EARLY NOTICE OF THE GORDONS—ADAM
GORDON JOINED WALLACE—HE WAS THE FIRST OF THE NAME WHO OBTAINED LANDS IN
THE NORTH—ALEXANDER SETON, FIRST LORD GORDON.
TRADITION carries the origin and
surname of Gordon far back into bygone ages. It is said that there was a
tribe in Gaul called Gordon before the Christian era: and that there was a
Roman Emperor of the name of Gordonius.
There appear, however, to have been
families of the name of Gordon in France at an early period. The Gordons
settled in Scotland in the early part of the twelfth century. It seems
that they first obtained lands in Berwickshire, to which they gave the
name of the barony of Gordon. In this district, another of their
possessions was called Huntly, which the family at a subsequent period
assumed as the title and name of their Earldom in the North, and adopted
the name in Strathbogie.
About the year 1160 Richard de
Gordon granted to the monks of the Abbey of Kelso a right of pasture, an
acre of land at Todlaw, and an acre of meadow in Huntly-Strother, in the
barony of Gordon. He was succeeded by his son, Sir Thomas de Gordon. In
1170 Sir Thomas confirmed his father’s grant of lands to the monks of
Kelso. He was an ardent supporter of the policy of William the Lion; and
ably assisted him in his conflicts with the people of Galloway, Ross, and
other quarters of the kingdom.
Sir Thomas died in 1215, and was
succeeded by his son, Thomas, who was knighted by Alexander II. He
confirmed the grants of his father and grandfather to the Abbey of Kelso;
and made some additional grants of lands, with a portion of his peatry of
Brunmoss, and with the liberty of taking timber from his woods and pulling
heather on his estates, for which privileges Gordon obtained the right of
burial in the cemetery of the Abbey of Kelso. He died in 1258,
leaving an only child, a daughter, called Alice de Gordon. She married Sir
Adam Gordon, a descendant of a younger branch of the family; and thus
united the estates of Gordon and Huntly, in the Merse. Sir Adam was a man
of great energy. He was one of the company who left Scotland to assist
Lewis IX. of France in an expedition to the Holy Land. But disaster
overtook this expedition, and Sir Adam and many others perished before
reaching the Holy Land. His widow survived him for several years. She died
in 1280, and was succeeded by her son, Sir Adam Gordon.
In the spring of 1296, Sir Adam
Gordon, with his tenants, joined the army led by John Comyn, Earl of
Buchan, which invaded and wasted the North of England. Gordon’s lands were
plundered by Edward I. on his march through Berwickshire, and forfeited to
the English Crown. Sir Adam was present at the battle of Dunbar on the
26th of April, 1296, and fell in that disastrous action. He was
succeeded by his eldest son, Sir Adam de Gordon. After the defeat of the
Scots at Dunbar, Sir Adam, with a few other Scotsmen, retreated northward,
until he was forced to surrender to Edward I. at Elgin, on the 28th of
July, 1296.
In the spring of 1297, Sir William
Wallace raised the standard against Edward I., and Sir William Douglas and
Sir Adam Gordon were amongst the first who joined him. Sir Adam fought
bravely at the battle of Stirling Bridge; and also, against fearful odds,
at the battle of Falkirk, where the Scots were overwhelmed and defeated by
the weight of superior numbers.
This was a period of rapid changes
in Scotland.. After the capture of Wallace in the summer of 1305, Sir Adam
Gordon surrendered to Edward I. Shortly after, he was appointed one of the
Justiciaries of Lothian, with an annual fee of forty merks. He continued
on the English side; and in 1309, Edward II. granted to him the lands of
Stichel. He adhered till 1313, to the English cause, which had then become
well-nigh hopeless. Accordingly Sir Adam offered his allegiance and
service to Bruce, which was gladly accepted; and he immediately joined
Randolph, Earl of Moray. At the battle of Bannockburn, Randolph led the
centre division of the Scottish army, and Sir Adam fought heroically under
him on that memorable field.
