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EARLS OF MINTO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 563 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARLS OF

MINTO  . The Scottish border
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family of Elliot which has held the earldom of Minto since 1813 has had many distinguished members .
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Sir Gilbert Elliot, bart . (1651-1718), and his son and successor, another Sir Gilbert Elliot (1693-1766), were both celebrated Scottish judges and both took the official title of Lord Minto . The elder Sir Gilbert was sentenced to
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death for his share in the rising of the
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earl of Argyll in 1685, but was afterwards pardoned; the younger Sir Gilbert was a scholar and an agriculturist . Among the children of the latter were John Elliot (d . 1808), a
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naval officer, who served as governor of
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Newfoundland and was made an
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admiral; Andrew Elliot, the last
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English governor of New York; and the poetess
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Jean, or Jane, Elliot (c . 1727-1805), who wrote the popular ballad " Flowers of the
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Forest." The eldest son, Sir Gilbert Elliot (1722-1777), who became the third
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baronet in
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April 1766, was a member of parliament from 1753 to 1777, and a friend and follower of the earl of Bute . He filled several public offices, and Horace Walpole said he was " one of the ablest members of the House of
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Commons." His second son was the diplomatist,
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Hugh Elliot (1752-1830), who represented his country at Munich, at Berlin, at Copenhagen and at Naples . He was governor of
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Madras from 1814 to 1820, and he died on the loth of December 1830 . See the
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Memoirs of the Right Hon . Hugh Elliot, by the countess of Minto (
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Edinburgh, 1868).' The third baronet's eldest son was GILBERT ELLIOT, 1st earl of Minto (1751–1814) .

About 1763 Gilbert and his

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brother Hugh were sent to Paris, where their studies were supervised by David Hume and where they became intimate with Mirabeau . Having passed the winters of 1766 and 1767 at Edinburgh University, Gilbert entered Christ Church, Oxford, and on quitting the university he was called to the bar . In 1776 he entered parliament as an
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independent Whig . He became very friendly with Burke, whom he helped in the attack on Warren Hastings and Sir Elijah Impey, and on two occasions was an unsuccessful
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candidate for the office of
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speaker . In 1794 Elliot was appointed to govern Corsica, and in 1797 he assumed the additional names of Murray-Kynynmond and was created Baron Minto . From 1799 to 18o1 he was envoy-extraordinary to Vienna, and having been for a few months president of the board of control he was appointed governor-general of India at the end of 18o6 . He governed with
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great success until 1813 . He was then created Viscount Melgund and earl of Minto . He died at
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Stevenage on the 21st of
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June 1814 and was buried in Westminster Abbey . The earl's second son was Admiral Sir George Elliot (1784-1863), who as a youth was
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present at the battles of Cape St Vincent and the Nile, and who was secretary to the admiralty from 183o to 1834 . A
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nephew of the earl was Sir Charles Elliot (1801–1875) also an admiral, who took a prominent
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part in the war with
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China in 184o . Afterwards he was governor of Bermuda, of
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Trinidad and of St Helena .

End of Article: EARLS OF MINTO
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MINT (Lat. moneta; Mid. Eng. mynt)
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WILLIAM MINTO (1845-1893)

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