On 20 May 1455, George Gordon was married by contract to Lady Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of James Dunbar, 7th Earl of Moray. The marriage was annulled due to
affinity, before March 1459–60; the couple had no children. George secondly married, before March 1459–60, Princess
Annabella of Scotland, youngest daughter of King
James I of Scotland and
Joan Beaufort (the granddaughter of
John of Gaunt). After several years of marriage, the Earl of Gordon instituted proceedings to have this marriage annulled as well, on the grounds that Princess Annabella was related in the third and fourth degrees of
consanguinity to his first wife, Elizabeth Dunbar, and the marriage was dissolved on 24 July 1471. George Gordon had a number of children, but with few exceptions, there remains no clear consensus as to which child was of the second marriage and which was of the third: • Lady Isabella Gordon (d. 1485), wife of
William Hay, 3rd Earl of Erroll (d. 1507). •
Alexander Gordon, 3rd Earl of Huntly (died 21 January 1523/24) • James Gordon, mentioned in an entail in 1498. • Lady Elizabeth Gordon, mother was Annabella, who was contracted to marry
William Keith, 3rd Earl Marischal, in 1481. George obtained an annulment from his second marriage on 24 July 1471. He then married, thirdly, his mistress, Lady Elizabeth Hay, daughter of
William Hay, 1st Earl of Erroll, and swore a solemn oath to have no 'actual delen' with the lady until after they were married. He married Elizabeth Hay on 12 May 1476, and they had the following children: •
Lady Catherine Gordon (died October 1537), probably a daughter of Elizabeth Hay, she married firstly,
Perkin Warbeck (d. 1499), notorious for claiming to be
Richard of Shrewsbury, 1st Duke of York, one of the young princes who disappeared from history in the
Tower of London; she married secondly, James Strangeways of Fyfield (d. 1515); she married thirdly, Matthew Cradock of Swansea (d. 1531); and she married fourthly, Christopher Assheton of Fyfield. She was well received at the court of King
Henry VII of England, who styled her "the White Rose." • Lady Agnes Gordon ==Notes==