Duncan Forbes of Culloden (politician, born 1644)
Duncan Forbes of Culloden | |
|---|---|
| Commissioner for Nairnshire | |
| In office 1703–1704 | |
| Monarch | Anne |
| Preceded by | Hugh Rose of Kilvarock |
| Succeeded by | John Forbes |
| Commissioner for Inverness-shire | |
| In office 1689–1702 | |
| Monarch | William II |
| Preceded by | Hugh Fraser of Belladrum |
| Succeeded by | Alexander Grant |
| Commissioner for Nairnshire | |
| In office 1678–1686 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1644 Culloden House, Inverness, Scotland |
| Died | 24 June 1704 (aged 60) Edinburgh |
| Spouse | Marie Innes (d 1678?) |
| Children | John (1673–1734); Jean (ca 1678–?); Margaret; Duncan (1685–1747); four others died young |
| Parent(s) | John Forbes (died ca 1688) Anna Dunbar (died after 1716) |
| Residence | Culloden House |
| Alma mater | Marischal College, Aberdeen University of Bourges |
| Occupation | Politician |
Duncan Forbes 3rd of Culloden (1644–1704) was a politician and member of the Parliament of Scotland between 1678 and 1704. He was a strong supporter of Whiggism, a political philosophy developed during the 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms, which advocated the supremacy of Parliament over the monarch and opposed Catholicism.
His two sons, John (1673-1734), and Duncan (1685-1747), played prominent roles in suppressing the Jacobite rebellions of 1715 and 1745.