Katherine Clifton, 2nd Baroness Clifton
Katherine Clifton, 2nd Baroness Clifton (c. 1592 – buried 17 September 1637), was an English-born Scottish peer (later known as the Countess of March, then Duchess of Lennox and then Countess of Abercorn). Birth and originsKatherine was born about 1592, in England, as daughter of Gervase Clifton and his wife, Katherine Darcy. Her father was a knight and would become the 1st Baron Clifton of Leighton Bromswold in Huntingdonshire, England.[1] Her mother was the only child and heiress of Sir Henry Darcy. Her parents married in June 1591.[2] Her brother died in 1602 and she became the only surviving child of her parents and heiress of the manor of Leighton Bromswold.[3] Her father is made a baron by writOn 9 July 1608 her father was summoned to Parliament by writ,[1] which implicitly elevated him to a baron. Such baronies by writ had a succession in which a daughter could succeed in absence of a son. First marriageKatherine Clifton married twice. In 1609, when she was about 17, she married her first husband, Lord Esmé Stewart, a younger son of The 1st Duke of Lennox in Scotland.[4][5] In 1619, he was created Earl of March. Catherine and Ésme had eleven children:
In 1624 his brother, 2nd Duke, died without legitimate heirs, her husband became Duke of Lennox[6] and she became duchess. However, his ducal reign lasted less than a year. He died on 30 July 1624[7] and was succeeded by their eldest son James. Father's death and successionIn 1618, when she was about 26, her father died committing suicide from "ennui". Being her father's only surviving child, she inherited her father's title and thus became Baroness Clifton in her own right (suo jure). Second marriageIn about 1627[a] she remarried taking as her second husband, The 2nd Earl of Abercorn.[10] Katherine and James had three children:
ExcommunicationHer husband was Catholic and she also practised that religion. However, the church of Scotland was Presbyterian and persecuted Catholics. On 3 February 1628, she was excommunicated by the Synod of Paisley.[9] LettersTwo letters sent by Katherine to William Douglas, 7th earl of Morton are preserved in the National Library of Scotland collections. These are MS 80 fol 21, undated and MS 80 fol. 22, 29th October 1630.[13]She is addressed in an 'Epistle, To Katherine ,Lady Aubigny ' by Ben Jonson(The Forest X111). Death and timelineShe died in 1637 in Scotland.[14] Having been a Catholic, she was buried without ceremony. Her eldest son James succeeded her as Baron Clifton in addition to the titles he inherited from his father.
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