38:
425:
520:, the late Whig MP for the borough, during the election: after an exchange of insults, wherein Norreys called Whorwood an "old knave" and was called a "young rogue" in turn, Norreys then proceeded to beat Whorwood with his cane. Norreys was apparently ready to duel Lord Lovelace (in place of the aged Whorwood) over the matter, but Lovelace declined to take up the quarrel, and Bishop Fell managed to patch up affairs between Norreys and Whorwood before they could reach the courts.
233:, by his second wife, Bridget Bertie (nΓ©e Wray), 4th Baroness Norreys. His father, who had five sons by his previous marriage, was a royalist of impeccable credentials, and the head of an influential Lincolnshire family. While James' position as a sixth son might have limited his prospects, he was his mother's eldest son, and upon her death in c.1657, he became the 5th
541:
Catholic rebellion. This can hardly have endeared him to
Norreys, charged with keeping the peace in Oxford for the duration of the Parliament, and it was understood that he would engineer a successful indictment of College. Such was indeed the case: College was charged with sedition before a grand jury whose foreman was Norreys' younger brother
704:
Abingdon's health, never good, continued to plague him throughout the decade, and
Charles reported in January 1694 that Abingdon suffered badly from shortness of breath. Carmarthen was made Duke of Leeds that year, but a Whig attack on him for accepting bribes drove him from office in 1695. Abingdon
496:
did not prove any more favourable to the court party than those preceding, but
Norreys played out his role as Lord Lieutenant and host, leading a troop of horse to escort the King from the border of Oxfordshire to the Parliament. Norreys also took the somewhat daring step of presenting a petition to
305:, later Danvers, was also a beneficiary, but the trustees bought out her share in the year of Ann's marriage. Litigation arose between Norreys, Wharton, and their wives over the trust, and a partition of the estates in 1681 made Abingdon, as he then was, and his wife the sole owners of the manors of
666:. While the attack was not pursued, Abingdon's political history at Oxford left his position under William always somewhat insecure, despite the renewed influence at court of Danby, now Marquess of Carmarthen. He remained active in local politics in Berkshire, Oxfordshire, and Wiltshire. During the
464:
while the
Commons, who had impeached him, debated his fate with the Lords. Norreys remained a staunch supporter of the court, and Danby, corresponding with the King from the Tower that summer, recommended his advancement in the peerage. Although enthusiastic, Norreys was notoriously unwell, having
540:
of
Middlesex, which was Whiggish, failed to indict College; he was then brought before the Oxfordshire assizes for alleged misdeeds there. College had been a prominent figure at the assembly of the Oxford Parliament, riding into town armed and armoured to protect Protestantism, he claimed, from a
682:
as well. This was a prudent move: Norreys was defeated in
Berkshire (he may not even have gone to the poll there), but was returned for Oxfordshire after a bruising campaign which included accusations of Jacobitism levelled against Abingdon, which so dispirited him he considered resigning the
601:
in their respective counties and remove those hostile to
Catholic tolerance. Abingdon, in a candid exchange with the King, refused to take part in this program. He further offended his master by his continued support for the fellows of Magdalen. When they were ejected on 16 November by the
549:, put up as good a defence as could be expected, and much of the evidence against him was circumstantial; but he could hardly hope to escape, and was promptly condemned to death. This result was greatly satisfactory to the court, and on 30 November 1682, Norreys was created
501:. It was not taken up again: a secret treaty with France had relieved the King's need for supply, and a popular reaction against the Whigs had begun to grow. Charles was disinclined to wrangle with another Exclusionist parliament and abruptly dissolved it after a week.
576:
As James II adopted increasingly forceful pro-Catholic policies, many Tories found themselves forced to choose between support for the Court and support for the
Established Church. Abingdon sided with the Church: in particular, he took the side of the fellows of
285:
would also prove of great advantage to the
Berties, as Osborne rose to become Duke of Leeds and one of the eminent politicians of the later Stuart era. Osborne was on particularly good terms with Lord Norreys, and often stayed and hunted with him at Rycote.
