Online Encyclopedia

OGILVY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 24 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OGILVY  , the name of a celebrated Scottish

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family of which the
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earl of Airlie is the head . The family was probably descended from a certain Gillebride, earl of Angus, who received lands from William the Lion .
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Sir Walter Ogilvy (d . 1440) of Lintrathen, lord high treasurer of Scotland from 1425 to 1431, was the son of Sir Walter Ogilvy of Wester Powrie and Auchterhouse, a man, says Andrew of Wyntoun, " stout and manfull, bauld and wycht," who was killed in 1392 . He built a castle at Airlie in Forfarshire, and
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left two sons . The elder of these, Sir John Ogilvy (d. c . 1484), was the
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father of Sir James Ogilvy (c . 1430-c . 1504), who was made a lord of parliament in 1491; and the younger, Sir Walter Ogilvy, was the ancestor of the earls of Findlater . The earldom of Findlater, bestowed on James Ogilvy, Lord Ogilvy of Deskford, in 1638, was
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united in 1711 with the earldom of Seafield and became dormant after the
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death of James Ogilvy, the 7th earl, in
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October all (see SEA-FIELD, EARLS OF) . Sir James Ogilvy's descendant, James Ogilvy, 5th Lord Ogilvy of Airlie (c . 1541—1606), a son of James Ogilvy, master of Ogilvy, who was killed at the
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battle of Pinkie in 1547, took a leading
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part in Scottish politics during the reigns of Mary and of James VI .

His

grandson, James Ogilvy (c . 1593—1666), was created earl of Airlie by Charles I. at York in 1639 . A loyal partisan of the king, he joined Montrose in Scotland in 1644 and was one of the royalist leaders at the battle of
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Kilsyth . The destruction of the earl's castles of Airlie and of Forther in 164o by the earl of Argyll, who " left him not in all his lands a cock to crow day," gave rise to the
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song " The bonny house o'Airlie." His eldest son, James, the 2nd earl (c . 1615—c . 1704) also fought among the royalists in Scotland; in 1644 he was taken prisoner, but he was released in the following
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year as a consequence of Montrose's victory at Kilsyth . He was again a prisoner after the battle of Philiphaugh and was sentenced to death in 1646, but he escaped from his captivity at St Andrews and was after-wards pardoned . Serving with the Scots against Cromwell he became a prisoner for the third time in 165r, and was in the Tower of
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London during most of the years of the
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Commonwealth . He was a fairly prominent man under Charles II. and James II., and in 1689 he ranged himself on the side of William of Orange . This earl's grandson, James Ogilvy (d . 1731), took part in the Jacobite rising of 1715 and was attainted; consequently on his father's death in 1717 he was not allowed to succeed to the earldom, although he was pardoned in 1725 . When he died his
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brother John (d .

1761) became earl de jure, and John's son

David (1725—1803) joined the standard of Prince Charles
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Edward in 1745 . He was attainted, and after the defeat of the prince at
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Culloden escaped to Norway and Sweden, afterwards serving in the French army, where he commanded " le regiment Ogilvy" and was known as " le
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bel Ecossais." In 1778 he was pardoned and was allowed to return to Scotland, and his family became
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extinct when his son David died unmarried in
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April 1812 . After this event David's cousin, another David Ogilvy(1785-1849), claimed the earldom . He asserted that he was unaffected by the two attainders, but the House of Lords decided that these barred his succession; however, in 1826 the attainders were reversed by act of parliament and David became 6th earl of Airlie . He died on the loth of August 1849 and was succeeded by his son, David Graham Drummond Ogilvy (1826—1881), who was a Scottish representative peer for over
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thirty years . The latter's son, David Stanley William Drummond Ogilvy, the 8th earl (1856—1900), served in
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Egypt in 1882 and 1885, and was killed on the rrth of
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June 1900 during the
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Boer War while at the head of his regiment, the 12th Lancers . His titles then passed to his son, David Lyulph Gore Wolseley Ogilvy, the 9th earl (b . 1843) . A word may be said about other noteworthy members of the Ogilvy family . John Ogilvy, called Powrie Ogilvy, was a
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political adventurer who professed to serve King James VI. as a spy and who certainly served William
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Cecil in this capacity . Mariota Ogilvy (d . 1575) was the
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mistress of Cardinal Beaton .

Sir

George Ogilvy (d . 1663), a supporter of Charles I. during the struggle with the
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Covenanters, was created a peer as lord of
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Banff in 1642; this dignity became dormant, or extinct, on the death of his descendant, William Ogilvy, the 8th lord, in June 1803 . Sir George Ogilvy of Barras (d. c . 1679) defended Dunnottar Castle against Cromwell in 1651 and 1652, and was instrumental in preventing the regalia of Scotland from falling into his hands; in 166o he was created a
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baronet, the title becoming extinct in 1837 . See Sir R . Douglas, Peerage of Scotland, new ed. by Sir J . B . Paul (19o4 fol.) .

End of Article: OGILVY
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