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William Russell, 1st Duke of Bedford

William Russell, 1st Duke of Bedford KG PC (August 1616 – 7 September 1700) was an English nobleman and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 until 1641 when he inherited his Peerage as 5th Earl of Bedford and removed to the House of Lords. He fought in the Parliamentarian army and later defected to the Royalists during the English Civil War.


The Duke of Bedford

Portrait by Godfrey Kneller
Tenure11 May 1694 – 7 September 1700
SuccessorWriothesley Russell, 2nd Duke of Bedford
Other titles1st Marquess of Tavistock
5th Earl of Bedford
5th Baron Russell
3rd Baron Russell of Thornhaugh
1st Baron Howland
BornAugust 1616
Died7 September 1700
(aged 84)
Spouse(s)Anne Carr, Countess of Bedford
IssueFrancis Russell
William Russell
John Russell
Edward Russell
Robert Russell
Anne Russell
James Russell
George Russell
Diana Russell
Catharine Russell
Margaret Russell
ParentsFrancis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford
Catharine Brydges

Early life, 1616–1640 edit

 
Bedford (right), with George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol in a 1637 painting by Anthony van Dyck.

He was the son of Francis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford and his wife Catherine, the daughter and coheir of Giles Brydges, 3rd Baron Chandos.

Russell was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford, and then, in 1635 went to Madrid where he hoped to learn Spanish. He returned by July 1637, at which point he concluded a marriage (initially against his father's wishes), to Anne, the sole heir of Robert Carr, 1st Earl of Somerset.

Career during the English Civil War, 1640–1644 edit

Bedford as Parliamentarian, 1640–1642 edit

In April 1640, Russell was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Tavistock in the Short Parliament. He was re-elected MP for Tavistock in the Long Parliament in November 1640 and sat until 1641.[1] John Pym was the other MP for Tavistock. Russell followed his father's lead and sided with Parliament in its emerging conflict with Charles I which would shortly lead to the English Civil War.

In May 1641, Russell's father died unexpectedly of smallpox and he succeeded him as 5th Earl of Bedford. Although he was only 24 at the time, Parliament gave Bedford considerable responsibilities, naming him a commissioner to treat with the king in 1641 and naming him Lord Lieutenant of Devon and Lord Lieutenant of Somerset in 1642. He was made General of the Horse in the Parliamentary Service on 14 July 1642 and in September he led an expedition in western England against royalist forces under the command of the Marquess of Hertford. Although Bedford's forces outnumbered Hertford's, Bedford's troops were poorly trained and many deserted and, upon his return to London, Bedford was criticised for his performance.

The next month, he joined Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex and fought with the Parliamentarians in the Battle of Edgehill on 23 October 1642.

Bedford as Royalist, 1643 edit

By the summer of 1643, Bedford had aligned himself with the parliamentary "peace party" headed by Henry Rich, 1st Earl of Holland and John Holles, 2nd Earl of Clare, which advocated a settlement with Charles I. When Essex rejected the peace party's advice, Bedford became one of the "peace lords" who abandoned the Parliamentary cause and joined Charles I at Oxford: the king pardoned Bedford for his previous position in the conflict.

Bedford returned to battle, this time on the side of the Royalists, with his participation in the Siege of Gloucester (3 August – 5 September 1643) and the first Battle of Newbury (20 September 1643). On 16 June 1644, the eve of the Second Battle of Newbury, the King's daughter Princess Henrietta was born in Bedford House, Exeter, the Earl's town house in the South-West.

Bedford attempts to return to the Parliamentary side, 1643–44 edit

Although Charles I fully pardoned Bedford, Charles' inner circle remained wary of Bedford and was therefore reluctant to give him anything but minor responsibilities. Disillusioned, Bedford returned to the Parliamentary side in December 1643, claiming that he had only been attempting to negotiate a settlement with the king and had never intended to abandon the Parliamentary cause. Parliament, however, remained wary of a man who had abandoned them and refused to allow Bedford to retake his seat in the House of Lords.

Withdrawal from public life, 1644–1660 edit

At any rate, the increasingly radical course pursued by the army in the mid-1640s alienated Bedford and he withdrew to his estate at Woburn. Although he took the Engagement in 1650, Bedford would not play any significant public role during the English Interregnum.

Career at the Restoration, 1660–1683 edit

 
Portrait by Peter Lely

At the Restoration of 1660, Bedford resumed his seat in the House of Lords, becoming a leader of the Presbyterian faction. Bedford bore the sceptre at Charles II's coronation in 1661, but he was never close to the king.

