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Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll

Archibald Campbell, Marquess of Argyll, 8th Earl of Argyll, Chief of Clan Campbell (March 1607 – 27 May 1661) was a Scottish nobleman, politician, and peer. The de facto head of Scotland's government during most of the conflict of the 1640s and 50s known as the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, he was a major figure in the Covenanter movement that fought for the maintenance of the Presbyterian religion against the Stuart monarchy's attempts to impose episcopacy. He is often remembered as the principal opponent of the royalist general James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose.

The Marquess of Argyll
The Marquess of Argyll, by David Scougall
Born7 March 1607
Died27 May 1661 (aged 54)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Cause of deathExecution
Resting placeKilmun Parish Church
NationalityScottish
Alma materUniversity of St Andrews
Occupation(s)Chief of Clan Campbell, politician
TitleMarquess of Argyll, 8th Earl of Argyll, member of the Privy Council of Scotland, Assembly of Divines, parliament of 1659 for Aberdeenshire
SpouseLady Margaret Douglas
ChildrenArchibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll
Lord Neill Campbell
Lady Anne Campbell
Lady Jean Campbell
two other daughters
Parent(s)Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll
Agnes Douglas, Countess of Argyll

Early life

Archibald Campbell, Marquess of Argyll was the eldest son of Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll, by his first wife Agnes Douglas daughter of William Douglas, 6th Earl of Morton, and was educated at St Andrews University, where he matriculated on 15 January 1622. He had early in life, as Lord Lorne, been entrusted with the possession of the Argyll estates when his father renounced Protestantism and took arms for Philip III of Spain; and he exercised over Clan Campbell an authority almost absolute, disposing of a force of 20,000 retainers, being, according to Baillie, "by far the most powerful subject in the kingdom".[1]

Argyll was said to be of above average height, but slight in build. He had reddish hair, which darkened in later life – among the Highlanders he was often called "red Argyll" – and a pronounced squint.[2] Contemporaries said he had a very charming and persuasive manner,[2] although early in life he developed a habit of abruptly leaving the room if a conversation took a turn he did not like. Clarendon said that "his wit was pregnant, and his humour gay and pleasant, except when he liked not the company or the argument".[3]

In the Covenanter movement

 
Portrait traditionally identified as the 9th Earl, but subsequently confirmed as being of the 8th Earl in his youth (Scottish Notes and Queries, v11, pp.5–6). His biographer John Willcock believed that it dated from his 1626 marriage.

On the outbreak of the religious dispute between the king and Scotland in 1637, Lord Lorne's support was eagerly sought by Charles I. He was made a privy councillor in 1628. In 1638, the king summoned him, together with the earls of Traquair and Roxburgh, to London, but he refused to be won over, warned Charles against his despotic ecclesiastical policy, and showed great hostility towards William Laud. In consequence, a secret commission was given to the Randal MacDonnell, Earl of Antrim to invade Argyll and stir up the MacDonalds against the Campbells. Argyll, who inherited the title at the death of his father in 1638, originally had no preference for Presbyterianism, but now definitely took the side of the Covenanters in defence of national religion and liberties.[1][4] Argyll continued to attend the meetings of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland after its dissolution by the Marquess of Hamilton, when Episcopacy was abolished. In 1639, he sent a statement to Laud, and subsequently to the king, defending the General Assembly's action.[1]

Argyll raised a body of troops and seized Hamilton's castle of Brodick in Arran. After the pacification of Berwick-upon-Tweed, he carried a motion, in opposition to James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose, by which the estates secured to themselves the election of the lords of the articles, who had formerly been nominated by the king. This was a fundamental change to the Scottish constitution, whereby the management of public affairs was entrusted to a representative body and withdrawn from the control of the crown.[1]

An attempt by the king to deprive Argyll of his office as justiciary of Argyll failed, and on the prorogation of the parliament by Charles, in May 1640, Argyll moved that it should continue its sittings and that the government and safety of the kingdom should be secured by a committee of the estates, of which he was the guiding spirit. In June, he was trusted with a Commission of fire and sword against the royalists in Atholl and Angus, which, after succeeding in entrapping John Murray, 1st Earl of Atholl, he carried out with completeness and cruelty.[5]

