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2ND DUKE 0E1 See also: English statesman, son of the 1st duke, was See also: born on the 3oth of See also: January 1628
.
He was brought up, together with his younger See also: brother See also: Francis, by See also: King
See also: Charles I. with his own
See also: children, and was educated at Trinity See also: College, Cambridge, where he obtained the degree of M.A. in 1642
.
He fought for the king in the See also: Civil War, and took See also: part in the attack on See also: Lichfield Close in See also: April 1643
.
Subsequently, under the care of the See also: earl of See also: Northumberland, the two See also: brothers travelled abroad and lived at Florence and See also: Rome
.
When the Second Civil War broke out they joined the earl of See also: Holland in Surrey, in
See also: July 1648
.
See also: Lord Francis was killed near See also: Kingston, and See also: Buckingham and Holland were surprised at St Neots on the loth, the duke succeeding in escaping to Holland
.
In consequence of his participation in the See also: rebellion, his lands, which had been restored to him in 1647 on account of his youth, were now again confiscated, a consider-able portion passing into the possession of See also: Fairfax; and he refused to compound
.
Charles II. conferred on him the Garter on the 19th of See also: September 1649, and admitted him to the privy. council on the 6th of April 165o
.
In opposition to See also: Hyde he supported the See also: alliance with the Scottish presbyterians, accompanied Charles to Scotland in See also: June, and allied himself with See also: Argyll, dissuading Charles from joining the royalist See also: plot of See also: October 165o, and being suspected of betraying the See also: plan to the convenanting leaders
.
In May he had been appointed general of the eastern association in See also: England, and was commissioned to raise forces abroad; and in the following See also: year he was chosen to See also: lead the projected See also: movement in See also: Lancashire and to command the Scottish royalists
.
He was See also: present with Charles at the See also: battle of See also: Worcester on the 3rd of September 1651, and escaped safely
1 i.e. in the See also: Villiers See also: line; see above
.
alone to See also: Rotterdam in October
.
His subsequent negotiations with See also: Cromwell's See also: government, and his readiness to sacrifice the interests of the See also: church, separated him from the rest of Charles's advisers and diminished his influence; while his estrangement from the royal
See also: family was completed by his audacious courtship of the king's See also: sister, the widowed princess of Orange, and by a See also: money dispute with Charles
.
In 1657 he returned to England, and on the 15th of September married Mary, daughter of Lord Fairfax, who had fallen in love with him although the banns of her intended See also: marriage with the earl of Chesterfield had been twice called in church
.
Buckingham was soon suspected of organizing a presbyterian plot against the government, and in spite of Fairfax's See also: interest with Cromwell an See also: order was issued for his arrest on the 9th of October
.
He was confined at See also: York See also: House about April 1658, and having broken See also: bounds was rearrested on the 18th of See also: August and imprisoned in the Tower, where he remained till the 23rd of See also: February 1659, being then liberated on his promise not to abet the enemies of the government, and on Fairfax's security of £20,000
.
He joined the latter in his See also: march against
See also: Lambert in January 166o, and afterwards claimed to have gained Fairfax to the cause of the Restoration
.
On the king's return Buckingham, who met him at his landing at See also: Dover, was at first received coldly; but he was soon . again in favour, was appointed a gentleman of the bedchamber, carried the See also: orb. at the See also: coronation on the 23rd of April 1661, and was made lord-See also: lieutenant of the West See also: Riding of See also: Yorkshire on the 21st of September
.
The same year he accompanied the princess Henrietta to See also: Paris on her marriage with the duke of See also: Orleans, but made love to her himself with such imprudence that he was recalled
.
On the 28th of April 1662 he was admitted to the privy council
.
His confiscated estates amounting to £26,000 a year were restored to him, and he was reputed the king's richest subject
.
He took part in the suppression of the projected insurrection in Yorkshire in 1663, went to
See also: sea in the first Dutch war in 1665, and was employed in taking See also: measures to resist the Dutch or French invasion in June 1666
.
He was, however, debarred from high office by See also: Clarendon's influence
.
Accordingly Buckingham's intrigues were now directed to effect the chancellor's ruin
.
He organized parties in both houses of parliament in support of theSee also: bill of 1666 prohibiting the import of Irish cattle, partly to oppose Clarendon and partly to thwart the duke of See also: Ormonde
.
Having asserted during the debates that " whoever was against the bill had either an Irish interest or an Irish understanding," he was challenged by Lord Ossory
.
Buckingham avoided the encounter, and Ossory was sent to the Tower
.
