Martyn Family History

Scott H. Martyn
Glen Ellyn, IL  60137
Please type this address in your email program to contact me

Alexander SETON [7472]
(1382-Abt 1440)
Elizabeth GORDON Heiress of Gordon [7473]
(1384-1438)
Sir Alexander SETON GORDON 1st Earl of Huntly [7409]
(1410-1470)
Lady Elizabeth CRICHTON of Crichton - Countess of Huntly [7410]
(1410-1479)
Sir George GORDON 2nd Earl of Huntly - High Chancellor of Scotland [6826]
(1430-1502)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Lady Annabella STEWART Princess of Scotland [6827]

2. Elizabeth DUNBAR 8th Countess of Moray [7411]
3. Elizabeth HAY of Errol - Countess of Huntly [7412]

Sir George GORDON 2nd Earl of Huntly - High Chancellor of Scotland [6826] 1599

  • Born: 1 January 1430, Huntly, , Aberdeen, Scotland 1599
  • Marriage (1): Lady Annabella STEWART Princess of Scotland [6827] on 10 March 1460 in Aberdeen, , Aberdeenshire, Scotland 1598
  • Marriage (2): Elizabeth DUNBAR 8th Countess of Moray [7411] on 20 May 1455 1598
  • Marriage (3): Elizabeth HAY of Errol - Countess of Huntly [7412] on 12 May 1476
  • Died: 30 January 1502, Stirling, , Stirlingshire, Scotland at age 72 1599
  • Buried: 1502, Chancel of the Abbey of Cambuskenneth Church , Cambuskenneth, Stirlingshire, Scotland 1599

   FamilySearch ID: LZL3-SJF.

  General Notes:

Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor was born circa 1441. A contract for the marriage of Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor and Elizabeth Dunbar was signed on 20 May 1455; No issue. Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor and Elizabeth Dunbar were divorced before March 1460; On grounds they were related in the 3rd & 4th degrees of consanguinity.

**Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor married Annabella Stewart, daughter of James I Stewart, King of Scotland and Joan Beaufort, before 10 March 1460; They had 1 daughter (Isabel, wife of William Hay, 3rd Earl of Erroll). Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor and Annabella Stewart were divorced before 12 May 1466; Final decree pronounced in 1471. Divorced on grounds that she was related to his former wife, Elizabeth Dunbar, in the 3rd and 4th degrees of consanguinity.

Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor married Elizabeth Hay, daughter of Sir William Hay, 1st Earl of Erroll, 2nd Lord Hay, Constable of Scotland and Beatrix Douglas, after 12 May 1466; They had 4 sons (Alexander, 3rd Earl of Huntly; Adam, Earl of Sutherland; William, 1st Laird of Gight; & James) & 6 daughters (Janet, wife of Alexander Lindsay, Master of Crawford; Elizabeth, wife of William Keith, 3rd Earl Marischal; Margaret, wife of Patrick Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell; Katherine; Eleanor, wife of William Sinclair, & of David Hepburn; & Agnes, wife of Sir Gilbert Hay).
He also had an illegitimate son (Alexander) and an illegitimate daughter (Janet, wife of James Ogilvy of Findlater).

Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor and Elizabeth Hay obtained a marriage license on 25 June 1466; Date of Dispensation, they being related in the 3rd & 3rd degree of affinity.

Sir George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntley, Lord of Gordon & Badenoch, Justiciary North of the Forth, Lt. North of the Esk, Lord High Chancellor died on 8 June 1501 at Stirling, Stirlingshire, Scotland; Buried at Cambuskenneth, Stirlingshire.


The Gordons of Sutherland and Gordons of Huntly ancestry of Lady Mary Heron (nee McGeoch)

NOTE: The Life Sketch Info. above reflects the research of B. Phillips, Dr. Margaret Heron Selkirk, Dr. Liam Selkirk, et al, for their book : "The Heron & Bromfield Intrigue - Vols. 1, 2, & 3, from years of research on the ancestry of the "Jamaican Herons and their connection to Ford Castle, Chipchase Castle, Etal Castle (Northumberland),Heron House (Essex), Shacklewell Hall (Kent), Rycote (Oxfordshire), Cressy Hall, Surfleet Estate (Lincolnshire) Kirroughtree Estate. Bargaly Estate, Palnur Estate (Dumfries & Galloway), Heron House (Ayrshire); Wigton, Shooter's Hill, Williamsfield Great House (Jamaica) among many others over England, Scotland and Jamaical and the connections to the Huntingdon/Bruce/Stewart/Gordon/Drummond families and the Ruthven/Wemyss* families.