It was on this occasion that the Bonnie Hoose o' Airlie was burned. By this time, the personal dislike and difference in opinion between Montrose and Argyll led to an open breach. The former arranged that on the occasion of Charles's approaching visit to Scotland, Argyll would be accused of high treason in the parliament. The plot, however, was disclosed, and Montrose, among others, was imprisoned. Accordingly, when the king arrived, he found himself deprived of every remnant of influence and authority. It only remained for Charles to make a series of concessions. He transferred control over judicial and political appointments to the parliament, created Argyll a marquess in 1641, and returned home, having, in Clarendon's words, made a perfect deed of gift of that kingdom. Meanwhile, there was an unsuccessful attempt to kidnap Argyll, Hamilton, and Lanark, known as The Incident. Argyll was mainly instrumental in this crisis in keeping the national party faithful to what was to him evidently the common cause, and in accomplishing the alliance with the Long Parliament in 1643.[6]

English and Scottish Civil Wars

In January 1644, he accompanied the Scottish army into England as a member of the Committee of Both Kingdoms and in command of a troop of horse, but was soon compelled, in March, to return to suppress Royalists in the Scottish Civil War and to defend his own territories. He forced Huntly to retreat in April. In July, he advanced to abet the Irish troops now landed in Argyll, which were fighting in conjunction with Montrose, who had put himself at the head of the Royalist forces in Scotland. Neither general succeeded in obtaining an advantage over the other, or even in engaging in battle. Argyll then returned to Edinburgh, threw up his commission, and retired to Inveraray Castle. Montrose unexpectedly followed him in December, compelling him to flee to Roseneath, and devastating his territories. On 2 February 1645, while following Montrose northwards, Argyll was surprised by him at Inverlochy. He witnessed, from his barge on the lake to which he had retired after falling from his horse, a fearful slaughter of his troops, which included 1,500 of the Campbells.[6][7] He arrived at Edinburgh on 12 February and was again present at Montrose's further great victory on 15 August at Kilsyth, whence he escaped to Newcastle. Argyll was at last delivered from his formidable antagonist by Montrose's final defeat at Philiphaugh on 12 September.[6]

In 1646, he was sent to negotiate with the king at Newcastle after his surrender to the Scottish army, when he endeavoured to moderate the demands of the parliament and at the same time to persuade the king to accept them. On 7 July 1646, he was appointed a member of the Assembly of Divines.[6]

Up to this point, Argyll's statesmanship had been highly successful. The national liberties and religion of Scotland had been defended and guaranteed, and the power of the king in Scotland reduced to a mere shadow. In addition, these privileges had been still further secured by the alliance with the English opposition, and by the subsequent triumph of the Parliament and Presbyterianism in the neighbouring kingdom. The king himself was a prisoner in their midst. But Argyll's influence could not survive the rupture of the alliance between the two nations on which his whole policy was founded. He opposed in vain the Engagement, concluded in December 1647, between Charles I and the Scots against the English Parliament. James, Duke of Hamilton commanded an Engager army that marched into England and was defeated by Cromwell at Preston the following August. Argyll, after a narrow escape from a surprise attack at the Battle of Stirling in September 1648, joined the Whiggamores, a body of Covenanters at Edinburgh; and, supported by John Campbell, 1st Earl of Loudoun and Alexander Leslie, 1st Earl of Leven, he established a new government, which welcomed Oliver Cromwell on his arrival there on 4 October 1648.[6]

War with the English Parliament and personal ruin

 
Photograph of now lost portrait of c.1644, attributed to George Jamesone, of Archibald Campbell, Marquess of Argyll, formerly at Castle Campbell. The painting, rediscovered in an estate cottage in c.1870, was destroyed in an 1877 fire at Inveraray Castle.[8]

