fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick

Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick KB, PC (May/June 1587 – 19 April 1658) was an English naval officer, politician and peer who commanded the Parliamentarian navy during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. A Puritan, he was also lord of the Manor of Hunningham.[1]

Earl of Warwick
Lord Lieutenant of Essex
In office
1625–1642
Governor of Guernsey
In office
1643–1645
Member of Parliament
for Essex
In office
April 1614 – June 1614
Member of Parliament
for Maldon
In office
February 1610 – February 1611
Personal details
BornMay/June 1587
Leez Priory, Essex
Died18 April 1658(1658-04-18) (aged 70)
Holborn, London
Resting placeHoly Cross Church, Felsted
Spouse(s)Frances Hatton (m. 1605)
Susan Rowe (m. c. 1625)
Eleanor Wortley (m. 1646)
Children5, including Anne, Robert and Charles
Parent(s)Robert Rich, 1st Earl of Warwick
Penelope Devereux
Alma materEmmanuel College, Cambridge
Military service
Branch/serviceRoyal Navy
RankAdmiral
Battles/warsWars of the Three Kingdoms

Personal details edit

 
Arms of Rich: Gules, a chevron between three crosses botonée or

Robert Rich, later Lord Holland, was the eldest son and third of seven children born to Robert Rich, 1st Earl of Warwick (1559–1619) and his first wife Penelope (1563–1607). His parents separated soon after Henry's birth, although they did not formally divorce until 1605, when Penelope married her long-time partner, Charles Blount, 8th Baron Mountjoy (1563-1606). Penelope was a sister of the Earl of Essex, executed for treason in 1601, making Rich a cousin to future Parliamentarian general Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex.[2]

He had two sisters, Essex (1585-1658) and Lettice (1587-1619) and a younger brother Henry Rich, 1st Earl of Holland (1590–1649). He also had a number of half brothers and sisters, including Penelope (1592-?), Isabella, Mountjoy Blount, 1st Earl of Newport (1597-1666), and Charles (1605-1627). Almost certainly fathered by Charles Mountjoy, these children were brought up within the Rich family and appear in its pedigree, with the exception of Mountjoy, who was legitimised after his father's death.[3]

Robert Rich married three times, first in February 1605 to Frances Hatton (1590–1623) Lady of the Manor of Hunningham,[1] daughter and heiress of Sir William Hatton (1560–1597)[4] Lord of the Manor of Hunningham,[1] formerly "Newport",[5] the granddaughter of Francis Gawdy. Their children included Anne (1604–1642), Robert (1611–1659), Lucy (1615–after 1635), Frances (1621–1692) and Charles (1623?–1673). Sometime before January 1626, he married Susan Rowe (1582–1646), a daughter of Sir Henry Rowe, Lord Mayor of London, and widow of William Holliday (c.1565–1624), Alderman of London, a wealthy London merchant and chairman of the East India Company. In March 1646, he made his third and last marriage to Eleanor Wortley (died 1667); neither of these produced children.[6]

Career edit

 
Captain John Smith's 1624 map of Bermuda, showing Warwick Parish (3) and contemporary fortifications, including at Castle Harbour (originally "Southampton Port") where the ship Warwick was lost in 1619

He succeeded to his father's title as Earl of Warwick in 1619. Early developing interest in colonial ventures, he joined the Guinea, New England, and Virginia companies, as well as the Virginia Company's offspring, the Somers Isles Company (the Somers Isles, or Bermuda, was at first the more secure of the Virginia Company's two settlements, being impossible to attack overland and almost impregnable against attack from the ocean due to its encircling reef, and was attractive as a base of operations for Warwick's privateers, though his ship the Warwick was lost at Castle Harbour in November 1619).[7][8]

