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Maurice Berkeley, 3rd Viscount Fitzhardinge PC (Ire) FRS (1628 – 13 June 1690), known as Sir Maurice Berkeley, Bt from 1660 to 1668, was an English politician, of the Bruton branch of the Berkeley family.
Sir Maurice Berkeley | |
---|---|
Lord Lieutenant of Somerset | |
In office 1689–1690 | |
Custos Rotulorum of Somerset | |
In office 1688–1690 | |
Member of Parliament for Bath | |
In office 1681–1690 | |
Custos Rotulorum of Somerset | |
In office 1675–1688 | |
Member of Parliament for Wells | |
In office 1661–1679 | |
Personal details | |
Born | 1628 |
Died | 13 June 1690 (aged 61–62) |
Spouse(s) | Anne Lee (m. 1649) Mary Rutley |
Children | 4 |
Parent |
|
Relatives | Berkeley family, Bruton branch John Berkeley (uncle) |
Military career | |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Unit | Irish Life Guards |
Early life
editMaurice was the eldest son of Sir Charles Berkeley and his wife Elizabeth Killigrew, and was baptized on 15 June 1628.[1] His father was the head of the branch of the Berkeley family founded by Maurice Berkeley, which was seated at Bruton, Somerset.
Unlike his relatives, he took no part in the English Civil War. On 1 January 1649, he married Anne Lee, the daughter of Sir Henry Lee, 1st Baronet, by whom he had two daughters. He also had two natural sons by Mary Rutley. Anne was the stepdaughter of Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick, the Parliamentary Lord High Admiral.
Career
editBerkeley held local office under the Protectorate: he was a commissioner of assessment for Somerset in 1657, and was again appointed to the commission in January 1660. In March he was appointed to the militia commission and the commission of the peace for Somerset.[1]
Appointed a captain of militia horse in April 1660, he obtained a pass to travel overseas and brought to the court of Charles II the news of Monck's declaration in favour of restoration. He was rewarded with a baronetcy on 2 July 1660, and was appointed to the household the Duke of Gloucester in May; however, Gloucester died of smallpox in September and his appointment lapsed. In June, he was appointed an extraordinary gentleman of the privy chamber to the King. Berkeley also briefly enjoyed two revenue posts as treasurer and receiver of the Dunkirk garrison from December 1660 to 1661, and joint agent for wine licenses from 1661 to 1662. Locally, he was appointed to the commission for oyer and terminer on the Western circuit in July and for sewers in Somerset in December.[1]
In the 1661 election, he was returned as a Member of Parliament for Wells. He was moderately active in the Cavalier Parliament, serving on 72 committees, but was much abroad in Ireland. There he served as vice-president of Connaught from 1662 to 1666: his uncle, John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton, was Lord President of Connaught, although Maurice was more closely attached in politics to the Duke of Ormonde. Berkeley was also appointed to the Privy Council of Ireland in 1663 and sat in the Parliament of Ireland from 1665 to 1666. He was a commissioner of excise accounts in that country from 1666 to 1667.[1]
In England, he was appointed to the commission on loyal and indigent officers in Bristol in 1662 and was made a deputy lieutenant of Somerset. From 1673 to 1679, he was a commissioner of assessment for Wells, and from 1667 to some time before 1679, was a colonel of militia foot in Somerset. In 1667, Berkeley was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was appointed Custos Rotulorum of Somerset in 1675.[1]
In 1668, he became a gentleman of the privy chamber in ordinary, and held the office until the death of Charles II in 1685. He was captain of an independent troop of cavalry in 1667 and in 1685, and of a troop of Irish Life Guards from 1676 to 1685. He succeeded his father as Viscount Fitzhardinge, an Irish peerage originally created for his younger brother, in 1668.[citation needed]
In the spring 1679 election, Berkeley was defeated in Somerset; he was again defeated in the October election while standing for Bath. He was removed from the Somerset commission of assessment in 1680.[citation needed]
He was returned for Bath in the 1681 election and continued to represent it until his death. Made a freeman of Bath in 1679, he was chosen high steward of the town in 1685.[citation needed]
He was removed as a deputy lieutenant of Somerset in 1687, from the Somerset commission of the peace in February 1688, and as high steward of Bath in August 1688. In October 1688 he was re-appointed a JP in Somerset and to the high stewardship. After the Glorious Revolution, he declined to vote on the transfer of the throne to William and Mary. He was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Somerset in 1689 and returned to the commission for assessment of the county; in 1690, he was also appointed to the commission for assessment for Bath. He died on 13 June 1690 and was succeeded by his younger brother John in his Irish peerage, while his English baronetcy became extinct.[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Cassidy, Irene (1983). "BERKELEY, Sir Maurice, 1st Bt. (1628-90), of Bruton, Som. and Pall Mall, Westminster.". In Henning, B. D. (ed.). The House of Commons 1660–1690. The History of Parliament Trust.