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2ND See also: father, See also: William, as 3rd Baron
See also: Spencer of Wormleighton in 1636
.
This See also: barony had been bestowed in 1603 upon See also: Sir Robert Spencer (d
.
1627), the only son of Sir See also: John Spencer (d
.
1600) of Althorp,
See also: Northamptonshire, who claimed descent from the baronial See also: family of Despenser
.
The fortunes of the family were founded by Sir John Spencer (d
.
1522) of Snitterfield, See also: Warwickshire, a wealthy grazier
.
His descendant, Sir Robert Spencer, the 1st baron, was in 1603, " reputed to have by him the most See also: money of any See also: person in the See also: kingdom
.
Sir Robert's See also: grandson, See also: Henry, the 3rd baron, was created
See also: earl of See also: Sunderland in See also: June 1643, and was killed at the See also: battle of See also: Newbury when fighting for the See also: king a little later in the same
See also: year
.
He married Dorothy (1617-1684), daughter of
.
Robert See also: Sidney, and earl of See also: Leicester
.
She was the Sacharissa of the poems of her admirer, Edmund Waller, and for her second See also: husband she married Sir Robert Smythe
.
Their son Robert, the 2nd earl, was educated abroad and at Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford, and in 1665 married See also: Anne (d
.
1715), daughter of john Digby, 3rd earl ofSee also: Bristol; she was both a beauty and an heiress, and is also famous for her knowledge and love of intrigue
.
Having passed some See also: time in the See also: court circle, Sunderland was successively ambassador at See also: Madrid, at See also: Paris and at Cologne; in 1678 he was again ambassador at Paris
.
In See also: February 1679, when the country was agitated by real or fancied dangers to the See also: Protestant See also: religion, the earl entered See also: political See also: life as secretary of See also: state for the See also: northern department and became at once a member of the small clique responsible for the See also: government of the country
.
He voted for the exclusion of See also: James, duke of
See also: York, from the See also: throne, and made overtures to William, See also: prince of Orange, and consequently in 1681 he lost both his secretaryship and his seat on the privy council
.
Early in 1683, however, through the influence of the king's See also: mistress, the duchess of Portsmouth, Sunderland regained his place as secretary for the northern department, the chief feature of his See also: term of office being his rivalry with his See also: brother-in-See also: law, See also: George Savile, See also: marquess of See also: Halifax
.
By this time he had made his See also: peace with the duke of York, and when in February 1685 James became king, he retained his position of secretary, to which was soon added that of See also: lord president of the council
.
He carried out the wishes of the new See also: sovereign and after the intrigues of a few months he had the satisfaction of securing the dismissal of See also: Lawrence See also: Hyde, earl of Rochester, from his See also: post as lord treasurer
.
He was a member of the commission for ecclesiastical causes, and although afterwards he claimed that he had used all his influence to dissuade James from removing the tests, and in other ways illegally favouring the See also: Roman Catholics, he signed the warrant for the committal of the seven bishops, and appeared as a witness against them
.
It should be mentioned that while Sunderland was thus. serving James II., he was receiving a pension from See also: France, and through his wife's See also: lover, Henry Sidney, afterwards earl of Romney, he was furnishing William of Orange with particulars about affairs in See also: England
.
In the last months of James's reign he was obviously uncomfortable
.
Although he had in 1687 openly embraced the Roman Catholic faith, he hesitated to commit himself entirely to the acts of the fierce devotees who surrounded the king, whom he advised to See also: reverse the arbitrary acts of the last year or two, and in See also: October 1688 he was dismissed by James with the remark " I hope you will be more faithful to your next master than you have been to me."
Sunderland now took See also: refuge in See also: Holland, and from
See also: Utrecht he sought to justify his See also: recent actions in A letter to a friend in the country
.
He had been too deeply involved in the arbitrary acts of James II. to find a place at once among the advisers of William and Mary, and he was excepted from the See also: act of indemnity of 1690
.
However, in 1691, he was permitted to return to England, and he declared himself a Protestant and began to attend the sittings of parliament . But his experience was invaluable and soon he became prominent in public affairs, a visit which William III. paid him at Althorp, his Northamptonshire seat, in 1691, being the prelude to his recall into the royal counsels . It was his advice which led the king to choose all his ministers from one political party, to adopt theSee also: modern See also: system, and he managed to effect a reconciliation between William and his See also: sister-in-law, the princess Anne
.
From See also: April to See also: December 1697 he discharged the duties of lord See also: chamberlain, and for
See also: part of this time he was one of the lords justices, but the general suspicion with which he was regarded terrified him, and in December he resigned
.
The rest of his life was passed in seclusion at Althorp, where he died on the 28th of See also: September 1702
.
The earl was a See also: great gambler, but he was wealthy enough also to spend money on improving his See also: house at Althorp, which he beautified both within and without
.
His only surviving son was See also: Charles Spencer, 3rd earl of Sunderland (q.v.)
.
Lord Sunderland possessed a keen intellect and was consumed by intense restlessness; but his character was wanting in
See also: stead-fastness, and he yielded too easily to opposition
.
His adroitness in intrigue and his fascinating See also: manners were exceptional even in an age when such qualities formed part of every statesman's See also: education; but the characteristics which ensured him success in the House of Lords and in the royal closet led to failure in his attempts to understand the feelings of the mass of his country-men
.
Consistency of conduct was not among the See also: objects which he aimed at, nor did he shrink from thwarting in secret a policy which he supported in public
.
A large share of the discredit attaching to the See also: measures of James II. must be assigned to the earl of Sunderland
.
The best account of Sunderland is the article by T
.
Seccombe in the Dict . Nat . Biog., which gives a full bibliography . |
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