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Īfter Easter, Hope-Weir went on to Naples, taking with him the minor Scottish painter and art dealer Colin Morison (1732–1810) in Adam's place. Although they remained civil whenever they met, Adam wrote in a letter that Hope was a "poor, vain, affected, childish coxcomb". They then fell out over travelling expenses, and over the Casa Guarnieri, a house which they both hoped to rent. They met William at Pisa, and arrived in Rome in February 1755. The pair met up in Brussels in November 1754, and travelled through France and Italy together, on the typical grand tour route, taking in Lyon, Marseilles, Nice and Genoa. At his brother's suggestion, Hope-Weir took with him the young architect Robert Adam, who had been advising Lord Hope on the decoration of Hopetoun House. His son William was already in Italy with his tutor. In 1754, with the encouragement of his uncle, the Marquess of Annandale, and his brother, the Earl of Hopetoun, Hope-Weir set off for Italy on the grand tour. He later held the posts of Commissary General of the Musters in Scotland, and Ranger of Ettrick Forest. He was appointed Governor of Blackness Castle in 1744. On he was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Linlithgowshire, a seat he held until 1769, when he stepped down. The family name was later changed to Hope-Vere. He adopted the name Hope-Weir, and the arms of the Weir family, on his marriage in 1733 to Catherine Weir, daughter and heiress of the Weir Baronets of Blackwood, Lanarkshire. In 1730 he inherited the Craigiehall estate, in the parish of Dalmeny, West Lothian, from his uncle, the 2nd Marquess of Annandale. Charles Hope, he was the second son of Charles Hope, 1st Earl of Hopetoun and Lady Henrietta Johnstone, daughter of William Johnstone, 1st Marquess of Annandale. Charles Hope-Weir (or Hope-Vere) ( – 30 December 1791) was a Scottish politician.īorn The Hon.