The ‘Banff Burghs’ comprised the towns of Banff and Cullen and the city of Aberdeen, situated on the north-east coast of Scotland. All three had been royal burghs since the twelfth century, but Aberdeen, as an important centre for trade, religion and education, soon outstripped its neighbours in size and prosperity.
The paucity of records makes the political situation in the burgh of Cullen difficult to gauge, but it may have been similar to nearby Banff, where there were competing covenanter and royalist factions within the town in the early 1640s. At Banff, the covenanters (led by Dr Alexander Douglas*) ousted Lord Banff and the Ogilvies, but were themselves ejected by Montrose in 1644. Douglas and his cronies were soon returned to power, however, and managed to hold on to it even after 1651, when they submitted to the English invaders.
The survival of Scottish influence in the administration of the burghs may also have had an impact on the elections for the constituency for the Westminster Parliaments. Under the union ordinance of April 1654, the three burghs were to return one MP, elected at Aberdeen.
The election of Clarges in 1659 may have been at the request of George Monck*, but again it would be a mistake to see him as having been imposed on them against their will. On 19 January 1659 Monck wrote to Aberdeen thanking them ‘for your favour in choosing of Dr Clarges’, and assuring them that although he had already been returned for Peebles Burghs, ‘yet he will stand for your burgh and the rest joined with it and be ready to do you any service that lies in his power, if you please to lay your commands upon him’.
Right of election: ?commissioners appointed by the burghs
Royal Burghs of Aberdeen, Banff and Cullen, combined to return one MP, 1654-9
Number of voters: ?3
