Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex

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Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, after Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, after Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger

Robert Devereaux, 2nd Earl of Essex (10 November 156625 February 1601), a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I of England, is the best-known of the many holders of the title "Earl of Essex." He was a military hero and royal favourite, but following a poor campaign against Irish rebels during the Nine Years War in 1599, he defied the queen and was executed for treason.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Lord Essex was born in Cumbria, in 1566, the son of Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex and Lettice Knollys. His lineage has been called into doubt with some evidence presented that he might not have been Walter's son, but the son of Robert Dudley.[1] He was brought up on his father's estate in Wales and educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. His father died in 1576, and four years later his mother married Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, the long-standing favourite of Queen Elizabeth I. His great-grandmother Mary Boleyn was a sister of Anne Boleyn, second wife of King Henry VIII and mother of Queen Elizabeth I.

Frances Walsingham, countess of Essex, and her son Robertby Robert Peake the elder, 1594
Frances Walsingham, countess of Essex, and her son Robert
by Robert Peake the elder, 1594

Essex performed military service under his stepfather before making an impact at court and winning the Queen's favour. In 1590 he married Frances Walsingham, daughter of Sir Francis Walsingham and widow of Sir Philip Sidney. Sidney, Leicester's nephew, had died at the Battle of Zutphen in which Essex also distinguished himself.

[edit] Court and military career

Essex first came to court in 1584, and by 1587 had become a favourite of the Queen, who relished his lively mind and eloquence, as well as his skills as a showman and in courtly love. In addition, she rewarded Essex with a royal monopoly on sweet wines, for which Essex would receive taxes. However, problems with his relationship with Elizabeth would lead to his demise. He underestimated the Queen, and his later behaviour towards her lacked due respect and showed disdain for the influence of her principal secretary, Sir Robert Cecil. On one occasion during a heated Privy Council debate on the problems in Ireland the Queen reportedly cuffed an insolent Essex round the ear, prompting him to draw his sword on her.

After Leicester's death in 1588, Essex replaced the earl as Master of the Horse. In 1589, he took part in Sir Francis Drake's English Armada, which sailed to Iberia in an unsuccessful attempt to press home the English advantage following the defeat of the Spanish Armada; the Queen had ordered him not to take part in the expedition, but he only returned upon the failure to take Lisbon. In 1591, he was given command of a force sent to the assistance of King Henry IV of France. In 1596, he distinguished himself by the capture of Cádiz. During the Islands Voyage expedition to the Azores in 1597, on which Sir Walter Raleigh was his second in command, he defied the Queen's orders, pursuing the treasure fleet without first putting the Spanish royal navy out of action.

[edit] Ireland

Main article: Essex in Ireland
Essex by Isaac Oliver, 1590s
Essex by Isaac Oliver, 1590s

The greatest failure of Essex was as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, a post which he talked himself into. In the middle stages of the Nine Years War (1595–1603), no other English commander had shown himself capable of taking on the extreme challenges that faced the crown forces in that country. Superior military resources had been required to combat the rebels, who were being supplied from Spain and Scotland and led by Hugh O'Neill, the Earl of Tyrone.

Essex led the largest expeditionary force ever sent to Ireland (16,000 troops), where he was charged with putting an end to the rebellion. He departed London to the cheers of the Queen's subjects, and it was expected that the rebellion would be crushed instantly, but the constraints of crown resources and of the Irish campaigning season dictated another course. Rather than confront O'Neill in Ulster — as his intentions had been declared to the Privy Council — Essex chose to lead his men in a series of inconclusive engagements throughout the south of the country, wasting his treasure and dissipating the strength of his army into garrisons. The rebels then won several victories, and, instead of facing O'Neill in battle, Essex was compelled to enter a truce with the rebel leader that was considered humiliating to the crown and to the detriment of English authority.

In all of his campaigns, Essex secured the loyalties of his officers by conferring knighthoods, an honour which the Queen herself dispensed sparingly. By the end of his time in Ireland, more than half the knights in England owed their rank to Essex. The rebels were said to have taunted that, "he never drew sword but to make knights". But the import of his practice was to establish a party that might in time challenge the powerful faction at the command of Cecil.

He served as second Chancellor of Trinity College, Dublin between 1598 and 1601.

[edit] Rebellion

Relying on his general warrant to return to England, given under the great seal, Essex sailed from Ireland on 24 September 1599, and reached London four days later. The queen had expressly forbidden his return and was surprised when he presented himself in her bedchamber one morning at Nonsuch Palace, before she was properly wigged or gowned. On that day, the privy council met three times, and it seemed his disobedience might go unpunished, although the queen did confine him to his rooms with the comment that "an unruly beast must be stopped of his provender".

Essex appeared before the full council on 29 September, when he was compelled to stand bareheaded before the table during a five hour interrogation; the council —his uncle Knollys included— took a quarter of an hour to compile a report, in which it was found that his truce with O'Neill was indefensible and his flight from Ireland tantamount to a desertion of duty. He was committed to custody in his own York House on 1 October, and he chose to blame Cecil and Raleigh for the queen's hostility. Raleigh advised Cecil to see to it that he did not recover power, and Essex appeared to heed advice to retire from public life, although the population was thought to be with him.

