Encyclopedia > James Cunningham, 13th Earl of Glencairn
James Cunningham (1749–1791), 14th Earl of Glencairn, was a Scottish nobleman. Events While in debtors prison, John Cleland writes Fanny Hill (Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure). ... 1791 was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ...
A friend of Robert Burns, he was a Captain in the West Fencible Regiment from 1778, and a Scottish representative peer from 1780. Robert Burns, preeminent Scottish poet Statue of Burns in London Robert Burns (January 25, 1759 â July 21, 1796) is the best known of the poets who have written in Scots. ... In the United Kingdom, representative peers were individuals elected by the members of the Peerage of Scotland and the Peerage of Ireland to represent them in the British House of Lords. ...
William Cunningham, 8th Earl of Glencairn, born about 1610, was appointed Privy Councillor and Commissioner of the Treasury in 1641, and Lord Justice General in 1646.
One Alexander Cunningham of Sorbie in Wigtonshire, was granted 1000 acres in the baronies of Boylagh and Banagh in Co. Donegal.
Earl of Mountcharles, Viscounty Slane; the Lords Rossmore; the LennoxªConyinghams of Springhill, Co.
1526: Cuthbert Cunningham, 3rd Earl of Glencairn, is wounded in a failed attempt to rescue James V from the Douglas' at the Battle of Linlithgow.
Regardless of the truth of this accusation, it is a fact that the Earl of Glencairn did rise against Mary Queen of Scots, and was one of the commanders at the Battle of Carbery Hill as a result of which Mary surrendered in 1567.
The Cunninghams also were among the Scottish undertakers of the Plantation of Ulster, and Sir JamesCunningham, who was married to a daughter of the Earl of Glencairn, was granted five thousand acres in County Donegal.