the Scottish Borders, specifically Berwickshire, during the 12th century, holding the barony of Gordon under feudal tenure from the crown.[6] Early records trace their presence to figures like Richard de Gordon in the reign of David I (1124–1153), with the family deriving Norman origins possibly from a place named Gourdon in Normandy or Berwickshire.[4] A pivotal early member, Adam de Gordon, participated in the Seventh Crusade in 1270, accompanying Louis IX of France, which is reflected in the clan's crest of a Saracen's head and motto "Bydand" (abiding or standing fast).[7] Initially aligned with English overlords amid Anglo-Scottish border tensions, the Gordons rendered homage to Edward I in 1296, as did Sir Adam Gordon, the fourth of his name.[8] However, feudal loyalties shifted decisively to the Scottish cause during the Wars of Independence; Adam de Gordon supported Robert the Bruce, acknowledging him as king and fighting at the Battle of Bannockburn on 23 June 1314, contributing to the decisive Scottish victory.[9] The family engaged in border warfare, with Adam de Gordon serving as Warden of the Marches, defending against English incursions and managing feudal obligations in contested territories.[10] By the 15th century, the Gordons expanded northward into Aberdeenshire through land acquisitions, royal grants, and marital alliances that consolidated power. Alexander Seton, a scion of the Seton family, married Elizabeth Gordon, the sole heiress of Adam Gordon of that Ilk, assuming the Gordon surname and inheriting core estates around 1420–1430, thereby founding the dominant Huntly lineage.[11] In recognition of military service against the Douglases, James II granted him the lordship of Huntly circa 1449, elevating the family as regional magnates; he was created Earl of Huntly shortly thereafter.[12] This strategic foothold in the northeast, coupled with later unions such as Alexander's marriage to Elizabeth Crichton (daughter of William, Lord Crichton), secured additional lands and influence, establishing the Gordons as a major force under subsequent monarchs like James IV, who favored them with offices including justiciarship of the north.[13]Establishment of the First Dukedom (1684)
The dukedom of Gordon was created by letters patent dated 1 November 1684, when King Charles II elevated George Gordon, 4th Marquess of Huntly (c. 1643–1716), to the rank of Duke of Gordon, with subsidiary titles including Marquess of Huntly, Earl of Huntly and of Enzie, Viscount of Inverness, and Lord Badenoch, Lochaber, Strathavon, Balmore, Auchindoun, Garochie, and Kincardine.[14] This elevation built upon the family's existing peerage, originating with the earldom of Huntly granted around 1445 to Alexander Seton (later Gordon) for service to the Scottish crown, and the marquessate of Huntly conferred on 7 April 1599 to George Gordon, 6th Earl of Huntly, affirming their regional dominance in the northeast.[15][16] The patent, reportedly urged by the royalist John Graham of Claverhouse, reflected Charles II's post-Restoration policy of ennobling key supporters to secure loyalty amid ongoing factional tensions in Scotland.[14] The Gordons' advancement rewarded their steadfast royalism during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, where predecessors like James Gordon, 2nd Marquess of Huntly (c. 1620–1649), actively backed Charles I's cause, raising forces against Covenanters and suffering execution at the hands of parliamentary forces in 1649, with titles briefly attainted before restoration in 1660.[17] George Gordon himself, inheriting amid family forfeitures, had navigated the Cromwellian era's upheavals, emerging as a Catholic-leaning adherent to the Stuarts at a time when Charles II sought to bolster pro-monarchy nobles against presbyterian resistance.[18] This loyalty contrasted with broader Scottish divisions, positioning the Gordons as pivotal in northeastern power structures. The new dukedom immediately augmented the family's precedence in the Scottish peerage, placing the Duke among the realm's highest non-royal ranks and reinforcing governance over extensive estates centered in Aberdeenshire, Banffshire, and Moray, encompassing thousands of acres productive in agriculture and timber.[3] These holdings, rooted in medieval grants and expanded through royal favor, underpinned the clan's military recruitment capabilities and local influence, though the title's creation also invited scrutiny from rival protestant factions wary of the Gordons' recusant sympathies.[19]Dukes of the First Creation
Profiles of the First to Third Dukes
