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  2. On 2 July 1784, the 4th Duke was created Earl of Norwich, in the County of Norfolk, and Baron Gordon, of Huntley in the County of Gloucester, in the Peerage of Great Britain. The principal family seat was Gordon Castle. The Dukedom became extinct in 1836, along with all the titles created in 1684 and 1784. Most of the Gordon estates passed to ...

    • Alexander Gordon

      Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, KT (18 June 1743 – 17...

  3. His grandson George Gordon (1643-1716), fourth marquis, was restored to the family titles and estates in 1661 and created Duke of Gordon (1684). He held Edinburgh Castle for James II in Revolution of 1688. His son Alexander Gordon (16781728), second duke, also a Jacobite, as Marquis of Huntly led 2300 men to Old Pretender at Perth (1715).

  4. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. The title Duke of Gordon has been created once in the Peerage of Scotland and again in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. Quick Facts Dukedom of Gordonheld with Dukedom of Richmond, Dukedom of Lennox, Creation date ...

  5. The Duke of Gordon, who was the chief of the clan, was usually styled "The Cock of the North". His most ancient title was the "Gudeman of the Bog", from the Bog-of-Gight, a morass in the parish of Bellie, Banffshire, in the centre of which the former stronghold of this family was placed, and which forms the site of Gordon castle, considered the ...

  6. Description: The one thousand letters dating from 1677 to 1860 which comprise the Gordon Papers, are the correspondence of the five Dukes of Gordon. The letters, which were originally preserved at Gordon Castle, were first noticed in the 1st Report of the Historical Manuscripts Commission in 1874, although a very small number of them were ...

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