Herbert and Lou Henry with Lou's sister and parents on their wedding day. 154, iii. The King and Queen stayed for two nights with Henry and Elizabeth at Wilton House in 1778. He remained in favour under Elizabeth, who made him ' custos rotulorum ' of Glamorgan (1567) and lord steward of her household (1568). the movie shows the mad King harassing her, but she (and the Queen) remaining loyal to him. MSS. He held regular court, reforming many abuses, instilling into the Welsh gentry a sense of public duty, instituting a great drive against recusants and urging strongly the defence of Milford Haven against Spanish invasion (1595). In the court intrigues of Elizabeth's reign Pembroke was regarded as a partisan of Leicester, and was certainly in very intimate relations with him (cf. Ox., i, 216, 418). She refused to allow his illegitimate son from that affair to keep the surname Herbert, and she and Henry ended up living in separate quarters at Wilton (he downstairs, she upstairs). But ill-health set in from 1590 and became almost chronic from 1595, and his frequent absences led to intrigues within the Council against his authority, a return of many abuses, and a slackening of control over local administration. The union was never consummated, and in 1554 Queen Mary's influence led the bridegroom's father to consent to a dissolution of the marriage. In 1557 he took part in a tournament held before the queen, and subsequently accompanied his father to the siege of St. Quentin. 416).
At nineteen she married Henry Herbert, 10th Earl of Pembroke. HERBERT, HENRY, second Earl of Pembroke (1534?–1601), elder son of William Herbert, first earl (1501?–1570) [q. v.], by his first wife, Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Parr, and sister of Queen Catherine Parr, was educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge, under Whitgift, and is also said to have studied for a time at Douav. Wynn Papers, 809). "Husbands are dreadfull and powerful Animals," wrote the long-suffering Elizabeth after reconciling with her husband in 1762. He was also given the lands of Wilton monastery, Wiltshire, served in the Boulogne campaign of 1544 and in the defence of the Isle of Wight in 1545, and was given the right to keep thirty liveried retainers. Until his elevation to the peerage he sat for Glamorgan in James's first parliament. 176,353 sq.) HENRY HERBERT, 2nd earl Pembroke (c. 1534 - 1601) Eldest son of the 1st earl, was educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge. Windsor sold the lordships of Caerleon, Usk and Trelleck (1722); the Glamorgan lands were conveyed (1766) through his granddaughter Charlotte Jane to her husband John Stuart (heir of George III's prime minister, the earl of Bute), who was created baron Cardiff of Cardiff castle (20 May 1776), succeeded to the earldom in 1792 and became earl of Windsor and marquis of Bute in 1796; hence the territorial, political and industrial influence in the area of succeeding marquises (see the article Bute). Univ. He entered into his father's plans for lady Jane Grey, and was married (25 May 1553) to her sister Catherine, but divorced her (1554) after the plot failed, was made a K.B. Herbert Jr., and Herbert Hoover at railway station in Cairo, Egypt. 119; cf. After the Restoration he was custos rotulorum for Glamorgan and Pembrokeshire and a member of the Committee for Trade and Navigation, and as hereditary Visitor of Jesus College, Oxford, was called on (but declined) to pronounce on the disputed Fellowship of Michael Roberts (died 1679) (see Cal. Com., Cecil, xvi, 190-1), thus wielding considerable electoral influence (especially in the shires and boroughs of Monmouth, Glamorgan, Radnor, and Montgomery) — whereby he was able to organize a Welsh group of supporters for his Protestant parliamentary, and anti- Buckingham policy at Westminster, with Sir William Herbert (later 1st baron Powys) as his recognized mouthpiece in the Commons. Allan, Herbert, Lou and Herbert Jr. about to board the S.S. Ryndam for the United States. She died childless in 1575. In right of his mother he succeeded, as Lord Parre and Ros of Kendal, Fitzhugh, Marmion, and Quentin, on 1 Aug. 1571. Queen Elizabeth was much attached to her, and during her fatal illness twice visited her at Baynard's Castle (cf. He further increased his estates by purchasing the Llantarnam monastic lands (many of which he leased to William Morgan, founder of the Morgan family of Llantarnam) and the lordship of Neath (1561); but he lost favour through his support of the proposed marriage of the duke of Norfolk to Mary, Queen of Scots, (1559). Handsome woman, what? Henry, Elizabeth and George: Letters and Diaries of Henry, 10th Earl of Pembroke and his Circle (1734–80), 16th Earl, 1939, repub as: The Pembroke Papers vol. II (1780–94), 16th Earl, 1950, [EUL] 9(42073) Pem. He was buried in Salisbury Cathedral.
235). After 1551, when his father became Earl of Pembroke, he was known as Lord Herbert.
A portrait of Pembroke is in Holland's ‘Herωologia.’ Fifteen letters from Pembroke to Sir Edward Stradling appear in the ‘Stradling Correspondence.’, Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, https://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Dictionary_of_National_Biography,_1885-1900/Herbert,_Henry_(1534%3F-1601)&oldid=10572624, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. As an executor of Henry VIII's will, he became a governor to the young king Edward VI, chief gentleman of his privy chamber, one of his twelve privy councillors (January 1547), Master of his Horse (1548-52), and a Knight of the Garter (December 1548). His heir was M.P. (1553) and a member of the suite of king Philip (after whom he named his second son), and served with his father in … Blood of Blenheim. ‘Portrait of the Artist's Wife’ was created by Henry Herbert La Thangue in Impressionism style. HERBERT family, 179).
Stuff of generals. He remained in favour under Charles I, who visited him annually at Wilton, gave him his brother's offices of lord chamberlain (3 August 1626) and vice-admiral of South Wales (23 April 1631), and restored to him in 1633 the family stewardships in Radnorshire which had been temporarily alienated to the 1st lord Powis (Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1629-31, 530; 1631-3, 94), and decorated him with the Garter (23 April 1638); but his dealings with the Scots in the Bishops' Wars (on which he accompanied the king) and his conduct in the Long Parliament lost him his chamberlainship (17 April 1641), after which he became more deeply committed to the opposition than he ever meant, failing after repeated efforts to bring about a negotiated settlement during the war and ending up on the first Commonwealth Council of State (14 February 1649).
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