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William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland

William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland,[1] KG, PC (Dutch: Hans Willem Bentinck; 20 July 1649 – 23 November 1709) was a Dutch-born English nobleman who became in an early stage the favourite of William, Prince of Orange, Stadtholder in the Netherlands, and future King of England. He was reportedly steady, sensible, modest and usually moderate.[2] The friendship and cooperation stopped in 1699.

The Earl of Portland
Portrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud, c. 1698-99
English Ambassador to France
In office
1697–1698
Preceded byThe Lord Waldegrave
Succeeded byThe Earl of Jersey
Personal details
Born(1649-07-20)20 July 1649
Diepenheim, Overijssel, Dutch Republic
Died23 November 1709(1709-11-23) (aged 60)
Bulstrode Park, Buckinghamshire, Kingdom of England
NationalityDutch and English
Spouse(s)Anne Villiers
Jane Martha Temple
Parent(s)Bernard, Baron Bentinck
Anna van Bloemendaal
ResidenceBulstrode Park
Quartered arms of William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland, KG, PC

Biography edit

Early life and nurse to Prince William edit

Hans Willem was born in Diepenheim, Overijssel, the son of Bernard, Baron Bentinck, and was descended from an ancient and noble family of Guelders and Overijssel. He was appointed first page of honour and chamberlain. When, in 1675, Prince William was attacked by smallpox, his physicians suggested he sleep with one of his pages to absorb "animal spirits" from a young, healthy body.[3] Bentinck was the page and he nursed the prince assiduously back to health. This devotion secured for him the special and enduring friendship of William.[4] From that point on, Bentinck had the Prince's confidence, and in their correspondence, William was very open.

Communicator edit

In 1677 he was sent to England to solicit for Prince William the hand of Mary, daughter of James, Duke of York and future King of England. He was again in England on William's behalf in 1683 and in 1685. Later, in 1688, when William was preparing to assist in the overthrow of (now King) James including an invasion by Dutch troops, Bentinck went to some of the German princes to secure their support, or at least their neutrality. He had also been, since 1687, a medium of communication between his master and his English friends.[4] Bentinck superintended the arrangements for the invasion, including raising money, hiring an enormous transport fleet, organising a propaganda offensive, and preparing the possible landing sites, and also sailed to England with Prince William.

Titles and military service edit

The revolution accomplished, William (now King of England) made Bentinck Groom of the Stole, first gentleman of the bedchamber, and a Privy Counsellor. In April 1689 he was created Baron Cirencester, Viscount Woodstock and, in its second creation, Earl of Portland. (The first creation of the earldom had been made for Richard Weston in 1633, but it became extinct in 1688.) He commanded some cavalry at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, and was present at the Battle of Landen, where he was wounded, and at the Siege of Namur in 1695.[4]

Diplomat edit

Bentinck's main work was of a diplomatic nature. In 1690 he was sent to The Hague to help solve the problem between William and the burgomasters of Amsterdam. He was caught up in the corruption scandal concerning the East India Company in 1695; the board was losing its monopoly under pressure from a New Company and was engaging profusely in bribery in an attempt to renew its charter. He was however cleared in the matter.[5] Having thwarted the Jacobite plot to murder the King in 1696, he helped to arrange the peace of Ryswick in 1697. In 1698 he was ambassador to Paris for six months. While there, he opened negotiations with Louis XIV for a partition of the Spanish monarchy, and as William's representative, signed the two partition treaties (Treaty of The Hague (1698)).[4]

Resignation and land gifts edit

William Bentinck had, however, become very jealous of the rising influence of another Dutchman, Arnold van Keppel, and, in 1699, he resigned all his offices in the royal household. He did not forfeit the esteem of the King, who continued to trust and employ him. Portland had been loaded with gifts, and this, together with the jealousy felt for him as a foreigner, made him very unpopular in England. He received 135,000 acres (546 km2) of land in Ireland, and only the strong opposition of a united House of Commons prevented him obtaining a large gift of crown lands in North Wales. For his share in drawing up the partition treaties, he was impeached in 1701, but the case against him did not proceed. He was occasionally employed on public business under Queen Anne until his death at his residence, Bulstrode Park in Buckinghamshire. Portland's eldest son Henry succeeded him as earl, and was granted the titles of Marquess of Titchfield and Duke of Portland in 1716.[4]