This alliance, however, was at once destroyed by the execution of Charles I on 30 January 1649, which excited universal horror in Scotland. In the series of tangled incidents which followed, Argyll lost control of the national policy. He describes himself at this period as "a distracted man ... in a distracted time" whose "remedies ... had the quite contrary operation".[6]

Argyll supported the invitation from the Covenanters to Charles II to land in Scotland, and gazed upon the captured Montrose, bound on a cart to execution at Edinburgh. When Charles II came to Scotland, having signed the Covenant and repudiated Montrose, Argyll remained at the head of the administration. After the defeat of Dunbar, Charles retained his support by the promise of a dukedom and the Garter, and an attempt was made by Argyll to marry the king to his daughter, Lady Anne.[6][9] On 1 January 1651, he placed the crown on Charles's head at Scone. But his power had now passed to the Hamiltonian party.[6]

Argyll strongly opposed, but was unable to prevent, the expedition into England. In the subsequent reduction of Scotland, after holding out in Inveraray Castle for nearly a year, he was at last surprised in August 1652 and submitted to the Commonwealth. His ruin was then complete. His policy had failed, his power had vanished. He was hopelessly in debt, and on terms of such violent hostility with his eldest son and heir Archibald as to be obliged to demand a garrison in his house for his protection.[6]

Later life and writings

 
Memorial to Argyll in St. Giles Kirk, Edinburgh

During his visit to Monck at Dalkeith in 1654 to complain of this, Argyll was subjected to much personal insult from his creditors, and on visiting London in September 1655 to obtain money due to him from the Scottish Parliament, he was arrested for debt, though soon liberated. In Richard Cromwell's Parliament of 1659 Argyll sat as member for Aberdeenshire.[6]

At the Restoration, Argyll presented himself at Whitehall, but was at once arrested by order of Charles II and placed in the Tower of London (1660), before being sent to Edinburgh to stand trial for high treason. He was acquitted of complicity in the death of Charles I, and his escape from the whole charge seemed imminent, but the arrival of a packet of letters written by Argyll to Monck showed conclusively his collaboration with Cromwell's government, particularly in the suppression of Glencairn's Royalist rising in 1652. He was immediately sentenced to death,[6] his execution by beheading on the 'Maiden' taking place on 27 May 1661,[10] before the death warrant had even been signed by the king. He was attended in his final hours by Rev Archibald Hutchison of Tolbooth Parish (contained in St Giles Cathedral) which oversaw the Tolbooth prison.[11]

His head was placed on the same spike upon the west end of the Tolbooth, as that of Montrose, who had previously been exposed there, and his body was buried at Kilmun Parish Church near the Holy Loch, where the head was also deposited in 1664. A monument was erected to his memory in Church of St Giles in Edinburgh in 1895.[6]

Works

While imprisoned in the Tower he wrote Instructions to a Son (1661). Some of his speeches, including the one delivered on the scaffold, were published and are printed in the Harleian Miscellany.[6]

Family

Argyll married Lady Margaret Douglas, second daughter of William Douglas, 7th Earl of Morton, with whom he had two sons, the elder of whom, Archibald, succeeded him as the 9th Earl,[12] and four daughters.[6]

Ancestry

In Fiction

Archibald Campbell, Marquess of Argyll features as a character in Neil Munro's novel of the Little Wars of Lorn, John Splendid (1898).

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Yorke & Chisholm 1911, p. 483.
  2. ^ a b Willcock 1903, p. 63.
  3. ^ Willcock 1903, p. 336.
  4. ^ This Day in Presbyterian History.
  5. ^ Yorke & Chisholm 1911, pp. 483–484.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Yorke & Chisholm 1911, p. 484.
  7. ^ Roberts 2000, pp. 68–69.
  8. ^ Stevenson 1896, pp. 101–102.
  9. ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 89, 99–100.
  10. ^ Cruwys & Riffenburgh 1995, pp. &#91, page needed&#93, .
  11. ^ Fasti Ecclesiastae Scoticana by Hew Scott
  12. ^ Henderson 1886.

