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1ST See also: lord chancellor of Scotland, son of See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Gordon, 1st See also: baronet of Haddo, See also: Aberdeenshire, executed by the Presbyterians in 1644, was See also: born on the 3rd of See also: October 1637
.
He graduated M.A., and was chosen professor at See also: King's
See also: College, See also: Aberdeen, in 1658
.
Subsequently he travelled and studied See also: civil See also: law abroad
.
At the Res oration the See also: sequestration of his See also: father's lands was annulled, and in 1665 he succeeded by the See also: death of his-'elder See also: brother to the baronetcy and estates
.
He returned home in 1667, was admitted advocate in 1668 and gained a high,legal reputation
.
He represented Aberdeenshire in the Scottish parliament of 1660 and in the following assemblies, during his first session strongly opposing the projected union of the two legislatures
.
In See also: November 1678 he was made a privy councillor for Scotland, and in 168o was raised to the bench as Lord Haddo
.
He was a leading member of the duke of See also: York's administration, was 'created a lord of session' in See also: June and in November 1681 president of the See also: court
.
The same See also: year he is reported as moving in the council for the torture of witnesses.' In 1682 he was made lord chancellor of Scotland, and was created, on the 13th of November, See also: earl of Aberdeen, Viscount Formartine, and Lord Haddo, Methlick, Tarves and Kellie, in the Scottish See also: peerage, being appointed also See also: sheriff See also: principal of Aberdeenshire and Midlothian
.
Burnet reflects unfavourably upon him, calls him
a proud and covetous See also: man," and declares " the new chancellor exceeded all that had gone before him." 2 He executed the See also: laws enforcing religious conformity with severity, and filled the parish churches, but resisted the excessive See also: measures of tyranny pre-scribed by the See also: English See also: government; and in consequence of an intrigue of the duke of Queensberry and Lord See also: Perth; who gained the duchess of Portsmouth with a See also: present of £27,000, he was dismissed in 1684
.
After his fall he was subjected to various See also: petty prosecutions by his victorious rivals with the view of discovering some See also: act of maladministration on which to found a See also: charge against him, but the investigations only served to strengthen his See also: credit
.
He took an active See also: part in parliament in 1685 and r686, but remained a non-juror during the See also: whale of See also: William's reign, being frequently fined for his non-attendance, and took the oaths for the first
See also: time after See also: Anne's accession, on the 11th of May 1703
.
In the See also: great affair of the Union in 1707, while protesting against the Completion of the treaty till the act declaring the Scots aliens should be repealed, he refused to support the opposition to the measure itself and refrained from attending parliament when the treaty was settled
.
He died on the loth of See also: April 1720, after having amassed a large See also: fortune
.
He is described by John See also: Mackay as " very knowing in the laws and constitution of his country and' is believed to be the solidest statesman in Scotland, a See also: fine orator, speaks slow but, sure."
Sir J
.
Lauder's Hist
.
Notices (See also: Bannatyne See also: Club, 1848), p
.
297
.
2 Hist. of his own Times, i
.
523
.
His See also: person was said to be deformed, and his " want of mine or deportment " was alleged as a disqualification for the office of lord chancellor
.
He married Anne, daughter and See also: sole heiress of See also: George See also: Lockhart of Torbrecks, by whom he had six See also: children, his only surviving son, William, succeeding him as 2nd earl of Aberdeen
.
See Letters to George, earl of Aberdeen (with memoir: Spalding Club, 1851); Hist
.
Account of the Senators of the College of See also: Justice, by G
.
See also: Brunton and D
.
Haig (1832), p
.
408; G
.
See also: Crawfurd's Lives of the See also: Officers of See also: State (1726), p
.
226; See also: Memoirs of Affairs in Scotland, by Sir G
.
See also: Mackenzie (1821), p
.
148; Sir J
.
Lauder's (Lord Fountainhall) See also: Journals (Scottish Hist
.
Society, vol. See also: xxxvi., 'goo) ; J
.
Mackay's Memoirs (1733), p
.
215; A
.
Lang's Hist. of Scotland, 369, 376
.
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