Codex Bentingiana edit

While living in the Netherlands, Bentinck maintained a garden boasting many botanical rarities. Illustrations of these plants were collected under the name Codex Bentingiana. This work has since disappeared from the botanical scene.[6]

Family edit

Lord Portland was married twice. On 1 February 1678, he married his first wife, Anne Villiers (died 30 November 1688), daughter of Sir Edward Villiers and his wife Lady Frances Howard, daughter of the 2nd Earl of Suffolk. They had seven children:

  • Lady Mary Bentinck (20 August 1679 – 20 August 1726), who married, firstly, the 2nd Earl of Essex on 28 February 1692 and had one son and two daughters.[7] She married, secondly, Sir Conyers D'Arcy (died 1 December 1758), circa August 1714 and had no issue.
  • Willem Bentinck (3 March 1681 – 26 May 1688)
  • Henry Bentinck, 1st Duke of Portland (17 March 1682 – 4 July 1726)
  • Lady Anna Margaretha Bentinck (19 March 1683 – 3 May 1763), who married Arent van Wassenaar, Baron van Wassenaar circa 1701 and had at least one daughter.
  • Lady Frances Wilhelmina Bentinck (18 February 1684 – 31 March 1712), who married the 4th Baron Byron (4 January 1670 – 8 August 1736) on 19 December 1706 and had four children.
  • Lady Eleonora Sophia Bentinck (born 8 April 1687)
  • Lady Isabella Bentinck (4 May 1688 – 23 February 1728), who married the 1st Duke of Kingston-upon-Hull on 2 August 1714.

He was briefly engaged to Stuarta Werburge Howard (1669-1706), a granddaughter of King Charles II of England, but the engagement was either broken or abandoned. Instead, he married on 12 May 1700, his second wife, Jane Martha Temple (1672 – 26 May 1751), daughter of Sir John Temple, and widow of John Berkeley, 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton. They had the following children:

  • Lady Sophia Bentinck (4 April 1701 – 5 June 1741), who married the 1st Duke of Kent on 24 March 1729 and had issue.
  • Lady Elizabeth Adriana Bentinck (27 June 1703 – 1765), who married Rev. The Hon. Henry Egerton (died 1 April 1746) on 18 December 1720 and had issue.
  • The Hon. William Bentinck, 1st Count Bentinck (6 November 1704 – 13 October 1774), who married Charlotte Sophie, Countess von Aldenburg (4 August 1715 – 5 February 1800) on 1 June 1733 and had two sons. In 1990, after the extinction of the male line from his half-brother the 1st Duke of Portland, his descendant Henry Bentinck, 7th Count Bentinck became the 11th Earl of Portland. One of his sons, Captain John Albert Bentinck, Royal Navy, of Terrington St Clement in Norfolk, a Count of the Empire, founded the line of Bentinck of Indio in the parish of Bovey Tracey in Devon.[8]
  • Lady Harriet Bentinck (12 November 1705 – 10 June 1792), who married James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Clanbrassill (bef. 1697 – 17 March 1758) on 15 October 1728 and had two children.
  • The Hon. Charles John Bentinck (2 June 1708 – 18 March 1779), who married Lady Margaret Cadogan on 11 January 1738.
  • Lady Barbara Bentinck (20 October 1709 – 1 April 1736), who married the 2nd Baron Godolphin (1707 – 25 May 1785) on 18 February 1734; no issue.

