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  1. William Gordon, 2nd Earl of Aberdeen (1679 – 30 March 1745), known between c. 1691 and 1720 as Lord Haddo, was a Scottish landowner and Tory politician who sat in the British House of Commons briefly from 1708 to 1709 when he was declared ineligible, being the eldest son of a Scottish peer.

  2. 12 de ene. de 2023 · Husband of Lady Mary Leslie; Susan Murray and Anne Gordon, Countess of Aberdeen. Father of Anne, Countess of Dumfries, Gordon; Mary Gordon; Lady Catherine Gordon, Duchess of Gordon; George Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aberdeen; General Hon. William Gordon, of Fyvie and 6 others.

  3. William, second Earl of Aberdeen, was baptized at Methlic 22 December 1679. He was elected Member of Parliament for Aberdeenshire in 1708, but was unseated on petition by the House of...

  4. The 1st Earl of Aberdeen, one of the Duke of York’s henchmen in Scotland in the 1680s, acted a prudent part at the Revolution, attending in Edinburgh in 1689 when required by the Williamite government, and communicating with Jacobite agents, if at all, only when approached.

  5. Second Earl of Aberdeen. Built Haddo House on the site of Kelly Castle. Information board, Game Larder, Haddo House: WILLIAM 2nd Earl of Aberdeen (1679-1746) The nest-builder William was nearly 50 when he married his third wife, 19 year old Anne Gordon, and Haddo House built for her. Nearby Fyvie Castle (also a NTS...

  6. William Gordon, segundo conde de Aberdeen (1679 - 30 de marzo de 1745), conocido entre c. 1691 y 1720 como Lord Haddo, fue un terrateniente escocés y político conservador que se sentó brevemente en la Cámara de los Comunes británica de 1708 a 1709 cuando fue declarado inelegible, siendo el hijo mayor de un par escocés.

  7. 23 de may. de 2014 · There have been two army regiments formed by Clan Gordon - the ‘81st,’ established in 1777 by the Hon. Colonel William Gordon, son of the Earl of Aberdeen, and disbanded in 1783, and the ...