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Earl of Leicester
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Key Information
Earl of Leicester is a title that has been created seven times. The first title was granted during the 12th century in the Peerage of England. The current title is in the Peerage of the United Kingdom and was created in 1837.
History
[edit]Early creations
[edit]The title was first created for Robert de Beaumont (also spelt de Bellomont), but he nearly always used his French title of Count of Meulan. Three generations of his descendants, all also named Robert, called themselves Earls of Leicester. The Beaumont male line ended with the death of the 4th Earl. His property was split between his two sisters, with Simon IV de Montfort, the son of the eldest sister, acquiring Leicester and the rights to the earldom. (The husband of the younger daughter, Saer de Quincy, was created Earl of Winchester.) However, Simon IV de Montfort was never formally recognized as earl, due to the antipathy between France and England at that time. His second son, Simon V de Montfort, did succeed in taking possession of the earldom and its associated properties. He is the Simon de Montfort who became so prominent during the reign of Henry III. He was killed at the Battle of Evesham in 1265, and his lands and titles were forfeited.
In 1267 the title was created a second time and granted to the king's youngest son, Edmund Crouchback. In 1276 he also became Earl of Lancaster, and the titles became united. Crouchback's son Thomas lost the earldom when he was executed for treason in 1322, but a few years later, it was restored to his younger brother Henry. Henry's son Henry of Grosmont left only two daughters, and his estate was divided between them, the eldest daughter Matilda receiving the earldom, which was held by her husband William V of Holland. (The two passages of the earldom via females illustrate the medieval practice by which such inheritance was allowed in the absence of male heirs.) Matilda, however, soon died, and the title passed to John of Gaunt, husband of her younger sister, Blanche, who was later created Duke of Lancaster. Both the dukedom and the earldom were inherited by John of Gaunt's son, Henry Bolingbroke, and both titles ceased to exist when Henry usurped the throne, as the titles "merged into the crown". (The peers are vassals to the Sovereign, and no one can be a vassal to himself.) The properties associated with the earldom became part of what was later called the Duchy of Lancaster.
In 1564 the earldom was again created for Queen Elizabeth I's favourite, Robert Dudley. Since Dudley died without heirs, the title became extinct at his death. The title was again created in 1618 for Robert Sidney (Baron Sydney), his nephew. Prior to being granted the earldom, Robert Sidney was granted the subsidiary title of Viscount Lisle on 4 May 1605. The Sidneys retained the titles until the death of the seventh Earl in 1743, when the titles again became extinct. The title of earl was then recreated for Thomas Coke (pronounced "Cook"[2]), but it became extinct when he, too, died without heirs.
1784 creation
[edit]The title was again bestowed upon George Townshend, 17th Baron Ferrers of Chartley and 8th Baron Compton, eldest son and heir apparent of George Townshend, 4th Viscount Townshend, later the first Marquess Townshend. Townshend was a female-line great-great-great-grandson of Lady Lucy Sydney, daughter of the second Earl of the 1618 creation. The earldom became extinct yet again upon the death of his son, the third Marquess and second Earl, in 1855 (the marquessate was passed on to a cousin and is extant).
1744 and 1837 creations
[edit]The Coke family is descended from the noted judge and politician Sir Edward Coke, Lord Chief Justice from 1613 to 1616. Through his son Henry Coke, his great-great-great-grandson Thomas Coke was a landowner, politician and patron of arts. In 1728 he was raised to the Peerage of Great Britain as Baron Lovel, of Minster Lovel in the County of Oxford, and in 1744 he was created Viscount Coke, of Holkham in the County of Norfolk, and Earl of Leicester, also in the Peerage of Great Britain. Lord Leicester began the construction of Holkham Hall in Norfolk. He married Lady Margaret Tufton, 19th Baroness de Clifford (1700—1775) (see the Baron de Clifford for earlier history of this title). Their only child Edward Coke, Viscount Coke, predeceased both his parents, without issue. Consequently, Lord Leicester's titles became extinct on his death in 1759 while the barony of de Clifford fell into abeyance on Lady de Clifford's death in 1775.
The Coke estates were passed on to the late Earl's nephew Wenman Coke. Born Wenman Roberts, he was the son of Philip Roberts and Anne, sister of Lord Leicester, and assumed the surname of Coke in lieu of Roberts. His son Thomas Coke was a politician and noted agriculturalist. Known as "Coke of Norfolk", he sat as a Member of Parliament for many years but is best remembered for his interest in agricultural improvements and is seen as one of the instigators of the British Agricultural Revolution. In 1837 the titles held by his great-uncle were revived when Coke was raised to the Peerage of the United Kingdom as Viscount Coke and Earl of Leicester, of Holkham in the County of Norfolk. This was despite the fact that the 1784 creation of the earldom held by the Townshend family was then still extant (then "usurped" by John Dunn-Gardner), hence the territorial designation "of Holkham". Lord Leicester was succeeded by his eldest son from his second marriage, the second Earl. He served as Lord-Lieutenant of Norfolk for sixty years and was made a Knight of the Garter in 1873.
On his death in 1909 the titles passed to his eldest son, the third Earl. He was a colonel in the 2nd Battalion of the Scots Guards and also served as Lord-Lieutenant of Norfolk. He was succeeded by his eldest son, the fourth Earl in 1944. He was also Lord-Lieutenant of Norfolk. His younger son, David Arthur Coke was a friend of the author Roald Dahl but was killed in action during the second world war in December 1941. When he (fourth Earl) died the titles passed to his eldest son, the fifth Earl, in 1949. He was an Extra Equerry to both George VI and Elizabeth II. He died without male issue and was succeeded by his first cousin, the sixth Earl in 1976. He was the son of the Hon. Arthur George Coke, second son of the third Earl. Upon his death in 1994, his son became the 7th Earl of Leicester. As of 2015[update] the titles are held by his son Thomas Edward Coke, the eighth Earl, who succeeded in that year.
