Portraits of illustrious personages of Great Britain Engraved from authentic pictures in the galleries of the nobility and the public collections of the country With biographical and historical memoirs of their lives and actions . rought to a trial, and condemned to suffer death, and on thetwenty-second of that month was beheaded at the market cross ofKdinburgli. This nobleman married .\inu, eldest daughter of Archibald 4 SECOND MARQUIS OF HUNTLY. Campbell, seventh Earl of Argyll, by whom he had five sons, andas many daughters. George, his eldest son, fell, as has beenalready said, in the fiel


Portraits of illustrious personages of Great Britain Engraved from authentic pictures in the galleries of the nobility and the public collections of the country With biographical and historical memoirs of their lives and actions . rought to a trial, and condemned to suffer death, and on thetwenty-second of that month was beheaded at the market cross ofKdinburgli. This nobleman married .\inu, eldest daughter of Archibald 4 SECOND MARQUIS OF HUNTLY. Campbell, seventh Earl of Argyll, by whom he had five sons, andas many daughters. George, his eldest son, fell, as has beenalready said, in the field of battle ; the second, James, Viscount ofAboyne, died unmarried not long before his father ; Lewis, thethird son, succeeded to the titles of Marquis of Huntly, &c.:Charles, the fourth, was created Earl of Aboyne in 1660; andHenry passed his life in the military service of the King ofPoland. Of the daughters, Anne was married to James Drum-mond, third Earl of Perth ; Henrietta, first to George, Lord Seton,and, secondly, to John Stewart, second Earl of Traquair ; Jane,to Thomas Hamilton, second Earl of Haddington: Mary, waswife of Alexander Irvine, of Drum ; and Catherine, of CountMorstain, High Treasurer of Poland. 5. EBgnwtd w-Tir T i^»a (. CDinXC. TIIK Mii\ Mil i,\i:i. (PI i;i:n>..MiiNT U-nJMt. rutUititJJuiu Uf^ ?r^rdjua Vail f^l GEORGE, LORD GORING. OIR George Goring, of Hurst Pierrepont, in Sussex, represent-ative of a junior line of the respectable family of Goring whichstill maintains its importance in that county, was bred in thecourt, under the care of his father, one of Elizabeths gentlemenpensioners, and was placed in the household of Henry, Prince ofWales by James the first, to whom, recommended equally by hissagacity and by a peculiar jocularity of humour, he became afamilar companion, and at length a sort of minor , whose friendship he had gained by his bravery andpoliteness, prevailed on Charles the first to raise


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Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1800, bookidportraitsofillus06lodg, bookyear1835