651:
Abingdon's Tory principles were not abated by his role in the
Revolution. After the flight of James, he voted against declaring the throne vacant. Nonetheless, he was reappointed Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire on 3 May 1689 to replace Lichfield, and
621:
imminent, James reversed course in October and annulled the charters of 1684 and 1688. Abingdon was unanimously re-elected high steward, an event celebrated widely, if not universally, in the borough. During the year, he also bought the manor of
523:
Norreys by now had a much more important commission in hand from the court. As the Tory reaction gained strength, the court now proceeded, on rather specious grounds, against some of the Whigs for conspiring to depose the King. Jurisdiction over
460:, but without success: he was shouted out of the streets of Oxford by a mob. The country party dominated the Commons, and Danby was forced to resign his offices. A royal pardon only heightened the outrage against him, and he was committed to the
484:, the principal Whig electioneer in the borough, while Norreys took care of the logistical details of hosting Parliament. Happily for him, the officer in the Royal Household responsible for accommodating Parliament, the
581:
in their quarrel with the King, which began in the spring of 1687. His division from the Court signaled his rapprochement with the borough of Oxford: on 16 September 1687, he was unanimously elected
824:
569:
705:
was increasingly at odds with the Whig-dominated government; to this was added the old quarrel over the Danvers estates with his wife's brother-in-law, Lord Wharton, one of the members of the
1892:
480:, who had been the court's managers in the previous two elections, were entrusted with the preparations for holding the new Parliament. Fell managed to arrange a truce between Norreys and
606:, he offered them his hospitality at Rycote. This act of defiance was not to be borne, and Abingdon was dismissed from the lord-lieutenancy and replaced by his wife's first cousin, the
281:, all then in Berkshire. These extensive estates would provide him with a base of political power in Oxfordshire. The marriage in the early 1650s of his half-sister Bridget to
597:, intended to identify supporters of his programme to remove the legal disabilities against Catholics. The lord lieutenants were to address these questions to members of the
357:
472:
The opposition of Shaftesbury had rendered the two Parliaments summoned in 1679 quite unmanageable by the court. The King determined to hold a new Parliament in
1220:
Dunning, R W; Rogers, K H; Spalding, P A; Shrimpton, Colin; Stevenson, Janet H; Tomlinson, Margaret (1970). "Parishes: Lyneham". In Crittall, Elizabeth (ed.).
831:
613:
As James' program for generating a compliant government escalated, the borough of Oxford was "regulated", and the corporation dissolved in June 1688 by
497:
the Lords for the bail of Danby, still languishing in the Tower; opinion was divided, and the matter was put aside for a few days on the suggestion of
1412:
Eleanor Chance, Christina Colvin, Janet Cooper, C J Day, T G Hassall, Mary Jessup and Nesta Selwyn (1979). "Early Modern Oxford". In Crossley, Alan;
404:. He first took his seat in the House of Lords on 13 April 1675. As befitted his royalist descent and connection with Osborne, now Earl of Danby and
528:
at law had been debated between Commons and Lords in the late Parliament; the dissolution of Parliament cleared the way for his condemnation in the
1441:
662:. The two offices were thereafter united. Late in the year, Abingdon defended his conduct in the trial of Stephen College against an attack by the
635:
in June, and many of the Berties, including Abingdon, had been drawn into the conspiracy by September. In November 1688, Abingdon defected to join
517:
1650:
721:
509:
441:
1882:
671:
336:
166:
297:
and his wife Ann Danvers, both of whom had died in 1659. The Danvers estates were left in trust for Eleanor and her sister Ann, who married
440:
which Danby had carried out, led to a violent political reaction against Catholicism and the court party, managed in part by Danby's rival
1788:
397:
1939:
679:
663:
453:
1411:
1832:
1773:
590:
381:
298:
93:
1949:
675:
498:
1727:
617:. A new charter was issued in September, the patent for which named Lichfield as high steward in place of Abingdon. With the
542:
512:. Norreys acknowledged that Edward Prince, the Whig candidate, was likely to prove more popular, and the intervention of the
729:
717:
1719:, vol. 1 (107th 3 volumes ed.), Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books), p. 1124
728:. They had no children; Abingdon died at Westminster on 22 May 1699, and was succeeded in the Earldom by his eldest son
449:
230:
191:
1209:. Vol. 8, Warminster, Westbury and Whorwellsdown Hundreds. London: Victoria County History. 1965. pp. 148β163.