In 1718, as the Dowager Countess of Portland, Jane was appointed Governess to the daughters of George Augustus, Prince of Wales (later King George II), with a salary of £2000 a year.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ "House of Bentinck". Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. - website European Heraldry
  2. ^ Japikse, N. (1927) Correspondentie van Willem III en Hans Willem Bentinck, Eersten graaf van Portland, Deel I, Het archief van Welbeck Abbey, p. XXI.
  3. ^ Haerbele, Erwin (1983). The Sex Atlas. London: Sheldon Press. p. 387. ISBN 0-85969-378-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911.
  5. ^ Horwitz, Henry (1978). "The East India trade, the politicians, and the constitution: 1689-1702". Journal of British Studies. 17 (2): 1–18.
  6. ^ The Anglo-Dutch Favourite 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine - The career of Hans Willem Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland (1649–1709)
  7. ^ A biographical history of England, from the Revolution to the end of George i's reign; a continuation of the rev. J. Granger's work, Volume 1, page 327
  8. ^ Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p.141, pedigree of Bentinck of Indio House
  9. ^ "Treasury Warrants: September 1718, 1-30 Pages 566-577 Calendar of Treasury Books, Volume 32, 1718". British History Online. HMSO. Retrieved 13 September 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Grew, M. E. William Bentinck and William III (Prince of Orange). The Life of Bentinck, Earl of Portland, from the Welbeck Correspondence ( 1924)
  • de Kavanagh Boulger, Demetrius Charles, and Lord William Henry Cavendish Bentinck. Lord William Bentinck (Clarendon Press, 1897) online.
  • Onnekink, David. The Anglo-Dutch Favourite: The Career of Hans Willem Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland (1649–1709) (2017) a major scholarly biography
  • Onnekink, David. "'Mynheer Benting now rules over us': the 1st Earl of Portland and the Re-emergence of the English Favourite, 1689–99." English Historical Review 121.492 (2006): 693–713. online
  • Onnekink, David. "The earl of Portland and Scotland (1689–1699): a re-evaluation of Williamite policy." Scottish Historical Review 85.2 (2006): 231–249.

External links edit

  • N. Japikse, ed., van Willem III en van Hans Willem Bentinck, eersten graaf van Portland.
  • Biography of the 1st Earl, with links to online catalogues, from Manuscripts and Special Collections, The University of Nottingham
  • The Invasion of England in 1688: a learning resource based on the 1st Earl's papers, developed by Manuscripts and Special Collections, The University of Nottingham
  • David Onnekink, The Anglo-Dutch Favourite - The career of Hans Willem Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland (1649-1709) 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine (Ashgate Publishing, 2007)
Court offices
Preceded by Groom of the Stole
1689–1700
Succeeded by
Preceded by Keeper of the Privy Purse
1689–1700
Succeeded by
Caspar Frederick Henning
Diplomatic posts
Vacant
Title last held by
The Lord Waldegrave
English Ambassador to France
1697–1698
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
New creation Earl of Portland
1689–1709
Succeeded by
Dutch nobility
Preceded by
Bernard, Baron Bentinck
Baron Bentinck
1649–1709
Succeeded by

