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Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of St Albans

Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of Saint Albans KG (25 March 1605 (baptised) – January 1684) was an English Royalist politician, diplomat and courtier.

The Earl of St Albans
The Earl of St Albans, from a portrait by Lely
Lord Chamberlain
In office
1672–1674
MonarchCharles II
Preceded byThe Earl of Manchester
Succeeded byThe Earl of Arlington
Personal details
Born1605
Died1684
Parent(s)Sir Thomas Jermyn
Catherine Killigrew

Jermyn sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1625 and 1643 when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Jermyn. Having formed an intimate friendship with Henrietta Maria of France in the 1630s, he constantly devised and promoted schemes to involve foreign powers in the restoration of the monarchy, both before and after the execution of Charles I in 1649. A long-standing advocate of pro-French policies, he became one of the most influential courtiers of the Interregnum and reign of Charles II.

Early life edit

Jermyn was the fourth but second surviving son of Sir Thomas Jermyn (1572–1645) of Rushbrooke, Suffolk, Vice-Chamberlain to Charles I, and his wife Catherine, daughter of Sir William Killigrew of Hanworth, Middlesex (a sister of Sir Robert Killigrew).[1] He was baptised at St Margaret's Lothbury, London on 25 March 1605.

In 1618 he undertook a tour of Europe for three years and in 1623 he became a member of the household of the Earl of Bristol in Madrid. While living in Spain he met the Duke of Buckingham and Jermyn "abounded in the expression of his joy for the honour and favours done him" by the duke.[1]

Politician and courtier edit

In 1625, while still underage, Jermyn was elected Member of Parliament for Bodmin on the interest of his uncle Sir Robert Killigrew, and was re-elected MP for the seat in 1626.[2] He made no contribution to parliamentary proceedings in either year. In around 1627, he came to the attention of Henrietta Maria, Queen consort of Charles I of England, and was appointed a gentleman usher in her private household. In July 1627 he was sent to France by the queen to convey her condolences to Louis XIII on the death of the duchess of Orléans. He became Henrietta Maria's vice-chamberlain in 1628 and the same year he was elected as the MP for Liverpool on the nomination of Humphrey May. During the parliamentary recess, Jermyn was seconded to Jersey to train the island's militia.[1]

In 1632 Jermyn was again sent to Paris, this time to congratulate the queen's mother, Marie de' Medici, on surviving a coach accident. In 1633 he jeopardised his position when Eleanor Villiers, one of the queen's ladies in waiting, gave birth to his illegitimate child.[1][3] Jermyn was sent abroad by Charles I, but was allowed to return and resume his role at court in August 1634. His favour with Henrietta Maria was undamaged and in 1639 his dominant position in her household was confirmed when he was appointed her Master of the Horse.[4]

Civil War and exile edit

 
Henry Jermyn painted in circa 1640

In April 1640, Jermyn was elected MP for Corfe Castle in the Short Parliament together with his brother Thomas.[2] The brothers were both elected MPs for Bury St Edmunds in the Long Parliament in November 1640 and were active and ardent Royalists. Jermyn took a prominent part in the First Army Plot of 1641 and on its discovery he fled to France.[5] In 1642, he joined Henrietta Maria in The Hague where he assisted her to raise loans, buy weapons and recruit troops for the Royalist cause. Returning to England in 1643, he resumed his personal attendance on the queen and was appointed colonel of her bodyguard. On 8 September 1643 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Jermyn of St Edmundsbury,[4] ostensibly so that, should he fall into Parliamentarian hands, he would be beheaded, and not hanged, drawn and quartered.[citation needed] The same year he was made a colonel of horse in the king's army. In 1644 he became the queen's chamberlain. A few months later he accompanied Henrietta Maria to France, where he continued to act as her secretary and confidant, and attempted to raise support for the Royalist war effort.[6]