On the 20th of April, 1320,
Parliament met in the Abbey of Arbroath, and drew up a spirited and
remarkably constitutional address to the Pope, which represented to His
Holiness the real state of the Scottish nation. Parliament selected Sir
Adam Gordon and Sir Edward Mabuisson to carry this address to Rome, and
plead its prayer before the Pope. When they arrived at Rome, they were
rather coldly received. But, aided by two of Sir Adam’s sons, John and
Thomas, who were in holy orders, they at last obtained an interview with
the Pope, and presented the address from the Scottish Parliament. They
succeeded so far, as the severe papal edicts against Scotland were
suspended.
When Sir Adam returned home, he
advised Robert I. to send Randolph, Earl of Moray, as ambassador to the
Pope. Accordingly, Randolph proceeded to Rome in 1323, and he succeeded in
persuading the Pope to give Bruce the title of King of Scotland, and
remove all cause of quarrel.
Robert I. granted a charter of the
barony of Strathbogie to Sir Adam Gordon, which had been forfeited from
David Strathbogie, Earl of Athole, by an act of Parliament in 1319. He was
the first of the Gordons who obtained territory in Aberdeenshire and the
north. He died about 1325 and was succeeded by his son, Sir Adam Gordon.
But the Gordons were not secure in their possession of Strathbogie till
after the death of the Earl of Athole.
As stated in a preceding chapter,
after the death of Randolph, the Regent, Edward Baliol, at the head of an
English party, invaded the kingdom, and claimed earldoms and lands in
Scotland. David Strathbogie, Earl of Athole, who had married one of the
heiresses of the disinherited Comyns, seized possession of Strathbogie,
which had been granted by charter to Sir Adam Gordon’s father. At last the
Earl of Athole besieged the Castle of Kildrummy, which had been held for
some years by Sir Andrew Moray’s wife, Christian Bruce, the heroic sister
of Robert I., on behalf of her nephew, David II. When Sir Andrew Moray,
the Regent, received tidings of Athole’s attack on Kildrummy, he
immediately marched northward to raise the seige. He was accompanied by
William Douglas, Sir Adam Gordon of Strathbogie, the Earl of Dunbar,
Ramsay of Preston, and other men of note; his army numbered about eight
hundred fighting men. Athole’s followers were probably more numerous, as
his territorial power was very extensive. He prepared to face the Regent;
and, leaving Kildrummy, he marched his army to a position on the wooded
slope of Culblean, in the valley of the Dee. The battle was fought on the
30th of November, 1335. William Douglas led the vanguard, with a company
of stalwart men, and advanced with consummate tact, watching his
opportunity, and at the proper moment ordered his men to couch their
spears and charge the centre of the enemy’s line. A furious hand to hand
combat ensued. Sir Andrew Moray then rapidly advanced with the main body
of his men, and assailed the enemy in flank with irresistible fury. The
contest raged hotly for a short time. Athole fell on the field, and his
followers were completely defeated, and fled in confusion.
This battle was an exceedingly
important national event. It formed a turning-point as the national party
at the time were reduced to dire extremity; while Athole was the most
powerful baron in Scotland, owing to his wide territorial possessions and
his connection with the disinherited Comyns. Thus his continued opposition
would have proved ruinous to the national cause. The battle also restored
Sir Adam Gordon to his estates in Strathbogie; and secured the lands of a
considerable number of other families, who would have lost their
possessions if Athole and the English party had prevailed.
John Gordon, son of Sir Adam, was
taken a prisoner at the battle of Durham in 1346. Sir Adam died in 1351,
and was succeeded by his son, John, who was confined, with David II. and a
number of other Scots prisoners, in the Tower of London by Edward III. for
a period of eleven years. In 1357 the enormous ransom extorted by Edward
III. for the Scottish king was adjusted, and he was released, and returned
to Scotland. At the same time Sir John Gordon was liberated, and he, too,
with many other prisoners, had to pay ransoms for their liberty.