1146:. Vol. 7, Bradford, Melksham, and Potterne and Cannings Hundreds. London: Victoria County History. pp. 198β206
1464:
1371:
529:
489:
413:
387:
1186:
Baggs, A P; Crittall, Elizabeth; Freeman, Jane; Stevenson, Janet H (1980). "Parishes: Patney". In Crowley, D A (ed.).
1842:
1815:
1805:
1754:
1619:
The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant
659:
607:
603:
513:
481:
282:
81:
779:
The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant
37:
1578:
409:
1849:
1551:
1192:. Vol. 11, Downton Hundred, Elstub and Everleigh Hundred. London: Victoria County History. pp. 203β208.
654:
545:
and committed to trial. Norreys presided over the trial, held on 17 and 18 August 1681. College and his counsel,
504:
In July, the town clerk of Oxford died, and Norreys recommended Thomas Baker as a Tory candidate for the post to
350:
145:
241:. Together with the peerage, he inherited from his mother considerable estates, including the manors of Rycote,
1934:
1822:
1795:
1534:
1489:
401:
667:
1617:
1237:
689:
In 1693, upon the death of his political rival Lord Lovelace, Carmarthen obtained for Abingdon the post of
329:
was divided between Anne and her aunt Elizabeth until 1683, when Abingdon bought out Elizabeth's interest.
1136:
Chettle, H F; Powell, W R; Spalding, P A; Tillott, P M (1953). "Parishes: West or Bishop's Lavington". In
1613:
1308:
424:
713:
in 1696 gave grounds to dismiss him from his offices as Justice and Lord Lieutenant the following year.
686:
Abingdon's wife Eleanora died suddenly on 31 May 1691 at West Lavington and was buried there on 6 June.
1929:
1387:
697:. The patronage of the post included a secretaryship to the justice, which he gave to his half-brother
374:
294:
1590:
1563:
1108:; Stevenson, Janet H; Tomlinson, Margaret (1965). "Parishes: Rushall". In Crittall, Elizabeth (ed.).
546:
306:
174:
1169:; Stevenson, Janet H; Tomlinson, Margaret (1975). "Parishes: Marden". In Crittall, Elizabeth (ed.).
578:
493:
457:
1114:. Vol. 10, Swanborough Hundred and Devizes. London: Victoria County History. pp. 136β146
629:
It was far too late, however, to recall Abingdon to his allegiance to James. Danby had signed the
698:
598:
250:
957:. Vol. 7, Dorchester and Thame Hundreds. London: Victoria County History. pp. 160β178.
1944:
636:
485:
1634:
1326:
1241:
1083:
940:. Vol. 7, Dorchester and Thame Hundreds. London: Victoria County History. pp. 39β64.
1509:
1505:
1413:
1187:
1170:
1109:
1079:
631:
586:
437:
1204:
1141:
1026:
1001:
1924:
1919:
1582:
1555:
1221:
952:
885:
582:
262:
254:
25:
1417:
1051:
910:
825:"'A man subject to vapours': James Bertie, earl of Abingdon, and his brothers c.1670β1699"
8:
969:
935:
733:
710:
618:
445:
405:
322:
266:
242:
1457:
James II and the Three Questions: Religious Toleration and the Landed Classes, 1687β1688
1346:
860:
1859:
1681:
1644:
1435:
993:
477:
129:
121:
516:
against Baker indeed secured Prince the vote on 11 August. An altercation ensued with
1530:
1485:
1460:
1367:
753:
525:
466:
310:
1872:
1673:
1422:. Vol. 4, The City of Oxford. London: Victoria County History. pp. 74β180
997:
890:. Vol. 6, Ploughley Hundred. London: Victoria County History. pp. 338β346
781:. Vol. I (new ed.). Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing. p. 45.