The family seat is Holkham Hall, near Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk. The traditional burial place of the Coke family is a plot situated on the south side of the churchyard of the Holkham parish church of St Withburga. A family mausoleum was built in the same churchyard in the 1870s,[3] but was later abandoned. Many members of the Coke family during the post-medieval period were also buried in St. Mary's Church, Tittleshall.
Earl of Leicester, first creation (1107)
[edit]
- Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester (died 1118)
- Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester (1104–1168)
- Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester (died 1190)
- Robert de Beaumont, 4th Earl of Leicester (died 1204) (alias Robert FitzPernel)
- Amice, Countess of Leicester (died 1215)
- Simon de Montfort, 5th Earl of Leicester (c. 1170–1218, confirmed 1207)
- Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester (1208–1265, forfeit 1265)
Earl of Leicester, second creation (1267)
[edit]- Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Leicester and Lancaster (1245–1296)
- Thomas, 2nd Earl of Leicester and Lancaster (c. 1280–1322, forfeit 1322)
- Henry, 3rd Earl of Leicester and Lancaster (c. 1281–1345) (restored as Earl of Leicester in 1324 and as Earl of Lancaster in 1327)
- Henry of Grosmont, Duke of Lancaster, 4th Earl of Leicester (c. 1310 – 1361)
- William V of Holland, Earl of Leicester (1330–1389) 1361–1362 Earl of Leicester jure uxoris.
- John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Leicester (1340–1399), in 1362 at first Earl of Leicester jure uxoris.
- Henry Bolingbroke, Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Leicester (1367–1413, became king in 1399)
Earl of Leicester, third creation (1564)
[edit]- Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester (1532–1588)
Earl of Leicester, fourth creation (1618)
[edit]
- Robert Sidney, 1st Earl of Leicester (1563–1626)
- Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester (1595–1677)
- Philip Sidney, 3rd Earl of Leicester (1619–1698)
- Robert Sidney, 4th Earl of Leicester (1649–1702)
- Philip Sidney, 5th Earl of Leicester (1676–1705)
- John Sidney, 6th Earl of Leicester (1680–1737)
- Jocelyn Sidney, 7th Earl of Leicester (1682–1743)
Earl of Leicester, fifth creation (1744)
[edit]- Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester (1697–1759)
Earl of Leicester, sixth creation (1784)
[edit]Earl of Leicester, seventh creation (1837)
[edit]
- Thomas William Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester (1754–1842)
- Thomas William Coke, 2nd Earl of Leicester (1822–1909)
- Thomas William Coke, 3rd Earl of Leicester (1848–1941)
- Thomas William Coke, 4th Earl of Leicester (1880–1949)
- Thomas William Edward Coke, 5th Earl of Leicester (1908–1976)
- Anthony Louis Lovel Coke, 6th Earl of Leicester (1909–1994)
- Edward Douglas Coke, 7th Earl of Leicester (1936–2015)
- Thomas Edward Coke, 8th Earl of Leicester (born 1965)
The heir apparent is the 8th Earl's son, Edward Horatio Coke, Viscount Coke (born 2003).
Family trees
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Family tree, 1744 and 1837 creations
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See also
[edit]- Mountsorrel, a village close to Leicester and home to the Earl of Leicester in 1151.
- Earl of Romney
- Marquess Townshend
- Baron de Clifford
- Coke baronets, a junior branch of the Coke family
References
[edit]- Citations
- ^ Crest: On a Chapeau Azure, turned up Ermine, an Ostrich Argent, holding in the beak a Horseshoe Or. Supporters: Dexter: an Ostrich Argent, gorged with a Ducal Coronet per pale Gules and Azure, line reflexed over the back Argent. Sinister: an Ostrich Argent, gorged with a Ducal Coronet per pale Azure and Gules, line reflexed over the back Argent.
- ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1967, p. 669.
- ^ "Coke Mausoleum, Holkham". Archived from the original on 28 February 2020. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
- ^ Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1904). The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopaedia of Armory. T.C. & E.C. Jack. p. 195. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
- Sources
- Hesilrige, Arthur G. M. (1921). Debrett's Peerage and Titles of courtesy. London, UK: Dean & Son. p. 550.
- Levi Fox, "The Honor and Earldom of Leicester: Origin and Descent, 1066-1399", English Historical Review, 54 (1939), 385-402.
- Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (1990 edition). New York: St Martin's Press, 1990.