In 1358 the King granted a charter
confirming to John Gordon the grant which Robert I. gave to his
grandfather, Sir Adam, of the lands of Strathbogie. During the rest of his
life he usually resided at Strathbogie, putting his estates in order,
which had been much impaired by hostile raids. He died about the year
1374, and was succeeded by his son, Sir John.
Robert II., in 1376, granted to Sir
John Gordon, a charter confirming the grant made by Robert I. to his
great-grandfather of the lands of Strathbogie. Sir John was a man of great
activity. In 1388 he was present and fought in the battle of Otterburn, in
which he distinguished himself. In 1391 he was appointed Justiciary for
settling disputed marches.
Sir John died in 1394, unmarried,
but left two natural sons, by Elizabeth, a daughter of Cruickshank of
Aswanley, in the parish of Glass. His two sons, John and Thomas, were
usually called, in the traditions of Strathbogie and the Valley of the
Deveron, "Jock and Tam," The lands of Aswanley lay on the south side of
the beautiful valley of Deveron; and the old house stood on the south
bank, a few paces from the river, in a well sheltered and fertile spot,
with a small brook on the east side rippling to the Deveron. It is about
half a mile east from the Church of Glass.
It appears that Sir John Gordon made
ample provision for his two sons. John Gordon was Laird of Essie, in the
parish of Rhynie, and from him were descended the Gordons of Lesmore and
other branches of the Gordons. Thomas Gordon was Laird of Daach and
Ruthven, in the parish of Cairnie, and from him were descended the Gordons
of Hall-head, in Cushnie, and Esslemont, in Ellon, and other branches of
the old line of the Gordons of the north.
Sir John Gordon was succeeded by his
brother, Sir Adam. He married Elizabeth Keith, fourth daughter of Sir
William Keith, Great Marischal of Scotland, by whom he had issue. He was
for a short time Warden of the East Marches. He was at the battle of
Homildon, and fell while leading a charge against the English, on the 14th
of September, 1402.
He was succeeded by his son, John
Gordon of Huntly and Strathbogie. He married Lady Agnes Douglas, a
daughter of Lord Dalkeith. By her, it appears, he had no issue. He died in
1408, and was the last of the male line of the Gordons of Strathbogie. The
succession then fell to his sister, Elizabeth, who became the heiress of
her father, Sir Adam Gordon.
In 1408 Elizabeth Gordon married
Alexander Seton, the second son of Sir William Seton of Seton. The same
year Elizabeth Gordon resigned her lands in Parliament at Perth, and on
the 20th of July, she and her husband received a charter from the Regent
Albany of "all the lands and baronies of Gordon and Huntly within the
sheriffdom of Berwick, the lands of Fogo and Fauns, and the lands of
Strathbogie and Beldygordon, in Aberdeen-shire," to be held by them and
their heirs. Thus Alexander Seton obtained the Gordon territories.
He was one of the commissioners
appointed to treat for the liberation of James I. in 1423. The following
year, on the 28th of May, he became surety for 400 merks of the King’s
ransom. In 1436 he was created a Lord of Parliament under the title of
Lord Gordon.
In 1437 Lord Gordon drew the rents
of Aboyne and Cluny. These territories appear to have come through
Elizabeth Keith, the wife of Sir Adam Gordon, and from her to Lord
Gordon’s wife.
Alexander Seton, first Lord Gordon,
had three sons and one daughter by Elizabeth Gordon, his wife—Alexander,
Master of Gordon, and subsequently created Earl of Huntly; William,
ancestor of the Setons of Meldrum; and Henry. His daughter Elizabeth
married Alexander, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles. Lady Seton Gordon
died at Strathbogie on the 16th of March, 1436, and was interred at St.
Nicholas Church in Aberdeen. Lord Gordon died in 1440, and was succeeded
by his eldest son, Alexander. |