626:, adjacent to his West Lavington estate, from Robert Tyderlegh and his wife, Mary.
623:
614:
974:. Vol. 5, Bullingdon Hundred. London: Victoria County History. pp. 56β76
915:. Vol. 6, Ploughley Hundred. London: Victoria County History. pp. 92β103
476:
in 1681, hoping to draw on the city's traditional royalist loyalties. Norreys and
1761:
1391:
1270:
865:. Vol. 5, Bullingdon Hundred. London: Victoria County History. pp. 8β14
749:
690:
594:
533:
505:
461:
364:
56:
43:
568:
1609:
554:
302:
1913:
1899:
234:
1704:
343:
170:
125:
1622:. Vol. I, Ab-Adam to Basing. London: St. Catherine Press. p. 46.
1331:. Vol. 12. London: HM Stationery Office. 1767β1830. pp. 652β656.
716:
He made a second marriage to Catherine Chamberlayne, daughter of Reverend
469:), reputedly to the point of interfering with his parliamentary business.
694:
433:
326:
448:, and new elections were held in February 1678/9. Norreys campaigned in
1166:
1137:
1105:
856:
706:
537:
246:
1685:
1665:
318:
290:
1677:
1636:
Calendar of State Papers Domestic, of the Reign of William and Mary
1050:
Page, William; Ditchfield, P H, eds. (1924). "Parishes: Frilsham".
725:
278:
1672:, vol. 154, London: Royal Geographical Society, p. 237,
1175:. Vol. 10. London: Victoria County History. pp. 119β125.
1025:
Page, William; Ditchfield, P H, eds. (1924). "Parishes: Cumnor".
757:
737:
639:, leading 50 horsemen out of Oxford to William's headquarters in
1226:. Vol. 9. London: Victoria County History. pp. 90β104.
1031:. Vol. 4. London: Victoria County History. pp. 398β405
1006:. Vol. 4. London: Victoria County History. pp. 427β430
593:. In October 1687, James II issued the "Three Questions" to his
363:
Capt. Hon. Peregrine Bertie (2 February 1677 β 1709), commanded
643:, the first of the peers to openly take up arms on his behalf.
640:
473:
428:
James Bertie following his elevation to the earldom of Abingdon
314:
274:
270:
238:
1313:
List of Lieutenants of Counties of England and Wales 1660β1974
1219:
1056:. Vol. 4. London: Victoria County History. pp. 70β73
740:
lamenting his death, which he dedicated to the Duke of Leeds.
1364:
The King's Smuggler: Jane Whorwood, Secret Agent to Charles I
1185:
258:
1135:
658:
of the county on 9 July, replacing the resolutely Jacobite
1484:. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 215β216.
776:
412:. It was Danby who composed a quarrel between Norreys and
380:
Lady Bridget Bertie (before 1683 β 13 June 1753), married
1732:
The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1715β1754
1164:
1103:
777:
Cokayne, G.E.; Gibbs, Vicary; et al., eds. (2000).
1090:. v. 1 n.s. London: Hamilton, Adams & Co.: 420β421.
332:
Norreys and his wife had six sons and three daughters:
289:
On 1 February 1671/2, Norreys married Eleanor Lee at
859:, ed. (1957). "Parishes: Albury (with Tiddington)".
934:Lobel, Mary D, ed. (1962). "Parishes: Dorchester".
909:Lobel, Mary D, ed. (1959). "Parishes: Chesterton".
884:Lobel, Mary D, ed. (1959). "Parishes: Wendlebury".
683:lord-lieutenancy, much to the dismay of Clarendon.
1250:
321:; they also received Anne's share in the manor of
732:. He was buried at Rycote on 29 May. His client,
408:, Norreys belonged to the court party, later the
386:Lady Anne Bertie (died 31 October 1718), married
1911:
1482:Whig's Progress: Tom Wharton Between Revolutions
968:Lobel, Mary D, ed. (1957). "Parishes: Beckley".
1527:The Army, James II, and the Glorious Revolution
1348:Thomas Osborne, Earl of Danby and Duke of Leeds
221:from 1657 until 1682, was an English nobleman.