william, bentinck, earl, portland, dutch, hans, willem, bentinck, july, 1649, november, 1709, dutch, born, english, nobleman, became, early, stage, favourite, william, prince, orange, stadtholder, netherlands, future, king, england, reportedly, steady, sensibl. William Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland 1 KG PC Dutch Hans Willem Bentinck 20 July 1649 23 November 1709 was a Dutch born English nobleman who became in an early stage the favourite of William Prince of Orange Stadtholder in the Netherlands and future King of England He was reportedly steady sensible modest and usually moderate 2 The friendship and cooperation stopped in 1699 The Right HonourableThe Earl of PortlandKG PCPortrait by Hyacinthe Rigaud c 1698 99English Ambassador to FranceIn office 1697 1698Preceded byThe Lord WaldegraveSucceeded byThe Earl of JerseyPersonal detailsBorn 1649 07 20 20 July 1649Diepenheim Overijssel Dutch RepublicDied23 November 1709 1709 11 23 aged 60 Bulstrode Park Buckinghamshire Kingdom of EnglandNationalityDutch and EnglishSpouse s Anne VilliersJane Martha TempleParent s Bernard Baron BentinckAnna van BloemendaalResidenceBulstrode Park Quartered arms of William Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland KG PC Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and nurse to Prince William 1 2 Communicator 1 3 Titles and military service 1 4 Diplomat 1 5 Resignation and land gifts 2 Codex Bentingiana 3 Family 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editEarly life and nurse to Prince William edit Hans Willem was born in Diepenheim Overijssel the son of Bernard Baron Bentinck and was descended from an ancient and noble family of Guelders and Overijssel He was appointed first page of honour and chamberlain When in 1675 Prince William was attacked by smallpox his physicians suggested he sleep with one of his pages to absorb animal spirits from a young healthy body 3 Bentinck was the page and he nursed the prince assiduously back to health This devotion secured for him the special and enduring friendship of William 4 From that point on Bentinck had the Prince s confidence and in their correspondence William was very open Communicator edit In 1677 he was sent to England to solicit for Prince William the hand of Mary daughter of James Duke of York and future King of England He was again in England on William s behalf in 1683 and in 1685 Later in 1688 when William was preparing to assist in the overthrow of now King James including an invasion by Dutch troops Bentinck went to some of the German princes to secure their support or at least their neutrality He had also been since 1687 a medium of communication between his master and his English friends 4 Bentinck superintended the arrangements for the invasion including raising money hiring an enormous transport fleet organising a propaganda offensive and preparing the possible landing sites and also sailed to England with Prince William Titles and military service edit The revolution accomplished William now King of England made Bentinck Groom of the Stole first gentleman of the bedchamber and a Privy Counsellor In April 1689 he was created Baron Cirencester Viscount Woodstock and in its second creation Earl of Portland The first creation of the earldom had been made for Richard Weston in 1633 but it became extinct in 1688 He commanded some cavalry at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 and was present at the Battle of Landen where he was wounded and at the Siege of Namur in 1695 4 Diplomat edit Bentinck s main work was of a diplomatic nature In 1690 he was sent to The Hague to help solve the problem between William and the burgomasters of Amsterdam He was caught up in the corruption scandal concerning the East India Company in 1695 the board was losing its monopoly under pressure from a New Company and was engaging profusely in bribery in an attempt to renew its charter He was however cleared in the matter 5 Having thwarted the Jacobite plot to murder the King in 1696 he helped to arrange the peace of Ryswick in 1697 In 1698 he was ambassador to Paris for six months While there he opened negotiations with Louis XIV for a partition of the Spanish monarchy and as William s representative signed the two partition treaties Treaty of The Hague 1698 4 Resignation and land gifts edit William Bentinck had however become very jealous of the rising influence of another Dutchman Arnold van Keppel and in 1699 he resigned all his offices in the royal household He did not forfeit the esteem of the King who continued to trust and employ him Portland had been loaded with gifts and this together with the jealousy felt for him as a foreigner made him very unpopular in England He received 135 000 acres 546 km2 of land in Ireland and only the strong opposition of a united House of Commons prevented him obtaining a large gift of crown lands in North Wales For his share in drawing up the partition treaties he was impeached in 1701 but the case against him did not proceed He was occasionally employed on public business under Queen Anne until his death at his residence Bulstrode Park in Buckinghamshire Portland s eldest son Henry succeeded him as earl and was granted the titles of Marquess of Titchfield and Duke of Portland in 1716 4 Codex Bentingiana editWhile living in the Netherlands Bentinck maintained a garden boasting many botanical rarities Illustrations of these plants were collected under the name Codex Bentingiana This work has since disappeared from the botanical scene 6 Family editLord Portland was married twice On 1 February 1678 he married his first wife Anne Villiers died 30 November 1688 daughter of Sir Edward Villiers and his wife Lady Frances Howard daughter of the 2nd Earl of Suffolk They had seven children Lady Mary Bentinck 20 August 1679 20 August 1726 who married firstly the 2nd Earl of Essex on 28 February 