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・ Jane Gissing
・ Jane Glazebrook
・ Jane Glover
・ Jane Godwin
・ Jane Goes A-Wooing
・ Jane Golden
・ Jane Goldman
・ Jane Gomeldon
・ Jane Goodall
・ Jane Goodall Center for Excellence in Environmental Studies
・ Jane Goodall Environmental Middle School
・ Jane Goodall Institute
・ Jane Goodall Institute (Hong Kong)
・ Jane Gordon
・ Jane Gordon (jewelry designer)
Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon
・ Jane Gorry
・ Jane Gosling
・ Jane Got a Gun
・ Jane Gough
・ Jane Goulding
・ Jane Granby
・ Jane Grant
・ Jane Gray
・ Jane Gray (broadcaster)
・ Jane Gray (stained glass artist)
・ Jane Gray (supercentenarian)
・ Jane Green
・ Jane Green (actress)
・ Jane Green (author)


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Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon : ウィキペディア英語版
Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon

Jane Gordon, Duchess of Gordon (1748 or 1749 – 14 April 1812), née Lady Jane Maxwell, was a Scottish Tory political hostess.
Together with her husband Alexander, 4th Duke of Gordon and her son George, Marquess of Huntly, the future 5th Duke of Gordon she founded the Gordon Highlanders, a British Army infantry regiment that existed until 1994.〔The Gordon Highlanders Museum, St Lukes, Aberdeen: ''History of the Gordons.''〕
==Childhood in Edinburgh==
Jane was the fourth child of Sir William Maxwell, 3rd Baronet of Monreith, and his wife Magdalene Blair. She was born at Myrton Castle the now ruined castle a short distance from the present seat of the family, Monreith House, which was not built until fifty years later.
Her father has been depicted as a drunk who allowed his family to exist in poverty in Edinburgh while he sold most of his estate to make ends meet. In Edinburgh Jane lived together with her mother and her two sisters in a rented second-floor flat in Hyndford's Close near Royal Mile. As for the family living in an Edinburgh apartment, that would have been normal at that time. Titled Scottish land owning families often rented apartments in Edinburgh so their girls could receive further education, be launched on Edinburgh Society, and attend the balls. This is exactly what happened when Lady Maxwell moved there in 1760 with her three daughters: Catherine, 13; Jane, 11; and Eglantine, 9, the future Lady Wallace of Craigie.
The Monreith Maxwells would have been considered a respectable family in that era. They were closely related to the Maxwells at Caerlaverock, Earls of Nithsdale who in the 17th Century had been considered one of the most powerful families in Scotland. And their grandmother was the daughter of the 9th Earl of Eglinton, head of the great Ayrshire land owning family and distinguished Member of Parliament.〔

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