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  1. 17 de feb. de 2009 · This file has been superseded by Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond and Lennox by Sir Godfrey Kneller, Bt.jpg. It is recommended to use the other file. Please note that deleting superseded images requires consent.

  2. 4 de abr. de 2024 · Richmond succeeded to the peerage in 1750 (his father, the 2nd duke, having added the Aubigny title to the Richmond and Lennox titles in 1734). He was British ambassador extraordinary in Paris in 1765 and the following year became a secretary of state in the marquess of Rockingham ’s administration, resigning office on the accession to power of William Pitt the Elder .

  3. A mezzotint after a painting by Henri Gascar of Charles Lennox, 1st Duke of Richmond as a boy in a garden, with a Black servant on the right holding a plumed hat.The Black servant is unlikely to represent an identifiable individual. Instead, the inclusion of Black figures as servants, attendants, or enslaved people in portraits of European sitters was a common visual trope in the 17th and 18th ...

  4. Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond (1701-1750), became the fourth noble Grand Master of Grand Lodge in 1724. Master of London’s most influential Masonic lodge, the Horn Tavern in New Palace Yard, Westminster (pictured below), and a grandson of Charles II, Richmond set a pro-Hanoverian seal on eighteenth-century Freemasonry. Richmond was popular and gregarious, and […]

  5. Charles Lennox (1672–1723), 1st Duke of Richmond and Lennox, as a Child Henri Gascars (1634–1701) National Trust, Castle Coole

  6. James Stewart, 1st Duke of Richmond, 4th Duke of Lennox KG (6 April 1612 – 30 March 1655), lord of the Manor of Cobham, Kent, was a Scottish nobleman. A third cousin of King Charles I, he was a Privy Councillor and a key member of the Royalist party in the English Civil War. In 1641–42, he served as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports.

  7. 2 de ago. de 2023 · The Richmonds were quick to hotfoot it to No.15 Savile Row too, as records from 1857 show Henry and George Gordon Lennox, the third and fifth sons of Charles Gordon Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond, becoming frequent customers. A frock coat was bought by George in 1860, as was another for the Prince of Wales that same year.