- Leigh Rayment's Peerage Pages [self-published source] [better source needed]
External links
[edit]- Coke family tree
- Brief History of Holkham House with some family references
Earl of Leicester
View on GrokipediaOverview of the Title
Origins and Peerage Status
The Earldom of Leicester originated as a title in the Peerage of England, with its first creation traditionally dated to circa 1107 when King Henry I granted it to Robert de Beaumont, a Norman noble who had supported the monarch's accession. De Beaumont, born around 1049 and a companion of William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, already held the Honour of Leicester—a major feudal barony encompassing over 100 knight's fees primarily in Leicestershire—through inheritance and royal favor under William II. The earldom formalized his comital jurisdiction over these lands, though historical records indicate he wielded substantial authority in the region before 1107, leading some scholars to question the precise timing of the creation.[12] As an English peerage, the title conferred the rank of earl, entitling the holder to hereditary succession in the male line, summons to parliamentary assemblies from the 13th century onward, and feudal rights including custody of key castles like those at Leicester and Mountsorrel, as well as shrieval duties. The Honour of Leicester itself traced its establishment to post-Conquest land reallocations, with de Beaumont receiving core manors such as those at Barrow and Hinckley by the Domesday survey of 1086, underscoring the earldom's roots in Norman consolidation of power over Anglo-Saxon territories. This peerage status positioned the Earl among England's premier magnates, with economic influence derived from demesne revenues and judicial perquisites estimated to support dozens of knights annually.[12][13]Heraldry, Insignia, and Associated Lands
The insignia of the Earl of Leicester conforms to the standard design for British earldoms, featuring a coronet with eight strawberry leaves alternating with eight silver balls mounted on the rim of a cap of maintenance.[14] This coronet, symbolizing the rank, has been used consistently across creations of the title since the formalization of peerage heraldry in the late medieval period. Heraldry for the earldom varied by creation, typically incorporating the arms of the grantee family, often quartered with ancestral or inherited bearings to reflect lineage and claims to the honour. The Beaumont family's arms, used in the first creation (1107), were gules, a cinquefoil ermine, adopted around 1200 during the emergence of hereditary armorials.[15] For the Montfort creation (1267), Simon de Montfort employed argent, a lion rampant gules queue forchée (forked tail), a paternal Montfort-l'Amaury bearing that distinguished his line and appeared in contemporary seals and effigies.[16][17] Robert Dudley, in the third creation (1564), quartered the Dudley arms or, a lion rampant double-queued azure with Beaumont and other inherited quarterings, including the bear and ragged staff crest from his Warwick claims; his stall plate at St. George's Chapel records this complex achievement encircled by the Garter.[18] The Sidney fourth creation (1618) featured the family arms or, a pheon azure, quartered extensively in their Garter stall plate to include maternal Dudley and other lines.[19] Later Coke creations (1744 and 1784) used argent, on a chief gules three crescents ermine, with an ostrich crest holding a horseshoe, reflecting Norfolk estate symbolism; supporters included ostriches gorged with ducal coronets.[20][21] Associated lands centered on the Honour of Leicester, a feudal barony encompassing Leicester Castle—granted in 1107 with the title—and manors across Leicestershire, Warwickshire, and Rutland, generating revenues from rents, courts, and demesne farms documented in medieval inquisitions post mortem.[22] Specific estates varied: Dudleys controlled Kenilworth Castle as a Leicester appurtenance; Sidneys held Penshurst Place in Kent; while Cokes developed Holkham Hall in Norfolk as their principal seat from 1734, expanding agricultural lands to over 25,000 acres by the 19th century through enclosure and model farming.[5]Current Holder and Succession
The current holder of the title is Thomas Edward Coke, 8th Earl of Leicester (born 6 July 1965), who succeeded his father, Edward Douglas Coke, 7th Earl of Leicester, following the latter's death on 25 April 2015.[23][24] The 8th Earl, previously known by the courtesy title Viscount Coke, resides at Holkham Hall in Norfolk, the family seat associated with the title since its seventh creation.[25] The earldom descends according to the terms of its 1837 patent, which limits succession to the heirs male of the body of the 1st Earl by primogeniture.[4] The heir apparent is the 8th Earl's eldest son, Edward Coke, Viscount Coke.[24] Should the direct male line fail, the title would become extinct, as prior creations in the Coke family (fifth and sixth) did upon the death of their respective last holders without surviving male heirs.[4]Medieval Creations
First Creation (1107): Beaumont Family
The Earldom of Leicester was first created in 1107 by King Henry I of England for Robert de Beaumont, a Norman noble born circa 1049 and son of Roger de Beaumont, lord of Beaumont-le-Roger and Pont-Audemer in Normandy.[13] Robert had accompanied William the Conqueror to England in 1066, receiving extensive estates in central England, including the honor of Leicester, which formed the basis of the earldom. The creation rewarded his loyalty to Henry amid the succession struggles following William II's death in 1100, solidifying Beaumont's influence in the Anglo-Norman realm; Robert also held the County of Meulan in France.[26] He died on 5 June 1118 at Durham, New England.[27] The title passed to Robert's younger son, Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester (c. 1104–1168), nicknamed "le Bossu" for his hunchback, while the elder son Waleran inherited Meulan and later became Earl of Worcester.[28] The 2nd Earl played a pivotal role in English governance, serving as one of the chief justiciars under Henry II from 1155 until his death on 5 April 1168; he accompanied the king on campaigns in France and helped suppress the 1141 anarchy under Stephen.[29] His tenure emphasized the earldom's administrative prestige, with Leicester Castle as a key stronghold. Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester (c. 1121–1190), known as "Blanchmains" for his white hands, succeeded in 1168; he joined Henry the Young King's rebellion against Henry II in 1173, leading to his capture at Fornham and forfeiture of lands until 1177.[30] Restored, he participated in the Third Crusade, departing in December 1190 and dying en route home that year, likely at Marseilles.[31] The 4th Earl, another Robert de Beaumont (d. 1204), his son, held the title amid Angevin decline; childless and without legitimate male heirs, he died circa 21 October 1204, causing the earldom to escheat to the crown under King John as the direct Beaumont male line failed. This marked the end of the first creation after nearly a century, with the family's Norman-English dual lordships underscoring feudal complexities of the period.[32]| Earl | Name | Lifespan | Key Events |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Robert de Beaumont | c. 1049–1118 | Creation in 1107; dual count-earl status.[13] |
