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1ST BARON See also: English statesman and See also: man of letters, See also: born at Hagley, See also: Worcestershire, was a descendant of the See also: great jurist See also: Sir See also: Thomas Littleton (q.v.)
.
He was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Lyttelton, 4th
See also: hart
.
(d
.
1751), who at the revolution of 1688 and during the following reign was one of the ablest Whig debaters of the See also: House of See also: Commons.' Lyttelton was educated at See also: Eton and See also: Oxford, and in 1728 set out on the See also: grand tour, spending considerable periods at See also: Paris and See also: Rome
.
On his return to See also: England he sat in parliament for See also: Okehampton, Devonshire, beginning public See also: life in the same See also: year with Pitt
.
From 1744 to 1754 he held the office of a See also: lord See also: commissioner of the See also: treasury
.
In 1755 he succeeded See also: Legge as chancellor of the See also: exchequer, but in 1756 he quitted office, being raised to the See also: peerage as Baron Lyttelton, of Frankley, in the county of See also: Worcester
.
In the See also: political crisis of 1765, before the formation of the Rockingham administration, it was suggested that he might be placed at the See also: head of the treasury, but he declined to take See also: part in any such scheme
.
The closing years of his life were devoted chiefly to See also: literary pursuits
.
He died on the 22nd of See also: August 1773
.
Lyttelton's earliest publication (1735), Letters from a Persian in England to his Friend at Ispahan, appeared anonymously
.
Much greater celebrity was achieved by his Observations on the Conversion and Apostleship of St See also: Paul, also See also: anonymous, published in 1747
.
It takes the See also: form of'a letter to See also: Gilbert West, and is designed to show that St Paul's conversion is of itself a sufficient demonstration of the divine character of
See also: Christianity
.
Dr See also: Johnson regarded the
See also: work as one " to which infidelity has never been able to fabricate a specious answer." Lord Lyttelton's Dialogues of the Dead, a creditable performance, though hardly rivalling either Lucian or See also: Landor, appeared in 176o
.
His See also: History of See also: Henry II
.
(1767-1771), the fruit of twenty years' Tabour, is not now cited as an authority, but Le painstaking and
See also: fair
.
Lyttelton was also a writer of verse; his Monody on his wife's See also: death has been praised by See also: Gray for its elegiac tenderness, and his Prologue to the Coriolanus of his friend
See also: Thomson shows genuine feeling
.
He was also the author of the well-known stanza in the See also: Castle of Indolence, in which the poet himself is described
.
A See also: complete collection of the See also: Works of Lord Lyttelton was published by his See also: nephew, G
.
E
.
See also: Ayscough in 1774
.
His son THOMAS (1744-1779), who succeeded as 2nd baron, played some part in the political life of his See also: time, but his loose and prodigal habits were notorious, and he is known, in distinction to his See also: father " the See also: good lord," as the wicked Lord Lyttelton
.
He See also: left no lawful issue, and the See also: barony became See also: extinct; but it was revived in 1794 in the See also: person of his See also: uncle See also: WILLIAM HENRY, 1st baron of the new creation (1724-1808), who was governor of S
.
Carolina and later of
See also: Jamaica, and ambassador to See also: Portugal
.
The new barony went after him to his two sons . The 3rd baron (1782-1837) was succeeded by his son See also: GEORGE WILLIAM LYTTELTON, 4th baron (1817-1876), who was a See also: fine See also: scholar, and See also: brother-in-See also: law of W
.
E
.
Gladstone, having married See also: Miss Mary Glynne
.
He did important work in educational and poor law reform
.
He had eight sons, of whom the eldest, See also: CHARLES GEORGE (b
.
1842), became 5th baron, and in
' Sir Thomas (or Thomas de) Littleton, the jurist, had three sons, William,
See also: Richard and- Thomas
.
From the first, William, was descended Sir Thomas Lyttelton, 1st hart. of Frankley (1596-165o), whose sons were Sir Henry, and hart
.
(d
.
1693), and Sir Charles, 3rd See also: bart
.
(1629-1716), governor of Jamaica
.
The latter's son was Sir Thomas, 4th hart., above mentioned, who was also the father of Charles Lyttelton (1714-1768), See also: bishop of See also: Carlisle, and president of the Society of Antiquaries
.
The male descendants of the second, Richard, died out with Sir See also: Edward Littleton, hart., of Pillaton, See also: Staffordshire, in 1812, but the latter's grandnephew, Edward See also: John Walhouse (1791-1863) of Hatherton, took the estates by will and also the name of Littleton, and was created 1st Baron Hatherton in 1835; he was chief secretary for
See also: Ireland (1833-1834)
.
From Thomas, the third son, was descended, in one See also: line, Edward, Lord Littleton, of Munslow (1589-1645), See also: recorder of See also: London, chief See also: justice of the See also: common pleas, and eventually lord keeper; and in another line, the baronets of Stoke St Milborough, See also: Shropshire, of whom the best known and last was Sir Thomas Littleton, 3rd bart
.
(1647-1710), See also: speaker of the House of Commons (1698-1700), and treasurer of the See also: navy.1889 succeeded, by the death of the 3rd duke of See also: Buckingham and Chandos, to the viscounty of See also: COBHAM, in which title the barony of Lyttelton is now merged
.
Other distinguished sons were Arthur See also: Temple Lyttelton (d
.
1903), See also: warden of See also: Selwyn See also: College, Cambridge, and bishop-suffragan of Southampton; Edward Lyttelton (b
.
1855), headmaster of Haileybury (189o-1905) and then of Eton; and See also: Alfred Lyttelton (b
.
1857), secretary of See also: state for the colonies (1903-1906)
.
It was a See also: family of well-known cricketers, Alfred being in his See also: day the best wicket-keeper in England as well as a fine tennis player
.
For the 1st baron see Sir R
.
Phillimore's See also: Memoirs and See also: Correspondence of Lord Lyttelton, 1734-1773 (2 vols., 1845)
.
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