Record

Authorised form of nameCampbell; Archibald (1629 - 1685); 9th Earl of Argyll; politician and clan leader
Dates1629 - 1685
NationalityScottish
British
Place of birthDalkeith, Midlothian, Scotland, Europe
Date of birth26 February 1629
Place of deathThe Coss of Edinburgh, Scotland, Europe
Date of death30 June 1685
DatesAndPlacesBurial:
Greyfriars churchyard, Edinburgh, Scotland, Europe
OccupationPolitician
ActivityEducation:
Glasgow University (1643)
Career:
Travelled in France and Italy (1648-1649); Colonel, afterwards Lieutenant-General in the Royalist Army, fought against his father (1650-1654); imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle (1657-1660 and 1661-1663, after the execution of his father), released on secret instructions from the King; Scottish Privy Councillor (1664); Extraordinary Lord of Session (1674-1681); objected to the Test Act; dismissed from the Privy Council for not having properly taken the test and imprisoned on charges including treason (1681); escaped with the aid of his stepdaughter and reached London, where he lived under an assumed name; took part in the Monmouth rebellion (1685); taken prisoner at Inchinnan and beheaded at Edinburgh on the charges laid against him in 1681
Membership categoryFellow
Date of election28/10/1663
ProposerSir Robert Moray
Date of ejection or withdrawal9 August 1682
Other Royal Society activityProposed on the same day as elected; Admitted 4 November 1663
RelationshipsParents: Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquis of Argyll, and Margaret Douglas
Married: 1) Mary Stuart [Stewart]; 2) Anne Mackenzie, Countess of Balcarres
Children: 1) Archibald Campbell, 1st Duke of Argyll; John Campbell of Mamore; Charles Campbell, James Campbell, Mary Campbell, Anne Stuart (formerly Maitland; née Campbell); Jean Kerr (née Campbell)
OtherInfoAlthough Campbell was a Royalist supporter throughout the Civil War and the Protectorate, post-Restoration rulers were still suspicious of his political motives as he held hereditary judicial powers as the chief of Clan Campbell and held an important role in Scottish politics. The ascension of James I and Campbell's subsequent refusal to convert to Catholicism were ultimately his downfall. His trial is considered by some to have been a show trial and the verdict of a death sentence to have been exaggerated so as to deter people from similar acts against the crown. His death made Campbell to somewhat of a martyr to presbyterians.
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Campbell A Argyll, IM000709.jpg

SourceSources:
Bulloch's Roll; DNB; GEC; Hunter; ODNB
Notes:
ODNB has Newbattle Abbey, Edinburghshire as place of birth. He was later reburied at Kilmun Parish Church in the county of Argyll and Bute in Scotland. From 1638, he held the courtesy title Lord Lorne and he also held the title Lord Argyll [Argile].
Virtual International Authority Filehttp://viaf.org/viaf/64945461
CodeNA7441
Archives associated with this Fellow
RefNoTitleDate
IM/000710Campbell, Archibald, 9th Earl of Argyll nd
DM/5/73A'Desiderata to the Earle of Argyle' 27 April 1664
LBO/13/74Copy letter from Christopher Birbeck, Easingwold, to Archibald Campbell24 January 1701/1702
IM/000709Campbell, Archibald, 9th Earl of Argyll nd
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