1692 and had one son and two daughters 7 She married secondly Sir Conyers D Arcy died 1 December 1758 circa August 1714 and had no issue Willem Bentinck 3 March 1681 26 May 1688 Henry Bentinck 1st Duke of Portland 17 March 1682 4 July 1726 Lady Anna Margaretha Bentinck 19 March 1683 3 May 1763 who married Arent van Wassenaar Baron van Wassenaar circa 1701 and had at least one daughter Lady Frances Wilhelmina Bentinck 18 February 1684 31 March 1712 who married the 4th Baron Byron 4 January 1670 8 August 1736 on 19 December 1706 and had four children Lady Eleonora Sophia Bentinck born 8 April 1687 Lady Isabella Bentinck 4 May 1688 23 February 1728 who married the 1st Duke of Kingston upon Hull on 2 August 1714 He was briefly engaged to Stuarta Werburge Howard 1669 1706 a granddaughter of King Charles II of England but the engagement was either broken or abandoned Instead he married on 12 May 1700 his second wife Jane Martha Temple 1672 26 May 1751 daughter of Sir John Temple and widow of John Berkeley 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton They had the following children Lady Sophia Bentinck 4 April 1701 5 June 1741 who married the 1st Duke of Kent on 24 March 1729 and had issue Lady Elizabeth Adriana Bentinck 27 June 1703 1765 who married Rev The Hon Henry Egerton died 1 April 1746 on 18 December 1720 and had issue The Hon William Bentinck 1st Count Bentinck 6 November 1704 13 October 1774 who married Charlotte Sophie Countess von Aldenburg 4 August 1715 5 February 1800 on 1 June 1733 and had two sons In 1990 after the extinction of the male line from his half brother the 1st Duke of Portland his descendant Henry Bentinck 7th Count Bentinck became the 11th Earl of Portland One of his sons Captain John Albert Bentinck Royal Navy of Terrington St Clement in Norfolk a Count of the Empire founded the line of Bentinck of Indio in the parish of Bovey Tracey in Devon 8 Lady Harriet Bentinck 12 November 1705 10 June 1792 who married James Hamilton 1st Earl of Clanbrassill bef 1697 17 March 1758 on 15 October 1728 and had two children The Hon Charles John Bentinck 2 June 1708 18 March 1779 who married Lady Margaret Cadogan on 11 January 1738 Lady Barbara Bentinck 20 October 1709 1 April 1736 who married the 2nd Baron Godolphin 1707 25 May 1785 on 18 February 1734 no issue In 1718 as the Dowager Countess of Portland Jane was appointed Governess to the daughters of George Augustus Prince of Wales later King George II with a salary of 2000 a year 9 References editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message House of Bentinck Archived from the original on 30 July 2012 website European Heraldry Japikse N 1927 Correspondentie van Willem III en Hans Willem Bentinck Eersten graaf van Portland Deel I Het archief van Welbeck Abbey p XXI Haerbele Erwin 1983 The Sex Atlas London Sheldon Press p 387 ISBN 0 85969 378 3 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 Horwitz Henry 1978 The East India trade the politicians and the constitution 1689 1702 Journal of British Studies 17 2 1 18 The Anglo Dutch Favourite Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The career of Hans Willem Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland 1649 1709 A biographical history of England from the Revolution to the end of George i s reign a continuation of the rev J Granger s work Volume 1 page 327 Burke s Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry 15th Edition ed Pirie Gordon H London 1937 p 141 pedigree of Bentinck of Indio House Treasury Warrants September 1718 1 30 Pages 566 577 Calendar of Treasury Books Volume 32 1718 British History Online HMSO Retrieved 13 September 2021 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Portland William Bentinck Earl of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 119 Further reading editGrew M E William Bentinck and William III Prince of Orange The Life of Bentinck Earl of Portland from the Welbeck Correspondence 1924 de Kavanagh Boulger Demetrius Charles and Lord William Henry Cavendish Bentinck Lord William Bentinck Clarendon Press 1897 online Onnekink David The Anglo Dutch Favourite The Career of Hans Willem Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland 1649 1709 2017 a major scholarly biography Onnekink David Mynheer Benting now rules over us the 1st Earl of Portland and the Re emergence of the English Favourite 1689 99 English Historical Review 121 492 2006 693 713 online Onnekink David The earl of Portland and Scotland 1689 1699 a re evaluation of Williamite policy Scottish Historical Review 85 2 2006 231 249 External links editN Japikse ed van Willem III en van Hans Willem Bentinck eersten graaf van Portland Biography of the 1st Earl with links to online catalogues from Manuscripts and Special Collections The University of Nottingham The Invasion of England in 1688 a learning resource based on the 1st Earl s papers developed by Manuscripts and Special Collections The University of Nottingham David Onnekink The Anglo Dutch Favourite The career of Hans Willem Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland 1649 1709 Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ashgate Publishing 2007 Court offices Preceded byThe Earl of Peterborough Groom of the Stole1689 1700 Succeeded byThe Earl of Romney Preceded byJames Graham Keeper of the Privy Purse1689 1700 Succeeded byCaspar Frederick Henning Diplomatic posts VacantNine Years WarTitle last held byThe Lord Waldegrave English Ambassador to France1697 1698 Succeeded byThe Earl of Jersey Peerage of England New creation Earl of Portland1689 1709 Succeeded byHenry Bentinck Dutch nobility Preceded byBernard Baron Bentinck Baron Bentinck1649 1709 Succeeded byHenry Bentinck Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland amp oldid 1183470694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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