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The east wall, damaged in 1650. The castle was built at the site of an earlier structure, and it remains the Borthwick family ancestral seat. [citation needed] Sir William Borthwick, later the 1st Lord, obtained from King James I on 2 June 1430 a licence to erect on the Mote of Locherwart, a castle or fortalice. [5]
Lord Borthwick is a title in the Peerage of Scotland. ... The family seat is Borthwick Castle, near Borthwick, Midlothian but is leased as a venue for hire by the family.
Sir William Borthwick, 3rd of Borthwick and later 1st Lord Borthwick (c. 1413 – October 1483) [1] was a Scottish peer and ambassador. Borthwick was the eldest son of Sir William Borthwick, 2nd of Borthwick, castellan of Edinburgh ( Sir William Borthwick of that Ilk ), and his wife Bethoc (or Beatrice) Sinclair of Orkney, daughter of Henry ...
William Borthwick, 4th Lord Borthwick, whose father had died in the previous decade, was given command of Stirling Castle and charged with the safety of the infant James V of Scotland. [1] John, Lord Borthwick was an opponent of the Reformation of the Church of Scotland and a supporter of Mary of Guise. [1]
Primary Title Current Seat Former Seats Duke of Hamilton: Lennoxlove House, East Lothian: Hamilton Palace, Brodick Castle, Dungavel House, Kinneil House, Cadzow Castle: Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry
William Borthwick, 4th Lord Borthwick (died 1542) was a Scottish nobleman. He succeeded his father William Borthwick, 3rd Lord Borthwick in 1503. Lord Borthwick inherited a tenement on the south side of Edinburgh's High Street divided into several "lands", and one land was occupied by the merchant James Hommyll . [ 1 ]
William Borthwick was the son of John, 5th Lord Borthwick and Isobel Lindsay, daughter of David Lindsay, 8th Earl of Crawford. Borthwick first attended the Privy Council of Scotland on 22 August 1567, when the act of abdication of Mary, Queen of Scots was read out by Lord Lindsay and James, Earl of Moray was appointed Regent of Scotland.
He was a son of William Borthwick, 1st Lord Borthwick. Borthwick served as ambassador to England in 1459, his name was included in a safe-conduct or passport of 13 July as "William lord Borthwik" to travel to Newcastle with numerous other nobles, clerics, and a retinue of 200 attendants. [2]