He was also instrumental in the establishment of the ill-fated Providence Island colony in the West Indies (which was also linked with his privateering activities). Warwick's enterprises involved him in disputes with the East India Company (1617) and with the Virginia Company, which in 1624 was suppressed as a result of his action. In August 1619, the White Lion, a privateer ship sponsored by him and operating under a Dutch letter of marque, attacked the Portuguese slave ship São João Bautista and captured approximately 20 African slaves. The White Lion proceeded to sail to Old Point Comfort in the English colony of Virginia, where its crew sold the Africans to the colony's settlers, including Governor George Yeardley. This event is considered by historians to be a major event in slavery in the colonial history of the United States.[9][10] In 1627, he commanded an unsuccessful privateering expedition against the Spanish.[11] He sat as a Member of Parliament for Maldon for 1604 to 1611 and for Essex in the short-lived Addled Parliament of 1614.[12]

Colonial ventures edit

 
Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick, portrait by Anthony van Dyck

Warwick's Puritan connections and sympathies gradually estranged him from the court but promoted his association with the New England colonies. In 1628 he indirectly procured the patent for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and in 1631 he was granted the "Saybrook" patent in Connecticut. Forced to resign the presidency of the Council for New England in the same year, he continued to manage the Somers Isles Company (the Somers Isles being one of the colonies that sided with the Crown) and Providence Island Company, the latter of which, founded in 1630, administered Old Providence on the Mosquito Coast. Meanwhile, in England, Warwick opposed the forced loan of 1626, the payment of ship money, and Laud's church policy.[11]

His Richneck Plantation was located in what is now the independent city of Newport News, Virginia. The Warwick River, Warwick Towne, Warwick River Shire, and Warwick County, Virginia are all believed named for him, as are Warwick, Rhode Island and Warwick Parish in Bermuda (alias The Somers Isles). The oldest school in Bermuda, Warwick Academy, was built on land in Warwick Parish given by the Earl of Warwick; the school was begun in the 1650s (its early records were lost with those of the Warwick Vestry in a twentieth-century shipwreck), though the school places its founding officially in 1662.[13] In September 1640, Warwick signed the Petition of Twelve to Charles I, asking the king to summon another parliament.[14]

Civil War period edit

In 1642, following the dismissal of the Earl of Northumberland as Lord High Admiral, Warwick was appointed commander of the fleet by Parliament.[15] In 1643, he was appointed head of a commission for the government of the colonies, which the next year incorporated Providence Plantations, afterwards Rhode Island, and in this capacity, he exerted himself to secure religious liberty.[11]

As commander of the fleet, in 1648, Warwick retook the 'Castles of the Downs' (at Walmer, Deal, and Sandown) for Parliament, and became Deal Castle's captain 1648–53.[16] The subject was criticized for not recapturing the royalist fleet in 1648 when Prince Rupert suffered mutiny and disarray in Hellevoetsluis.[17] However, he was dismissed from office on the abolition of the House of Lords in 1649. He retired from national public life, but was intimately associated with the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell, whose daughter Francis married his grandson and heir, also Robert Rich, in 1657 (the marriage was a short one as the grandson died the following year).[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hunningham, in A History of the County of Warwick: Vol. 6, Knightlow Hundred, ed. L F Salzman (London, 1951), pp. 117–120.
  2. ^ Smut 2004.
  3. ^ Usher 2004.
  4. ^ Salzman, L F. "Parishes: Wellingborough Pages 135-146 A History of the County of Northampton: Volume 4". www.british-history.ac.uk. Victoria County History, 1937. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  5. ^ Aughterson 2004.
  6. ^ Kelsey 2004.
  7. ^ Bojakowski, Katie (2014). "The Wreck of the Warwick, Bermuda 1619". tDAR (the Digital Archaeological Record). Center for Digital Antiquity, a collaborative organization and university Center at Arizona State University. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  8. ^ Inglis, Doug (5 June 2012). "1619: Unrecoverably lost in Castle Harbour". Warwick, 1619: Shipwreck Excavation. The Warwick Excavation is a National Museum of Bermuda (NMB) project in partnership with Texas A&M and the Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA), in association with The Global Exploration and Oceanographic Society (G-EOS) and Department of Archaeology at the University of Southampton. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  9. ^ , https://www.nationalgeographic.com. Accessed 9 January 2023.
  10. ^ The First Africans in Virginia Landed in 1619. It Was a Turning Point for Slavery in American History — But Not the Beginning, time.com. Accessed 9 January 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Warwick, Sir Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 349.
  12. ^ "RICH, Sir Robert (c.1588–1658), of Wallington, Norf., Hackney, Mdx. and Allington House, Holborn, Mdx.; later of Leez Priory, Essex". History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  13. ^ , warwickacad.bm. Accessed 9 January 2023.
  14. ^ Kelsey 2004
  15. ^ "July 1642: Ordinance for the Earl of Warwick to remain in his Command of the Fleet", Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum, 1642–1660 (1911), p. 12. Accessed 13 April 2007.
  16. ^ 13 July 1648: "Taking of Walmer Castle", British-history.ac.uk. Accessed 6 August 2007.
  17. ^ Richard J Blakemore and Elaine Murphy. (2018). The British Civil Wars at Sea, 1638-1653. Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK: The Boydell Press. pp. 149–152; ISBN 9781783272297.

