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Robert Carnegie, 3rd Earl of Southesk

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Robert Carnegie, 3rd Earl of Southesk (b. before 1649–1688) was a Scottish nobleman.

Life

Commissioned as a captain in Louis XIV's Scottish Guards at Chantilly, Oise, France in 1659, he was later a colonel in the Forfarshire militia. He attended the Parliament of Scotland sporadically in the 1670s but attended more regularly through the 1680s.

In 1666 he was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle for wounding George Livingston, 3rd Earl of Linlithgow in a duel.

He inherited the earldom from James Carnegie, 2nd Earl of Southesk in 1669.

King James VII of Scotland granted a charter for an area of moorland to the west of Kinnaird, Angus and Farnell, Angus called Monrommon to Carnegie.

Family

Southesk married before 1664, Lady Anna Hamilton, eldest daughter of William Hamilton, 2nd Duke of Hamilton and had issue:

References

  1. ^ James Balfour Paul, ed. (1907). The Scots Peerage Founded on Wood's Edition of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage of Scotland. Vol. 8. p. 71.
  2. William Fraser (1867). History of the Carnegies, Earls of Southesk, and of their kindred. Vol. 1.
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded byJames Carnegie Earl of Southesk
1669–1688
Succeeded byCharles Carnegie
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