Background
He was the son of John Gordon, Lord Gordon, and Margaret Stewart, daughter of James IV.
He was the son of John Gordon, Lord Gordon, and Margaret Stewart, daughter of James IV.
George Gordon inherited his earldom and estates in 1524 at age 10. He was captured at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh in 1547, but escaped and in 1550 accompanied Mary of Guise to France. He joined the Lords of the Congregation in 1560 and was prepared to accept Mary, Queen of Scots, until she transferred the Earldom of Moray, which had been given to the Earl of Huntly in 1549, to her half-brother Lord James Stewart, at which point he withdrew to his estates in the North-East of Scotland.
Mary, Queen of Scots, toured the north-east in August 1562, and was refused entry to Inverness Castle on Gordon"s orders.
The Queen"s forces captured the Castle before moving to Aberdeen where she issued a summons for Gordon. He refused to answer and was outlawed.
He marched on Aberdeen but was defeated by James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray at the Battle of Corrichie in October 1562. Huntly was posthumously forfeited by parliament in May 1563.
After his death his body and goods seized at Strathbogie Castle were shipped from Aberdeen to Edinburgh.
The body stood for the earl at his trial. The goods were taken to Holyrood Palace. When Mary was imprisoned at Lochleven, she was given the earl"s cloth-of-estate.
Thomas Gordon
George Gordon, 5th Earl of Huntly
Lady Margaret Gordon
Lady Jean Gordon, Countess of Bothwell (1546 - 14 May 1629)
Lady Elizabeth Gordon (died 1557) married John Stewart, 4th Earl of Atholl
Alexander Gordon, Lord Gordon
Sir John Gordon, executed 1562 after Corrichie, Laird of Findlater.
James Gordon, (born 1541)
Adam Gordon, (born 1545).
As commander of the King"s Army he defeated the English at the Battle of Haddon Rig in 1542, was a member of the council of Regency under James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran and Cardinal Beaton and succeeded as Chancellor on the murder of Beaton in 1546.