1099:
1097:
1049:
1024:
992:
951:Lobel, Mary D, ed. (1962). "Parishes: Thame".
532:, and proceedings were then set afoot against
1073:
1071:
337:Montagu Venables-Bertie, 2nd Earl of Abingdon
167:Montagu Venables-Bertie, 2nd Earl of Abingdon
1529:. Manchester University Press. p. 149.
1440:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
1196:
1131:
1129:
436:, and the popular disdain for the policy of
419:
1514:. Vol. 3. Clarendon Press. p. 57.
1340:
1338:
1307:
1094:
301:in 1673; Eleanor's aunt Elizabeth, wife of
293:. She was the elder daughter and coheir of
224:
197:Bridget Wray, 4th Baroness Norreys (mother)
1666:"The English Place-Names of the GalΓ‘pagos"
1649:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
1068:
36:
1407:
1405:
1403:
1351:. Oxford: B.H. Blackwell. pp. 40β43.
1126:
818:
816:
814:
812:
810:
808:
536:, a virulent anti-Catholic activist. The
1344:
1335:
806:
804:
802:
800:
798:
796:
794:
792:
790:
788:
567:
465:suffered from "black jaundice" (perhaps
423:
1608:
1576:
1549:
1236:
646:
382:Richard Bulkeley, 4th Viscount Bulkeley
1912:
1725:
1717:'s Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage
1714:
1663:
1604:
1602:
1600:
1524:
1454:
1400:
1396:. London: Longmans, Green. p. 11.
1393:The Official Baronage of England, v. 1
1295:
1256:
563:
416:in September 1678 and averted a duel.
1702:
1632:
1504:
1479:
1386:
1315:. London: Swift Printers (Sales) Ltd.
1291:
1268:
1077:
967:
950:
933:
908:
883:
855:
785:
213:(16 June 1653 β 22 May 1699), styled
1271:"A List of Deaths for the Year 1753"
1223:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1206:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1189:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1172:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1143:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1111:A History of the County of Wiltshire
1088:Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica
1053:A History of the County of Berkshire
1028:A History of the County of Berkshire
1003:A History of the County of Berkshire
1706:James Bertie, 1st Earl of Abingdon1
1639:. Vol. 4. London. p. 348.
1597:
1361:
1000:, eds. (1924). "Parishes: Wytham".
231:Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey
192:Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey
13:
1703:Lundy, Darryl (15 December 2012),
1366:. The History Press. p. 211.
1269:Urban, Sylvanus, ed. (June 1753).
822:
388:Sir William Courtenay, 2nd Baronet
370:, died a prisoner of war in France
360:(28 February 1676 β 6 August 1710)
211:James Bertie, 1st Earl of Abingdon
14:
1961:
1739:
1728:"Bertie, Hon. Henry (1675β1735)."
1709:, The Peerage, p. 917 Β§ 9164
1633:Hardy, William John, ed. (1903).
1511:Antiquities of the City of Oxford
1419:A History of the County of Oxford
971:A History of the County of Oxford
954:A History of the County of Oxford
937:A History of the County of Oxford
912:A History of the County of Oxford
887:A History of the County of Oxford
862:A History of the County of Oxford
748:James Bertie was the namesake of
432:The imaginary revelations of the
400:in 1674, Norreys replaced him as
1246:. Vol. 3. pp. 473β475.
456:for the court candidates to the
392:Lady Mary Bertie, died unmarried
1940:Lord-lieutenants of Oxfordshire
1850:Custos Rotulorum of Oxfordshire
1657:
1626:
1591:The History of Parliament Trust
1570:
1564:The History of Parliament Trust
1543:
1518:
1498:
1473:
1448:
1380:
1355:
1319:
1301:
1285:
1262:
1230:
1213:
1179:
1158:
1043:
1018:
488:, was his eldest half-brother,
146:City and Liberty of Westminster
1823:Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire
1796:Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire
1587:The House of Commons 1690β1715
1560:The House of Commons 1690β1715
1459:. Peter Lang. pp. 75β76.
