In 1544, Alexander described himself as a servant of Francis I of France, and he was a loyal and well rewarded servant to the Queen Dowager, Mary of Guise. Apart from his ecclesiastical preferments, Guise gave him a yearly pension of £200 on 17 January 1547. The next year Alexander claimed poverty because Robert Stewart had possession of his Caithness rents, but he wrote that he would not tempted by English offers, 'for suppose poverty banish me from your grace's service, riches shall not cause me offend.'[4] Alexander sent Mary of Guise a vivid account of the capture of Ferniehirst Castle from the French in February 1549. He was there in the company of his brother George, Earl of Huntly.[5]
Alexander travelled through England to Scotland with a retinue of 12 followers in April 1553.[6] Alexander preached at the wedding of his niece Jean Gordon to the Earl of Bothwell on 24 February 1566.[7] A year later, Alexander was a signatory to Ainslie's Tavern Band in April 1567, agreeing to the marriage of Mary, Queen of Scots to Bothwell.[8]
John Gordon, future Bishop of Galloway, was the son of Alexander Gordon and his wife Barbara Logie. John seems to have been illegitimate; his parents married, perhaps clandestinely, only in 1546, before Alexander obtained ecclesiastical preferment.[10]
References
^ abcScott 1928, Fasti Ecclesae Scoticanae, volume 7, p. 343.
^Scott 1928, Fasti Ecclesae Scoticanae, volume 7, p. 344.
^Cameron, Annie I., ed., Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (Scottish History Society, 1927), 12-13, 239-240.
^Cameron, Annie I., ed., Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine, Scottish History Society (1927), 40, 96, 102, 214, 240
^Cameron, Annie I., ed., Scottish Correspondence of Mary of Lorraine (SHS, 1927), 286-290, 20 February 1549.
^Strype, John, Ecclesiastical Memorials, vol 2, part 2, Oxford (1822), 235 (passport from Edward VI).
^Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1900), 258.
^Wormald, Jenny, Lords and Men in Scotland (John Donald, 1985), 406.
^Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 2 (London, 1791), pp. 62–63.