Dundas History
The ancestry of this ancient
family is said to be traced from Helias, son of
Hutred a younger son of Gospatrick, Prince of
Northumberland. The first reliable record of the
family is found in the reign of William the Lion
when Serle de Dundas appears in deeds of that
period. Serle de Dundas and Robertus de Dundas
both appear on the Ragman Roll of Scottish nobles submitting to Edward I of England in 1296. Sir
Archibald Dundas was a favourite of James III and
was employed by him several times on important
missions to England. The king intended to bestow
high rank upon his ambassador, but died before
he could do so. James IV did, however, bestow
lands upon Dundas, including the island of
Inchgarvie with the right to build a castle
there.
George Dundas, the eighteenth
Laird, was a staunch Presbyterian who fought in
the Wars of the Covenant. He was a member of the
committee for the trial of the great Marquess of
Montrose. Re was subsequently given command of
Linlithgowshire and charged with its defence against the forces of Oliver Cromwell. George
Dundas, twenty-third Laird, was a captain in the
East India Company and died in a shipwreck off
the coast of Madagascar in 1792.
The principal branches of the
family were Dundas of Blair Castle, Arniston, Duddingston, and Fingask. William Dundas of
Kincavel, ancestor of the Dundases of Blair, was
a Jacobite who was imprisoned for his part in the
rising of 1715. The founders of the house of
Arniston, which was to acquire distinction
through high legal and political office, were
senior cadets of the chiefly house of Dundas. Sir
James Dundas, first of Arniston, was governor of
Berwick in the reign of James VI. His eldest son,
Sir James Dundas, was knighted by Charles I in
November 1641 and sat as member of the Scottish
parliament rep-resenting Mid-Lothian. He was a
loyal subject but violently disapproved of
his kings interference with the Church of
Scotland and in particular with plans for the
re-introduction of bishops. Consequently, he was
one of the first signatories to the National
Covenant. When the monarchy was restored in 1660,
he was offered a seat on the supreme court bench,
in spite of not being a professional lawyer, and
he eventually accepted the post, taking his place
with the title "Lord Arniston" in May
1662. He did not serve the court long as he
refused to sign the declaration, required by law
in 1663, accepting that both National and Solemn
League Covenants had been unlawful. Arniston
promptly resigned rather than accept the oath,
but his vacancy was not filled for nearly
eighteenth months whilst his friends tried to
persuade him to return. He offered to do so only
if the declaration was amended to refer solely to
the "Solemn League and Covenant" and
even then only in so far as it led to "deeds
of actual rebellion". He did not resume his
seat and died at Arniston in 1679. His eldest
son, Robert Dundas of Arniston, was made a judge
ten years after his fathers death and to honour his memory, he took the title "Lord
Arniston". The family were there-after to
provide no less than two Lords President of the
Court of Session. Henry Dundas, first Viscount
Melville, was a distinguished politician. In
1775 he was appointed Lord Advocate and
thereafter Treasurer of the Navy. In 1791 he
became Secretary of State for the Home Department
at a time when the country was in crisis after
the outbreak of the French Revolution. On 21
December 1802 he was raised to the peerage as
Viscount Melville and Baron Dunira. His splendid
town mansion in St Andrew Square in Edinburgh is
now the headquarters of the Royal Bank of
Scotland. In the original plan for
Edinburghs Georgian New Town, the site of
Melvilles house was to be a church to
balance that built in Charlotte Square which lay
at the other end of George Street, which linked
the two. The viscount preferred the site for his
own home, and so great was his influence that the
plan was simply ignored. He died in 1811, and his
statue stands on a lofty column in the centre of
St Andrew Square.
Sir David Dundas was born in
Edinburgh in 1735. He was a distinguished
soldier, rising ultimately to be
commander-in-chief of the British army in 1809.
Other branches of the family were also ennobled,
including Sir Thomas Dundas of Kerse, who was
created Lord Dundas of Skea in 1794, and whose
descendants became first Earls, and then
Marquesses of Zetland. The second Marquess was
Secretary of State for India from 1935 to 1937.
Admiral Sir Charles Dundas of Dundas,
twenty-eighth chief, was an aide-de-camp to
George V and principal naval transport officer
during the First World War. The present chief
lives abroad, but many of the great Dundas
houses, including Dundas Castle and the splendid
eighteenth-century mansion of Arniston, are still
homes of members of the family.
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