1140:; Crittall, Elizabeth (eds.).
986:
961:
944:
927:
902:
877:
849:
770:
402:Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire
1:
1950:Bertie County, North Carolina
1715:Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003),
1696:
1328:Journal of the House of Lords
229:Bertie was the eldest son of
756:, now renamed Isla Pinta by
217:until 1657 and known as the
7:
1726:Thomas, Peter D.G. (1970),
1388:Doyle, James William Edmund
1294:, p. 917 Β§ 9164 cites
572:James Bertie's Coat of Arms
42:The 1st Earl of Abingdon. (
10:
1966:
1789:The Viscount Saye and Sele
1664:McEwen, Alec (July 1988),
1585:; Handley, Stuart (eds.).
1558:; Handley, Stuart (eds.).
1165:Baggs, A P; Crowley, D A;
1104:Baggs, A P; Crowley, D A;
1078:B. W., Greenfield (1874).
720:and Margaret, daughter of
709:. His refusal to sign the
295:Sir Henry Lee, 3rd Baronet
1897:
1889:
1879:
1870:
1865:
1858:
1847:
1839:
1829:
1820:
1812:
1802:
1793:
1785:
1780:
1770:
1759:
1751:
1746:
1730:, in Sedgwick, R. (ed.),
1345:Browning, Andrew (1913).
743:
674:, the sitting member for
604:Ecclesiastical Commission
444:. The King dissolved the
420:Court supporter in Oxford
204:
184:
162:
152:
135:
108:
103:
99:
87:
75:
64:
55:
51:
35:
23:
1670:The Geographical Journal
1577:Handley, Stuart (2002).
1550:Handley, Stuart (2002).
763:
225:Early life and relations
1883:Montagu Venables-Bertie
1480:Clark, J. Kent (2004).
718:Sir Thomas Chamberlayne
599:commission of the peace
492:. The elections to the
1455:Walker, Peter (2010).
1243:The Peerage of England
1080:Howard, Joseph Jackson
724:, on 15 April 1698 at
573:
486:Lord Great Chamberlain
429:
158:Catherine Chamberlayne
1935:Younger sons of earls
1843:The Earl of Clarendon
1816:The Earl of Lichfield
1806:The Earl of Lichfield
1583:Cruickshanks, Eveline
1556:Cruickshanks, Eveline
1525:Childs, John (1980).
632:Invitation to William
571:
530:Court of King's Bench
427:
1734:, Boydell and Brewer
1581:. In Hayton, David;
1554:. In Hayton, David;
1275:Gentleman's Magazine
1203:"Westbury: Manors".
670:, he put up his son
664:Earl of Macclesfield
647:After the Revolution
269:in Oxfordshire, and
178:Lady Bridget Bertie
148:, Kingdom of England
30:The Earl of Abingdon
26:The Right Honourable
1765:south of the Trent
619:Glorious Revolution
564:Break with James II
506:Sir Leoline Jenkins
446:Cavalier Parliament
406:Lord High Treasurer
323:Westbury, Wiltshire
1860:Peerage of England
1610:Cokayne, George E.
1362:Fox, John (2011).