In an attempt to win Bedford's support in the run-up to the Third Anglo-Dutch War, Charles II made Bedford Governor of Plymouth Colony in 1671 and, on 29 May 1672, the day after the Battle of Solebay, had him invested as a Knight of the Garter. He held the office of Joint Commissioner for the office of Earl Marshal in 1673. Charles' courtship of Bedford ended shortly thereafter when his overtures to the Dissenters proved fruitless.

Although Bedford attended services in the Established Church, he also kept a Presbyterian chaplain in his household and his wife was arrested in 1675 for attending a conventicle. This made Bedford a natural ally of Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury in opposition to the Earl of Danby's plans to establish royalist and Anglican dominance. As such, Bedford supported Shaftesbury and the Whigs during the Exclusion Crisis. The king consequently turned against Bedford, and, in 1682, the family borough of Tavistock lost its charter.[clarification needed]

Second withdrawal from public life, 1683–1688 edit

In 1683, Bedford's son, William Russell, Lord Russell was implicated in the Rye House Plot and was executed. Following his son's execution, Bedford withdrew from politics.

Career under William and Mary, 1688–1700 edit

Bedford returned to public life at the time of the Glorious Revolution. He again carried the sceptre at the coronation of William and Mary, and was made a member of the Privy Council. He was made Recorder of Cambridge in 1689. He was Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire and Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire between 1689 and 1700 and Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex between 1692 and 1700.

He was invested as a Privy Counsellor (P.C.) on 14 February 1689 and created Duke of Bedford and Marquess of Tavistock on 11 May 1694. He was created Baron Howland of Streatham on 13 June 1695, with remainder to his grandson, Wriothesley Russell.

Bedford died on 7 September 1700 at age 84 at Bedford House, London and was buried on 17 September in the 'Bedford Chapel' at St. Michael's Church at Chenies, Buckinghamshire.

Marriage and family edit

Russell married Anne Carr, daughter of the Earl of Somerset, on 11 July 1637. Her dowry of £12,000 was never paid in full[2] They had children:

  • Francis Russell, Lord Russell (1638–1678), died unmarried.
  • William Russell, Lord Russell (1639–1683), married Lady Rachel Wriothesley and had issue.
  • John Russell, died in infancy.[3]: 222 
  • Lord Edward Russell (1643[3]: 222 –30 Jun 1714[4]: 270 ), married (1668) Frances Williams.
  • Lord Robert Russell (c. 1645[5]: 95 –c. 1703[5]: 396 ) married (1690) his cousin Letitia Cheek.[4]: 270 [3]: 223 
  • Anne Russell (c. 1650–1657), died eating poisonous berries at Woburn[5]: 78 
  • Lord James Russell (c. 1651[5]: 93 –22 Jun 1712), married Elizabeth Lloyd and had issue.[4]: 271 
  • George Russell (c. 1652[5]: 93 –1692), married Sarah Milby.
  • Lady Diana Russell (9 Apr 1652[4]: 270 –1701), married firstly, Greville Verney, 9th Baron Willoughby de Broke and had issue. She married secondly, William Alington, 3rd Baron Alington of Killard and had issue.
  • Catharine Russell, died young.[3]: 224 
  • Lady Margaret Russell (31 Aug 1656[4]: 270 –c. 1702[5]: 396 ), married her first cousin, Edward Russell, 1st Earl of Orford.

References edit

  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ Life In a Noble Household, 30–32
  3. ^ a b c d "Historical Memoirs of the House of Russell: From the Times of the Norman Conquest, Volume 2", Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen, Longman, 1833.
  4. ^ a b c d e Collins, Arthur. The Peerage of England; Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the Peers of that Kingdom Etc. Fourth Edition, Carefully Corrected, and Continued to the Present Time, Volume 1, page 258-278. Woodfall, H et al.1768
  5. ^ a b c d e f Scott Thomson, Gladys. Life in a Noble Household 1641–1700, 1937, Jonathan Cape
Parliament of England
Parliament suspended since 1629 Member of Parliament for Tavistock
1640–1641
With: John Pym
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Custos Rotulorum of Devon
1641–1642
Succeeded by
Lord Lieutenant of Devon
1637–1646 (1637–1641)
With: The Earl of Bedford
English Interregnum
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Somerset
1642–1646
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire
1689–1700
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire
1689–1700
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex
1692–1700
Peerage of England
New creation Duke of Bedford
1694–1700
Succeeded by
Preceded by Earl of Bedford
1641–1700
New creation Baron Howland of Streatham
1695–1700

