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THOMAS RANDOLPH (1523-1590)

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 887 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS RANDOLPH (1523-1590)  ,
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English diplomatist, son of Avery Randolph, a Kentish gentleman, was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, and in 1549 became
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principal of Pembroke College, Oxford, then known as Broadgates Hall . During 'In 1754 the Burgesses sent him to
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London to argue against the governor's demand for a
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fee of one
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pistole on every
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land patent; his plea was successful, but the governor superseded him with George Wythe, who resigned in Randolph's favour upon his return from England . The Burgesses voted Randolph £2500 with the grant of £20,000 to Governor Dinwiddie for
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Indian warfare; the governor would not approve this appropriation, however, until Randolph apologized for leaving his office without the governor's permission.the reign of Mary, Randolph, who was a -zealous
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Protestant, sought
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refuge in Paris, where he cultivated the society of scholars . Returning to England after the accession of Elizabeth, he was soon employed as a confidential
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diplomatic agent of the English queen in Scotland . Here he succeeded in gaining the confidence of the Protestant party, with whom he became a person of
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great influence . Randolph's despatches from Scotland between 156o and 1585 supply important materials for the
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history of the
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political intrigues of that period . Randolph, who had hitherto remained ostensibly on terms of friendship with Mary Queen of Scots, exerted his influence on instructions from Elizabeth to prevent Mary's
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marriage with Darnley; but in 1566 he was driven from Scotland on the charge of having fomented Murray's
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rebellion, and he then obtained government employment of secondary importance in England . In 1568 he undertook a
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mission to Russia which resulted in the concession by
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Ivan the Terrible of certain privileges to English merchants; and in 1570 he returned to Scotland, where, after the
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murder of the regent Murray in
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January of that
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year, he " succeeded," says Andrew Lang, " in making
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civil war inevitable; he himself was in high
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spirits, as always when
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mischief was in hand." After carrying through certain diplomatic business in France in 1573 and 1576, Randolph returned in January 1581 to Scotland, where the
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earl of Morton, the regent, had been arrested a few days previously . Randolph, acting on Elizabeth's instructions, intrigued with Angus and the Douglases in favour of a plot to seize the person of the young King James, and to save Morton by laying violent hands on the earl of Lennox . Douglas of Whittingham, who was employed in the intrigue, on being arrested made revelations which imperilled Randolph, and the latter prudently withdrew to Berwick before the execution of Morton in
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June 1581 . In 1585, when he next visited Scotland,. he was more successful, being instrumental in arranging a treaty between England and Scotland . For the next four years he was chancellor of the
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exchequer in England, and he died in London in June 1590 .

Randolph married, in 1571,

Anne, daughter of Thomas Walsingham . He was a
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personal friend of George Buchanan, in whose History of Scotland he took a lively
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interest, and he has been credited, though on doubtful evidence, with the authorship of a
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Life of the historian in Latin . See J . A . Froude, History of England (12 vols., London, 1881); Andrew Lang, History of Scotland, vol. ii . (4 vols., London, 1902–7) ;
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Calendar of State Papers
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relating to Scotland (1509–1603), edited by M . J . Thorpe (2 vols.) ; Calendar of State Papers,
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Foreign Series of the Reign of Elizabeth; Anthony b . Wood, Athenae Oxonienses and
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Fasti, edited by P . Bliss (4 vols., London, 1813-20) .

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