A See also: short See also: time afterwards, during a See also: conference between the two houses on the loth of See also: December, he came to blows with the See also: marquess of Dorchester, pulling off the latter's periwig, while Dorchester at the close of the scuffle " had much of the duke's hair in his See also: hand."' According to Clarendon no misdemeanour so flagrant had ever before offended the dignity of the House of Lords
.
The offending peers were both sent to the Tower, but were released after apologizing; and Buckingham vented his spite by raising a claim to the title of Lord Roos held by Dorchester's son-in-See also: law
.
His opposition to the government had forfeited the king's favour, and he was now accused of treasonable intrigues, and of having cast the king's horoscope
.
His arrest was ordered on the 25th of February 1667, and he was dismissed from all his offices
.
He avoided capture till the 27th of June, when he gave himself up and was imprisoned in the Tower
.
He was released, however, by July 17th, was restored to favour and to his appointments on the 15th of September, and took an active part in the See also: prosecution of Clarendon
.
On the latter's fall he became the chief See also: minister, though holding no high office except that of master of the See also: horse, bought from the duke of Albermarle in 1668
.
In 1671 he was elected chancellor of Cambridge, and in 1672 high steward of See also: Oxford university
.
He favoured religious toleration, and earned the praise of See also: Richard See also: Baxter; he supported a scheme of comprehension in 1668, and advised the declaration of indulgence in 1672
.
He upheld the See also: original jurisdiction of the
1 Clarendon, See also: Life and Continuation, 979
.
Lords in Skinner's See also: case
.
With these exceptions Buckingham's tenure of office was chiefly marked by scandals and intrigues
.
His illicit connexion with the countess of See also: Shrewsbury led to a duel with her See also: husband at See also: Barn Elms on the 16th of January 1668, in which Shrewsbury was fatally wounded
.
The tale that the countess, disguised as a page, witnessed the encounter, appears to have no foundation; but Buckingham, by installing the " widow of his own creation" in his own and his wife's house, outraged even the lax opinion of that See also: day
.
He was thought to have originated the project of obtaining the See also: divorce of the childless See also: queen
.
He intrigued against See also: James, against
See also: Sir See also: William Coventry—one of the ablest statesmen of the time, whose fall he procured by provoking him to send him a challenge —and against the
See also: great duke of Ormonde, who was dismissed in 1669
.
He was even suspected of having instigated See also: Thomas
See also: Blood's attempt to kidnap and See also: murder Ormonde, and was charged with the See also: crime in the king's presence by Ormonde's son, Lord Ossory, who threatened to shoot him dead in the event of his See also: father's meeting with a violent end
.
Arlington, next to Buckingham himself the most powerful member of the cabal and a favourite of the king, was a See also: rival less easy to overcome; and he derived considerable influence from the control of See also: foreign affairs entrusted to him
.
Buckingham had from the first been an adherent of the French alliance, while Arlington concluded through Sir William See also: Temple in 1668 the Triple Alliance
.
But on the See also: complete volte-face and surrender made by Charles to See also: France in 167o, Arlington as a See also: Roman Catholic was entrusted with the first treaty of Dover of the loth of May—which besides providing for the See also: united attack on Holland, included Charles's undertaking to proclaim himself a Romanist and to reintroduce the Roman Catholic faith into England,—While Buckingham was sent to France to carry on the sham negotiations which led to the public See also: treaties of the 31st of December 1670 and the 2nd of February 1672
.
He was much pleased with his reception by See also: Louis XIV., declared that he had " more honours done him than ever were given to any subject," and, was presented with a pension of 1o,000 livres a year for Lady Shrewsbury
.
In June 1672 he accompanied Arlington to the Hague to impose terms on theSee also: prince of Orange, and with Arlington arranged the new treaty with Louis
.
After all this activity he suffered a keen disappointment in being passed over for the command of the English forces in favour of See also: Schomberg
.
He now knew of the secret treaty of Dover, and towards the end of 1673 his jealousy of Arlington became open hostility
.
He threatened to impeach him, and endeavoured with the help of Louis to stir up a faction against him in parliament
.
This, however, was unsuccessful, and in January 1674 an attack was made upon Buckingham himself simultaneously in both houses
.
In the Lords the trustees of the See also: young earl of Shrewsbury complained that Buckingham continued publicly his intimacy with the countess, and that a son of theirs had been buried in See also: Westminster Abbey with the title of earl of See also: Coventry; and Buckingham, after presenting an See also: apology, was required, as was the countess, to give security for £1o,000 not to cohabit together again
.
In the See also: Commons he was attacked as the See also: promoter of the French alliance, of " popery " and arbitrary government
.
He defended himself chiefly by endeavouring to throw the blame upon Arlington; but an address was voted petitioning the king to remove him from his See also: councils, presence and from employment for ever
.