william, russell, duke, bedford, august, 1616, september, 1700, english, nobleman, politician, house, commons, from, 1640, until, 1641, when, inherited, peerage, earl, bedford, removed, house, lords, fought, parliamentarian, army, later, defected, royalists, d. William Russell 1st Duke of Bedford KG PC August 1616 7 September 1700 was an English nobleman and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 until 1641 when he inherited his Peerage as 5th Earl of Bedford and removed to the House of Lords He fought in the Parliamentarian army and later defected to the Royalists during the English Civil War His GraceThe Duke of BedfordKG PCPortrait by Godfrey KnellerTenure11 May 1694 7 September 1700SuccessorWriothesley Russell 2nd Duke of BedfordOther titles1st Marquess of Tavistock5th Earl of Bedford5th Baron Russell3rd Baron Russell of Thornhaugh1st Baron HowlandBornAugust 1616Died7 September 1700 aged 84 Spouse s Anne Carr Countess of BedfordIssueFrancis RussellWilliam RussellJohn RussellEdward RussellRobert RussellAnne RussellJames RussellGeorge RussellDiana RussellCatharine RussellMargaret RussellParentsFrancis Russell 4th Earl of BedfordCatharine Brydges Contents 1 Early life 1616 1640 2 Career during the English Civil War 1640 1644 2 1 Bedford as Parliamentarian 1640 1642 2 2 Bedford as Royalist 1643 2 3 Bedford attempts to return to the Parliamentary side 1643 44 3 Withdrawal from public life 1644 1660 4 Career at the Restoration 1660 1683 5 Second withdrawal from public life 1683 1688 6 Career under William and Mary 1688 1700 7 Marriage and family 8 ReferencesEarly life 1616 1640 edit nbsp Bedford right with George Digby 2nd Earl of Bristol in a 1637 painting by Anthony van Dyck He was the son of Francis Russell 4th Earl of Bedford and his wife Catherine the daughter and coheir of Giles Brydges 3rd Baron Chandos Russell was educated at Magdalen College Oxford and then in 1635 went to Madrid where he hoped to learn Spanish He returned by July 1637 at which point he concluded a marriage initially against his father s wishes to Anne the sole heir of Robert Carr 1st Earl of Somerset Career during the English Civil War 1640 1644 editBedford as Parliamentarian 1640 1642 edit In April 1640 Russell was elected Member of Parliament MP for Tavistock in the Short Parliament He was re elected MP for Tavistock in the Long Parliament in November 1640 and sat until 1641 1 John Pym was the other MP for Tavistock Russell followed his father s lead and sided with Parliament in its emerging conflict with Charles I which would shortly lead to the English Civil War In May 1641 Russell s father died unexpectedly of smallpox and he succeeded him as 5th Earl of Bedford Although he was only 24 at the time Parliament gave Bedford considerable responsibilities naming him a commissioner to treat with the king in 1641 and naming him Lord Lieutenant of Devon and Lord Lieutenant of Somerset in 1642 He was made General of the Horse in the Parliamentary Service on 14 July 1642 and in September he led an expedition in western England against royalist forces under the command of the Marquess of Hertford Although Bedford s forces outnumbered Hertford s Bedford s troops were poorly trained and many deserted and upon his return to London Bedford was criticised for his performance The next month he joined Robert Devereux 3rd Earl of Essex and fought with the Parliamentarians in the Battle of Edgehill on 23 October 1642 Bedford as Royalist 1643 edit By the summer of 1643 Bedford had aligned himself with the parliamentary peace party headed by Henry Rich 1st Earl of Holland and John Holles 2nd Earl of Clare which advocated a settlement with Charles I When Essex rejected the peace party s advice Bedford became one of the peace lords who abandoned the Parliamentary cause and joined Charles I at Oxford the king pardoned Bedford for his previous position in the conflict Bedford returned to battle this time on the side of the Royalists with his participation in the Siege of Gloucester 3 August 5 September 1643 and the first Battle of Newbury 20 September 1643 On 16 June 1644 the eve of the Second Battle of Newbury the King s daughter Princess Henrietta was born in Bedford House Exeter the Earl s town house in the South West Bedford attempts to return to the Parliamentary side 1643 44 edit Although Charles I fully pardoned Bedford Charles inner circle remained wary of Bedford and was therefore reluctant to give him anything but minor responsibilities Disillusioned Bedford returned to the Parliamentary side in December 1643 claiming that he had only been attempting to negotiate a settlement with the king and had never intended to abandon the Parliamentary cause Parliament however remained wary of a man who had abandoned them and refused to allow Bedford to retake his seat in the House of Lords Withdrawal from public life 1644 1660 editAt any rate the increasingly radical course pursued by the army in the mid 1640s alienated Bedford and he withdrew to his estate at Woburn Although he took the Engagement in 1650 Bedford would not play any significant public role during the English Interregnum Career at the