Sources edit

  • Aughterson, Kate (2004). "Hatton, Elizabeth, Lady Hatton [née Lady Elizabeth Cecil] (1578–1646)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/68059. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Gowdy, Mahlon M (1919). A Family History Comprising the Surnames of . . . Gawdy. Journal Press.
  • Kelsey, Sean (2004). "Rich, Robert, second earl of Warwick (1587–1658)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23494. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Harris, Nicolas (1847). Memoirs of the Life and Times of Sir Christopher Hatton. Richard Bentley.
  • Smut, R Malcolm (2004). "Rich, Henry, first earl of Holland (1598-1649)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23484. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Usher, Brett (2004). "Rich, Robert, first earl of Warwick". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

External links edit

  Media related to Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick at Wikimedia Commons

Political offices
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Essex
jointly with The Earl of Sussex 1625–1629
The Earl of Portland 1629–1635
The Lord Maynard 1635–1640
The Earl of Carlisle 1641–1642

1625–1642
English Interregnum
Preceded by Custos Rotulorum of Essex
1640–1642
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
Preceded by Earl of Warwick
1619–1658
Succeeded by
Baron Rich
(descended by acceleration)

1619–1641

robert, rich, earl, warwick, june, 1587, april, 1658, english, naval, officer, politician, peer, commanded, parliamentarian, navy, during, wars, three, kingdoms, puritan, also, lord, manor, hunningham, right, honourableearl, warwickkb, pclord, lieutenant, esse. Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Warwick KB PC May June 1587 19 April 1658 was an English naval officer politician and peer who commanded the Parliamentarian navy during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms A Puritan he was also lord of the Manor of Hunningham 1 The Right HonourableEarl of WarwickKB PCLord Lieutenant of EssexIn office 1625 1642Governor of GuernseyIn office 1643 1645Member of Parliamentfor EssexIn office April 1614 June 1614Member of Parliamentfor MaldonIn office February 1610 February 1611Personal detailsBornMay June 1587Leez Priory EssexDied18 April 1658 1658 04 18 aged 70 Holborn LondonResting placeHoly Cross Church FelstedSpouse s Frances Hatton m 1605 Susan Rowe m c 1625 Eleanor Wortley m 1646 Children5 including Anne Robert and CharlesParent s Robert Rich 1st Earl of Warwick Penelope DevereuxAlma materEmmanuel College CambridgeMilitary serviceBranch serviceRoyal NavyRankAdmiralBattles warsWars of the Three Kingdoms Contents 1 Personal details 2 Career 3 Colonial ventures 4 Civil War period 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksPersonal details edit nbsp Arms of Rich Gules a chevron between three crosses botonee orRobert Rich later Lord Holland was the eldest son and third of seven children born to Robert Rich 1st Earl of Warwick 1559 1619 and his first wife Penelope 1563 1607 His parents separated soon after Henry s birth although they did not formally divorce until 1605 when Penelope married her long time partner Charles Blount 8th Baron Mountjoy 1563 1606 Penelope was a sister of the Earl of Essex executed for treason in 1601 making Rich a cousin to future Parliamentarian general Robert Devereux 3rd Earl of Essex 2 He had two sisters Essex 1585 1658 and Lettice 1587 1619 and a younger brother Henry Rich 1st Earl of Holland 1590 1649 He also had a number of half brothers and sisters including Penelope 1592 Isabella Mountjoy Blount 1st Earl of Newport 1597 1666 and Charles 1605 1627 Almost certainly fathered by Charles Mountjoy these children were brought up within the Rich family and appear in its pedigree with the exception of Mountjoy who was legitimised after his father s death 3 Robert Rich married three times first in February 1605 to Frances Hatton 1590 1623 Lady of the Manor of Hunningham 1 daughter and heiress of Sir William Hatton 1560 1597 4 Lord of the Manor of Hunningham 1 formerly Newport 5 the granddaughter of Francis Gawdy Their children included Anne 1604 1642 Robert 1611 1659 Lucy 1615 after 1635 