In 1645, Jermyn was made Governor of Jersey. He came into conflict with Sir Edward Hyde when he brought the Prince of Wales from Jersey to Paris, against Hyde's advice. In 1647, Jermyn advised the king to promise a Presbyterian church in England in order to gain Scottish assistance against parliament. Charles I made Jermyn his ambassador to France and the Dutch Republic prior to his execution in 1649.[1] Jermyn advocated for the Royalist alliance with Scotland which led to the Anglo-Scottish war of 1650 to 1652. In 1651 he was appointed to the Privy Council of England.[1]

In France, Jermyn became the leading figure in the 'Louvre faction', a group of English royalists who had attached themselves to Henrietta Maria's court-in-exile, based initially out of the Louvre Palace.[7] Following The Fronde, in 1653 the Queen Dowager swapped accommodation with Anne of Austria and her court relocated to the Palais-Royal.[8] Other members of the faction included Henry Wilmot, Lord John Byron, Kenelm Digby, George Digby, Henry Percy, John Colepeper and Charles Gerard. The group was marked by their close adherence to Henrietta Maria, their pro-French outlook and their opposition to the influence of Hyde over Charles II. Jermyn proposed to Charles a plan to cede the Channel Islands to France in exchange for military aid. Jermyn succeeding in getting large grants from the king's allowance and was able to live in relative luxury, despite the court itself being impoverished.[9] When Charles went to Breda, Jermyn remained in Paris with Henrietta Maria, who persuaded her son to create him Earl of St Albans on 27 April 1660.[10]

Restoration edit

 
The arms of Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of St Albans, as a Knight of the Garter

At the Restoration in May 1660, St Albans was appointed to the Court of Chancery and made a justice of the peace for Suffolk and Middlesex. However, Hyde ensured that Jermyn was kept out of government. In 1663 he was present at the birth of James Stuart, Duke of Cambridge.[11] He acted as Charles II's ambassador to France throughout the 1660s and was supportive of the policy of friendship towards Louis XIV of France. He contributed largely to the close secret understanding between Charles II and Louis XIV, arranging the preliminaries of the Secret Treaty of Dover in 1669.[12] St Albans' obvious affinity with France was controversial at court; the Italian diplomat Lorenzo Magalotti wrote that he was "a man who is wholly devoted to French interests and who acts with no other purpose than to promote the vast projects of that crown at whatever cost to England".[13]

St Albans witnessed the death of Henrietta Maria in France in August 1669 and was an executor of her will. That same year he hosted Cosimo III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany at his London townhouse. In 1672 he was appointed Lord Chamberlain, the most senior officer in the king's household, and was made a Knight of the Garter. He briefly served in the First Danby ministry as Lord Chamberlain, but left office in 1674 after which he largely retired from public life.[1] In 1683, the year before his death, he was described by John Evelyn as "a prudent old courtier and much enriched since his majesty's return".[9]

Founder of the West End edit

 
City of Westminster Green Plaque for Henry Jermyn, Earl of St Albans (1605–1684), located in Duke of York Street, London SW1

In September 1662, St Albans obtained a leasehold on a grant of land at Pall Mall Field in London north of St James's Palace.[14] He began the development of the field with the construction of grand houses in the classical style at what would soon become St. James's Square. The City of London, which feared for its water supply, was hostile to the plan, but the support of Charles II for the development discouraged opposition. The grant by Charles of the freehold of the new square and other adjacent property to trustees for the Earl of St Albans was made on 1 April 1665. A ground-rent of £80 per annum was reserved. The Earl of St Albans built his own townhouse, St Albans House (later the site of Norfolk House), on the square at a cost of £15,000.[14]

The surrounding streets, including Jermyn Street, King Street, Duke Street St James's and Charles II Street, were completed soon afterwards, an area which would become called St James's. St Albans market was built on a site later cleared for the construction of Regent Street and Waterloo Place.[12][15] It was a grand design in itself, and from its inspiration grew the whole of the West End of London, so much so that the Survey of London acknowledges Henry Jermyn as the 'Founder of the West End'.[16] In the 1660s he also owned Soho Fields, of which he leased 19 out of the 22 acres (89,000 m2) to Joseph Girle, who was granted permission to develop the land. In August 1674, further grants of freehold land were unsuccessfully sought on behalf of St Albans.[14]

