William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley
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William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley (sometimes spelled Burleigh) (13 September 1520 – 4 August 1598), KG was an English statesman, the chief advisor and good friend of Queen Elizabeth I for most of her reign (17 November 1558–24 March 1603), twice Secretary of State (1550–1553 and 1558–1572) and Lord High Treasurer from 1572.
Early life
Cecil was born in Bourne, Lincolnshire in 1520, the son of Richard Cecil, owner of the Burghley estate (near Stamford, Lincolnshire), and his wife, Jane Heckington.
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Burghley, William Cecil, Baron.
Pedigrees, elaborated by Cecil himself with the help of William Camden the antiquary, associated him with the Cecils or Sitsyllts of Allt-Yr-Ynys, Walterstone on the border of Herefordshire and Monmouthshire, and traced his descent from an Owen of the time of King Harold and a Sitsyllt of the reign of William Rufus. The connection with the Herefordshire family is not so impossible as the descent from Sitsyllt; but the earliest known authentic ancestor of the Lord Treasurer is his grandfather, David, who, according to Burghley's enemies, kept the best inn in Stamford. David somehow secured the favour of Henry VII, to whom he seems to have been Yeoman of the Guard. He was Sergeant-of-Arms to Henry VIII in 1526, Sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1532, and a Justice of the Peace for Rutland. His eldest son, Richard, Yeoman of the Wardrobe (d. 1554), married Jane, daughter of William Heckington of Bourne, and was father of three daughters and the future Lord Burghley.
William, the only son, was put to school first at The King's School, Grantham and then at Stamford School, which he later saved and endowed. In May 1535, at the age of fourteen, he went up to St John's College, Cambridge, where he was brought into contact with the foremost educationalists of the time, Roger Ascham and John Cheke, and acquired an unusual knowledge of Greek. He also acquired the affections of Cheke's sister, Mary, and was in 1541 removed by his father to Gray's Inn, without, after six years' residence at Cambridge, having taken a degree. The precaution proved useless and four months later Cecil committed one of the rare rash acts of his life in marrying Mary Cheke. The only child of this marriage, Thomas, the future Earl of Exeter, was born in May 1542, and in February 1543 Cecil's first wife died. Three years later, on 21 December 1546 he married Mildred, daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke, who was ranked by Ascham with Lady Jane Grey as one of the two most learned ladies in the kingdom, and whose sister, Anne, became the wife of Sir Nicholas (and the mother of Sir Francis) Bacon.
Early career
William Cecil's early career was spent in the service of the Duke of Somerset (a brother of the late queen, Jane Seymour), who was Lord Protector during the early years of the reign of his nephew, the young Edward VI. Cecil accompanied Somerset on his Pinkie campaign of 1547 (part of the "Rough Wooing"), being one of the two Judges of the Marshalsea, i.e. in the courts-martial. The other was William Patten, who states that both he and Cecil began to write independent accounts of the campaign, and that Cecil generously contributed his notes for Patten's narrative of the "Expedition into Scotland".
Cecil, according to his autobiographical notes, sat in Parliament in 1543; but his name does not occur in the imperfect parliamentary returns until 1547, when he was elected for the family borough of Stamford.
Cencil by George S. Stuart.
In 1548, he is described as the Protector's Master of Requests, which apparently means that he was clerk or registrar of the court of requests which the Protector, possibly at Hugh Latimer's instigation, illegally set up in Somerset House to hear poor men's complaints. He also seems to have acted as private secretary to the Protector, and was in some danger at the time of the Protector's fall in October 1549. The lords opposed to Somerset ordered his detention on 10 October, and in November he was in the Tower of London.
Cecil ingratiated himself with Warwick, and on 15 September 1550 he was sworn in as one of King Edward's two Secretaries of State. He was knighted on 11 October 1551, on the eve of Somerset's second fall, and was congratulated on his success in escaping his benefactor's fate.
In April 1551, Cecil became Chancellor of the Order of the Garter. But service under Warwick (by now the Duke of Northumberland) carried some risk, and in his diary Cecil recorded his release in the phrase ex misero aulico factus liber et mei juris.
To protect the Protestant government from the accession of a Catholic queen, Northumberland forced King Edward's lawyers to create an instrument setting aside Parliament's Succession Act on 15 June 1553. (The document barred both Elizabeth and Mary, the remaining children of Henry VIII, from the throne, in favour of Lady Jane Grey.) Cecil resisted for a while, expecting to die for his stand. In a farewell letter to his wife, he wrote "Seeing great perils threatened upon us by the likeness of the time, I do make choice to avoid the perils of God's displeasure." But at Edward's royal command he signed it; he was the last of the councillors to do so. [1]
Years afterwards, he pretended that he had only signed the devise as a witness, but in his apology to Queen Mary I, he did not venture to allege so flimsy an excuse; he preferred to lay stress on the extent to which he succeeded in shifting the responsibility on to the shoulders of his brother-in-law, Sir John Cheke, and other friends, and on his intrigues to frustrate the Queen to whom he had sworn allegiance.
There is no doubt that Cecil saw which way the wind was blowing, and disliked Northumberland's scheme; but he had not the courage to resist the duke to his face. As soon, however, as the duke had set out to meet Mary, Cecil became the most active intriguer against him, and to these efforts, of which he laid a full account before Queen Mary, he mainly owed his immunity. He had, moreover, had no part in the divorce of Catherine of Aragon or in the humiliation of Mary during Henry's reign, and he made no scruple about conforming to the Catholic reaction. He went to Mass, confessed, and in no particular official capacity went to meet Cardinal Pole on his return to England in December 1554, again accompanying him to Calais in May 1555.