| 2nd | Robert de Beaumont (le Bossu) | c. 1104–1168 | Justiciar 1155–1168.[28] |
| 3rd | Robert de Beaumont (Blanchmains) | c. 1121–1190 | Rebelled 1173; Third Crusade.[30] |
| 4th | Robert de Beaumont | d. 1204 | Last holder; no male heirs. |
Second Creation (1267): Montfort Family
The Earldom of Leicester passed to the Montfort family through inheritance rather than a new creation, when Simon de Montfort (c. 1170–1218), son of Simon III de Montfort and Amice de Beaumont, succeeded as the fifth earl following the death without male issue of his maternal uncle, Robert de Beaumont, fourth earl, in 1204. King John formally recognized Simon's claim to the title in August 1206, though full investiture was delayed due to political tensions and the earl's commitments in France.[33][34] Simon de Montfort the younger (c. 1208–1265), sixth earl, inherited the title upon his father's death in 1218 but faced prolonged disputes with King Henry III over confirmation and associated honors, including the stewardship of Leicester Castle, which were only granted in February 1239 after papal mediation and royal concession. As a key figure in the baronial opposition to royal overreach, the sixth earl convened what is regarded as an early prototype of Parliament in January 1265, summoning not only barons and clergy but also representatives from shires and boroughs to approve taxation amid the Second Barons' War. His military campaigns culminated in victories at Lewes in May 1264, where he captured Henry III and Prince Edward, but ended in defeat and his death at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265, after which his body was desecrated by royalist forces.[33][34] Following the sixth earl's attainder for treason, the Montfort lands and title were confiscated by Henry III, with the earldom's honors and castle granted to Prince Edmund (later first Earl of Lancaster) in 1267 as part of royal reconciliation efforts post-Evesham. The Montfort heirs, including Simon the Younger (d. 1271), who briefly continued resistance before fleeing to Italy, and Guy de Montfort (d. 1294), pursued unsubstantiated claims from exile in Tuscany but received no restoration, as the crown prioritized loyalty amid ongoing threats from disinherited barons. The family's exclusion persisted, with no reversion of the peerage dignity despite occasional diplomatic overtures, marking the effective end of Montfort tenure.[35]Early Modern Creations
Third Creation (1564): Dudley Family
The third creation of the Earl of Leicester occurred on 29 September 1564, when Queen Elizabeth I elevated Robert Dudley to the peerage as Earl of Leicester and Baron Denbigh, in recognition of his close service and longstanding favor at court.[8][36] Robert Dudley, born on 24 June 1532 as the fifth son of John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland—a powerful figure who had effectively controlled England during the final years of Edward VI's reign—was educated by tutors including John Dee and Roger Ascham in mathematics, languages, and horsemanship. In 1550, he married Amy Robsart in a love match at Sheen Palace, attended by Edward VI. Following his father's execution in 1553 for plotting to place Lady Jane Grey on the throne, Dudley, aged 21, was imprisoned in the Tower of London, condemned to death, and attainted. He was released in October 1554 under Mary I and officially pardoned in 1555.[8] In 1557, he fought for Philip II at the Battle of St. Quentin.[37] With Elizabeth's accession in 1558, Dudley rapidly advanced, leveraging his familial ties and personal rapport with the queen, who had known him since childhood; by 1564, he held positions including Master of the Horse and was among the realm's most influential courtiers.[38][39] As the sole holder of this creation, Dudley wielded the title amid his roles in Elizabethan governance and military endeavors, such as commanding English forces in the Netherlands from 1585 to 1587, where he faced logistical challenges and limited successes against Spanish forces, though he was appointed Governor-General of the United Provinces.[38] The Dudley family's prominence stemmed from Edmund Dudley's service under Henry VII and Henry VIII, but Robert's branch encountered setbacks post-1553; despite his two marriages—first to Amy Robsart in 1550, who died under suspicious circumstances in 1560, and second to Lettice Knollys in 1578, which incurred the queen's displeasure—he produced no legitimate heirs to inherit the peerage.[40][39] An illegitimate son, Robert Dudley, born around 1574 to Douglas Sheffield, later received a separate barony in 1603 under James I, but this did not extend to the Earldom of Leicester.[41] The title became extinct upon Robert Dudley's death on 4 September 1588 at Cornbury Park, Oxfordshire, at age 55 or 56, likely from malaria or a related ailment contracted during his campaigns; Queen Elizabeth, deeply affected, preserved his final letter among her private papers, underscoring their enduring bond.[40][41] With no surviving legitimate male issue, the peerage lapsed, marking the end of the Dudley holding in this line, though the family retained other estates and influences until later attainders.[36]Fourth Creation (1618): Sidney Family
The fourth creation of the Earldom of Leicester occurred on 2 August 1618, when King James I granted the title by letters patent to Robert Sidney, previously 1st Viscount Lisle.[3] This revival followed the extinction of the third creation in 1588 upon the death of Robert Dudley without male heirs.[42] Robert Sidney (19 November 1563 – 13 July 1626), a soldier and diplomat, was the second surviving son of Sir Henry Sidney, Lord Deputy of Ireland, and Mary Dudley, sister to the aforementioned Dudley.[42] His military service included campaigns in the Netherlands against Spain from 1585, where he fought under his uncle Dudley, and later as governor of Flushing from 1595 to 1610.[42] The title descended through the Sidney male line for six generations, with the family seated at Penshurst Place in Kent.[3] Sidney's eldest son predeceased him without issue, so the earldom passed to his grandson:
| Earl | Name | Birth–Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Robert Sidney | 1563–1626 | Creator of the title; also Baron Sidney (1603) and Viscount Lisle (1605).[3] |
| 2nd | Robert Sidney | 1595–1677 | Son of the 1st Earl's third son; supported Royalists in the English Civil War.[3] |
| 3rd | Philip Sidney | 1619–1698 | Eldest son of the 2nd Earl.[3] |
| 4th | Robert Sidney | 1649–1702 | Son of the 3rd Earl.[3] |
| 5th | Philip Sidney | 1676–1705 | Brother of the 4th Earl.[3] |
| 6th | John Sidney | 1680–1737 | Brother of the 5th Earl.[3] |
| 7th | Jocelyn Sidney | c. 1692–1743 | Son of the 6th Earl; died without legitimate male issue on 7 July 1743, causing the title's extinction.[3][43] |
Modern Creations
Fifth Creation (1744): Coke Family (Extinct)
The fifth creation of the Earldom of Leicester occurred on 9 May 1744, when Thomas Coke was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Coke of Holkham and Earl of Leicester in the County of Norfolk, with remainder to the heirs male of his body.[11] Coke had previously been created Baron Lovel of Minster Lovel in the County of Oxford on 28 May 1728.[11] Born on 17 June 1697, he was the only surviving son of Edward Coke of Holkham, Norfolk, and his wife Cary Newton, daughter of Sir John Newton, 3rd Baronet.[44] A landowner and Whig politician, Coke served as Member of Parliament for Norfolk from 1722 to 1728 and was appointed a Knight Companion of the Bath in 1725; later, he held the office of Postmaster General from 1745 to 1756 and again from 1758 until his death.[11] Coke is noted for commissioning the Palladian mansion Holkham Hall in Norfolk, designed by William Kent and constructed between 1734 and 1759, which became a seat of the Coke family.[45] On 3 July 1718, he married Lady Margaret Tufton (1700–1782), daughter of Thomas Tufton, 6th Earl of Thanet, and suo jure 19th Baroness de Clifford, thereby acquiring connections to ancient nobility.[46] The couple had one son, Edward Coke (born 2 February 1719, died 31 August 1753), who predeceased his father without legitimate issue.[11][47] The earldom became extinct upon Coke's death on 20 April 1759 at Holkham Hall, aged 61, as he left no surviving male heirs.[11] All associated titles—Baron Lovel, Viscount Coke, and Earl of Leicester—lapsed without succession, though the Holkham estates passed by entail to his nephew, Wenman Roberts, who subsequently adopted the surname Coke.[11] This brief creation marked an early attempt by the Coke family to revive the earldom, linked to their Norfolk patrimony, but ended due to the failure of the direct male line.[11]Sixth Creation (1784): Coke Family (Extinct)
The sixth creation of the Earldom of Leicester occurred on 24 May 1784, when King George III granted the title to George Townshend, 2nd Marquess Townshend (1755–1811), a member of the Townshend family rather than the Coke family, whose prior earldom from the fifth creation had become extinct in 1759 following the death without male issue of Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester (1697–1759).) Townshend, eldest son of George Townshend, 1st Marquess Townshend, and Ethelreda Harrison, held military commissions including as colonel of the 2nd Regiment of Life Guards and served politically as a Lord of the Bedchamber (1783–1790) and Master of the Mint (1790–1794).) He married Lady Charlotte Elliot, daughter of the 1st Earl of Minto, on 24 May 1784—the same day as his ennoblement—but they had no surviving sons, though two daughters reached adulthood.) Upon Townshend's death on 27 July 1811 at Raynham Hall, Norfolk, the earldom passed by special remainder to his younger brother, George Townshend, 3rd Marquess Townshend (1774–1855), who succeeded as 2nd Earl of Leicester. The 3rd Marquess, known for his administrative roles including Lord Lieutenant of Norfolk (1792–1807, 1811–1855) and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1821–1828), married twice: first to Lady Elizabeth Powlett (d. 1826), with whom he had three sons who predeceased him or died young without issue, and second to Jane Thomas (d. 1853). Despite these unions, he left no legitimate surviving male heirs.) The earldom became extinct upon his death on 31 December 1855 at Raynham Hall, aged 81.) Meanwhile, the Coke family of Holkham Hall, Norfolk—descended from the estates of the fifth creation's holder but without the title since 1759—remained influential in agriculture and politics; Thomas William Coke (1754–1842), who inherited Holkham in 1776, declined peerage offers in the intervening decades due to succession concerns but received a fresh creation as 1st Earl of Leicester of Holkham in 1837.[48] The 1784 grant to Townshend, a Norfolk neighbor to the Cokes, reflected royal favor toward the Townshends' local prominence and military service rather than reviving the Coke line.)Seventh Creation (1837): Coke Family (Current)
The seventh creation of the Earldom of Leicester took place on 12 August 1837, when King William IV granted the title by letters patent to Thomas William Coke, along with the subsidiary titles of Viscount Coke of Holkham and Baron Coke of Holkham, all in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.[4] Coke, born on 6 May 1754 and died on 30 June 1842, was a Norfolk landowner who inherited Holkham Hall and its estate in 1776 from his uncle, transforming it into a model of agricultural innovation through enclosure, selective breeding of livestock, and experimentation with four-course crop rotation systems that boosted yields and influenced British farming practices during the Agricultural Revolution.[5] As a Whig Member of Parliament for Norfolk from 1776 to 1832, he championed free trade and rural improvements, earning the nickname "Coke of Norfolk" for his contributions to estate management and soil fertility enhancement via marling and drainage.[4] Upon Coke's death in 1842, the title passed to his son from his second marriage, Thomas William Coke, who served as the 2nd Earl until 1909 and held the position of Lord Lieutenant of Norfolk from 1846.[4] The earldom has remained with the Coke family, centered at Holkham Hall—a Palladian mansion constructed between 1734 and 1760 on 25,000 acres of Norfolk land, featuring a 9-mile perimeter wall completed in 1839 and extensive pine plantations initiated in the late 18th century for timber and shelter.[5] The family has maintained the estate through diversified operations, including farming, forestry, and public access, with modern emphases on sustainability and conservation under Holkham Enterprises. The succession of holders is as follows:| Earl | Name | Birth–Death | Notable Roles |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Thomas William Coke | 1754–1842 | Agricultural reformer; MP for Norfolk (1776–1832) |