Personal life edit

 
Henry Jermyn, Earl of St Albans

He was a friend and patron of Abraham Cowley and Sir William Davenant. Magalotti wrote that St Albans was "an extremely handsome young man, and for that reason was always pleasing to the ladies".[13] He was much addicted to gambling, which was a very popular pastime in his era, and had several romances at court.[4] The 1636 play The Platonick Lovers was dedicated to him by Davenant. His entry in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica described him as a "man of dissolute morals".[4]

Gossip which the historian Henry Hallam accepted as authentic, but which is supported by no real evidence, asserted that Jermyn was secretly married to Queen Henrietta Maria during their exile in France.[12] It was further rumoured during Jermyn's lifetime that he may have been the true father of at least one of her children, even perhaps of Charles II himself. The Domestic State Papers for 13 August 1660 contain a report by Capt. Francis Robinson of Nathaniel Angelo, a Windsor clergyman, asserting that "all the royal children were Jermyn's bastards."[17]

St Albans died at his house in St James's Square in January 1684. At his own request, he was buried with his ancestors at Rushbrooke.[1] As he was unmarried, the earldom of St Albans became extinct at his death, while the barony of Jermyn of St Edmundsbury passed by special remainder, together with his property, to his nephew Thomas Jermyn (1633–1703), and after the latter's death to Thomas's brother Henry, Lord Dover (1636–1708).[12] The fate of his illegitimate daughter with Eleanor Villiers is unknown. In January 1684, immediately after St Albans' death, Charles II granted Jermyn's territorial designation to one of his illegitimate sons, Charles Beauclerk, as the first Duke of St Albans.[18]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Thrush & Ferris 2010.
  2. ^ a b Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ... London. pp. 229–239.
  3. ^ Sensabaugh 1940, p. 460.
  4. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911, p. 1011.
  5. ^ Russell 1988, pp. 85–106.
  6. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 1011–1012.
  7. ^ Thurley 2020.
  8. ^ Britland 2007.
  9. ^ a b P. R. 1924, p. 140.
  10. ^ Collins 1812a, p. 402.
  11. ^ Jesse 1840, p. 302.
  12. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911, p. 1012.
  13. ^ a b Knowles Middleton 1980, p. 59.
  14. ^ a b c Sheppard 1960.
  15. ^ BBC News 2011.
  16. ^ Wriston 1969, p. 96.
  17. ^ Public Record Office 1860, p. 189.
  18. ^ Collins 1812b, p. 244.