References

  • Cruwys, Elizabeth; Riffenburgh, Beau (1995). Hicks, Penny (ed.). Explore Britain's Castles. Basingstoke, Hampshire: AA Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7495-1048-0.
  • Fraser, Antonia (1979). King Charles II. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 89, 99–100.
  • Henderson, Thomas Finlayson (1886). "Campbell, Archibald (1598–1661)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 8. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 319–329.
  • Roberts, John Leonard (2000). Clan, king, and covenant: history of the Highland clans from the Civil War to the Glencoe Massacre. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-0-7486-1393-9.
  • Stevenson, J.H., ed. (1896). Scottish Antiquary or Northern Notes and Queries. Vol. XI. Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable. p. 101-102.
  • "This Day in Presbyterian History · February 7: Archibald Campbell, Marquis of Argyle". This Day in Presbyterian History. 7 February 2017. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  • Willcock, J. (1903). The Great Marquess.

Attribution:

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainYorke, Philip Chesney; Chisholm, Hugh (1911). "Argyll, Earls and Dukes of". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 483–486. Endnotes:
    • Life and Times of Archibald Marquess of Argyll (1903), by John Willcock, who prints for the first time the six incriminating letters to Monk
    • Eng. Hist. Review, xviii. 369 and 624
    • Scottish History Society, vol. xvii. (1894)
    • Charles II. and Scotland in 1650, ed. by S. R. Gardiner, and vol. xviii. (1895)
    • History of Scotland, by A. Lang, vol. iii. (1904)

Further reading

  • Stevenson, David (May 2006) [2004]. "Campbell, Archibald, marquess of Argyll (1605x7–1661)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4472. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Peerage of Scotland
New creation Marquess of Argyll
1641–1661
Forfeit
Preceded by Earl of Argyll
1638–1661
Succeeded by

