LordWilliamGordon (1744–1823) was a Scottish nobleman. He was the second son of Cosmo Gordon, 3rd Duke of Gordon (1720–1752) and his wife Lady Catherine...
Lord George Gordon (26 December 1751 – 1 November 1793) was a British politician best known for lending his name to the Gordon Riots of 1780. An eccentric...
Winchester is older. The Marquess holds the following subsidiary titles: LordGordon of Strathaven and Glenlivet and Earl of Aboyne (1660; Peerage of Scotland)...
LordGordon-Gordon (c. 1840 – August 1, 1874), also known as LordGordonGordon, Lord Glencairn, and The Hon. Mr. Herbert Hamilton, was a British impostor...
WilliamGordon, Lord Strathnaver (1683–1720), MP for Tain Burghs, judged ineligible to sit because he was the eldest son of a Scottish peer William Gordon...
the second Earl, was a Lord of Session from 1788 to 1792 under the judicial title of Lord Rockville. His son William Duff-Gordon was Member of Parliament...
of Gordon, Marquess of Huntly, Earl of Huntly and Enzie (all three of which he already held by an older creation), Viscount of Inverness, and Lord Strathaven...
Baronet in 1764. Lady Sarah had an affair with LordWilliamGordon, the second son of the Duke of Gordon, and gave birth to his illegitimate daughter in...
They had no issue. Lady Sarah embarked on an adulterous affair with LordWilliamGordon and bore him a daughter, called Louisa Bunbury, in 1768. Bunbury...
Huntly, the eldest son of Elizabeth Gordon and Alexander Seton, LordGordon, changed the family name from Seton to Gordon.c. 1457. His male heirs through...
WilliamGordon, 2nd Earl of Aberdeen Catherine Gordon (fl. 1770–1811), mother of the poet George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron, usually known as Lord...
Lord Douglas William Cope Gordon (11 October 1851 – 4 August 1888), was a Scottish Liberal Party politician. Gordon was the fourth son of Charles Gordon...
Lord Augustus FitzClarence (1 March 1805 – 14 June 1854), was the youngest illegitimate son of William IV of the United Kingdom and his long-time mistress...
discrimination against British Catholics enacted by the Popery Act 1698. Lord George Gordon, head of the Protestant Association, argued that the law would enable...