References edit

  • Adolph, Anthony (2012). The King's Henchman. Henry Jermyn: Stuart Spymaster and Architect of the British Empire. Gibson Square. ISBN 9781908096302.
  • "Henry Jermyn, West End visionary, in green plaque honour". BBC News. 2011.
  • Britland, Karen (2007). "'Tyred in her banished dress': Henrietta Maria in exile". Early Modern Literary Studies (Special Issue 15): 1–39. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  • Calendar of State Papers: Of the Reign of Charles II (Domestic Series, Volume 1). Public Record Office. 1860.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "St Albans, Henry Jermyn, Earl of". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 1011–1012.
  • Collins, Arthur (1812a). Peerage of England (Volume 9). F. C. and J. Rivington.
  • Collins, Arthur (1812b). Peerage of England (Volume 11). F. C. and J. Rivington.
  • Jesse, John Heneage (1840). Memoirs of the court of England during the reign of the Stuarts. Vol. 1. Massachusetts: Harvard University.
  • Knowles Middleton, W. E. (1980). Lorenzo Magalotti at the Court of Charles II. Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press.
  • P. R. (1924). "The Rushbrooke Bed". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 19 (6): 149–141. doi:10.2307/3254514. JSTOR 3254514. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  • Russell, Conrad (1988). "The First Army Plot of 1641". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 38: 85–106. doi:10.1017/S0080440100013177. JSTOR 3678968. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  • Sensabaugh, G. F. (1940). "Platonic Love and the Puritan Rebellion". Studies in Philology. 37 (3): 457–481. JSTOR 4172493. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  • Sheppard, F. H. W. (1960). "St. James's Square: General". Survey of London: Volumes 29 and 30, St James Westminster, Part 1. British History Online. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  • Thrush, Andrew; Ferris, John P. (2010). "JERMYN, Henry (c.1605-1684), of Rushbrooke, Suff. and Whitehall". The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629. historyofparliamentonline.org. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  • Thurley, Simon (2020). "Charles II: The Court in Exile" (PDF). gresham.ac.uk. Gresham College. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  • Willis, Browne (1750). Notitia Parliamentaria, Part II: A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541, to the Restoration 1660 ... London. pp. 229–239.
  • Wriston, Barbara (1969). "The Howard Van Doren Shaw Memorial Collection". Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies. 3: 87–107. doi:10.2307/4115951. JSTOR 4115951. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
Parliament of England
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Bodmin
1625–1626
With: Robert Caesar 1625
Sir Richard Weston 1626
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Edward Bridgeman
Thomas Stanley
Member of Parliament for Liverpool
1628–1629
With: John Newdigate
Parliament suspended until 1640
Vacant Member of Parliament for Corfe Castle
1640
With: Thomas Jermyn
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Bury St Edmunds
1640–1643
With: Thomas Jermyn
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Lord Chamberlain
1671–1674
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
New creation Earl of St Albans
1660–1684
Extinct
Baron Jermyn of St Edmundsbury
1643–1684
Succeeded by