| 2nd | Thomas William Coke | 1822–1909 | KG; Lord Lieutenant of Norfolk (1846–1909) |
| 3rd | Thomas William Coke | 1848–1941 | GCVO, CMG; military service in colonial campaigns |
| 4th | Thomas William Coke | 1880–1949 | Landowner during interwar period |
| 5th | Thomas William Edward Coke | 1908–1976 | MVO, DL; no surviving male issue |
| 6th | Anthony Louis Lovel Coke | 1909–1994 | Assumed title via kinship |
| 7th | Edward Douglas Coke | 1936–2015 | CBE, DL; estate steward |
| 8th | Thomas Edward Coke | 1965–present | Current holder; manages Holkham estate with focus on rewilding and natural capital enhancement |
Notable Holders and Their Roles
Military and Political Influence
Robert de Beaumont, the first creation's inaugural holder, commanded the Norman infantry's right wing at the Battle of Hastings on October 14, 1066, contributing to William the Conqueror's victory and earning grants of over 90 English manors as recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. His military service solidified Beaumont influence in early Norman governance, including roles as a royal counselor under William II and Henry I. Simon de Montfort, inheriting the title through the second creation, led the baronial opposition against King Henry III during the Second Barons' War, defeating royal forces at the Battle of Lewes on May 14, 1264, and capturing the king and his son Edward, which positioned Montfort as England's effective ruler until his death at Evesham in 1265.[49] Politically, he advanced reform by summoning a parliament on January 20, 1265, that included knights, burgesses, and clergy alongside barons, expanding consultative governance beyond the feudal elite.[50] In the third creation, Robert Dudley wielded significant political sway as Queen Elizabeth I's favored courtier from 1558, advising on domestic and foreign policy while holding offices like Master of the Horse and privy councillor.[8] Militarily, he commanded 6,000 English troops dispatched to the Netherlands in December 1585 to aid the United Provinces' revolt against Spanish rule, achieving initial successes like the capture of Zutphen and Groenlo but facing setbacks from logistical issues and internal Dutch divisions.[38] The fourth creation's Robert Sidney pursued military engagements in the Low Countries from 1585, joining the Earl of Leicester's expedition, fighting at Zutphen where he was knighted for valor, and serving as governor of Flushing from 1588 to support English interests against Spain.[51] His political roles included ambassadorships to France in 1596 and the United Provinces, blending martial duties with Jacobean diplomacy under James I. Later Coke earls, from the fifth through seventh creations, exerted political influence primarily through parliamentary service and estate management rather than battlefield command; Thomas William Coke, elevated in 1837, represented Norfolk as a Whig MP intermittently from 1776 to 1807, advocating enclosure and agricultural innovation that shaped rural policy amid industrialization.[52]Patronage and Cultural Contributions
Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, emerged as one of the foremost patrons of the arts during the Elizabethan era, amassing a significant collection of paintings and fostering the work of prominent artists. He commissioned portraits from painters such as Federico Zuccaro, who created matching depictions of Dudley and Queen Elizabeth I around 1575, and supported Nicholas Hilliard, England's leading miniaturist, whose early career was shaped by Dudley's encouragement to elevate miniature painting as a liberal art.[53][54] Dudley's patronage extended to literature, where he backed writers including Edmund Spenser, Gabriel Harvey, and Philip Sidney, contributing to the burgeoning English Renaissance literary scene.[55] As Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1564 until his death in 1588, Dudley played a key role in revitalizing academic and scholarly pursuits, hosting Elizabethan progresses such as the lavish 1575 Kenilworth entertainments that featured displays from his picture gallery, blending portraiture, maps, and architecture to project power and cultural sophistication.[8][56] His efforts elevated the status of painters at court, marking a shift toward viewing visual arts as integral to elite identity and intellectual discourse.[57] In the 18th century, Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester (1697–1759), advanced cultural endeavors through his Grand Tour from 1712 to 1718, during which he acquired classical antiquities, books, and architectural inspirations that informed the design of Holkham Hall, completed under his oversight starting in 1734.[58] His library, enriched by studies of Greek and Roman authors and collaborations with contemporary scholars, underscored a commitment to classical learning and estate-based cultural preservation.[59] Later Coke earls continued this legacy; Edward Coke, 7th Earl (1936–2015), actively curated Holkham's extensive art holdings, lending works to public exhibitions and galleries, thereby promoting access to the family's accumulated cultural patrimony while maintaining its historical integrity.[23] These contributions collectively highlight the earls' roles in bridging political influence with enduring artistic and intellectual legacies across centuries.Controversies and Criticisms
The death of Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester's first wife, Amy Robsart, on September 8, 1560, at Cumnor Place, sparked widespread suspicion of foul play. Robsart was found at the foot of a staircase with two fatal injuries to her head and neck, and a contemporary inquest concluded accidental death from misadventure.[60] Despite this, contemporary gossip and later accounts accused Dudley of orchestrating her murder to clear the path for marriage to Queen Elizabeth I, fueled by his rapid rise at court and their evident closeness.[61] These allegations persisted without direct evidence, amplified by Catholic propagandists hostile to Dudley's Protestant faction.[62] Dudley's clandestine marriage to Lettice Knollys, Countess of Essex, on September 21, 1578, provoked royal fury from Elizabeth, who viewed it as a betrayal given her own rumored affections for him. The union, kept secret for years, led to Elizabeth's lifelong banishment of Lettice from court and strained Dudley's favor, highlighting tensions over his personal ambitions amid political maneuvering.[63] As Governor-General of the Netherlands from 1585 to 1587, Dudley faced criticism for military setbacks against Spanish forces, including the loss of key towns and internal factionalism among Dutch allies. The campaign's failure incurred massive debts for Dudley, over £70,000, and was lambasted in polemics like Leicester's Commonwealth (1584), a Catholic tract charging him with tyranny, corruption, and atheism—claims rooted in partisan opposition rather than verified acts.[9] Dudley's command, intended to bolster Protestant resistance, ultimately underscored the limits of English intervention abroad.[62] Later holders, such as those in the Coke family, encountered fewer scandals, though the 8th Earl, Thomas Coke, drew local ire in 2023-2024 over claims of enclosing 3,000 acres of contested coastal land near Holkham Hall, disputed as common access versus private estate.[64] This reflected ongoing tensions between aristocratic land management and public rights, but lacked the intrigue of earlier Tudor-era controversies.Genealogical Lines
