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  1. 10 de mar. de 2021 · Amid the ever-shifting political alliances of 17th century Scotland, fighting marquess James Graham morphed from Covenanter champion into defender of the Crown. James Graham arrived a prisoner at the Canongate district on the outskirts of Edinburgh on May 18, 1650, and was promptly bound to the seat of a rude little horse-drawn cart for ...

  2. 25 de set. de 2021 · Inverlochy Castle, with Ben Nevis in the Background. James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose lived from 1612 to 21 May 1650. He can be viewed in various lights. To some he was a man who backed both sides in the key conflicts of the day to further his own ambitions. Perhaps more charitably he can be viewed as a pragmatist who sought to avoid the ...

  3. 7 de abr. de 2024 · cywiki James Graham, Ardalydd 1af Montrose; dewiki James Graham, 1. Marquess of Montrose; enwiki James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose; eswiki James Graham, I marqués de Montrose; fawiki جیمز گراهام، اولین مارکز مونتروز; frwiki James Graham (1er marquis de Montrose) itwiki James Graham, I marchese di Montrose

  4. James Graham, 1. Marquess of Montrose. James Graham, 1. Marquess of Montrose (* 1612 (vermutlich) in Montrose; † 21. Mai 1650 in Edinburgh) war ein schottischer Adeliger, der in den Kriegen der drei Königreiche von 1644 bis 1650 in Schottland für die königliche Seite kämpfte und hingerichtet wurde.

  5. Scotland. Died. 7 January 1742 (aged 59) London, England, Great Britain. Spouse. Christian Carnegie. Children. 5, including William and George. James Graham, 1st Duke and 4th Marquess of Montrose (April 1682 – 7 January 1742) was a Scottish aristocratic statesman in the early eighteenth century.

  6. James Graham, 8th Duke of Montrose, OStJ (born 6 April 1935), styled as the Earl of Kincardine until 1954 and the Marquess of Graham between 1954 and 1992, is a Scottish peer and Conservative politician in the House of Lords .

  7. James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose was born in 1612, the only son of John Graham, 4th Earl of Montrose and Lady Margaret Ruthven in in the family mansion 'New Montrose in Montrose, Scotland. He succeeded to the title of 5th Earl of Montrose and to the title of 7th Lord Graham on 14 November 1626. [citation needed]