Lord Rutherfurd

For the politician and judge, see Andrew Rutherfurd, Lord Rutherfurd.

The title of Lord Rutherfurd was a Lordship of Parliament in the Peerage of Scotland.

It was created on 19 January 1661 for the soldier Andrew Rutherfurd, with remainder to the heirs male of his body, failing which to his heirs of tailzie. He was further created Earl of Teviot on 2 February 1663, with remainder to the heirs male of his body. He was killed while serving as Governor of Tangier on 3 May 1664, when the earldom became extinct and the lordship passed to his kinsman Sir Thomas Rutherfurd of Hunthill. He was in turn succeeded by his brothers Archibald and Robert. The third Lord's ill-fated engagement to Janet Dalrymple, daughter of James Dalrymple, 1st Viscount of Stair, was the inspiration for Sir Walter Scott's 1819 novel The Bride of Lammermoor. The lordship became dormant on the death of the fourth Lord in 1724, but was still being claimed as late as 1839.[1]

Lords Rutherfurd (1661)

References

  1. Francis J. Grant, Rutherfurd, Lord Rutherfurd in The Scots Peerage, ed. Sir James Balfour Paul, vol. VII (Edinburgh, 1910) pp. 374–384.
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