Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. John Erskine, 1st earl of Mar (died Oct. 29, 1572, Stirling, Stirling, Scot.) was a Scottish lord who played a major role in deposing Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots (reigned 1542–67), and gaining the crown for her infant son James VI (later James I of England); Mar was regent for James in 1571–72.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. John Erskine, 2nd Earl of Mar (c. 1558 – 14 December 1634) was a Scottish politician, the only son of another John Erskine and Annabella Murray. He is regarded as both the 19th earl (in the 1st creation ) and the 2nd earl (in the 7th ).

  3. John Erskine is regarded as both the 18th earl (in the 1st creation) and the 1st earl (in the 7th). Some sources deem him the 17th Earl, still others as the 6th Earl. Mar was made Sheriff of Stirlingshire and Keeper of Stirling Castle and the parks of Raploch and Gallowhill on 18 July 1566.

  4. 10 de may. de 2022 · John Erskine, Earl of Mar (died 28 October 1572), regent of Scotland, was a son of John, 5th Lord Erskine, who was guardian of King James V, and afterwards of Mary, Queen of Scots. He is regarded as both the 18th earl (in the 1st creation) and the 1st earl (in the 7th).

    • Annabelle Murray
    • October 28, 1572Stirling, Scotland
    • estimated between 1493 and 1545
    • Alloa, Clackmananshire, Scotland
  5. John Erskine, 18th Earl of Mar may refer to: John Erskine, Earl of Mar (died 1572), regarded as 18th earl by some sources, and 17th by others.

  6. When John Erskine 18th Earl of Mar was born in 1521, in Erskine, Renfrewshire, Scotland, United Kingdom, his father, Sir John Erskine - 5th Lord Erskine, was 34 and his mother, Lady Margaret Campbell, was 37. He married Countess Annabella Murray of Mar on 29 January 1557, in Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland.

  7. John Erskine, Earl of Mar was a Scottish Jacobite who was the eldest son of Charles, Earl of Mar (who died in 1689), from whom he inherited estates that were heavily loaded with debt. He was nicknamed "Bobbing John", for his tendency to shift back and forth from faction to faction, whether from Tory to Whig or Hanoverian to Jacobite.