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Anna Mackenzie

Anna Mackenzie
Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll; Countess of Argyll crop for anna mackenzie from NPG.jpg
Lady Anna Mackenzie
Born 1621
Brahan Castle
Died 1707
Residence Balcarres House
Nationality Scottish
Other names Lady Anna Mackenzie Campbell
Political party Jacobite

Anna Mackenzie (1621–1707) was a Scottish countess of Balcarres and later a countess of Argyll. She was known as Lady Anna Mackenzie and was the wife of the first Earl of Balcarres and the mother of the second and third. After her first husband died, she remarried and became the Countess of Argyll. She was a governess to William III when he was a child. She suffered because she was a Jacobite and her second husband was executed for invading Scotland. She worked to keep together the estates of Balcarres despite the tumultuous times in which she lived and her family's support of the Jacobite cause. Her memoirs were published over a century after her death.

Mackenzie was born in Brahan Castle in about 1621. Her parents were Colin Mackenzie, the first earl of Seaforth, Viscount Fortrose, and Lord Mackenzie of Kintail, and, Margaret, who was the daughter of Alexander Seton, 1st Earl of Dunfermline, Lord Chancellor of Scotland.} There were several siblings, all of whom died young, except for an elder sister, Jean (died 1648). The parents died whilst Anna was a child.

After her father's death, in 1633, she resided at Leslie House, the seat of her cousin, Lord Rothes. Here she was married in April 1640, against the wish of her uncle, then the head of the family, to another cousin, Alexander Lindsay, master of Balcarres, who became Lord Balcarres in the following year. She worked throughout her life to keep together the estates of Balcarres despite the tumultuous times in which she lived and her family's support of the Jacobite cause.

In 1647, her husband became responsible for Edinburgh Castle and in 1651, Charles II became the King of Scots and he promoted her husband to be the Earl of Balcarres. On 22 February 1651, the king paid the couple a visit shortly before the birth of her first child, to whom he became godfather. On the invasion after Worcester, she went with her husband to the Scottish Highlands, where he had command of the royalists. To pay for the debts incurred by Balcarres in the royal cause, she sold her jewels and other valuables, and many years of her subsequent life were spent in redeeming the ruin in which the Balcarres family had been involved.


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