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  1. National Galleries of Scotland, Scottish National Portrait Gallery. Photo credit: National Galleries of Scotland. Send information to Art Detective. James, 4th Earl of Morton, was involved in the most dramatic events of the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots. He was among those who burst into the.

  2. Roland Tanner. Morton, James Douglas, 1st earl of [S] (d. 1493). Made earl of Morton by James II (1458). Although married to Joanna, sister of James II, Morton took little part in affairs of state. However he was briefly associated with the Kennedy faction, which controlled the minority government of James III between 1463 and 1466.

  3. William of Lochleven, 6th Earl of Morton. William Douglas, 6th Earl of Morton (c.1540 - 1606) was the son of Sir Robert Douglas of Lochleven and Margaret Erskine, a former mistress of James V of Scotland. Sir William's half-brother from his mother's liaison with the king was James Stewart, Earl of Moray, Regent of Scotland from 1567 until his ...

  4. dewiki James Douglas, 4. Earl of Morton; enwiki James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton; fawiki جیمز داگلاس، چهارمین ارل مورتون; frwiki James Douglas (4e comte de Morton) idwiki James Douglas, Earl ke-4 Morton; itwiki James Douglas, IV conte di Morton; jawiki ジェイムズ・ダグラス (第4代モートン伯)

  5. In the Middle Ages the Douglas family owned extensive estates in Fife (Aberdour), Midlothian (Dalkeith), Berwickshire, Peeblesshire and elsewhere, and were created Earls of Morton in 1458. The 3rd Earl of Morton (d. 1550) was succeeded in his estates and title by his son-in-law James Douglas of Pittendriech, Regent of Scotland 1572-78, but in 1558 they reverted to the Douglases of Loch Leven ...

  6. James was married to Katherine Stuart, the "natural" daughter of James IV. He died without male issue, circa 1550, but on April 22, 1543 he had willed the Morton possessions to the husband of his third daughter, Elizabeth. Death: DEC 1548 in Dspm. Father: John (2nd Earl of Morton) Douglas b: BEF. 1466.

  7. 20 de jun. de 2015 · On 20th June 1567, a few days after Scottish rebels apprehended Mary, Queen of Scots, servants of James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton, allegedly found a silver casket of eight letters, two marriage contracts (which apparently proved that Mary had agreed to marry Bothwell before his divorce) and twelve sonnets. The casket was found in the possession of James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell and ...