837:on 27 October 2015
591:Duke of Buckingham
574:
510:Southern secretary
430:
398:Lord Saye and Sele
396:Upon the death of
283:Sir Thomas Osborne
130:Kingdom of England
122:Grimsthorpe Castle
60:South of the Trent
1930:Earls of Abingdon
1908:
1907:
1880:Succeeded by
1830:Succeeded by
1803:Succeeded by
1771:Succeeded by
1755:The Lord Lovelace
754:Galapagos Islands
660:Earl of Clarendon
608:Earl of Lichfield
589:, succeeding the
585:of Oxford by the
526:Edward Fitzharris
494:Oxford Parliament
219:5th Baron Norreys
215:Hon. James Bertie
208:
207:
175:Hon. Henry Bertie
171:Hon. James Bertie
82:The Lord Lovelace
1957:
1890:Preceded by
1873:Earl of Abingdon
1840:Preceded by
1833:The Lord Wharton
1813:Preceded by
1786:Preceded by
1781:Honorary titles
1774:The Lord Wharton
1752:Preceded by
1744:
1743:
1735:
1720:
1710:
1690:
1688:
1661:
1655:
1654:
1648:
1640:
1630:
1624:
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830:. Archived from
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655:custos rotulorum
624:Littleton Panell
615:Order in Council
595:lord lieutenants
579:Magdalen College
551:Earl of Abingdon
514:Duke of Monmouth
442:Lord Shaftesbury
180:Lady Anne Bertie
142:
118:
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104:Personal details
94:The Lord Wharton
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1110:
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1002:
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929:
917:. Retrieved
911:
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892:. Retrieved
886:
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867:. Retrieved
861:
851:
839:. Retrieved
832:the original
778:
772:
747:
734:Robert Gould
715:
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672:Lord Norreys
653:
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583:high steward
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499:Lord Halifax
490:Lord Lindsey
471:
431:
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366:
351:Henry Bertie
344:James Bertie
331:
288:
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141:(1699-05-22)
126:Lincolnshire
119:16 June 1653
89:Succeeded by
66:
18:
1925:1699 deaths
1920:1653 births
1552:"Berkshire"
1309:J.C. Sainty
1296:Mosley 2003
1257:Thomas 1970
736:, wrote an
711:Association
695:River Trent
680:Oxfordshire
587:corporation
547:Aaron Smith
454:Oxfordshire
434:Popish Plot
377:(1678β1747)
353:(1675β1735)
346:(1674β1735)
339:(1673β1743)
327:Bradenstoke
139:22 May 1699
77:Preceded by
1914:Categories
1877:1682β1699
1854:1689β1697
1827:1689β1697
1800:1674β1687
1768:1693β1697
1711:endnotes:
1697:References
1536:0719006880
1491:0838639976
1426:31 January
1292:Lundy 2012
1150:31 January
1118:6 February
1060:31 January
1035:31 January
1010:31 January
978:31 January
919:31 January
894:31 January
869:31 January
841:26 January
538:grand jury
438:Charles II
373:Rev. Hon.
255:Dorchester
251:Chesterton
247:Wendlebury
115:1653-06-16
1645:cite book
1436:cite book
1138:Pugh, R B
678:, up for
676:Berkshire
478:John Fell
319:Wiltshire
291:Adderbury
153:Spouse(s)
71:1693β1697
67:In office
1612:(1910).
1508:(1899).
1416:(eds.).
1390:(1886).
1311:(1979).
1240:(1768).
726:Stanwell
279:Frilsham
194:(father)
163:Children
1616:(ed.).
1082:(ed.).
758:Ecuador
752:in the
738:eclogue
730:Montagu
699:Charles
637:William
263:Beckley
185:Parents
1686:633849
1684:
1533:
1488:
1463:
1370:
1281:: 296.
744:Legacy
641:Exeter
508:, the
474:Oxford
450:Oxford
410:Tories
315:Patney
313:, and
311:Marden
275:Cumnor
271:Wytham
267:Horton
243:Albury
239:Rycote
1682:JSTOR
835:(PDF)
828:(PDF)
764:Notes
707:Junto
543:Henry
356:Hon.
349:Hon.
342:Hon.
259:Thame
1651:link
1531:ISBN
1486:ISBN
1461:ISBN
1442:link
1428:2016
1368:ISBN
1152:2016
1120:2016
1062:2016
1037:2016
1012:2016
980:2016
921:2016
896:2016
871:2016
843:2016
452:and
367:Ruby
365:HMS
277:and
265:and
136:Died
109:Born
1674:doi
553:by
237:of
1916::
1680:,
1668:,
1647:}}
1643:{{
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1438:}}
1434:{{
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1337:^
1279:23
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1273:.
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701:.
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557:.
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249:,
245:,
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1689:.
1676::
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1593:.
1566:.
1539:.
1494:.
1469:.
1444:)
1430:.
1376:.
1259:.
1154:.
1122:.
1064:.
1039:.
1014:.
982:.
923:.
898:.
873:.
845:.
117:)
113:(
46:)
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