Medieval Lines (Beaumont and Montfort)
The earldom of Leicester originated with the Beaumont family in the early 12th century. Robert de Beaumont, born circa 1049 and died 5 June 1118, a Norman noble and companion of William the Conqueror at Hastings in 1066, received the honour of Leicester from King Henry I around 1107, establishing him as the 1st Earl of Leicester and Count of Meulan. His extensive landholdings included over 90 knight's fees in England by 1086, reflecting his status as one of the realm's wealthiest barons. Robert's son, Robert de Beaumont II (c. 1104–1168), known as "le Bossu" for his hunched back, succeeded as 2nd Earl and served as Justiciar of England from 1155 until his death. The 3rd Earl, Robert FitzPernel (c. 1135–1190), derived his surname from his mother, Petronilla, granddaughter of Ralph de Tony, and participated in the Third Crusade, dying at the Siege of Acre.[65] His son, Robert de Beaumont IV (died 1204), the 4th Earl, left no male heirs, leading to the division of estates among his aunts or cousins, but the core title passed through female descent.[65] The earldom transferred to the Montfort family via Amice de Beaumont, daughter of the 3rd Earl Robert FitzPernel, who married Simon de Montfort (c. 1170–1218), a French crusader and lord of Montfort-l'Amaury. This Simon, recognized as the 5th Earl, inherited the Leicester estates after the death of his brother-in-law, the 4th Earl, and maintained claims despite challenges from co-heiresses. His son, Simon de Montfort (c. 1208–1265), the 6th Earl, initially favored by King Henry III—marrying the king's sister Eleanor in 1238—later led the baronial opposition, summoning the Parliament of 1265, often cited as an early precursor to representative assemblies.[49] Simon VI's defeat and death at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265 resulted in the forfeiture of his titles and lands by Henry III. His son, Simon de Montfort the Younger (c. 1240–1271), briefly claimed the earldom but died without legitimate issue at the Siege of Kenilworth, rendering the medieval male-line succession extinct. The honour of Leicester was subsequently annexed to the crown, with later grants to Lancastrian royals like Edmund Crouchback in 1267, marking the end of the Beaumont-Montfort lineage.Dudley and Sidney Lines
The third creation of the Earldom of Leicester occurred on 29 September 1564, when Queen Elizabeth I elevated Robert Dudley to the peerage as 1st Earl of Leicester.[66] Born on 24 June 1532 or 1533, Dudley was the fifth son of John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, whose execution for treason in 1553 had temporarily diminished the family's fortunes.[40] Despite marrying Lettice Knollys in 1573 and fathering an illegitimate son, Robert Dudley, with Douglas Sheffield earlier, the earl produced no legitimate male heirs.[41] Upon his death on 4 September 1588 at Cornbury, Oxfordshire, the title became extinct.[66] The fourth creation revived the earldom on 2 July 1618 for Robert Sidney, nephew of the previous earl through his mother, Mary Dudley, sister to Robert Dudley.[67] Born on 19 November 1563 at Penshurst Place, Kent, Sidney was the younger son of Sir Henry Sidney and inherited significant estates, including Penshurst.[51] He married Barbara Gamage in 1584, by whom he had several children, including Robert Sidney, who succeeded as 2nd Earl.[42] Sidney died on 13 July 1626, passing the title to his son. The Sidney succession continued through six more earls over 125 years:| Earl | Name | Birth–Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2nd | Robert Sidney | 1595–1677 | Son of 1st Earl; diplomat and MP for Kent.[68] |
| 3rd | Algernon Sidney | 1623–1683 | Son of 2nd Earl; executed for alleged involvement in Rye House Plot.[3] |
| 4th | Philip Sidney | 1641–1699 | Brother of 3rd Earl; succeeded upon posthumous attainder reversal.[3] |
| 5th | Robert Sidney | c.1677–1722 | Son of 4th Earl; died without male issue.[3] |
| 6th | John Sidney | 1680–1737 | Brother of 5th Earl; succeeded as next male heir.[3] |
| 7th | Jocelyn Sidney | 1701–1743 | Grandson of 4th Earl via daughter; last holder, died without sons.[3] |
Coke Family Tree
The Coke family, associated with the Earls of Leicester through the Holkham Hall estates in Norfolk, descends from the jurist Sir Edward Coke (1552–1634) via his descendants who established the Norfolk branch in the 17th century.[4] Thomas Coke (c. 1654–1727), a prosperous merchant and landowner, purchased Holkham Hall in 1703 and served as High Sheriff of Norfolk; his progeny held the earldom in multiple creations.- Thomas Coke (c. 1654–1727) m. Susan Hicks (d. 1684), then Pious Alexander (d. 1724)
- Thomas Coke (1697–1759), 1st Earl of Leicester (5th creation, cr. 1744), KB, m. Elizabeth Robinson (d. 1742); died without surviving issue, causing extinction of the title.[11]
- Robert Coke (d. 1713) m. Lettice Mary Keck; daughter Elizabeth Coke m. Philip Roberts
- Wenman Coke (né Roberts) (1717–1776), assumed surname Coke upon inheriting family estates; m. Elizabeth Mary (d. 1811)
- Thomas William Coke (1754–1842), 1st Earl of Leicester (7th creation, cr. 1837), KG, PC, m1. Lady Mary Hill (d. 1811, no issue); m2. Lady Anne Amelia Keppel (d. 1824); agriculturist and Whig politician known as "Coke of Norfolk."[48][4]
- Thomas William Coke (1822–1909), 2nd Earl, KG; m. Juliana Whitbread (d. 1887)
- Thomas William Coke (1848–1941), 3rd Earl; m. Elizabeth Ellen Boardman (d. 1899)
- Thomas William Coke (1880–1949), 4th Earl; m. Marion Gertrude Trefusis (1883–1966)
- Thomas William Coke (1908–1976), 5th Earl; m. Lady Elizabeth Rose Yorke (1915–1985)
- Thomas Edward Coke (1936–2015), 6th Earl (succeeded 1976); unmarried, no issue.
