Online Encyclopedia

EARL OF SEAFORTH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 533 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARL OF SEAFORTH  , a Scottish title held by the
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family of Mackenzie from 1623 to 1716, and again from 1771 to 1781 . The Mackenzies trace their descent to one Colin of Kintail (d . 1278), and their name is a variant of Mackenneth .
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Kenneth, the twelfth head'of the clan, was made Lord Mackenzie of Kintail in 1609, and his son Colin, who succeeded his
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father as 2nd Lord Mackenzie in March 1611, was created
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earl of Seaforth in 1623 . Colin's successor was his
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half-
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brother George (d . 1651), who became the 2nd earl in 1633 . George was alternately a royalist and a covenanter between 1636 and 1646, and was afterwardsin Holland with Charles II., who made him secretary of state for Scotland . His grandson, Kenneth, the 4th earl, followed James II. to France and was with the dethroned king in Ireland . Sent by James in 1690 to head a rising in Scotland, he was captured and imprisoned, but in 1697 he was released and he died in Paris in
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January 1701 . His successor was his son William, who joined the Jacobite standard at
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Braemar in 1715, and then, having raised 3000 men, was
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present at the
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battle of
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Sheriff muir and was appointed
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lieutenant-general of the
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northern counties . He also took
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part in the Jacobite enterprise of 1719, being wounded at Glenshiel . In 1716 he was attainded and his titles and estates forfeited; before his
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death in January 1740, he had been relieved of some of the penalties of his treason, although his titles were not restored .

His son Kenneth (c . 17'8–1761), who but for the

attainder would have been the 6th earl, helped the
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English government during the rising of 17451 and was a member of parliament for some years . His son Kenneth (c . 1744–1781) was created earl of Seaforth in 1771, but his peerage became
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extinct when he died in August 1781, although there were still heirs to the older earldom, which was under attainder . This earl raised the regiment of Highlanders, the 78th, known later as the 2nd
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battalion of the Seaforth Highlanders .

End of Article: EARL OF SEAFORTH
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