George Gordon, 1st Duke of Gordon (c. 1643 – 7 December 1716), served as constable of Edinburgh Castle from 1685 and registered for military service in 1673.[20] He opposed William III's policies by holding Edinburgh Castle for James VII in 1689 during the initial stages of the Glorious Revolution, surrendering only after negotiations.[21] Appointed to the Order of the Thistle, Gordon's governance reflected administrative duties in northeastern Scotland, managing clan affairs amid shifting political allegiances. His death occurred amidst family religious divisions, as his son later converted to Catholicism, straining relations with Protestant kin.[22] Alexander Gordon, 2nd Duke of Gordon (c. 1678 – 28 November 1728), succeeded his father in 1716 after serving as Marquess of Huntly.[22] He converted to Catholicism, influenced by his mother Lady Elizabeth Howard, as evidenced in correspondence dated 21 April 1711.[22] Militarily, he joined the 1715 Jacobite rising, leading 500 horsemen and 2,000 foot to Perth by 9 October 1715 and present near Sheriffmuir on 13 November 1715, but pragmatically surrendered on 12 February 1716, securing a pardon by pledging to undermine the rebellion.[22] Despite brief Jacobite involvement, he aligned with the Hanoverian regime post-1715, demonstrating support for the Union of 1707 through estate stabilization rather than overt opposition. Administratively, he managed extensive Gordon lands, using Gordon Castle as a strategic base, including for Jacobite meetings on 11 June 1715, while maintaining European diplomatic ties via travels to Prussia, Tuscany, and Germany from 1705 onward.[22] Cosmo George Gordon, 3rd Duke of Gordon (27 April 1720 – 5 August 1752), inherited the title at age eight upon his father's death in 1728.[23] He served as a Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords from 1747 to 1752, claiming £22,300 in compensation under the 1747 Jurisdiction Act but receiving only £5,282, reflecting ongoing financial pressures from his predecessor's expenditures.[23] Married to his cousin Catherine Gordon on 3 September 1741, his administrative role focused on estate oversight amid fiscal strains, with limited broader political influence due to his youth and early death at age 32 in Breteuil, France.[24]Profiles of the Fourth and Fifth Dukes
Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon (18 June 1743 – 17 June 1827), succeeded his father Cosmo George Gordon, 3rd Duke, upon the latter's death on 5 August 1752, inheriting vast estates in northeastern Scotland at the age of nine.) Educated through a Grand Tour of Europe, he focused on rural pursuits and estate improvements, including the rebuilding of Gordon Castle to designs by architect Robert Baxter of Edinburgh.) As Lord-Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire and Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland, he raised two fencible regiments—the Northern Fencibles and the 100th (Gordon) Regiment of Fencible Infantry—between 1793 and 1799 to support British defenses during the French Revolutionary Wars.) He opposed the depopulation of Highland tenancies, even retaining unprofitable renters, and established new villages such as Fochabers, Tomintoul, and Port Gordon to bolster local economies.[25] Gordon married Jane Maxwell, daughter of Sir William Maxwell, 4th Baronet, on 25 October 1767; the union produced two sons and five daughters, including George, who succeeded as 5th Duke.) Jane emerged as a prominent Tory political hostess in London, hosting influential salons that advanced party interests, though Alexander himself leaned toward support of William Pitt's administration as a Scottish representative peer from 1767.) He patronized Highland cultural elements through encouragement of music—commissioning works from his butler, James Marshall—and breeding of deerhounds and black-and-tan setters at Gordon Castle kennels in the late 1700s, the latter forming the basis of the Gordon Setter breed.)[26] Despite such contributions to estate and regional life, the ducal household's lavish entertaining and family expenditures contributed to accumulating debts that burdened the succession.) Widowed in 1812, Gordon remarried Jane Christie of Fochabers in 1820, by whom he had prior illegitimate children but no further legitimate issue; she died in 1824.) George Duncan Gordon, 5th and last Duke of Gordon (2 February 1770 – 28 May 1836), pursued a distinguished army career beginning in 1789, rising to captain in the 42nd (Royal Highland) Regiment of Foot by 1791.[27] As Marquess of Huntly, he served with the Guards in Flanders (1793–1794), raised the 92nd (Gordon Highlanders) Regiment in 1794, and commanded it in operations across Corsica (1795), Ireland (1798), Spain, and the Walcheren expedition (1809).[28] Appointed general in 1819 and Colonel-in-Chief of the 42nd Regiment in 1806 after relinquishing the 92nd, he received the Knight Grand Cross of the Bath (GCB) for his services.[29] Upon his father's death in 1827, he inherited the dukedom and Gordon Castle, where he resided after 1813.