Early life and family He was the third and youngest son of George Ainslie, Esq., from a
Lasswade family, who married Jane, daughter of Sir Philip Anstruther of Anstrutherfield, and died in 1773. The issue of the marriage of George Ainslie was a family of eight children and included five daughters, four of whom were married and established in
France. The elder brothers of Ainslie were Sir
Philip Ainslie, knight, who was born in 1728 and died on 19 June 1802 and
George Ainslie, a general in the army, colonel of the 13th regiment of foot and lieutenant-governor of the
Scilly Islands who died in 1804. Ainslie, who was born about 1730, is described as having resided in the earlier part of his life at
Bordeaux, where his father had been for some time settled as a merchant. He is said to have returned to Scotland in 1727 and to have purchased the estate of
Pilton, in the county of
Midlothian.
Ambassador to Ottoman Empire Ainslie is first noticed in the
London Gazette on 20 September 1775: "The king has been pleased to appoint Robert Ainslie, Esq., to be his majesty's ambassador to the Ottoman Porte, in the room of John Murray, Esq., deceased; and his majesty was pleased this day to confer upon him the honour of knighthood, upon which occasion he had the honour to kiss his majesty's hand". He was given leave to return home on 22 September 1793 and left Turkey sometime in 1794.
Member of Parliament On 8 September 1796, Ainslie received a grant of a pension of £1,000 on the civil list to be held "during the joint lives of his majesty and himself" and was elected a Member of Parliament. It met on the 27th of the same month, with
Lord Paget as his colleague, for the close borough of
Milborne Port,
Somerset. At the general election of 1802, his seat in Parliament was transferred to Hugh Leycester. The ''
Gentleman's Magazine'' for December 1796 recorded the death of his son on 20 December 1796 from a violent fever. His great-nephew was
Thomas Corbett. Ainslie died after a long illness aged 83 at
Bath, England, on 21 July 1812. ==Numismatics==