- Edward Douglas Coke (1936–2015), 7th Earl (succeeded 2015); m. Valeria Phyllis Potter (d. 2003)
- Thomas Edward Coke (b. 1965), 8th Earl (current, succeeded 2015); m. Polly Whittome (d. 2018), then Sarah de Chair (issue).[4]
- Thomas William Coke (1908–1976), 5th Earl; m. Lady Elizabeth Rose Yorke (1915–1985)
- Thomas William Coke (1880–1949), 4th Earl; m. Marion Gertrude Trefusis (1883–1966)
- Thomas William Coke (1848–1941), 3rd Earl; m. Elizabeth Ellen Boardman (d. 1899)
- Thomas William Coke (1822–1909), 2nd Earl, KG; m. Juliana Whitbread (d. 1887)
- Thomas William Coke (1754–1842), 1st Earl of Leicester (7th creation, cr. 1837), KG, PC, m1. Lady Mary Hill (d. 1811, no issue); m2. Lady Anne Amelia Keppel (d. 1824); agriculturist and Whig politician known as "Coke of Norfolk."[48][4]
- Wenman Coke (né Roberts) (1717–1776), assumed surname Coke upon inheriting family estates; m. Elizabeth Mary (d. 1811)
Legacy and Historical Impact
Role in English Governance and Power Structures
Holders of the Earl of Leicester title have exerted influence within English governance through administrative, legislative, and advisory capacities, often shaping power dynamics between monarchy and nobility. Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester, served as Justiciar of England from 1155 to 1168 under King Henry II, functioning as the kingdom's chief judicial and administrative officer responsible for implementing royal policy and maintaining order during the king's absences.[70] This role positioned him at the apex of early Angevin power structures, bridging Norman feudal traditions with emerging centralized authority.[71] In the 13th century, Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, challenged royal prerogative by leading the baronial opposition against King Henry III, enforcing the Provisions of Oxford in 1258 to limit monarchical power through a council of barons.[72] His victory at the Battle of Lewes in 1264 temporarily established baronial rule, and in January 1265, he convened a parliament at Westminster that included not only barons and clergy but also elected knights from shires and burgesses from towns, marking an early experiment in broader representation to legitimize governance and secure finances.[50] This assembly, though short-lived until Montfort's defeat at Evesham later in 1265, influenced subsequent constitutional developments by demonstrating parliamentary consultation beyond the feudal elite.[73] During the Elizabethan era, Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, wielded substantial informal power as Queen Elizabeth I's favored courtier and advisor, appointed Master of the Horse in 1558 and Privy Councillor in 1562, roles that granted him oversight of the royal household and access to core decision-making on foreign policy and military affairs.[74] Dudley commanded English forces in the Netherlands from 1585 to 1587, supporting Protestant allies against Spanish Habsburg dominance, though his tenure revealed tensions between court influence and practical command challenges.[8] His proximity to the throne exemplified the Tudor system's reliance on personal favorites within privy council structures to balance factional interests. In the 18th and 19th centuries, Thomas William Coke, created 1st Earl of Leicester in 1837, represented Norfolk in Parliament for over five decades intermittently from 1776 to 1832 as a Whig, advocating parliamentary reform and supporting Charles James Fox's opposition to royal influence.[75] His long tenure underscored the earls' integration into representative institutions, contributing to the transition from aristocratic dominance to broader electoral politics, while later Coke earls continued participation in the House of Lords, maintaining hereditary input into legislative processes.[52]
Influence on Constitutional Developments
Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, exerted significant influence on early English constitutional developments through his leadership in the baronial opposition to King Henry III during the Second Barons' War (1264–1267). Following his victory at the Battle of Lewes on 14 May 1264, Montfort effectively became the de facto ruler of England, imposing the Mise of Lewes, which compelled Henry to accept a council of nine to oversee governance and limited royal autonomy.[50] This arrangement built on the earlier Provisions of Oxford (1258), a baronial reform program Montfort championed that established regular parliaments and a council to advise the king, marking an early attempt to institutionalize checks on monarchical power through collective baronial oversight.[76] In January 1265, Montfort convened a parliament in Westminster that represented a pivotal innovation by summoning not only barons and clergy but also elected knights from the shires and burgesses from select towns, totaling around 120 representatives alongside 23 barons and 19 bishops.[72] This assembly, held from 20 January to 28 January, deliberated on taxation, governance, and the king's adherence to prior reforms, establishing a precedent for broader representation in national decision-making beyond the feudal elite.[77] Although Montfort's regime collapsed after his defeat and death at the Battle of Evesham on 4 August 1265, his parliamentary experiment influenced subsequent developments, notably Edward I's Model Parliament of 1295, which expanded on these inclusive summonses and contributed to the gradual evolution of parliamentary authority.[50] Montfort's actions, while driven partly by personal ambition and baronial self-interest rather than modern democratic ideals, introduced causal mechanisms for constraining absolute monarchy, such as mandatory consultation with representatives on fiscal matters and the use of written provisions to bind the crown.[76] Historians attribute to him a foundational role in shifting England toward constitutional monarchy by demonstrating that armed baronial coalitions could enforce accountability, though his foreign origins and autocratic style—evident in his unilateral appointments to the governing council—temper claims of pure proto-democratic intent.[49] Later holders of the title, such as Thomas William Coke (created 1st Earl of Leicester in the seventh creation in 1837), engaged peripherally with constitutional reform as Whig politicians, with Coke supporting the Great Reform Act of 1832 that expanded the electorate and redistributed parliamentary seats before his ennoblement.[49] However, such influences pale in comparison to Montfort's direct innovations in parliamentary summoning and royal limitation during the 13th century.References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Armorial_Bearings_of_the_BEAUMONT_family_%28Earls_of_Leicester%29.png
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Coat_of_arms_of_Sir_Robert_Dudley%2C_1st_Earl_of_Leicester%2C_KG.png
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sydney_Coat_of_arms.svg
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Arms_of_Coke%2C_Earls_of_Leicester.svg
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography%2C_1885-1900/Montfort%2C_Simon_of_%281208%253F-1265%29
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography%2C_1885-1900/Dudley%2C_Robert_%281532%253F-1588%29