[27] On 11 December 1813, George married Elizabeth Brodie (1789–1864), daughter of Alexander Brodie of Arnhall, Kincardineshire, who was 24 years his junior; the union produced no children.[29] His mother Jane's earlier role as a leading social and Tory political hostess in Edinburgh and London provided familial influence, though George's public life centered on military duties rather than politics.[30] The absence of legitimate male heirs ensured the dukedom's extinction upon his death without issue.[27] Contemporaries criticized his dissipated habits—marked by excessive pleasure-seeking and fashion—leading to overwhelming personal debts that her father's interventions partially alleviated but which encumbered the estates, exacerbating fiscal strains inherited from prior generations.[28]Interregnum and Second Creation
Extinction in 1836 and Family Succession Issues
George Gordon, 5th Duke of Gordon, died unmarried and without legitimate male issue on 28 May 1836 at Belgrave Square, London, aged 66.[31] The dukedom, along with the associated earldom of Norwich created in 1784, became extinct upon his death, as the original patent of 1684 limited succession to heirs male of the body of the 1st Duke. [4] The marquessate of Huntly, dating to 1599 and serving as a subsidiary title, devolved to the nearest heir male in the Gordon lineage, George Gordon, 5th Earl of Aboyne (1761–1853), who thereby became the 9th Marquess of Huntly.[31] This succession traced through the Aboyne cadet branch, descended from Lord Charles Gordon (d. 1736), fourth son of the 2nd Marquess of Huntly, bypassing female lines due to the male-preference entail.[32] Other subsidiary Scottish titles, such as the earldom of Enzie, followed the marquessate to this branch.[33] The vast Gordon estates, encompassing over 200,000 acres including Gordon Castle, passed not by primogeniture under the peerage but via entail to the 5th Duke's eldest surviving sister, Charlotte Gordon (1768–1842), wife of Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond.[34] This distribution highlighted the separation between titled succession and property inheritance, with no recorded legal challenges to the dukedom's extinction, as the patent's terms precluded female or collateral claims beyond specified remainders.[6] In the interim, Gordon family branches maintained prominence through lesser titles; for instance, the Haddo line held the earldom of Aberdeen, created in 1682, while the Aboyne succession preserved the Huntly marquessate's continuity until its own merger with the dukedom of Richmond and Gordon in 1863.[35] This fragmentation underscored the dukedom's strict male-line limitation, contributing to its permanent lapse without revival until a separate creation in 1876.[31]Revival of the Title (1876)
On 13 January 1876, Queen Victoria created the Dukedom of Gordon (second creation) in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, granting it to Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond and Lennox, along with the subsidiary title Earl of Kinrara.[36] This revival honored the recipient's descent from the original Gordon dukes through his mother, Lady Charlotte Gordon, daughter and co-heiress of George Gordon, 5th Duke of Gordon, whose marriage to Charles Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond, had brought substantial Gordon estates into the Lennox family.[36] The creation effectively recognized female-line inheritance from the extinct first dukedom, bypassing strict male primogeniture that had ended the original title in 1836 due to the 5th Duke's lack of sons.[37] The peerage was advanced at the suggestion of Benjamin Disraeli, Lord Beaconsfield, who served as Prime Minister from 1874 to 1880 and valued Richmond's role in his Conservative administration, including as President of the Poor Law Board and later Lord President of the Council. This aligned with Disraeli's efforts to reward loyal Unionist peers amid ongoing Irish and Scottish political tensions, consolidating support for imperial unity and Tory interests in the Scottish nobility.[38] Richmond's Gordon heritage strengthened claims to ancestral lands like Gordon Castle, reinforcing traditional estates against fragmentation post the first dukedom's extinction. In contrast to the 1684 creation—limited to "heirs male of the body" and thus vulnerable to male-line failure—the 1876 version, while still male-preferred, was bestowed on a proven descendant through female linkage, reflecting pragmatic adjustments in Victorian peerage practice to preserve prominent lineages.[37] Queen Victoria's decision echoed her pattern of reviving or elevating Scottish titles, influenced by her affinity for Highland culture and Balmoral, though primarily driven by political counsel rather than personal favoritism toward the rival Huntly branch, which retained the senior marquessate. This occurred amid broader expansions of the peerage under Victoria, with over 20 new dukedoms created to balance aristocratic influence and reward service, as seen in contemporaneous grants to figures like the Duke of Connaught.Dukes of the Second Creation
