Online Encyclopedia

EARLDOM OF MULGRAVE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 960 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARLDOM OF

MULGRAVE  , a title dating from 1626, when Edmund Sheffield, 3rd Baron Sheffield of Butterwicke, was created
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earl of Mulgrave . He was succeeded by his grandson Edmund, the 2nd earl, who was one of the nine true peers who sat in Oliver Cromwell's House of Lords . Edmund's son John, 3rd earl, was created marquess of Normanby in 1694, and duke of Buckingham and Normanby in 1703; but on the
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death of his son, the 2nd duke, without heirs in 1735, the titles became
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extinct . The 2nd duke devised the estates of the Sheffield
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family to his
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mother Catherine, a natural daughter of James II., who had married as her first
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husband the 3rd earl of Annesley, by whom she had a daughter Catherine, who married William Phipps and had a son
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Constantine Phipps . The latter succeeded to the estate of Mulgrave in
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Yorkshire in 1743 on the death of his grandmother, and in 1767 he was created Baron Mulgrave of New Ross in the peerage of Ireland . His son was created a peer of
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Great Britain in 1790 with the title of Baron Mulgrave of Mulgrave; and the latter's
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brother Henry, the next in succession, who was secretary of state for
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foreign affairs in 18o5 and held other high government offices, was created Viscount Normanby and earl of Mulgrave in 1812 . The 2nd earl of this creation, who like his
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father held several high
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cabinet offices, was advanced in the peerage at the coronation of Queen Victoria, being created marquess of Normanby in 1838 .

End of Article: EARLDOM OF MULGRAVE
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MULE (Lat. mulus)
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