Frances 1621 1692 and Charles 1623 1673 Sometime before January 1626 he married Susan Rowe 1582 1646 a daughter of Sir Henry Rowe Lord Mayor of London and widow of William Holliday c 1565 1624 Alderman of London a wealthy London merchant and chairman of the East India Company In March 1646 he made his third and last marriage to Eleanor Wortley died 1667 neither of these produced children 6 Career edit nbsp Captain John Smith s 1624 map of Bermuda showing Warwick Parish 3 and contemporary fortifications including at Castle Harbour originally Southampton Port where the ship Warwick was lost in 1619He succeeded to his father s title as Earl of Warwick in 1619 Early developing interest in colonial ventures he joined the Guinea New England and Virginia companies as well as the Virginia Company s offspring the Somers Isles Company the Somers Isles or Bermuda was at first the more secure of the Virginia Company s two settlements being impossible to attack overland and almost impregnable against attack from the ocean due to its encircling reef and was attractive as a base of operations for Warwick s privateers though his ship the Warwick was lost at Castle Harbour in November 1619 7 8 He was also instrumental in the establishment of the ill fated Providence Island colony in the West Indies which was also linked with his privateering activities Warwick s enterprises involved him in disputes with the East India Company 1617 and with the Virginia Company which in 1624 was suppressed as a result of his action In August 1619 the White Lion a privateer ship sponsored by him and operating under a Dutch letter of marque attacked the Portuguese slave ship Sao Joao Bautista and captured approximately 20 African slaves The White Lion proceeded to sail to Old Point Comfort in the English colony of Virginia where its crew sold the Africans to the colony s settlers including Governor George Yeardley This event is considered by historians to be a major event in slavery in the colonial history of the United States 9 10 In 1627 he commanded an unsuccessful privateering expedition against the Spanish 11 He sat as a Member of Parliament for Maldon for 1604 to 1611 and for Essex in the short lived Addled Parliament of 1614 12 Colonial ventures edit nbsp Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Warwick portrait by Anthony van DyckWarwick s Puritan connections and sympathies gradually estranged him from the court but promoted his association with the New England colonies In 1628 he indirectly procured the patent for the Massachusetts Bay Colony and in 1631 he was granted the Saybrook patent in Connecticut Forced to resign the presidency of the Council for New England in the same year he continued to manage the Somers Isles Company the Somers Isles being one of the colonies that sided with the Crown and Providence Island Company the latter of which founded in 1630 administered Old Providence on the Mosquito Coast Meanwhile in England Warwick opposed the forced loan of 1626 the payment of ship money and Laud s church policy 11 His Richneck Plantation was located in what is now the independent city of Newport News Virginia The Warwick River Warwick Towne Warwick River Shire and Warwick County Virginia are all believed named for him as are Warwick Rhode Island and Warwick Parish in Bermuda alias The Somers Isles The oldest school in Bermuda Warwick Academy was built on land in Warwick Parish given by the Earl of Warwick the school was begun in the 1650s its early records were lost with those of the Warwick Vestry in a twentieth century shipwreck though the school places its founding officially in 1662 13 In September 1640 Warwick signed the Petition of Twelve to Charles I asking the king to summon another parliament 14 Civil War period editIn 1642 following the dismissal of the Earl of Northumberland as Lord High Admiral Warwick was appointed commander of the fleet by Parliament 15 In 1643 he was appointed head of a commission for the government of the colonies which the next year incorporated Providence Plantations afterwards Rhode Island and in this capacity he exerted himself to secure religious liberty 11 As commander of the fleet in 1648 Warwick retook the Castles of the Downs at Walmer Deal and Sandown