archibald, campbell, marquess, argyll, archibald, campbell, marquess, argyll, earl, argyll, chief, clan, campbell, march, 1607, 1661, scottish, nobleman, politician, peer, facto, head, scotland, government, during, most, conflict, 1640s, known, wars, three, ki. Archibald Campbell Marquess of Argyll 8th Earl of Argyll Chief of Clan Campbell March 1607 27 May 1661 was a Scottish nobleman politician and peer The de facto head of Scotland s government during most of the conflict of the 1640s and 50s known as the Wars of the Three Kingdoms he was a major figure in the Covenanter movement that fought for the maintenance of the Presbyterian religion against the Stuart monarchy s attempts to impose episcopacy He is often remembered as the principal opponent of the royalist general James Graham 1st Marquess of Montrose The Marquess of ArgyllThe Marquess of Argyll by David ScougallBorn7 March 1607Died27 May 1661 aged 54 Edinburgh ScotlandCause of deathExecutionResting placeKilmun Parish ChurchNationalityScottishAlma materUniversity of St AndrewsOccupation s Chief of Clan Campbell politicianTitleMarquess of Argyll 8th Earl of Argyll member of the Privy Council of Scotland Assembly of Divines parliament of 1659 for AberdeenshireSpouseLady Margaret DouglasChildrenArchibald Campbell 9th Earl of ArgyllLord Neill CampbellLady Anne CampbellLady Jean Campbell two other daughtersParent s Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of ArgyllAgnes Douglas Countess of Argyll Contents 1 Early life 2 In the Covenanter movement 3 English and Scottish Civil Wars 4 War with the English Parliament and personal ruin 5 Later life and writings 6 Works 7 Family 8 Ancestry 9 In Fiction 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further readingEarly life EditArchibald Campbell Marquess of Argyll was the eldest son of Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyll by his first wife Agnes Douglas daughter of William Douglas 6th Earl of Morton and was educated at St Andrews University where he matriculated on 15 January 1622 He had early in life as Lord Lorne been entrusted with the possession of the Argyll estates when his father renounced Protestantism and took arms for Philip III of Spain and he exercised over Clan Campbell an authority almost absolute disposing of a force of 20 000 retainers being according to Baillie by far the most powerful subject in the kingdom 1 Argyll was said to be of above average height but slight in build He had reddish hair which darkened in later life among the Highlanders he was often called red Argyll and a pronounced squint 2 Contemporaries said he had a very charming and persuasive manner 2 although early in life he developed a habit of abruptly leaving the room if a conversation took a turn he did not like Clarendon said that his wit was pregnant and his humour gay and pleasant except when he liked not the company or the argument 3 In the Covenanter movement Edit Portrait traditionally identified as the 9th Earl but subsequently confirmed as being of the 8th Earl in his youth Scottish Notes and Queries v11 pp 5 6 His biographer John Willcock believed that it dated from his 1626 marriage On the outbreak of the religious dispute between the king and Scotland in 1637 Lord Lorne s support was eagerly sought by Charles I He was made a privy councillor in 1628 In 1638 the king summoned him together with the earls of Traquair and Roxburgh to London but he refused to be won over warned Charles against his despotic ecclesiastical policy and showed great hostility towards William Laud In consequence a secret commission was given to the Randal MacDonnell Earl of Antrim to invade Argyll and stir up the MacDonalds against the Campbells Argyll who inherited the title at the death of his father in 1638 originally had no preference for Presbyterianism but now definitely took the side of the Covenanters in defence of national religion and liberties 1 4 Argyll continued to attend the meetings of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland after its dissolution by the Marquess of Hamilton when Episcopacy was abolished In 1639 he sent a statement to Laud and subsequently to the king defending the General Assembly s action 1 Argyll raised a body of troops and seized Hamilton s castle of Brodick in Arran After the pacification of Berwick upon Tweed he carried a motion in opposition to James Graham 1st Marquess of Montrose by which the estates secured to themselves the election of the lords of the articles who had formerly been nominated by the king This was a fundamental change to the Scottish constitution whereby the management of public affairs was entrusted to a representative body and withdrawn from the control of the crown 1 An attempt by the king to deprive Argyll of his office as justiciary of Argyll failed and on the prorogation of the parliament by Charles in May 1640 Argyll moved that it should continue its sittings and that the government and safety of the kingdom should be secured by a committee of the estates of which he was the guiding spirit In June he was trusted with a Commission of fire and sword against the royalists in Atholl and Angus which after succeeding in entrapping John Murray 1st Earl of Atholl he carried out with completeness and cruelty 5 It was on this occasion that the Bonnie Hoose o Airlie was burned By this time the personal dislike and difference in opinion between Montrose and Argyll led to an open breach The former