Charles, who had only been waiting for a favourable opportunity, and who was enraged at Buckingham's disclosures, consented with alacrity
.
Buckingham retired into private life, reformed his ways, attended church with his wife, began to pay his debts, became a " patriot," and was claimed by the country or opposition party as one of their leaders
.
In the spring of 1675 he was conspicuous for his opposition to the Test See also: oath and for his abuse of the bishops, and on the 16th of See also: November he introduced a bill for the See also: relief of the nonconformists
.
On the 15th of February 1677 he was one of the four lords who endeavoured to embarrass the government by raising the question whether the parliament, not having assembled according to the See also: act of See also: Edward III. once in the year, had not been dissolved by
the See also: recent See also: prorogation
.
The motion was rejected and the four lords were ordered to apologize . On their refusing, they were sent to the Tower, Buckingham in particular exasperating the House by ridiculing its censure . He was released in July, and immediately entered into intrigues with Barillon, the French ambassador, with theSee also: object of hindering the See also: grant of supplies to the king; and in 1678 he visited Paris to get the assistance of Louis XIV. for the cause of the opposition
.
He took an active part in the prosecution of those implicated in the supposed Popish Plot, and accused the lord chief
See also: justice (Sir William See also: Scroggs) in his own See also: court while on circuit of favouring the Roman Catholics
.
In consequence of his conduct a writ was issued for his apprehension, but it was never served
.
He promoted the return of Whig candidates to parliament, constituted himself the champion of the dissenters, and was admitted a freeman of the city of See also: London
.
He, however, separated himself from the Whigs on the exclusion question, probably on account of his dislike of See also: Monmouth and See also: Shaftesbury, was absent from the great debate in the Lords on the 15th of November 168o, and was restored to the king's favour in 1684
.
He took no part in public life after James's accession, but returned to his See also: manor of Helmsley in Yorkshire, the cause of his withdrawal being probably exhausted See also: health and exhausted finances
.
In 1685 he published a pamphlet, entitled A short Discourse on the Reasonableness of See also: Man's having a See also: Religion (re-printed in Somers Tracts (1813, ix
.
13), in which after discussing the See also: main subject he returned to his favourite topic, religious toleration
.
The See also: tract provoked some rejoinders and was de-fended, amongst others, by William Penn, and by the author himself in The Duke of Buckingham's Letter to the unknown author of a short answer to the Duke of Buckingham's Paper (1685)
.
In hopes of converting him to Roman Catholicism James sent him a See also: priest, but Buckingham turned his arguments into ridicule
.
He died on the 16th of April 1687, from a chill caught while hunting, in the house of aSee also: tenant at See also: Kirkby Moorside in York-See also: shire, expressing great repentance and feeling himself "despised by my country and I fear forsaken by my See also: God." 1 The miserable picture of his end See also: drawn by See also: Pope, however, is greatly exaggerated
.
He was buried on the 7th of June 1687 in See also: Henry VII.'s
See also: chapel in Westminster Abbey, in greater See also: state, it was said, than the See also: late king, and with greater splendour
.
With his See also: death the family founded by the extraordinary rise to power and influence of the first duke ended
.
As he See also: left no legitimate children the title became See also: extinct, and his great estate had been completely dissipated; of the enormous mansion constructed by him at Cliveden in Buckinghamshire not a See also: stone remains
.
The ostentatious licence and the unscrupulous conduct of the
See also: Alcibiades of the 17th century have been deservedly censured
.
But even his critics agree that he was See also: good-humoured, good-natured, generous, an unsurpassed mimic and the See also: leader of fashion; and with his good looks, in spite of his moral faults and even crimes, he was irresistible to his contemporaries
.
Many examples of his amusing wit have survived
.
His portrait has been drawn by Burnet, Count See also: Hamilton in the Memoires de
See also: Grammont, See also: Dryden, Pope in the See also: Epistle to Lord See also: Bathurst, and Sir Walter See also: Scott in Peveril of the See also: Peak
.
He is described by Reresby as " the first gentleman of See also: person and wit I think I ever saw," and Burnet bears the same testimony
.
Dean Lockier, after alluding to his unrivalled skill in riding, dancing and See also: fencing, adds, " When he came into the presence-chamber it was impossible for you not to follow him with your See also: eye as he went along, he moved so gracefully." Racing and hunting were his favourite See also: sports, and his name long survived in the hunting songs of Yorkshire
.
He was the See also: patron of See also: Cowley, See also: Sprat, See also: Matthew Clifford and See also: Wycherley
.