henry, jermyn, earl, albans, henry, jermyn, earl, saint, albans, march, 1605, baptised, january, 1684, english, royalist, politician, diplomat, courtier, right, honourablethe, earl, albanskg, pcthe, earl, albans, from, portrait, lelylord, chamberlainin, office. Henry Jermyn 1st Earl of Saint Albans KG 25 March 1605 baptised January 1684 was an English Royalist politician diplomat and courtier The Right HonourableThe Earl of St AlbansKG PCThe Earl of St Albans from a portrait by LelyLord ChamberlainIn office 1672 1674MonarchCharles IIPreceded byThe Earl of ManchesterSucceeded byThe Earl of ArlingtonPersonal detailsBorn1605Died1684Parent s Sir Thomas JermynCatherine KilligrewJermyn sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1625 and 1643 when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Jermyn Having formed an intimate friendship with Henrietta Maria of France in the 1630s he constantly devised and promoted schemes to involve foreign powers in the restoration of the monarchy both before and after the execution of Charles I in 1649 A long standing advocate of pro French policies he became one of the most influential courtiers of the Interregnum and reign of Charles II Contents 1 Early life 2 Politician and courtier 2 1 Civil War and exile 2 2 Restoration 3 Founder of the West End 4 Personal life 5 Citations 6 ReferencesEarly life editJermyn was the fourth but second surviving son of Sir Thomas Jermyn 1572 1645 of Rushbrooke Suffolk Vice Chamberlain to Charles I and his wife Catherine daughter of Sir William Killigrew of Hanworth Middlesex a sister of Sir Robert Killigrew 1 He was baptised at St Margaret s Lothbury London on 25 March 1605 In 1618 he undertook a tour of Europe for three years and in 1623 he became a member of the household of the Earl of Bristol in Madrid While living in Spain he met the Duke of Buckingham and Jermyn abounded in the expression of his joy for the honour and favours done him by the duke 1 Politician and courtier editIn 1625 while still underage Jermyn was elected Member of Parliament for Bodmin on the interest of his uncle Sir Robert Killigrew and was re elected MP for the seat in 1626 2 He made no contribution to parliamentary proceedings in either year In around 1627 he came to the attention of Henrietta Maria Queen consort of Charles I of England and was appointed a gentleman usher in her private household In July 1627 he was sent to France by the queen to convey her condolences to Louis XIII on the death of the duchess of Orleans He became Henrietta Maria s vice chamberlain in 1628 and the same year he was elected as the MP for Liverpool on the nomination of Humphrey May During the parliamentary recess Jermyn was seconded to Jersey to train the island s militia 1 In 1632 Jermyn was again sent to Paris this time to congratulate the queen s mother Marie de Medici on surviving a coach accident In 1633 he jeopardised his position when Eleanor Villiers one of the queen s ladies in waiting gave birth to his illegitimate child 1 3 Jermyn was sent abroad by Charles I but was allowed to return and resume his role at court in August 1634 His favour with Henrietta Maria was undamaged and in 1639 his dominant position in her household was confirmed when he was appointed her Master of the Horse 4 Civil War and exile edit nbsp Henry Jermyn painted in circa 1640In April 1640 Jermyn was elected MP for Corfe Castle in the Short Parliament together with his brother Thomas 2 The brothers were both elected MPs for Bury St Edmunds in the Long Parliament in November 1640 and were active and ardent Royalists Jermyn took a prominent part in the First Army Plot of 1641 and on its discovery he fled to France 5 In 1642 he joined Henrietta Maria in The Hague where he assisted her to raise loans buy weapons and recruit troops for the Royalist cause Returning to England in 1643 he resumed his personal attendance on the queen and was appointed colonel of her bodyguard On 8 September 1643 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Jermyn of St Edmundsbury 4 ostensibly so that should he fall into Parliamentarian hands he would be beheaded and not hanged drawn and quartered citation needed The same year he was made a colonel of horse in the king s army In 1644 he became the queen s chamberlain A few months later he accompanied Henrietta Maria to France where he continued to act as her secretary and confidant and attempted to raise support for the Royalist war effort 6 In 1645 Jermyn was made Governor of Jersey He came into conflict with Sir Edward Hyde when he brought the Prince of Wales from Jersey to Paris against Hyde s advice In 1647 Jermyn advised the king to promise a Presbyterian church in England in order to gain Scottish assistance against parliament Charles I made Jermyn his ambassador to France and the Dutch Republic prior to his execution in 1649 1 Jermyn advocated for the Royalist alliance with Scotland which led to the Anglo Scottish war of 1650 to 1652 In 1651 he was appointed to the Privy Council of England 1 In France Jermyn became