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  1. Lord William Gordon (1744–1823) was a Scottish nobleman. Background. He was the second son of Cosmo Gordon, 3rd Duke of Gordon (1720–1752) and his wife Lady Catherine Gordon (1718 – 10 December 1779), daughter of William Gordon, 2nd Earl of Aberdeen. He was baptised at St Cuthbert's Church in York 21 August 1744. [1] .

  2. George Gordon Byron (Londres, 22 de enero de 1788-Mesolongi, 19 de abril de 1824), conocido como lord Byron, fue un revolucionario y poeta del movimiento del romanticismo británico, antecedente de la figura del poeta maldito.

  3. 2 de ago. de 2023 · Because His Grace and his two sons, the Earl of March and Kinrara and Lord William Gordon Lennox, donned three coordinating Irish buttermilk linen suits from Savile Row’s first and oldest tailor, Henry Poole & Co, for the occasion.

    • Chandler Tregaskes
  4. 11 de may. de 2022 · Lord William Gordon (1744–1823), married Hon. Frances Ingram-Shepheard (daughter of Charles Ingram, 9th Viscount of Irvine); previously, in 1768 he had an affair with Lady Sarah Bunbury, and fathered a daughter Louisa Bunbury who was acknowledged by her mother's husband Sir Charles Bunbury.

    • August 15, 1744
    • May 1, 1823
  5. 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.

  6. William Gordon, Lord Strathnaver (1683–1720), MP for Tain Burghs, judged ineligible to sit because he was the eldest son of a Scottish peer. William Gordon (bishop of Aberdeen) (died 1577), last of the pre-Reformation bishops of Aberdeen owing allegiance to the Roman Catholic Church.

  7. GORDON, Lord William (1744-1823), of Mamore, Inverness. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1754-1790, ed. L. Namier, J. Brooke., 1964. Available from Boydell and Brewer.