The Sixth and Seventh Dukes
Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond and Lennox (1818–1903), was created Duke of Gordon on 13 January 1876 in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, with the subsidiary title Earl of Kinrara, thereby numbering as the sixth Duke of Gordon overall. This revival honored the descent of former Gordon family estates to the Richmond line through inheritance ties. As a Conservative statesman, he had earlier served as aide-de-camp to military commanders like the Duke of Wellington (1842–1852), providing limited exposure to administrative and quasi-diplomatic duties in military contexts. The duke emphasized estate management across his Scottish holdings, particularly at Gordon Castle in Banffshire, where he enhanced shorthorn cattle herds and Southdown sheep flocks to bolster agricultural productivity. Amid the late-19th-century agricultural depression, marked by falling grain prices and rural distress, he maintained nominal rents for Speyside crofters and invested £15,000 in constructing Port Gordon harbour in 1878 to aid local trade and employment. Appointed Lord Lieutenant of Banffshire in 1879, he influenced regional affairs while chairing the Royal Commission on Agriculture (1879–1882), which investigated depression-era challenges and informed the Agricultural Holdings Act 1883, enabling tenant compensation for improvements. His twice serving as president of the Royal Agricultural Society (1868, 1883) underscored practical reforms like the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act 1878 to combat livestock plagues. Upon the sixth duke's death at Gordon Castle on 27 September 1903, his eldest son, Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox (1845–1928), succeeded as seventh Duke of Richmond and Lennox and thereby second (seventh overall) Duke of Gordon.[39] The younger Charles, who had sat as a Conservative MP for West Sussex (1869–1885), shifted focus to estate stewardship post-succession, overseeing Goodwood in England and Scottish properties including those linked to the Gordon patrimony.[40] Appointed Lord Lieutenant of Morayshire (Elginshire) in 1903, he managed land amid persistent post-depression recovery, prioritizing stability for tenants and rural infrastructure without major legislative pushes.[39] His tenure, lasting until his death on 18 January 1928, involved no prominent diplomatic roles but sustained family traditions in agricultural oversight and local governance.Final Extinction in 1916
The original Dukedom of Gordon, created in 1684 with remainder to heirs male of the body, became permanently extinct on 28 May 1836 upon the death of George Gordon, 5th Duke, without legitimate sons, exhausting all eligible successors under the patent's terms.[3] Although the Gordon family persisted through female descent, including branches connected to the Earls of Aberdeen via matrimonial ties—such as the marriage of Cosmo Gordon, 3rd Duke, to Catherine Gordon, daughter of the 2nd Earl of Aberdeen—no provision existed for transmission to heirs general, precluding revival for collateral lines like the Aberdeen-Gordons despite their proximity to the ducal bloodline. In the interregnum following 1836, family succession centered on the estates rather than the extinct peerage; these passed to Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond, nephew of the 5th Duke via his sister Charlotte, in accordance with the entail and bequest.[41] The Aberdeen-Gordon branch, lacking male heirs qualifying under the original remainder, saw no path to the dukedom, with peerage law's strict male primogeniture enforcing finality amid ongoing family divisions over inheritance. By 1916, amid the exigencies of the First World War, John Campbell Hamilton-Gordon, 7th Earl of Aberdeen—a descendant bearing Gordon lineage through prior unions—was advanced to Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair on 4 January, incorporating elements of Gordon heritage into the new creation and resolving lingering succession tensions without resurrecting the defunct dukedom.[42] War service and national priorities likely overshadowed any residual pursuits of extinct Scottish titles, channeling familial prestige into the fresh United Kingdom peerage. This outcome contrasted with subsidiary Gordon dignities, such as the Marquessate of Huntly, which devolved upon kinsman George Gordon, 5th Earl of Aboyne, as 9th Marquess upon the 1836 extinction, preserving that title in a parallel male line unencumbered by the dukedom's specialized limitations.Notable Contributions and Achievements