He dabbled in chemistry, and for some years, according to Burnet, " he thought he was very near the finding of the philosopher's stone." He set up See also: glass See also: works at See also: Lambeth the productions of which were praised by See also: Evelyn; and he spent much money, according to his biographer See also: Brian Fairfax, in See also: building insanae substructiones
.
Dryden described him under the character of Zimri in the 1 Quarterly Review, January 1898, p . 11o . celebrated lines in Absalom and Achitophel (to which Buckingham replied in Poetical Reflections on a late Poem . . . by a Person of Honour, 1682) : " A man so various, that he seemed to be Not one, but all mankind's epitome; Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong, Was everything by starts and nothing long; But in the course of one revolvingSee also: moon,
Was chymist, fiddler, statesman and buffoon
.
.
.
See also: Beggar'd by fools, whom still he found too late, He had his jest, but they had his estate."
Buckingham, however, cannot with any truth be called the " epitome of mankind." On the contrary, the distinguishing features of his life are its incompleteness, aimlessness, imperfection, insignificance, neglect of talents and waste of opportunities
.
" He saw and approved the best," says Brian Fairfax, " but did too often deteriora sequi." He is more severely but more justly judged by himself
.
In gay moments indeed he had written
" Methinks, I see the wanton houres flee,
And as they passe, turne back and laugh at me," 2
but his last recorded words on the approach of death, " O! what a prodigal have I been of that most valuable of all possessions—Time
!
" express with exact truth the fundamental flaw of his character and career, of which he had at last become conscious
.
Buckingham wrote occasional verses and satires showing undoubted but undeveloped poetical gifts, a collection of which, containing however many pieces not from his See also: pen, was first published by Tom See also: Brown in 1704; while a few extracts from a
See also: commonplace See also: book of Buckingham of some interest are given in an article in the Quarterly Review of January 1898
.
He was the author of The Rehearsal, an amusing and See also: clever satire on the heroic drama and especially on Dryden (first performed on the 7th of December 1671, at the Theatre Royal, and first published in 1672), a deservedly popular See also: play which was imitated by See also: Fielding in Tom Thumb the Great, and by Sheridan in the Critic
.
Buckingham also published two adapted plays, The Chances, altered from See also: Fletcher's play of the same name (1682) and The Restoration or Right will take place, from See also: Beaumont and Fletcher's Philaster (publ
.
1714) ; and also The Battle of Sedgmoor and The Militant Couple (publ . 1704) . The latest edition of his works is that by T . See also: Evans (2 vols
.
8vo, 1775)
.
Another See also: work is named by See also: Wood A Demonstration of the Deity, of which there is now no trace
.
BIBLIOGRAPnv.—The life of Buckingham has been well and accurately traced and the chief authorities collected in the article in the See also: Diet. of Nat
.
Biography (1899) by C.H.Firth, and in See also: George Villiers, and Duke of Buckingham,byLady Burghclere(1903)
.
Otherbiographies are in Wood's Athenae Oxon
.
(See also: Bliss), iv
.
207 ; in Biographia Britannica ; by Brian Fairfax, printed in H .Walpole's See also: Catalogue of Pictures of George Duke of Buckingham (1758); in See also: Arber's edition of the Rehearsal (1868) ; and by the author of Hudibras in The Genuine Remains of Mr See also: Samuel See also: Butler, by R
.
Thyer (1759), U
.
72 . The following may also be mentioned:—Quarterly Review, See also: Jan
.
1898 (commonplace book); A Conference on the See also: Doctrine of See also: Transubstantiation between . the Duke of Buckingham and Father See also: FitzGerald (1714); A Narrative of the Cause and Manner of the Imprisonment of the Lords (1677); The Declaration of the
.
.
.
Duke of Buckingham and the Earls of Holland and See also: Peterborough
.
. . associated for the King(' 648) ; S.R.See also: Gardiner's Mist. of the See also: Commonwealth (1894-1901); Mist. of Eng
.
See also: Poetry, by W
.
J
.
See also: Courthope (1903), iii
.
46o; Horace Walpole's Royal and See also: Noble Authors, iii
.
304; Miscellania Aulica, by T
.
Brown (1702); and the Fairfax See also: Correspondence (1848-1849)
.
For the correspondence see Charles II. and Scotland in 1650 (Scottish See also: History See also: Soc., vol. xvii., 1894) ; Calendars of St
.
Pap
.
Dom.; Hist
.
See also: MSS
.
See also: Comm
.
Series,MSS. of Duke of See also: Buccleuch at See also: Montagu House, of Mrs See also: Frankland-See also: Russell-Astley, of Marq. of Ormonde, and Various Collections; and English
Hist
.
Rev
.
(April 1905), xx• 373
.
(P
.
C
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