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  1. Charles 4th Duke of Richmond Lennox KG (9 Dec 1764 - 28 Aug 1819) 0 references . Sitelinks. Wikipedia (13 entries) edit. arzwiki تشارلز ...

  2. Offspring of Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond and Charlotte Gordon (1768-1842) Name. Birth. Death. Joined with. Mary Lennox (1790-1847) 15 August 1790 Goodwood House, Sussex, England, United Kingdom. 7 December 1847 Parramatta, New South Wales, Australia.

  3. He became the 4th Duke of Richmond on 29 December 1806, after the death of his uncle, Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond. In April 1807 he became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. He remained in that post until 1813, with Arthur Wellesley (the later Duke of Wellington) as his secretary. He participated in the Napoleonic Wars and in 1815 he was in ...

  4. Titles. Various titles became eligible for re-grant following the death in 1672 of King Charles II's childless 4th cousin (both being descended in the male line from John Stewart, 3rd Earl of Lennox, the paternal grandfather of Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, father of King James I of England) Charles Stewart, 3rd Duke of Richmond, 6th Duke of Lennox (1639–1672), KG, 12th Seigneur d'Aubigny in ...

  5. The Duke of Richmond, 1824. Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond, KG, PC (né Lennox; 3 August 1791 – 21 October 1860), styled the Earl of March from 1806 until 1819, was a British peer, soldier and prominent Conservative politician. Upon the death of his uncle in 1836, he inherited the Gordon estates and per the terms of the bequest ...

  6. Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 11th Duke of Richmond, 11th Duke of Lennox, 11th Duke of Aubigny, 6th Duke of Gordon, CBE, DL (born 8 January 1955), styled Lord Settrington until 1989 and then Earl of March and Kinrara until 2017, is a British aristocrat and owner of Goodwood Estate in Sussex. [1] [2] He is the founder of the Goodwood Festival of ...

  7. Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond and Lennox. Regency Portraits Catalogue Entry. After an illustrious military and administrative career which included seven years as Lord-Lieutenant in Ireland (1807-13), Richmond was appointed Governor-General of British North America in 1818. He died after only a year in the post.