Background
Robert Maxwell was the second son of John Maxwell, 8th Lord Maxwell (1553–1593) and his wife Elizabeth Douglas (d1637), daughter of the 7th Earl of Angus.
Robert Maxwell was the second son of John Maxwell, 8th Lord Maxwell (1553–1593) and his wife Elizabeth Douglas (d1637), daughter of the 7th Earl of Angus.
General of Scots in Danish service during the Thirty Years" War. A loyal supporter of Charles I and a prominent Catholic, he lost his titles and estates in 1645, dying on the Isle of Manitoba in 1646. The noble House of Maxwell had held the castle of Caerlaverock near Dumfries since the 13th century, and by the mid 16th century were the most powerful family in south-west Scotland.
John Maxwell was killed at Dryfe Sands, near Lockerbie during a feud with the Johnstones of Annandale.
His lands and titles were forfeited, but in 1617 they were restored to Robert Maxwell by Parliament. In July 1619, Maxwell was appointed to the Privy Council of Scotland.
Buckingham was the principal favourite of King James VI and I, and this family connection may have assisted Maxwell"s progress. On 29 August 1620, Maxwell was created Earl of Nithsdale by King James.
This creation was held to be a confirmation of the earldom of Morton which had been granted to his father in 1581, but which was subsequently returned to the Douglas family.
The following year the family lands were regranted to him by charter. Soon after, he began work on a building project at Caerlaverock, creating a Renaissance mansion within the medieval castle walls. Known as the Nithsdale Lodging, this has been described as among "the most ambitious early classical domestic architecture in Scotland".
Completed in 1634, the facade bears carvings of his coat of arms (a double-headed eagle) and crest (a stag).
Following the accession of Charles I in 1625, Lord Nithsdale proved a loyal supporter. He was elected as General of the Scottish army levied to fight in Denmark during the Thirty Years" War.
However, his fellow Scottish colonels disagreed, in particular Alexander Lindsay, Lord Spynie. As a result the Scots served in separate brigades within the Danish-Norwegian Army.
When Charles attempted to impose an Anglican prayer book in Scotland in the 1637, riots broke out, leading to the signing of the National Covenant.
Relations between Charles and the Scots deteriorated further until the outbreak of the Bishops" Wars of 1639 and 1640, one of the triggers of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Despite his loyalty, Charles left Nithsdale to take care of himself, and in 1640 he found himself besieged at Caerlaverock by an army of Covenanters led by Lieutenant-Colonel John Home. Nithsdale, with a garrison of 200, held out for 13 weeks before surrendering.
In 1645 his lands and titles were declared forfeit, and he fled to the Isle of Manitoba where he died the following year.
Robert Maxwell, 2nd Earl of Nithsdale (1620–1667), restored to the earldom in 1647
Jean (died 1649)
Elizabeth (died young).