Military and Political Influence
The Gordon family supported the Royalist cause during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms (1639–1651), providing forces against Covenanting armies and contributing to the defense of royalist positions in northeast Scotland.[43] Alexander Gordon, 2nd Duke of Gordon, raised troops for the Jacobite standard in the 1715 rising, commanding approximately 300 horsemen and 2,000 foot soldiers at the Battle of Sheriffmuir on 13 November 1715 before surrendering on 12 February 1716.[22] In the late 18th century, Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, oversaw the formation of the 92nd Regiment of Foot (Gordon Highlanders) in 1794 amid the French Revolutionary Wars, bolstering British Highland infantry recruitment from clan lands.[6] His son, George Gordon, 5th Duke of Gordon, advanced to general in 1819 after service with the Guards in the Flanders campaign (1793–1794); he later commanded the 92nd in expeditions to Spain (part of the Peninsular War, 1808–1814), Corsica, and Ireland, earning the Grand Cross of the Bath in 1820 for distinguished conduct.[29][44] Clan Gordons filled key roles in this and other Highland regiments, which saw extensive action in the Napoleonic Wars and beyond, reflecting the family's enduring military mobilization capacity.[45] Politically, the Dukes exerted influence through administrative offices in Scotland, with the 4th Duke serving as Lord-Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire from 1794 to 1808 and the 5th Duke holding the same position alongside Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland and Governor of Edinburgh Castle.[27] These roles facilitated local governance and militia oversight, extending the family's sway from earlier participation in the Scots Parliament—where predecessors like the 1st Duke navigated post-Revolution politics—to tacit endorsement of the 1707 Union by aligning with Hanoverian stability after Jacobite reversals.[4] The 5th Duke's brief tenure as MP for Eye (1806–1807) further embedded Gordon interests in Westminster, prioritizing crown loyalty over separatist agitation.[46]Patronage of Arts, Science, and Breeding
Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, undertook significant enhancements to Gordon Castle and its surrounding estate in the late 18th century, converting the medieval fortress into a grand baronial mansion and developing expansive landscaped grounds that exemplified contemporary estate architecture.[47] These improvements included formalized gardens and parklands designed to integrate natural beauty with structured design, reflecting the Duke's interest in agricultural and horticultural advancement on his Moray properties.[47] The Duke actively supported the breeding of sporting dogs at Gordon Castle, where his kennels produced the distinctive black-and-tan variety that became known as the Gordon Setter, a breed refined through selective crossing of existing setters with local pointers for enhanced hunting prowess in Highland terrain.[48][49] His huntsman, under ducal direction, concentrated on these darker-coated dogs, which the Duke favored for their stamina and scenting ability, establishing the breed's foundational traits by the early 19th century.[50] Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon and wife of the 4th Duke, hosted prominent literary salons in Edinburgh, fostering intellectual exchange among Scottish writers and artists during the late 18th century.[51] As a key patron, she championed Robert Burns, providing financial support and social elevation that aided his recognition as Scotland's national poet in 1787.[52] The Duchess also advanced agricultural reforms on the Gordon estates, introducing innovative farming techniques such as improved crop rotation and enclosure systems to boost productivity in the Highlands.[53] Her cultural sponsorship extended to promoting traditional Scottish elements like tartan attire and reels, influencing the Romantic-era revival of Highland heritage, which resonated with figures like Lord Byron, whose maternal Gordon lineage tied him to the family's aristocratic networks.[52]Controversies and Criticisms
Clan Feuds and Internal Conflicts
