Baron Caryll of Durford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baron Caryll of Durford (or Dunford) of Hartling in West Sussex is a title in the Jacobite Peerage of England created by the dethroned King James II for John Caryll, poet, dramatist and diplomat, with apparently a special remainder to the issue male of his brothers.

The first Baron was succeeded, under the special remainder, by his nephew, John, son of his younger brother, Richard Caryll. The eldest son of John, second Lord Caryll, also John, who predeceased him in 1718, married, in 1712, Lady Mary Mackenzie, daughter of Kenneth Mackenzie, 4th Earl and 1st Jacobite Marquess of Seaforth and his wife, Lady Frances Herbert, daughter of William Herbert, 1st Duke of Powis. The widowed Lady Caryll married secondly, Francis Sempill, 2nd Jacobite Lord Sempill.

The second Baron was succeeded by his grandson, John Baptist Caryll, who served as the Jacobite Secretary of State to Charles Edward Stuart ("King Charles III"), known as the Young Pretender.

The Barony of Caryll of Durford (or Dunford) became extinct with the death of the 3rd Baron in 1788.


[edit] Barons Caryll of Durford (Before 1698)


[edit] References

Marquis of Ruvigny and Raineval, The Jacobite Peerage, Edinburgh, 1904