All we ask is if you use our research material, please acknowledge the source



In addition other sources:
1 - In 1488 James III's eldest son was proclaimed James IV by a group of nobles consisting of the Humes and Hepburns in the south and the earls of Angus and Argyll in the north. The earls of Huntly, Crawford, Errol, and Buchan in the north with their respective clans remained loyal and the two sides clashed at the battle of Sauchieburn near Bannockburn.

2 - GEORGE, second Earl of Huntly, was appointed, with the Earl of Crawford, joint justiciary of the country beyond the Forth. He was a member of the Privy Council of James IlI. Though he was an accomplice of Bell-the-Cat and the other disaffected barons in the murder of the royal favourites at Lauder, in the final struggle between them and James, Huntly supported the cause of that unfortunate sovereign, and, along with the Earl of Athole, commanded the vanguard of the royal army in the battle of Sauchieburn, where the King lost his life. James IV., however, seems to have entertained no hostile feelings towards the Earl, for in 1491 he nominated him his lieutenant in the northern parts of Scotland beyond the North Esk river; and, in 1498, he appointed Huntly High Chancellor of Scotland. He resigned this office in 1502, and died soon after. The Earl was twice married. His first wife, Annabella, daughter of James I., bore to him six daughters and five sons. His eldest son became third Earl. His second son, Adam, married Elizabeth, Countess of Sutherland, and became Earl of Sutherland in her right. William, third son, was the ancestor of the Gordons of Gight, from whom Lord Byron was descended. James Gordon of Letterfourie, the fourth, was admiral of the fleet in 1513. Lady Catherine, the eldest daughter of Lord Huntly, who was regarded as the most beautiful and accomplished woman in Scotland, was given in marriage by the King to Perkin Warbeck, whose claims to the English throne he warmly supported. She accompanied that adventurer to England; after his execution King Henry granted her a pension, and assigned her a post of honour at the English Court, where she was known by the name of the White Rose of Scotland. Lady Catherine afterwards married Sir Matthew Cradock, an ancestor of the Pembroke family. The Earl had no issue by his second wife, a daughter of the first Earl of Errol.
[http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/families/gordons.htm]

3 - Although it does appear that there were no children by his first marriage, there is some uncertainty on which of his other wives mothered which of his children. Some sources report that Annabella was mother of only one daughter, the absence of any male issue probably being part of the reason why George divorced her. Claims that Annabella did in fact produce more children may have been made by later Gordons because of the greater social prestige that might have arisen through claiming close descent from the Royal family. We follow what is shown under Burkes Peerage 1934 (Huntly).

4 - George, second earl of Huntly, married Lady Jean[?] Stewart, the daughter of King James I, son of Queen Annabella Drummond.
("Genealogical memoir of the most noble and ancient house of Drummond" by David Malcolm 1808) [1, 4]

  Noted events in his life were:

1. Clan: Clan Gordon & Seton,,. 1598

2. He worked as a Keeper of the castles of Kildrummy, Kindrochat and Inverness. 1598

3. He worked as a Privy Counsellor in 1449. 1598

4. Title Of Nobility: Knighthood, in 1455,. 1598

5. Title Of Nobility: He succeeded his father as 2nd Earl of Huntly, on 15 July 1470,. 1598

6. He worked as a High Chancellor of Scotland between 1498 and 1501. 1598


George married Lady Annabella STEWART Princess of Scotland [6827] [MRIN: 5477], daughter of James I King of Scotland [7414] and Joan BEAUFORT Queen Consort of Scotland [7413], on 10 March 1460 in Aberdeen, , Aberdeenshire, Scotland.1598 The marriage ended in annulment on 24 July 1471. (Lady Annabella STEWART Princess of Scotland [6827] was born on 18 August 1432 in Perth, Perthshire, Scotland,1599 died on 13 October 1494 in Stirling Castle, Stirlingshire, Scotland 1599 and was buried after 13 October 1494 in Killean Graveyard, Tayinloan, Argyll, Scotland 1599.)


George next married Elizabeth DUNBAR 8th Countess of Moray [7411] [MRIN: 5648] on 20 May 1455.1598 (Elizabeth DUNBAR 8th Countess of Moray [7411] was born about 1425 in , , Aberdeenshire, Scotland,1598 died before 17 February 1485 in Luss, Dunbartonshire, Scotland 1598 and was buried on 17 February 1485 in Luss, Dunbartonshire, Scotland 1598.)

  Noted events in their marriage were:

1. They had a marriage annulled on 20 May 1455. 1598


George next married Elizabeth HAY of Errol - Countess of Huntly [7412] [MRIN: 5649] on 12 May 1476. (Elizabeth HAY of Errol - Countess of Huntly [7412] was born about 1442 in Huntly, , Aberdeen, Scotland,1598 died on 27 June 1509 in , , , Scotland 1598 and was buried in 1509 in , , , Scotland 1598.)