arranged that on the occasion of Charles s approaching visit to Scotland Argyll would be accused of high treason in the parliament The plot however was disclosed and Montrose among others was imprisoned Accordingly when the king arrived he found himself deprived of every remnant of influence and authority It only remained for Charles to make a series of concessions He transferred control over judicial and political appointments to the parliament created Argyll a marquess in 1641 and returned home having in Clarendon s words made a perfect deed of gift of that kingdom Meanwhile there was an unsuccessful attempt to kidnap Argyll Hamilton and Lanark known as The Incident Argyll was mainly instrumental in this crisis in keeping the national party faithful to what was to him evidently the common cause and in accomplishing the alliance with the Long Parliament in 1643 6 English and Scottish Civil Wars EditIn January 1644 he accompanied the Scottish army into England as a member of the Committee of Both Kingdoms and in command of a troop of horse but was soon compelled in March to return to suppress Royalists in the Scottish Civil War and to defend his own territories He forced Huntly to retreat in April In July he advanced to abet the Irish troops now landed in Argyll which were fighting in conjunction with Montrose who had put himself at the head of the Royalist forces in Scotland Neither general succeeded in obtaining an advantage over the other or even in engaging in battle Argyll then returned to Edinburgh threw up his commission and retired to Inveraray Castle Montrose unexpectedly followed him in December compelling him to flee to Roseneath and devastating his territories On 2 February 1645 while following Montrose northwards Argyll was surprised by him at Inverlochy He witnessed from his barge on the lake to which he had retired after falling from his horse a fearful slaughter of his troops which included 1 500 of the Campbells 6 7 He arrived at Edinburgh on 12 February and was again present at Montrose s further great victory on 15 August at Kilsyth whence he escaped to Newcastle Argyll was at last delivered from his formidable antagonist by Montrose s final defeat at Philiphaugh on 12 September 6 In 1646 he was sent to negotiate with the king at Newcastle after his surrender to the Scottish army when he endeavoured to moderate the demands of the parliament and at the same time to persuade the king to accept them On 7 July 1646 he was appointed a member of the Assembly of Divines 6 Up to this point Argyll s statesmanship had been highly successful The national liberties and religion of Scotland had been defended and guaranteed and the power of the king in Scotland reduced to a mere shadow In addition these privileges had been still further secured by the alliance with the English opposition and by the subsequent triumph of the Parliament and Presbyterianism in the neighbouring kingdom The king himself was a prisoner in their midst But Argyll s influence could not survive the rupture of the alliance between the two nations on which his whole policy was founded He opposed in vain the Engagement concluded in December 1647 between Charles I and the Scots against the English Parliament James Duke of Hamilton commanded an Engager army that marched into England and was defeated by Cromwell at Preston the following August Argyll after a narrow escape from a surprise attack at the Battle of Stirling in September 1648 joined the Whiggamores a body of Covenanters at Edinburgh and supported by John Campbell 1st Earl of Loudoun and Alexander Leslie 1st Earl of Leven he established a new government which welcomed Oliver Cromwell on his arrival there on 4 October 1648 6 War with the English Parliament and personal ruin Edit Photograph of now lost portrait of c 1644 attributed to George Jamesone of Archibald Campbell Marquess of Argyll formerly at Castle Campbell The painting rediscovered in an estate cottage in c 1870 was destroyed in an 1877 fire at Inveraray Castle 8 This alliance however was at once destroyed by the execution of Charles I on 30 January 1649 which excited universal horror in Scotland In the series of tangled incidents which followed Argyll lost control of the national policy He describes himself at this period as a distracted man in a distracted time whose remedies had the quite contrary operation 6 Argyll supported the invitation from the Covenanters to Charles II to land in Scotland and gazed upon the captured Montrose bound on a cart to execution at Edinburgh When Charles II came to Scotland having signed the Covenant and repudiated Montrose Argyll remained at the head of the administration After the defeat of Dunbar Charles retained his support by the promise of a dukedom and the Garter and an attempt was made by Argyll to marry the king to his daughter Lady Anne 6 9 On 1 January 1651 he placed the crown on Charles s head at Scone But his power had now passed to the Hamiltonian party 6 Argyll strongly opposed but was unable to prevent the expedition into England In the subsequent reduction of Scotland after holding out in Inveraray Castle for nearly a year he was at last surprised in August 1652 and submitted to the Commonwealth His ruin was then complete His policy had failed his power had vanished He was hopelessly in debt and on terms of such violent hostility with his eldest son and heir Archibald as to be obliged to demand a garrison in his house for his protection 