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  1. He was known as "Lord Hay". In January 1611, with the Earl of Pembroke and Lord Windsor, he escorted a French diplomat, the Marshal de Laverdin, from Croydon to Lambeth. [2] He succeeded to the earldom after his father's death in 1631. He became a member of the Privy Council on 28 May 1633. He also succeeded to the title of Lord High Constable ...

  2. William George Hay, 18th Earl of Erroll. 1 reference. retrieved. 7 August 2020. WeRelate person ID. William_Hay_(39) 0 references. WikiTree person ID. Hay-1072 ...

  3. 16 de ene. de 2024 · English: The 18th Earl of Erroll by Richard James Lane, published by John Mitchell, after Alfred, Count D'Orsay lithograph with some hand-colouring, (17 July 1840) 8 7/8 in. x 7 1/8 in. (224 mm x 181 mm) paper size

  4. It was created in 1831 for William Hay, 18th Earl of Erroll. This was a revival of the Kilmarnock title held by his great-grandfather William Boyd, 4th Earl of Kilmarnock, who was attainted in 1746. The barony of Kilmarnock remained a subsidiary title of the earldom of Erroll until the death in 1941 of the eighteenth Earl's great-great-grandson, the twenty-second Earl.

  5. William Hay, 5th Earl of Erroll (c. 1495, Errol, Perthshire, Scotland – 28 July 1522 in Edinburgh) Lady Isabel Hay He married secondly Margaret Kinloch of Cruvie, widow of Sir James Sandilands, 5th feudal baron of Calder.

  6. Sir William Hay was a member of the aristocracy in British Isles. William Hay, 17th Earl of Erroll [1] William Hay, 17th Earl of Erroll known as Lord Hay until 1778, was a Scottish peer. [1] Erroll was the son of James Hay, 15th Earl of Erroll and his second wife, Isabella Carr. [1] He was born at Lonmay, Aberdeenshire, in 1772.

  7. Hon. James Hay (d. 1797) Lord Erroll died on 3 July 1778 at Callendar House, aged fifty-two, and was succeeded by his eldest son, George. His widow died 3 November 1808. Descendants. Lord Erroll's grandson, William Hay, 18th Earl of Erroll, was created Baron Kilmarnock in the peerage of the United Kingdom in 1831. Ancestry