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  1. The Duke of Argyll (Scottish Gaelic: Diùc Earra-Ghàidheil) is a title, created by Letters Patent in the Peerage of Scotland June 23, 1701 and in the Peerage of the United Kingdom April 7, 1892. The Earls, Marquesses, and Dukes of Argyll were for centuries among the most powerful noble families in Scotland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom. They played a major role in Scottish and British ...

  2. Unit. 1st Argyll and Bute Artillery Volunteers. John George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland Campbell, 9th Duke of Argyll (6 August 1845 – 2 May 1914), usually better known by the courtesy title Marquess of Lorne, by which he was known between 1847 and 1900, was a British nobleman who was Governor General of Canada from 1878 to 1883.

  3. Duke of Argyll. Duke of Argyll ist ein erblicher britischer Adelstitel, der zweimal, nämlich in der Peerage of Scotland und in der Peerage of the United Kingdom geschaffen wurde. Beide Titel werden vom Chief des Clans Campbell geführt. Der Duke ist daher eine von nur fünf Personen im Vereinigten Königreich, die zwei Dukedoms führen.

  4. 8 de abr. de 1973 · GLASGOW, Scotland, April 7 — The 11th Duke of Argyll, whose marriages and divorces made headlines throughout the world, died in a private hospital in Edinburgh today from the effects of a stroke ...

  5. George John Douglas Campbell, 8th and 1st Duke of Argyll KG, KT, PC, FRS, FRSE (30 April 1823 – 24 April 1900; styled Marquess of Lorne until 1847), was a British polymath and Liberal statesman. He made a significant geological discovery in the 1850s when his tenant found fossilized leaves embedded among basalt lava on the Island of Mull.

  6. 24 de abr. de 2001 · Ian Campbell, 12th Duke of Argyll and Chief of the Clan Campbell, who rebuilt Inveraray Castle, his family's ancestral Scottish home, after disastrous fire, dies at age 63; photo (M)

  7. 26 de dic. de 2021 · But she would be remembered for just one thing: the so-called ‘divorce of the century’, which ended her marriage to the Duke of Argyll in 1963. Polaroids, forcibly snatched by her husband and produced in evidence, showed her – naked except for her recognisable signature pearls – engaged in what the presiding judge called “a gross form of a sexual relationship” with an unidentified man.