During his confinement at York House, Essex probably communicated with King James VI of Scotland through Lord Mountjoy, although any plans he may have had at that time to ease the Scots king on to the English throne came to nothing. In October, Mountjoy was appointed to replace him in Ireland, but matters seemed to look up for the earl. In November, the queen was reported to have said that the truce with O'Neill was "so seasonably made… as great good… has grown by it". Others in the council were willing to justify Essex's return to Ireland, on the grounds of the urgent necessity of a briefing by the commander-in-chief.

[edit] First trial

Cecil kept up the pressure and, on 5 June 1600, Essex was tried before a commission of 18 men. He had to hear the charges and evidence on his knees and, upon conviction, was deprived of public office and returned to virtual confinement. In August, his freedom was granted, but the source of his basic income—the sweet wines monopoly—was not renewed. His situation had become desperate, and he shifted "from sorrow and repentance to rage and rebellion". One Sunday morning he chose to march out from York House with a party of nobles and gentlemen (some later involved in the 1605 Gunpowder Plot) and enter the city in an attempt to force an audience with the queen. Cecil immediately had him proclaimed as a traitor, and, disappointed at the lack of support among the people, Essex retreated from the city, surrendering once the Crown forces trained their cannon on his house.

[edit] Treason, trial and death

On 19 February 1601, Essex was tried before his peers on charges of treason. Part of the evidence showed that he was in favour of toleration for religious freedom. In his own evidence, he countered the charge of dealing with Catholics, swearing that, "papists have been hired and suborned to witness against me". Essex also asserted that Cecil had stated that none in the world but the Infanta of Spain had right to the Crown of England, whereupon Cecil (who had been following the trial at a doorway concealed behind some tapestry) stepped out to make a dramatic denial, going down on his knees to give thanks to God for the opportunity. The witness whom Essex expected to confirm this allegation, his uncle Knollys, was called and admitted there had once been read in Cecil's presence a book treating of such matters (possibly Doleman's The book of succession, or Robert Persons' A Conference about the Next Succession to the Crown of England, in which a Catholic successor friendly to Spain was favoured), but denied he had heard Cecil make the statement. Thanking God again, Cecil expressed his gratitude that Essex stood there as a traitor while he himself was found an honest man.

Five years earlier Elizabeth had given Essex a ring as a token of her gratitude at his having defeated the Spanish at Cádiz, and instructed him to send it to her as a reminder of her debt to him, if he ever fell out of favour with her. When Elizabeth signed his death warrant for "insurrection" Robert sent the ring, but an enemy stopped its delivery and he was executed. Elizabeth was said to have wept for days, and ever afterwards at the mere mention of his name.

Essex was found guilty and, on 25 February 1601, was beheaded on Tower Green, the last person to be beheaded in the Tower of London. It is said to have taken three strikes from the executioner to complete the beheading. At Raleigh's own treason trial in 1603, it was alleged that Raleigh had said to a co-conspirator, "Do not, as my Lord Essex did, take heed of a preacher. By his persuasion he confessed, and made himself guilty." In the same trial, Raleigh also denied that he had stood at a window during the execution of Essex's sentence, disdainfully puffing out tobacco smoke in sight of the condemned man.

Some days before execution of sentence, Captain Thomas Lee was apprehended as he kept watch on the door to the queen's chambers. His plan had been to confine her until she signed a warrant for the release of Essex. Lee, who had served in Ireland with the earl and acted as go-between with the Ulster rebels, was tried and put to death the next day.

[edit] Legacy

Devereux's title was inherited by his son, Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex.

[edit] Essex in performance

[edit] Opera

[edit] Stage

  • In the essay Hamlet oder Hekuba: der Einbruch der Zeit in das Spiel [Hamlet or Hecuba: the Irruption of Time into the Play] (1956), the German legal theorist Carl Schmitt suggests that elements of the Earl's biography, in particular his final days and last words, were incorporated into William Shakespeare's Hamlet at both the level of dialogue and the level of characterization. Schmitt's overall argument investigates the relationship between history and narrative generally.

[edit] Film

[edit] TV

[edit] Music

  • English composer John Dowland published an intrumental arrangement of his song "Can she excuse my wrongs with virtue's cloak?" (1597) as "The Earl of Essex, his galliard" in 1603, alongside his Lachrimae, or Seven Teares.

[edit] Historical fiction

  • Susan Kay, author of the book Legacy (a historical fiction book written about the life of Elizabeth I of England), wrote of the Earl's relationship with Elizabeth. In it, Kay suggests that the adoration the Earl received from the people sparked Elizabeth's famous jealousy, and she realized what a danger he would prove to be if he chose to use the people against her. It is also suggested that Elizabeth deliberately set a trap for the Earl to take up the post of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the most unsought post available (no Englishman had ever made his fortune there). In this, the Earl's inevitable failure would sink his shining star in the eyes of the people.

[edit] References

  • Phoenix: Robert, Earl of Essex: An Elizabethan Icarus by Robert Lacey (March 2002) ISBN 1-84212-285-1
  • The Polarisation of Elizabethan Politics: The Political Career of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, 1585–1597.(Review) : An article from: Shakespeare Studies by Pauline Croft (January 2001)
  • Richard Bagwell, Ireland under the Tudors 3 vols. (London, 1885–1890).
  • Steven G. Ellis Tudor Ireland (London, 1985). ISBN 0-582-49341-2.
  • Cyril Falls Elizabeth's Irish Wars (1950; reprint London, 1996). ISBN 0-09-477220-7.
  • James Shapiro 1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare (London, 2005) ISBN 0-571-21480-0.
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