Online Encyclopedia

EARLS OF RADNOR

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 808 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EARLS OF

RADNOR  . The 1st
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earl of Radnor was John Robartes (16o6–1685); who succeeded his
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father, Richard Robartes, as 2nd baron Robartes of Truro in May 1634, the
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barony having been
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purchased under compulsion for £1o,000 in 1625 . The
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family had amassed
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great
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wealth by trading in tin and wool . Educated at Exeter College, Oxford, John Robartes fought on the side. of the Parliament during the
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Civil War, being
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present at the
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battle of Edgehill and at the first battle of
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Newbury, and was a member of the committee of both kingdoms . He is said to have persuaded the earl of Essex to make his
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ill-fated march into
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Cornwall in 1644; he escaped with the earl from
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Lostwithiel and was afterwards governor of Plymouth . Between the execution of Charles 1. and the restoration of Charles II. he took practically no
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part in public
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life, but after 166o he became a prominent public man, owing his prominence partly- to his influence among the Presbyterians, and ranged himself among Clarendon's enemies . He was lord deputy of Ireland in 166o–1661 and was lord
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lieutenant in 1669–167o; from 1661 to 1673 he was lord privy seal, and from 1679 to 1684 lord president of the council . In 1679 he was created viscount
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Bodmin and earl of Radnor, and he died at
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Chelsea on the 17th of
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July i685 . His eldest son, Robert, viscount Bodmin, who was
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British envoy to Denmark, having predeceased his father, the latter was succeeded as 2nd earl by his grandson, Charles Bodvile Robartes (1660-1723), who was a member of parliament under Charles II. and James II., and was lord lieutenant of Cornwall from 1696 to 1705 and again from 1714 to 1723 . Henry, the 3rd earl (c . 1690-1741), was also a
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grand-son of the 1st earl, and John, the 4th earl (c . 1686-1757), was another grandson .

When John, whose father was

Francis Robartes (c . 1650-1718), a member of parliament for over
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thirty years and a musician of some repute, died unmarried in July 1757, his titles became
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extinct . Lanhydrock, near Bodmin, and the other estates of the Robartes family passed to the earl's nephews, Thomas and George Hunt . Thomas Hunt's grandson and heir, Thomas James Agar-Robartes (1808–1882), a grandson of an Irish peer, James Agar, 1st viscount Clifden (1734–1789), was created baron Robartes of Lanhydrock and of Truro in 1869, after having represented East Cornwall in seven parliaments . His son and successor, Thomas Charles Agar-Robartes, the 2nd baron (b . 1844), succeeded his kinsman as 6th viscount Clifden in 1899 . In 1765 William Bourerie, 2nd viscount
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Folkestone (1725–1776), son of
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Sir Jacob Bouverie, bart . (d . 1761), of
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Longford, Wiltshire, who was created viscount Folkestone in 1747, was made earl of Radnor . Descended from a Huguenot family, William Bouverie was a member of parliament from 1747 until he succeeded to the peerage in
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February 1761 . He died on the 28th of
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January 1776 . His son and successor, Jacob, the 2nd earl (1750-1828), who took the name of Pleydell-Bouverie in accordance with the will of his maternal grand-father, Sir Mark Stuart Pleydell, bart .

(d . 1768), was the father of William Pleydell-Bouverie, the 3rd - earl (1779–1869), a politician of some

note . In 1900 his great-grandson, Jacob Pleydell-Bouverie (b . 1868), became 6th earl of Radnor .

End of Article: EARLS OF RADNOR
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