the leading figure in the Louvre faction a group of English royalists who had attached themselves to Henrietta Maria s court in exile based initially out of the Louvre Palace 7 Following The Fronde in 1653 the Queen Dowager swapped accommodation with Anne of Austria and her court relocated to the Palais Royal 8 Other members of the faction included Henry Wilmot Lord John Byron Kenelm Digby George Digby Henry Percy John Colepeper and Charles Gerard The group was marked by their close adherence to Henrietta Maria their pro French outlook and their opposition to the influence of Hyde over Charles II Jermyn proposed to Charles a plan to cede the Channel Islands to France in exchange for military aid Jermyn succeeding in getting large grants from the king s allowance and was able to live in relative luxury despite the court itself being impoverished 9 When Charles went to Breda Jermyn remained in Paris with Henrietta Maria who persuaded her son to create him Earl of St Albans on 27 April 1660 10 Restoration edit nbsp The arms of Henry Jermyn 1st Earl of St Albans as a Knight of the GarterAt the Restoration in May 1660 St Albans was appointed to the Court of Chancery and made a justice of the peace for Suffolk and Middlesex However Hyde ensured that Jermyn was kept out of government In 1663 he was present at the birth of James Stuart Duke of Cambridge 11 He acted as Charles II s ambassador to France throughout the 1660s and was supportive of the policy of friendship towards Louis XIV of France He contributed largely to the close secret understanding between Charles II and Louis XIV arranging the preliminaries of the Secret Treaty of Dover in 1669 12 St Albans obvious affinity with France was controversial at court the Italian diplomat Lorenzo Magalotti wrote that he was a man who is wholly devoted to French interests and who acts with no other purpose than to promote the vast projects of that crown at whatever cost to England 13 St Albans witnessed the death of Henrietta Maria in France in August 1669 and was an executor of her will That same year he hosted Cosimo III de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany at his London townhouse In 1672 he was appointed Lord Chamberlain the most senior officer in the king s household and was made a Knight of the Garter He briefly served in the First Danby ministry as Lord Chamberlain but left office in 1674 after which he largely retired from public life 1 In 1683 the year before his death he was described by John Evelyn as a prudent old courtier and much enriched since his majesty s return 9 Founder of the West End edit nbsp City of Westminster Green Plaque for Henry Jermyn Earl of St Albans 1605 1684 located in Duke of York Street London SW1In September 1662 St Albans obtained a leasehold on a grant of land at Pall Mall Field in London north of St James s Palace 14 He began the development of the field with the construction of grand houses in the classical style at what would soon become St James s Square The City of London which feared for its water supply was hostile to the plan but the support of Charles II for the development discouraged opposition The grant by Charles of the freehold of the new square and other adjacent property to trustees for the Earl of St Albans was made on 1 April 1665 A ground rent of 80 per annum was reserved The Earl of St Albans built his own townhouse St Albans House later the site of Norfolk House on the square at a cost of 15 000 14 The surrounding streets including Jermyn Street King Street Duke Street St James s and Charles II Street were completed soon afterwards an area which would become called St James s St Albans market was built on a site later cleared for the construction of Regent Street and Waterloo Place 12 15 It was a grand design in itself and from its inspiration grew the whole of the West End of London so much so that the Survey of London acknowledges Henry Jermyn as the Founder of the West End 16 In the 1660s he also owned Soho Fields of which he leased 19 out of the 22 acres 89 000 m2 to Joseph Girle who was granted permission to develop the land In August 1674 further grants of freehold land were unsuccessfully sought on behalf of St Albans 14 Personal life edit nbsp Henry Jermyn Earl of St AlbansHe was a friend and patron of Abraham Cowley and Sir William Davenant Magalotti wrote that St Albans was an extremely handsome young man and for that reason was always pleasing to the ladies 13 He was much addicted to gambling which was a very popular pastime in his era and had several romances at court 4 The 1636 play The Platonick Lovers was dedicated to him by Davenant His entry in the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica described him as a man of dissolute morals 4 Gossip which the historian Henry Hallam accepted as authentic but which is supported by no real evidence asserted that Jermyn was secretly married to Queen Henrietta Maria during their exile in France 12 It was further rumoured during Jermyn s lifetime that he may have been the true father of at