Scottish and Irish families including a line of dukes, over 200,000 Americans, towns in Scotland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, a football club, a trail-blazing mathematician, a famous racing driver, a musical – all these Hamiltons and more feature in the fascinating story of how this name travelled worldwide, probably starting in a village in northern England and carried by the tides of history.
This is a story of colonisation by the powerful landed class and of economic migration by the landless or unentitled, seeking betterment. Hamilton is borne by one of the most distinguished families of the Scottish nobility; they hold many titles, including the marquessate and dukedom of Hamilton, the marquessate of Douglas, the dukedom of Abercorn, and the earldom of Haddington. They take their ancestry from an Anglo-Norman aristocrat, Walter Fitz Gilbert de Hameldone, who did homage to Edward 1 as one of the lairds of Renfrewshire in 1296, and who, having changed sides in the Scottish Wars of Independence, was granted the barony and castle of Cadzow (Lanarkshire) in about 1315 by Robert the Bruce.
These wars were but one episode in a long history of disputed claims over territory and kingship following the colonisation of England by the Normans after 1066, and its later extension to Scotland, Wales and Ireland.



