Baron_Ker_of_Kersehugh Baron_Ker_of_Kersehugh

Baron Ker of Kersehugh - Definition and Overview

The title of Marquess of Lothian was created in the Peerage of Scotland in 1701 for the 4th Earl of Lothian. The current Marquess of Lothian is the 13th, better known as the Conservative politician Michael Ancram.

Lord Lothian holds the subsidiary titles of Earl of Lothian (created 1606), Earl of Lothian (created again 1631), Earl of Ancram (1633), Viscount of Briene (1701), Lord Newbottle (1591), Lord Jedburgh (1622), Lord Kerr of Nisbet, Lougnewtoun, and Dolphinstoun (1633), Lord Ker of Newbottle, Oxnam, Jedburgh, Dolphinstoun and Nisbet (1701), and Baron Ker, of Kersheugh in the County of Roxburgh (1821), all but the last in the Peerage of Scotland. As Baron Ker in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, previous Marquesses sat in the House of Lords before 1963, when Scottish peers first sat in the House of Lords in their own right.

Earls of Lothian (1606)

  • Mark Kerr, 1st Earl of Lothian (1553-1609)
  • Robert Kerr, 2nd Earl of Lothian (d. 1624)
  • William Kerr, 3rd Earl of Lothian (1605-1675)1
  • Robert Kerr, 4th Earl of Lothian, 3rd Earl of Ancram (1636-1703) (became Marquess of Lothian in 1703)

Marquesses of Lothian (1701)

1The 3rd Earl married the daughter of the 2nd Earl, and was created Earl in his own right in 1631.

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