Campbeltown (Parliament of Scotland constituency)
Appearance
Campbeltown was a royal burgh that elected one Commissioner to the Estates of Scotland between 1700 and 1707.
Campbeltown in Kintyre was erected a royal burgh by charter of King William II on 19 April 1700, at the request of the Earl of Argyll.[1]
The first and only Commissioner for the burgh was Mr Charles Campbell, who took his seat on 2 November 1700.[2] He was Lord Argyll's brother, and represented the burgh from 1700 to 1702 and in the last Parliament from 1703 to 1707.[3]
Following the Act of Union 1707, Campbeltown was represented in the Parliament of Great Britain as part of the Ayr district of burghs.
List of burgh commissioners
[edit]- 1700–02, 1702–07: Charles Campbell[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, K.M. Brown et al eds (St Andrews, 2007-2011), 1700/10/20. Date accessed: 19 November 2011.
- ^ RPS, 1700/10/19. Date accessed: 19 November 2011.
- ^ Joseph Foster, Members of Parliament, Scotland (London and Aylesbury, 1882), p. 48
- ^ Parliamentary Papers, Volume 62, Part 2. p. 598.
Categories:
- Burghs represented in the Parliament of Scotland (to 1707)
- Politics of Argyll and Bute
- History of Argyll and Bute
- 1700 establishments in Scotland
- Kintyre
- Campbeltown
- Constituencies established in 1700
- Constituencies disestablished in 1707
- 1707 disestablishments in Scotland
- Scottish history stubs
- Scotland politics stubs
- United Kingdom historical constituency stubs