least one of her children even perhaps of Charles II himself The Domestic State Papers for 13 August 1660 contain a report by Capt Francis Robinson of Nathaniel Angelo a Windsor clergyman asserting that all the royal children were Jermyn s bastards 17 St Albans died at his house in St James s Square in January 1684 At his own request he was buried with his ancestors at Rushbrooke 1 As he was unmarried the earldom of St Albans became extinct at his death while the barony of Jermyn of St Edmundsbury passed by special remainder together with his property to his nephew Thomas Jermyn 1633 1703 and after the latter s death to Thomas s brother Henry Lord Dover 1636 1708 12 The fate of his illegitimate daughter with Eleanor Villiers is unknown In January 1684 immediately after St Albans death Charles II granted Jermyn s territorial designation to one of his illegitimate sons Charles Beauclerk as the first Duke of St Albans 18 Citations edit a b c d e f g h Thrush amp Ferris 2010 a b Willis Browne 1750 Notitia Parliamentaria Part II A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541 to the Restoration 1660 London pp 229 239 Sensabaugh 1940 p 460 a b c d Chisholm 1911 p 1011 Russell 1988 pp 85 106 Chisholm 1911 pp 1011 1012 Thurley 2020 Britland 2007 a b P R 1924 p 140 Collins 1812a p 402 Jesse 1840 p 302 a b c d Chisholm 1911 p 1012 a b Knowles Middleton 1980 p 59 a b c Sheppard 1960 BBC News 2011 Wriston 1969 p 96 Public Record Office 1860 p 189 Collins 1812b p 244 References editAdolph Anthony 2012 The King s Henchman Henry Jermyn Stuart Spymaster and Architect of the British Empire Gibson Square ISBN 9781908096302 Henry Jermyn West End visionary in green plaque honour BBC News 2011 Britland Karen 2007 Tyred in her banished dress Henrietta Maria in exile Early Modern Literary Studies Special Issue 15 1 39 Retrieved 28 August 2023 Calendar of State Papers Of the Reign of Charles II Domestic Series Volume 1 Public Record Office 1860 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 St Albans Henry Jermyn Earl of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 1011 1012 Collins Arthur 1812a Peerage of England Volume 9 F C and J Rivington Collins Arthur 1812b Peerage of England Volume 11 F C and J Rivington Jesse John Heneage 1840 Memoirs of the court of England during the reign of the Stuarts Vol 1 Massachusetts Harvard University Knowles Middleton W E 1980 Lorenzo Magalotti at the Court of Charles II Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press P R 1924 The Rushbrooke Bed The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 19 6 149 141 doi 10 2307 3254514 JSTOR 3254514 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Russell Conrad 1988 The First Army Plot of 1641 Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 38 85 106 doi 10 1017 S0080440100013177 JSTOR 3678968 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Sensabaugh G F 1940 Platonic Love and the Puritan Rebellion Studies in Philology 37 3 457 481 JSTOR 4172493 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Sheppard F H W 1960 St James s Square General Survey of London Volumes 29 and 30 St James Westminster Part 1 British History Online Retrieved 27 August 2023 Thrush Andrew Ferris John P 2010 JERMYN Henry c 1605 1684 of Rushbrooke Suff and Whitehall The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1604 1629 historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 25 August 2023 Thurley Simon 2020 Charles II The Court in Exile PDF gresham ac uk Gresham College Retrieved 28 August 2023 Willis Browne 1750 Notitia Parliamentaria Part II A Series or Lists of the Representatives in the several Parliaments held from the Reformation 1541 to the Restoration 1660 London pp 229 239 Wriston Barbara 1969 The Howard Van Doren Shaw Memorial Collection Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies 3 87 107 doi 10 2307 4115951 JSTOR 4115951 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Parliament of EnglandPreceded bySir Thomas StaffordCharles Berkeley Member of Parliament for Bodmin1625 1626 With Robert Caesar 1625Sir Richard Weston 1626 Succeeded bySir Robert KilligrewHumphrey NichollsPreceded byEdward BridgemanThomas Stanley Member of Parliament for Liverpool1628 1629 With John Newdigate Parliament suspended until 1640VacantParliament suspended since 1629 Member of Parliament for Corfe Castle1640 With Thomas Jermyn Succeeded bySir Francis WindebankGiles GreenPreceded bySir Thomas JermynJohn Godbolt Member of Parliament for Bury St Edmunds1640 1643 With Thomas Jermyn Succeeded bySir William Spring BtSir Thomas BarnardistonPolitical officesPreceded byThe Earl of Manchester Lord Chamberlain1671 1674 Succeeded byThe Earl of ArlingtonPeerage of EnglandNew creation Earl of St Albans1660 1684 ExtinctBaron Jermyn of St Edmundsbury1643 1684 Succeeded byThomas Jermyn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Jermyn 1st Earl of St Albans amp oldid 1177905617, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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