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VISCOUNT SIR FRANCIS ANNESLEY VALENTI...

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 850 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VISCOUNT
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SIR FRANCIS ANNESLEY VALENTIA (1585-166o)
  , Anglo-Irish statesman, son of Robert Annesley of
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Newport Pagnel in Buckinghamshire, was born in 1585, and settled in Ireland at an early age, acquiring
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property in various parts of the island . His friendship with the lord deputy,
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Sir Arthur
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Chichester, procured for him government employment and the favour of King James I., who conferred on him a grant of the
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land and fort of Mountnorris, county
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Armagh, in 1612 . He was returned to the Irish parliament by the county Armagh in 1614, and four years later was appointed secretary for Ireland, being created a
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baronet in 162o . In the following
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year he received, by an unusual patent, a reversionary grant of the viscountcy of Valencia after the
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death without male issue of a kinsman (Sir Henry Power, created viscount of Valentia in 1621), the then living viscount . In 1625 Sir Francis Annesley was elected member for the county of Carmarthen in the
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English parliament; and in the same. year he was. made
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vice-treasurer and
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receiver-general of Ireland . In 1628 he was.created Baron Mountnorris in the peerage of Ireland . He strongly opposed the policy of Lord Falkland, who became lord deputy in 1622, and procured his recall in 1629 . When Sir Thomas Wentworth, afterwards the famous
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earl of Strafford, went to Ireland in 1633, he took
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action against Mountnorris, whom he accused of corruption and malversation of public
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money . The two men became violent opponents, and at a
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dinner at the lord chancellor's house in
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April 1635 Mountnorris used insulting and threatening language in reference to the lord deputy . Wentworth brought him before a court-martial on a charge of insubordination as an officer in the army, and by this tribunal Mountnorris was condemned to death . The sentence was not carried out, but he was imprisoned and deprived of all his offices on the report of a committee appointed by the privy council to inquire into the charges of corruption . The vindictiveness of the proceedings against Mountnorris, which afterwards constituted one of the
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counts in the impeachment of Strafford, has been strongly condemned by some historians and extenuated by others; that the trial by court-martial and the sentence were at all events not illegal, has been shown by S .

R .

Gardiner . Mountnorris was not long detained in prison, and in 164o his relations with Strafford were examined by a committee of the Long Parliament, which pronounced the sentence passed on him unjust and illegal . In 1642 he succeeded, under the above-mentioned reversion, to the title of viscount of Valentia . During the
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Commonwealth he again held the
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post of secretary in Ireland to the lord deputy, Henry Cromwell, with whom he was on friendly terms . Valentia died in 166o . His wife was Dorothy, daughter of Sir John Phillipps of
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Picton, Pembrokeshire, by whom he was the
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father of Arthur Annesley, earl of Anglesey (q.v. for later
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history) . See S . R . Gardiner, History of England, vol. viii . (
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London, 1883—84) ; Strafford's Letters and Dispatches, edited by W . Knowler (2 vols.,
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Dublin, 1740) ; G .

E . C.,

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Complete Peerage, vol. v . (London, 1893) .

End of Article: VISCOUNT SIR FRANCIS ANNESLEY VALENTIA (1585-166o)
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