6 Later life and writings Edit Memorial to Argyll in St Giles Kirk Edinburgh During his visit to Monck at Dalkeith in 1654 to complain of this Argyll was subjected to much personal insult from his creditors and on visiting London in September 1655 to obtain money due to him from the Scottish Parliament he was arrested for debt though soon liberated In Richard Cromwell s Parliament of 1659 Argyll sat as member for Aberdeenshire 6 At the Restoration Argyll presented himself at Whitehall but was at once arrested by order of Charles II and placed in the Tower of London 1660 before being sent to Edinburgh to stand trial for high treason He was acquitted of complicity in the death of Charles I and his escape from the whole charge seemed imminent but the arrival of a packet of letters written by Argyll to Monck showed conclusively his collaboration with Cromwell s government particularly in the suppression of Glencairn s Royalist rising in 1652 He was immediately sentenced to death 6 his execution by beheading on the Maiden taking place on 27 May 1661 10 before the death warrant had even been signed by the king He was attended in his final hours by Rev Archibald Hutchison of Tolbooth Parish contained in St Giles Cathedral which oversaw the Tolbooth prison 11 His head was placed on the same spike upon the west end of the Tolbooth as that of Montrose who had previously been exposed there and his body was buried at Kilmun Parish Church near the Holy Loch where the head was also deposited in 1664 A monument was erected to his memory in Church of St Giles in Edinburgh in 1895 6 Works EditWhile imprisoned in the Tower he wrote Instructions to a Son 1661 Some of his speeches including the one delivered on the scaffold were published and are printed in the Harleian Miscellany 6 Family EditArgyll married Lady Margaret Douglas second daughter of William Douglas 7th Earl of Morton with whom he had two sons the elder of whom Archibald succeeded him as the 9th Earl 12 and four daughters 6 Ancestry EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Archibald Campbell 1st Marquess of Argyll16 Colin Campbell 3rd Earl of Argyll8 Archibald Campbell 4th Earl of Argyll17 Jean Gordon4 Colin Campbell 6th Earl of Argyll18 William Graham 3rd Earl of Menteith9 Lady Margaret Graham19 Margaret Moubray2 Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyll20 Robert Keith Master of Marischal10 William Keith 4th Earl Marischal21 Elizabeth Douglas5 Agnes Keith Countess of Moray11 Margaret Keith1 Archibald Campbell Marquess of Argyll12 Sir Robert Douglas of Lochleven6 William Douglas 6th Earl of Morton26 John Erskine 5th Lord Erskine13 Margaret Erskine27 Lady Margaret Campbell3 Agnes Douglas Countess of Argyll14 George Leslie 4th Earl of Rothes7 Agnes Leslie Countess of Morton30 William Crichton 3rd Lord Crichton15 Margaret Crichton31 Margaret StewartIn Fiction EditArchibald Campbell Marquess of Argyll features as a character in Neil Munro s novel of the Little Wars of Lorn John Splendid 1898 Notes Edit a b c d Yorke amp Chisholm 1911 p 483 a b Willcock 1903 p 63 Willcock 1903 p 336 This Day in Presbyterian History Yorke amp Chisholm 1911 pp 483 484 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Yorke amp Chisholm 1911 p 484 Roberts 2000 pp 68 69 Stevenson 1896 pp 101 102 Fraser 1979 pp 89 99 100 Cruwys amp Riffenburgh 1995 pp amp 91 page needed amp 93 Fasti Ecclesiastae Scoticana by Hew Scott Henderson 1886 References EditCruwys Elizabeth Riffenburgh Beau 1995 Hicks Penny ed Explore Britain s Castles Basingstoke Hampshire AA Publishing ISBN 978 0 7495 1048 0 Fraser Antonia 1979 King Charles II London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson pp 89 99 100 Henderson Thomas Finlayson 1886 Campbell Archibald 1598 1661 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 319 329 Roberts John Leonard 2000 Clan king and covenant history of the Highland clans from the Civil War to the Glencoe Massacre Edinburgh University Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 7486 1393 9 Stevenson J H ed 1896 Scottish Antiquary or Northern Notes and Queries Vol XI Edinburgh T and A Constable p 101 102 This Day in Presbyterian History February 7 Archibald Campbell Marquis of Argyle This Day in Presbyterian History 7 February 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2019 Willcock J 1903 The Great Marquess Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Yorke Philip Chesney Chisholm Hugh 1911 Argyll Earls and Dukes of In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 483 486 Endnotes Life and Times of Archibald Marquess of Argyll 1903 by John Willcock who prints for the first time the six incriminating letters to Monk Eng Hist Review xviii 369 and 624 Scottish History Society vol xvii 1894 Charles II and Scotland in 1650 ed by S R Gardiner and vol xviii 1895 History of Scotland by A Lang vol iii 1904 Further reading EditStevenson David May 2006 2004 Campbell Archibald marquess of Argyll 1605x7 1661 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4472 Subscription or UK public library membership required Peerage of ScotlandNew creation Marquess of Argyll1641 1661 ForfeitPreceded byArchibald Campbell Earl of Argyll1638 1661 Succeeded byArchibald Campbell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archibald Campbell 1st Marquess of Argyll amp oldid 1142758500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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