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  1. Archibald Campbell Fraser of Lovat, (16 August 1736 – 8 December 1815) was British consul at Tripoli and Algiers, and later colonel of the 1st Inverness local militia. Upon the death of his brother, Simon Fraser (1726–1782), Archibald became the 20th MacShimidh (chief) of Clan Fraser of Lovat, and sat in the House of Commons from ...

  2. Archibald Campbell Fraser of Lovat (1736–1815) was a British diplomat, serving as consul in Tripoli and Algiers and also as MP of Inverness-shire. He was born on 16 August, 1736 as son to Simon Fraser, eleventh Lord Lovat (1667–1747) and his second wife, Primrose Campbell (1710–1796).

  3. FRASER, Archibald Campbell (1736-1815), of Lovat, Inverness. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1754-1790, ed. L. Namier, J. Brooke., 1964. Available from Boydell and Brewer. Constituency. Dates. INVERNESS-SHIRE. 28 Mar. 1782 - 1784. Family and Education. b. 16 Aug. 1736, 3rd s. of Simon, 11th Lord Lovat [S], by his 2nd w.

  4. When Archibald Campbell Fraser 20th Chief of Clan Fraser of Lovat was born on 16 August 1736, in Beauly, Inverness-shire, Scotland, his father, Simon Fraser 11th Lord Fraser of Lovat, was 68 and his mother, Primrose Campbell of Mamore, was 26. He married Jane Fraser of Leadclune in 1763.

  5. On the death of General Fraser's younger half-brother, Colonel Archibald Campbell Fraser of Lovat (1736–1815), without legitimate surviving male issue, the Lovat estates were transferred, by entail, to Thomas Alexander Fraser of Strichen (1802–1875), a distant cousin who was descended from Thomas Fraser of Knockie & Strichen ...

  6. Fraser who ministered in the area for On the east wall of the Wardlaw nearly ve decades; Archibald Campbell Mausoleum appears an inscription, the Fraser of Lovat; and his father, and clan words of which were composed many chief before him, the notorious Simon years before his actual death, that Lord Fraser of Lovat, beheaded at Tower curiously r...

  7. The land was governed by a succession of Ministers well into the 17th century. The first private owner of Boleskine House was Archibald Campbell Fraser of Lovat (1736–1815) who oversaw its commission as a manor estate.