George Douglas, 13th Earl of Morton

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George Douglas, 13th Earl of Morton (* 1662 - 4 January 1738 ) was a Scottish nobleman and politician from the House of Douglas .

Life

Douglas was born in 1662 to the fourth son of James Douglas, 10th Earl of Morton . In 1685 he was charged with murder when he killed his opponent in battle after defamation. The court followed Douglas' remarks on an act of self-defense and acquitted him. He then embarked on a military career and in 1685 held the rank of lieutenant . In 1688 he served in the 7th Hussar Regiment with the rank of captain . In 1709, Douglas ended his military engagement as a major . From 1733 until his death in 1738 he was installed as Vice Admiral of Scotland .

Douglas was married twice. The first marriage resulted in a son and the second, married before 1702, had three sons. On January 22, 1730, George Douglas succeeded his late brother Robert as the 13th  Earl of Morton . After his death in 1738, his son James inherited the title of Earl of Morton. His son Robert later also became a politician.

Political career

Like his brother James , George Douglas was a supporter of James Douglas, 2nd Duke of Queensberry . For the first time he was elected to the Scottish Parliament in 1702 as a member of the borough of Kirkwall . He lost his parliamentary seat in 1707 when the Scottish Parliament was dissolved by the Act of Union . In 1708 he was elected to the British House of Commons for the first time . From 1708 to 1713 and 1715 to 1722 he was an MP for the Borough of Linlithgow and from 1713 to 1715 and from 1722 to 1730 as a Member of the House of Commons for Orkney and Shetland .

Like his brother Alexander , who represented the constituency of Orkney and Shetland from 1708 to 1713, George Douglas was largely inactive in parliament. As a result of the decisions to raise a malt tax by the British parliament, which was dominated by English representatives, which were unfavorable for Scotland , Douglas was one of those Scottish representatives who supported a boycott and the dissolution of the Act of Union. He is usually considered a Whigs , although he also occasionally voted with the Tories . When his brother Robert in 1730, George Douglas followed this as Earl of Morton. In the same year he was elected as representative peer in the British House of Lords , which he had to give up his mandate. In 1734 Douglas was not re-elected.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e DOUGLAS, Hon. George (1662-1738) at historyofparliamentonline.org
  2. James Douglas, 14th Earl of Morton on thepeerage.com , accessed August 12, 2015.
  3. ^ Colonel Robert Douglas on thepeerage.com , accessed August 20, 2015.

Web links

predecessor Office successor
Robert Douglas Earl of Morton
1730-1738
James Douglas