The prolonged 16th-century feud between Clan Gordon and neighboring Clan Forbes arose from territorial rivalries in Aberdeenshire, intensified by religious schisms after the Protestant Reformation, as the Gordons clung to Catholicism while the Forbeses embraced Protestantism.[54][55] This conflict encompassed multiple raids, ambushes, and pitched battles, with the Gordons leveraging their position as Earls of Huntly to assert dominance over disputed estates.[8] Key escalations included retaliatory killings in the 1520s and a major clash at Tillieangus on October 10, 1571, where Gordon forces ambushed and routed a Forbes assembly convened for internal reconciliation, slaughtering dozens in the aftermath.[8] Underlying these hostilities were pragmatic incentives tied to regional economics, particularly command of grazing lands and drove roads essential for herding black cattle southward to English markets, a trade yielding substantial revenues for controlling clans.[56] Land seizures and cattle reiving thus served as mechanisms to consolidate wealth and influence, with the Gordons' Huntly earldom encompassing prime northeast territories that the Forbeses sought to challenge through alliances with royal authorities.[57] Internally, the Gordons experienced fractures along confessional and political lines, notably in the early 18th century under Cosmo Gordon, 3rd Duke of Gordon (1720–1752), whose adherence to the Protestant-established Hanoverian regime clashed with Catholic-leaning Jacobite sympathies among kin.[23] His younger brother, Lord Lewis Gordon, defied the duke by raising two regiments for the 1745 Jacobite uprising, highlighting familial rifts over loyalty that mirrored broader Gordon divisions between Catholic traditionalists and those accommodating the post-Reformation state.[58] Such splits weakened clan cohesion, as personal ambitions and ideological commitments superseded unified action against external foes.Jacobite Rebellions and Attainders
The Gordon family exhibited divided loyalties during the Jacobite rising of 1715, with Alexander Gordon, 2nd Duke of Gordon, initially aligning with the Jacobites by raising approximately 2,300 men under his style as Marquess of Huntly and participating in the Battle of Sheriffmuir on 13 November 1715, where Jacobite forces under the Earl of Mar clashed inconclusively with government troops led by the Duke of Argyll.[22] However, the 2nd Duke pragmatically submitted to the government on 12 February 1716 at Gordon Castle, surrendering his forces and avoiding attainder, a decision reflecting the tension between familial ties to the Stuart cause—rooted in Episcopalian sympathies and resentment toward the 1707 Union—and the preservation of ducal titles and estates under the Hanoverian regime. In the Jacobite rising of 1745, allegiances fractured further within the family; while Cosmo George Gordon, 3rd Duke of Gordon, remained loyal to the crown and raised a militia to oppose the Young Pretender, his younger brother Lord Lewis Gordon defected to the Jacobite side, enlisting as a naval officer before raising two battalions totaling around 900 men from Aberdeenshire and Banffshire, securing funds and defeating a government force at the Battle of Inverurie on 23 December 1745. Appointed lieutenant-general by Prince Charles Edward Stuart, Lord Lewis commanded Jacobite operations in the northeast but evaded the disastrous Battle of Culloden on 16 April 1746, escaping to France thereafter, where his attainder for high treason—enacted under the 1746 Act for not surrendering by 12 July—stripped him of any prospective inheritance without reversal before his death in exile on 15 June 1754. Cadet branches faced harsher repercussions, as exemplified by John Gordon of Glenbucket, a veteran Jacobite who, at age 72, raised Glenbucket's Regiment of about 300-500 men in September 1745, participating in early victories like Prestonpans before the Culloden defeat; attainted alongside Lord Lewis, his Banffshire estates were forfeited to crown commissioners for management and sale, though he evaded execution by fleeing to the continent and died in France around 1750.[59] These attainders, affecting peripheral Gordon holdings but sparing the main ducal line due to the 3rd Duke's fidelity, underscored pragmatic crown allegiance among title-holders amid broader clan motivations of anti-Union sentiment and religious nonconformity to post-Union Presbyterian dominance, with forfeited properties temporarily administered under the Annexing Act of 1747 before partial redemptions or sales to loyalists.[60]Legacy and Descendants
Family Tree Overview
The first creation of the Duke of Gordon in the Peerage of Scotland (1684) originated with the Huntly branch of Clan Gordon, descending from the Earls and Marquesses of Huntly, with succession strictly limited to heirs male of the body, leading to its extinction after five generations due to failure of male lines.[3][61]| Duke | Name | Lifespan | Relation to Predecessor |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | George Gordon | 1643–1716 | Created 1 November 1684 for the 4th Marquess of Huntly[3] |
| 2nd | Alexander Gordon | 1678–1728 | Eldest son[3] |
| 3rd | Cosmo Gordon | c. 1721–1752 | Eldest son[3] |
| 4th | Alexander Gordon | 1743–1827 | Only son; married Jane Maxwell, 23 September 1767[61] |
| 5th | George Gordon | 1770–1836 | Eldest son; died without legitimate sons, causing extinction 28 May 1836[3][61] |