Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke

English nobleman (1621–1669) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke, 2nd Earl of Montgomery (1621 – 11 December 1669), was an English nobleman and politician.

Born1621 (1621)
Died11 December 1669(1669-12-11) (aged 47–48)
Spouses
  • Penelope Naunton
  • Catherine Villiers
Quick facts The Right HonourableThe Earl of Pembroke, Born ...
The Earl of Pembroke
Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke
Born1621 (1621)
Died11 December 1669(1669-12-11) (aged 47–48)
Title5th Earl of Pembroke
Spouses
  • Penelope Naunton
  • Catherine Villiers
Children4 (including William, 6th Earl, Philip, 7th Earl, and Thomas, 8th Earl)
Parent(s)Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke
Susan de Vere
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Life

He was the second son of Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke, and his first wife Susan de Vere.[1] In February 1632 he appeared with his elder brother Charles in the masque Tempe Restored at Whitehall Palace.[2] Two months later the two boys matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford.[3] In the summer of 1635 they embarked on a Continental tour. Charles contracted smallpox and died in Florence in early January 1636. As a result of his death Philip became the heir to their father's titles.[4]

Portrait of Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke, his wife Susan de Vere and his Family, by Anthony van Dyck.

In 1639 he became a captain in the Household Volunteer Regiment of Horse Guards.[5] He was MP for Wiltshire in the Short Parliament of 1640. In the Long Parliament he sat initially for Glamorgan 1640–1649 and then Berkshire.[6] Philip succeeded his father as earl in 1650[1] and served as a Councillor of State 1651-2.[6][5]

At the coronation of Charles II he was Bearer of the Golden Spurs and Lord Cupbearer.[5]

After the Restoration he was active in the Council for Trade, Fishery Corporation and the Royal Africa Company.[6] He had been raised in a family sympathetic to Puritanism[7] and himself became a Quaker[8] According to Pepys, he had an idiosyncratic interpretation of the doctrine of Original Sin.[6]

He died 11 December 1669 and was buried with no memorial in Salisbury cathedral.[9][10]

Family

In 1639 he married Penelope Naunton (1620–1647),[9] widow of Paul Bayning, 2nd Viscount Bayning, and daughter of Sir Robert Naunton by his second wife, Penelope Perrot, widow of the astronomer Sir William Lower, and daughter of Sir Thomas Perrot and Dorothy Devereux.[11][12][13]

In 1649, after the death of his first wife, he married Catherine Villiers (d. 1678),[10] daughter of Sir William Villiers, 1st Baronet and his 3rd wife Rebecca, daughter of Robert Roper of Heanor, Derbyshire.[9]

On her death Catherine was also buried at Salisbury.[10]

Notes

References

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