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Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
(three children)
(three children)
(three children)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
~1374 - 1421
Alexander
Ogilvy
47
47
~1538
Joanna
Hepburn
~1400
Marjory
Ogilvy
~1402 - 1461
Sir
Andrew
Ogilvy
59
59
~1405
Sir
Patrick
Ogilvy
~1426
Margaret
Ogilvy
~1428
Christian
Ogilvy
~1430
Alexander
Ogilvy
~1416 - 1446
Sir
John
Oliphant
30
30
~1455
Margaret
Ogilvy
~1443
Sir
Laurence
Oliphant
~1446
Margaret
Oliphant
~1442 - 1499
Earl of
Buchan
James Stuart
57
57
~1488 - 1513
2nd Earl of
Bothwell
Adam Hepburn
25
25
~1490
Agnes
Stuart
~1488
Alexander
Stuart
1512 - 1556
3rd Earl of
Bothwell
Patrick Hepburn
44
44
Patrick Hepburn, 3rd Earl of Bothwell From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Patrick Hepburn, 3rd Earl of Bothwell was born in 1512. His father was Adam Hepburn, who died at the Battle of Flodden the year after Patrick's birth. Patrick Hepburn was known as the Fair Earl. He owed this more to his looks than his character, being described as "fair and white" whilst a young boy. He was imprisoned in 1529 for two years for harbouring robbers. Once released he decided to exact revenge by beginning a treasonable correspondence with England. He then spent much of the next years in England, and after James V died at the Battle of Solway Moss, Hepburn signed a pact with Henry VIII promising to serve him and aid the commitment of the then infant Mary Queen of Scots into Henry's custody. Hepburn married at the age of 21 on one of his return visits to Scotland, where he married Agnes Sinclair, who gave birth to his son James. Despite having sworn loyalty to Henry VIII, Hepburn was awarded an annual pension of £1,000 from Mary of Guise (Mary Queen of Scots' mother) in return for his fidelity. Hepburn believed there was the possibility of marrying into royalty, so much so that he organised a divorce from his wife. However, he soon realized the prospects for royal marriage were thin and despite Henry VIII engaging in the bloody invasion of Scotland Hepburn resumed correspondence with England. In the intervening years, Hepburn played a pivotal role in the death of George Wishart. In 1548 Hepburn renounced his loyalty to the Scottish crown and became a pensioner of England, to the tune of £3,000 annually. However he returned to Scotland when in 1554 Mary of Guise forgave him. Two years later he died and his titles passed to his son James, who would go on to become the third husband of Mary Queen of Scots.
~1520
Agnes
Sinclair
~1540 - 1578
4th Earl of
Bothwell
James Hepburn
38
38
James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia James Hepburn, Duke of Orkney, Marquess of Fife, 4th Earl of Bothwell, usually just referred to as Bothwell (~1535 - April 14, 1578) was the third husband of Mary I of Scotland. Bothwell was the son of Patrick Hepburn, 3rd Earl of Bothwell, whom he succeeded as earl in 1556. Although he was probably acting in an advisory capacity to Mary almost from the moment of her return in Scotland (in 1561), their liaison does not seem to have begun until 1566, after the birth of her son, the future James VI of Scotland. Bothwell had married Jean, the daughter of George Gordon, 4th Earl of Huntly, in February of that year; the marriage lasted just over a year. Hearing that Bothwell had been seriously wounded and was likely to die, Mary visited him at Hermitage Castle only a few weeks after giving birth to James. Bothwell was divorced by his wife on the grounds of adultery with his wife's servant, Bessie Crawford, in May, 1567, three months after the death of Mary's second husband, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, whom Bothwell was accused of murdering by his enemies. He married Mary on May 15, 1567, twelve days after his divorce, after having abducted her; he had been created Duke of Orkney on May 12. The marriage made her unpopular, and was a direct cause of her being forced to abdicate her throne. In December of the same year, Bothwell's titles and estates were forfeit for treason. He escaped from Scotland and travelled to Scandinavia in the hope of raising an army to put Mary back on the throne, but was imprisoned by King Frederick in Norway, and was imprisoned in the notorious Dragsholm Castle, Denmark, after a failed attempt to escape, where he was kept in appalling conditions and eventually died, insane. His mummified body could supposedly be seen in Fårevejle, in the church near Dragsholm, until a few decades ago. The identity of the body has never been conclusively proven, however, and it was properly buried at the request of Bothwell's relatives in the 1980s.
~1506
3rd Lord Oliphant
Laurence
Oliphant
~1486 - 1512
2nd Lord
Oliphant Colin
Oliphant
26
26
~1490 - 1554
Elizabeth
Keith
64
64
~1464
1st Lord
Oliphant John
Oliphant
1462
Elizabeth
Campbell
~1446
Mariot
De La
Haye
~1445
Isabella
Oliphant
1385
Janet
de
Grey
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