Restoration 1660 1683 edit nbsp Portrait by Peter LelyAt the Restoration of 1660 Bedford resumed his seat in the House of Lords becoming a leader of the Presbyterian faction Bedford bore the sceptre at Charles II s coronation in 1661 but he was never close to the king In an attempt to win Bedford s support in the run up to the Third Anglo Dutch War Charles II made Bedford Governor of Plymouth Colony in 1671 and on 29 May 1672 the day after the Battle of Solebay had him invested as a Knight of the Garter He held the office of Joint Commissioner for the office of Earl Marshal in 1673 Charles courtship of Bedford ended shortly thereafter when his overtures to the Dissenters proved fruitless Although Bedford attended services in the Established Church he also kept a Presbyterian chaplain in his household and his wife was arrested in 1675 for attending a conventicle This made Bedford a natural ally of Anthony Ashley Cooper 1st Earl of Shaftesbury in opposition to the Earl of Danby s plans to establish royalist and Anglican dominance As such Bedford supported Shaftesbury and the Whigs during the Exclusion Crisis The king consequently turned against Bedford and in 1682 the family borough of Tavistock lost its charter clarification needed Second withdrawal from public life 1683 1688 editIn 1683 Bedford s son William Russell Lord Russell was implicated in the Rye House Plot and was executed Following his son s execution Bedford withdrew from politics Career under William and Mary 1688 1700 editBedford returned to public life at the time of the Glorious Revolution He again carried the sceptre at the coronation of William and Mary and was made a member of the Privy Council He was made Recorder of Cambridge in 1689 He was Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire and Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire between 1689 and 1700 and Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex between 1692 and 1700 He was invested as a Privy Counsellor P C on 14 February 1689 and created Duke of Bedford and Marquess of Tavistock on 11 May 1694 He was created Baron Howland of Streatham on 13 June 1695 with remainder to his grandson Wriothesley Russell Bedford died on 7 September 1700 at age 84 at Bedford House London and was buried on 17 September in the Bedford Chapel at St Michael s Church at Chenies Buckinghamshire Marriage and family editRussell married Anne Carr daughter of the Earl of Somerset on 11 July 1637 Her dowry of 12 000 was never paid in full 2 They had children Francis Russell Lord Russell 1638 1678 died unmarried William Russell Lord Russell 1639 1683 married Lady Rachel Wriothesley and had issue John Russell died in infancy 3 222 Lord Edward Russell 1643 3 222 30 Jun 1714 4 270 married 1668 Frances Williams Lord Robert Russell c 1645 5 95 c 1703 5 396 married 1690 his cousin Letitia Cheek 4 270 3 223 Anne Russell c 1650 1657 died eating poisonous berries at Woburn 5 78 Lord James Russell c 1651 5 93 22 Jun 1712 married Elizabeth Lloyd and had issue 4 271 George Russell c 1652 5 93 1692 married Sarah Milby Lady Diana Russell 9 Apr 1652 4 270 1701 married firstly Greville Verney 9th Baron Willoughby de Broke and had issue She married secondly William Alington 3rd Baron Alington of Killard and had issue Catharine Russell died young 3 224 Lady Margaret Russell 31 Aug 1656 4 270 c 1702 5 396 married her first cousin Edward Russell 1st Earl of Orford References edit 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 Life In a Noble Household 30 32 a b c d Historical Memoirs of the House of Russell From the Times of the Norman Conquest Volume 2 Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen Longman 1833 a b c d e Collins Arthur The Peerage of England Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the Peers of that Kingdom Etc Fourth Edition Carefully Corrected and Continued to the Present Time Volume 1 page 258 278 Woodfall H et al 1768 a b c d e f Scott Thomson Gladys Life in a Noble Household 1641 1700 1937 Jonathan Cape Parliament of EnglandParliament suspended since 1629 Member of Parliament for Tavistock1640 1641 With John Pym Succeeded byHon John RussellJohn PymPolitical officesPreceded byThe Earl of Bedford Custos Rotulorum of Devon1641 1642 Succeeded byThe Earl of BathLord Lieutenant of Devon1637 1646 1637 1641 With The Earl of Bedford English InterregnumPreceded byLord Herbert Lord Lieutenant of Somerset1642 1646Honorary titlesPreceded byThe Earl of Ailesbury Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire1689 1700 Succeeded byLord Edward RussellPreceded byThe Lord Dover Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire1689 1700Preceded byThe Earl of Clare Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex1692 1700Peerage of EnglandNew creation Duke of Bedford1694 1700 Succeeded byWriothesley RussellPreceded byFrancis Russell Earl of Bedford1641 1700New creation Baron Howland of Streatham1695 1700 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Russell 1st Duke of Bedford amp oldid 1189199034, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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