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© Lennoxlove House Ltd |
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Formerly hanging in
Hamilton Palace, South Lanarkshire, now at Lennoxlove, East Lothian
The 2nd Duke and one of his companions
in exile, John, Earl of Lauderdale, were painted in Holland in 1649;
on 24 October that year, the Duke paid 3 guilders 'to Mr Johnston,
picture drawer at Middlebourg...for three pictures'. This was probably
one of them, and it has been in the Hamilton Collection ever since.
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Painted on canvas and measuring 99 x 158.75cm,
the double portrait is, in fact, two paintings joined together,
with the Lauderdale section signed and dated by the artist. Another
version is at Ham House, Lauderdale’s London home. The painting
is mentioned in a Hamilton inventory for 1704-12: 'Duke William
Hamilton and the Duke of Lauderdale, the first delivering the roll
of paper to the latter.'
Lord William Hamilton, brother of James,
1st Duke of Hamilton was educated at Glasgow University and
in France, then settled at Court in London. In 1639 Charles I created
him Earl of Lanark, and the following year he became Secretary of
State for Scotland. He and his brother both fought on the royalist
side in the Civil War, and after the Battle of Preston in 1648 he
escaped to Holland. When his brother was executed in 1649, he inherited
his titles, for the duke had only two surviving daughters and he
believed that the Hamilton family must have a man at its head in
such troubled times. Returning to Scotland with the young Charles
II in June 1650, the duke marched south with him and was mortally
wounded at the Battle of Worcester. He died nine days later. He
too had no surviving sons, and at his wish his titles and estates
passed to his niece, Anne, s.j. 3rd Duchess
of Hamilton.
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