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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
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ESSEX, ROBERT DEVEREUX, 2ND2 EARL OF (1566-1601) , son of the 1st Devereux earl
Hereford
shire, on the 19th of November 1566. He entered the university of Cambridge and graduated in 1581. In 1585 he accompaniedhis stepfather, the earl
and greatly distinguished himself at the battle of Zutphen. He now took his place at court, where so handsome a youth soon found favour with Queen Elizabeth, and in consequence was on bad terms with Raleigh. In 1587 he was appointed master of the horse, and in the following year was made general of the horse and installed knight of the Garter. On the death of Leicester he succeeded him as chief
position which injuriously affected his whole subsequent life, and ultimately resulted in his ruin. While Elizabeth was approach- ing the mature age of sixty, Essex was scarcely twenty-one. Though well aware of the advantages of his position, and some- what vain of the queen's favour, his constant attendance on her ' Diary and Corresp. (185o), ii. 141, 178. 2 i.e. in the Devereux line. at court was irksome to him beyond all endurance; and when he could not make his escape to the scenes of foreign adventure after which he longed, he varied the monotony of his life at court by intrigues with the maids of honour, He fought a duel with Sir Charles Blount, a rival favourite of the queen, in which the earl was disarmed and slightly wounded in the thigh. In 1589, without the queen's consent, he joined the expedition of Drake and Sir John Norris against Spain, but in June he was compelled to obey a letter enjoining him at his " uttermost peril " to return immediately. In 1590 Essex married the widow of Sir Philip Sidney, but in dread of the queen's anger he kept the marriage secret as long as possible. When it was necessary to avow it, her rage at first knew no bounds, but as the earl did " use it with good temper," and " for her majesty's better satisfaction was pleased that my lady should live retired in her mother's house," he soon came to be " in very good favour." In 1591 he was appointed to the command of a force auxiliary
justification
interest
Wanstead
In 1599, while Ulster was in rebellion under the earl of Tyrone, the office of lieutenant and governor-general of Ireland was conferred on Essex, and a large force out at his command., His campaign was an unsuccessful one, and by acting in various ways in opposition to the commands of the queen and the council, agreeing with Tyrone on a truce in September, and suddenly leaving the post of duty with the object of privately vindicating himself before the queen, he laid himself open to charges more serious than that of mere incompetency. For these misdemeanours he was brought in June 1600 before a specially constituted court, deprived of all his high offices, and ordered to live a prisoner in his own house during the queen's pleasure. Chiefly through the intercession of Bacon his liberty was shortly afterwards restored to him, but he was ordered not to return to court. For some time he hoped for an improvement in his prospects, but when he was refused the renewal of his patent for sweet wines, hope was succeeded by despair, and half maddened by wounded vanity, he made an attempt (Feb. 7, 16or) to incite a revolution in his behalf, by parading the streets of London with 300 retainers, and shouting, " For the queen! a plot is laid for my life!" These proceedings awakened, however, scarcely any other feelings than mild perplexity and wonder; and finding that hope of assistance from the citizens was vain, he returned to Essex House, where after defending himself for a short time he surrendered. After a trialin which Bacon, who prosecuted, delivered a speech against his quondam friend and benefactor, the bitterness of which was quite unnecessary to secure a conviction entailing at least very severe punishmenthe was condemned to death, and notwithstanding many alterations in Elizabeth's mood, the sentence was carried out on the 25th of February 1601. Essex was in person tall and well proportioned, with a countenance which, though not strictly handsome, possessed, on account of its bold, cheerful and amiable expression, a wonderful power of fascination . He was a patron of literature, and himself a poet. His carriage was not very graceful, but his manners are said to have been " courtly, grave and exceedingly comely." He was brave, chivalrous, impulsive, imperious sometimes with his equals, but generous to all his dependants and incapable of secret malice; and these virtues, which were innate and which remained with him to the last, must be regarded as some-what counterbalancing, in our estimation of him, the follies and vices created by temptations which were exceptionally strong.See Hon. W. B. Devereux, Lives of the Earls of Essex (1853); and Bacon and Essex, by E. A. Abbott (1877). Also the article BACON, FRANCIS, and authorities there. End of Article: ESSEX, ROBERT DEVEREUX, 2ND2 EARL OF (1566-1601) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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