for Parliament and became Deal Castle s captain 1648 53 16 The subject was criticized for not recapturing the royalist fleet in 1648 when Prince Rupert suffered mutiny and disarray in Hellevoetsluis 17 However he was dismissed from office on the abolition of the House of Lords in 1649 He retired from national public life but was intimately associated with the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell whose daughter Francis married his grandson and heir also Robert Rich in 1657 the marriage was a short one as the grandson died the following year 11 References edit a b c Hunningham in A History of the County of Warwick Vol 6 Knightlow Hundred ed L F Salzman London 1951 pp 117 120 Smut 2004 Usher 2004 Salzman L F Parishes Wellingborough Pages 135 146 A History of the County of Northampton Volume 4 www british history ac uk Victoria County History 1937 Retrieved 28 May 2023 Aughterson 2004 Kelsey 2004 Bojakowski Katie 2014 The Wreck of the Warwick Bermuda 1619 tDAR the Digital Archaeological Record Center for Digital Antiquity a collaborative organization and university Center at Arizona State University Retrieved 30 May 2022 Inglis Doug 5 June 2012 1619 Unrecoverably lost in Castle Harbour Warwick 1619 Shipwreck Excavation The Warwick Excavation is a National Museum of Bermuda NMB project in partnership with Texas A amp M and the Institute of Nautical Archaeology INA in association with The Global Exploration and Oceanographic Society G EOS and Department of Archaeology at the University of Southampton Retrieved 30 May 2022 400 years ago enslaved Africans first arrived in Virginia https www nationalgeographic com Accessed 9 January 2023 The First Africans in Virginia Landed in 1619 It Was a Turning Point for Slavery in American History But Not the Beginning time com Accessed 9 January 2023 a b c d nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Warwick Sir Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 349 RICH Sir Robert c 1588 1658 of Wallington Norf Hackney Mdx and Allington House Holborn Mdx later of Leez Priory Essex History of Parliament Trust Retrieved 16 March 2019 Warwick Academy warwickacad bm Accessed 9 January 2023 Kelsey 2004 July 1642 Ordinance for the Earl of Warwick to remain in his Command of the Fleet Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum 1642 1660 1911 p 12 Accessed 13 April 2007 13 July 1648 Taking of Walmer Castle British history ac uk Accessed 6 August 2007 Richard J Blakemore and Elaine Murphy 2018 The British Civil Wars at Sea 1638 1653 Woodbridge Suffolk UK The Boydell Press pp 149 152 ISBN 9781783272297 Sources editAughterson Kate 2004 Hatton Elizabeth Lady Hatton nee Lady Elizabeth Cecil 1578 1646 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 68059 Subscription or UK public library membership required Gowdy Mahlon M 1919 A Family History Comprising the Surnames of Gawdy Journal Press Kelsey Sean 2004 Rich Robert second earl of Warwick 1587 1658 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23494 Subscription or UK public library membership required Harris Nicolas 1847 Memoirs of the Life and Times of Sir Christopher Hatton Richard Bentley Smut R Malcolm 2004 Rich Henry first earl of Holland 1598 1649 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23484 Subscription or UK public library membership required Usher Brett 2004 Rich Robert first earl of Warwick Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 61021 Subscription or UK public library membership required External links edit nbsp Media related to Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Warwick at Wikimedia Commons Political officesPreceded byThe Earl of Sussex Lord Lieutenant of Essexjointly with The Earl of Sussex 1625 1629The Earl of Portland 1629 1635The Lord Maynard 1635 1640The Earl of Carlisle 1641 16421625 1642 English InterregnumPreceded byThe Lord Maynard Custos Rotulorum of Essex1640 1642 Succeeded byJames Hay 2nd Earl of CarlislePeerage of EnglandPreceded byRobert Rich Earl of Warwick1619 1658 Succeeded byRobert RichBaron Rich descended by acceleration 1619 1641 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Rich 2nd Earl of Warwick amp oldid 1186069422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.