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  1. Richard Aldred Lumley, 12th Earl of Scarbrough (5 December 1932 – 23 March 2004), styled Viscount Lumley between 1945 and 1969, was an English nobleman. Education and military service.

  2. Earl of Scarbrough is a title in the Peerage of England. It was created in 1690 for Richard Lumley, 2nd Viscount Lumley. He is best remembered as one of the Immortal Seven who invited William of Orange to invade England and depose his father-in-law James II.

  3. The Lumley family owned land in County Durham by the 12th century. Its estates, the core of which was at Lumley Castle, situated on the Durham coalfield by the River Wear, were extended in the 15th century through the marriage of George, Lord Lumley and the heiress of Roger Thornton, a Newcastle-upon-Tyne merchant.

  4. LUMLEY, Richard (c. 1650–1721) suc. grandfa. 1662 (a minor) as 2nd Visct. Lumley of Waterford [I]; cr. 31 May 1681 Bar. LUMLEY; cr. 10 Apr. 1689 Visct. LUMLEY of LUMLEY CASTLE; cr. 15 Apr. 1690 earl of SCARBROUGH. First sat 19 May 1685; last sat 11 Dec. 1721.

  5. Richard Lumley, 2nd Earl of Scarbrough KG PC (30 November 1686 – 29 January 1740), of Stansted Park, Sussex and Lumley Castle, County Durham, known as Viscount Lumley from 1710 to 1721, was a British Army officer and Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1708 until 1715 when he was raised to the House of Lords as Baron Lumley.