It was rumoured in December 1554 that Cecil would succeed Sir William Petre as Secretary of State, an office which, with his chancellorship of the Garter, he had lost on Mary's accession to the throne. Probably the Queen had more to do with this rumour than Cecil, though he is said to have opposed, in the parliament of 1555 (in which he represented Lincolnshire), a bill for the confiscation of the estates of the Protestant refugees. But the story, even as told by his biographer (Peck, Desiderata Curiosa, 1732–1735, i. 11), does not represent Cecil's conduct as having been very courageous; and it is more revealing that he found no seat in the parliament of 1558, for which Mary had directed the return of "discreet and good Catholic members".
1. ^ Beckingsale, B. W. Burghley Tudor Statesman. New York: Macmillan Co. Ltd., 1967. p.45-46.
Reign of Elizabeth
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By that time Cecil had begun to trim his sails to a different breeze. He was in secret communication with the future Elizabeth I before Mary died, and from the first the new Queen relied on Cecil as she relied on no one else. Her confidence was not misplaced; Cecil was exactly the kind of minister England then required. Personal experience had ripened his rare natural gift for avoiding dangers. It was no time for brilliant initiative or adventurous politics; the need was to avoid Scylla and Charybdis, and a via media (middle way) had to be found in Church and State, at home and abroad. Cecil was not a visionary political genius; no great ideas emanated from his brain. Nonetheless, he was an extremely capable man. His tight control over the finances of the Crown, leadership of the Privy Council, and the creation of a highly capable intelligence service under the direction of Francis Walsingham made him the de facto ruler of England for the majority of Elizabeth's reign. Noteworthy are those instances in which his and Elizabeth's will diverged on matters of state: it was Cecil's will, not hers, that inevitably prevailed. Not an original thinker perhaps, but a statesman of unrivalled competence. Calculation was his supreme characteristic; he saw that above all things England required time. He restored the fortunes of his country by deliberation. He averted open rupture until England was strong enough to stand the shock.
Though a Protestant, Cecil was not a religious purist; he aided the Huguenots and the Dutch just enough to keep them going in the struggles which warded danger from England's shores. But Cecil never developed that passionate aversion from decided measures which became a second nature to Elizabeth. His intervention in Scotland in 1559–1560 showed that he could strike hard when necessary; and his action over the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, proved that he was willing to take on responsibilities from which the Queen shrank.
Generally he was in favour of more decided intervention on behalf of continental Protestants than Elizabeth would have liked, but it is not always easy to ascertain the advice he gave. He left endless memoranda lucidly setting forth the pros and cons of every course of action; but there are few indications of the line which he actually recommended when it came to a decision. How far he was personally responsible for the Anglican Settlement, the Poor Laws, and the foreign policy of the reign, how far he was thwarted by the baleful influence of Leicester and the caprices of the Queen, remains to a large extent a matter of conjecture. However, it is most likely that Cecil's views carried the day in the politics of Elizabethan England.
His share in the Religious Settlement of 1559 was considerable, and it coincided fairly with his own Anglican religious views. Like the mass of the nation, he grew more Protestant as time wore on; he was happier to persecute Catholics than Puritans; And he had no love for ecclesiastical jurisdiction. He warmly remonstrated with John Whitgift, the Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury, over his persecuting Articles of 1583. The finest encomium was passed on him by the queen herself, when she said, "This judgment I have of you, that you will not be corrupted with any manner of gifts, and that you will be faithful to the state."
From 1558, for forty years, the biography of Cecil is almost indistinguishable from that of Elizabeth and from the history of England. When she came to the throne in 1558, she appointed him Secretary of State. Of personal incident, apart from his mission to Scotland in 1560, there is little. He represented Lincolnshire in the Parliament of 1559, and Northamptonshire in that of 1563, and he took an active part in the proceedings of the House of Commons until his elevation to the peerage; but there seems no good evidence for the story that he was proposed as Speaker in 1563. In January 1561, he was given the lucrative office of Master of the Court of Wards and Liveries in succession to Sir Thomas Parry, and he did something to reform that instrument of tyranny and abuse. In February 1559, he was elected Chancellor of Cambridge University in succession to Cardinal Pole; he was created M.A. of that university on the occasion of Elizabeth's visit in 1564, and M.A. of Oxford on a similar occasion in 1566.
He was the first Chancellor of Trinity College, Dublin between 1592 and 1598.
The American international relations theorist Hans Morgenthau claimed Burghley accepted a pension (a bribe) from Spain,[1] although Burghley's biographer Conyers Read has claimed that there is no evidence for this.[2]
On 25 February 1571, in anticipation of the impending marriage between his daughter Anne Cecil (b. 1556) to Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, Queen Elizabeth elevated him as Baron Burghley. According to Oxfordian Theory, de Vere is considered the most likely author of the works of Shakespeare, outside William Shakespeare from Stratford-upon-Avon. The fact that the character of Polonius is generally accepted to be a parody of Burghley in Hamlet is a point in Oxford's favor, as a commoner would have been risking life and limb by doing so, given Burghley's status; Hamlet also contains quotes from private letters written by Burghley to his son in Paris that were not made public until the 20th century.
The fact that Burgley continued to act as Secretary of State after his elevation illustrates the growing importance of that office, which under his son became a secretary of the ship of state. In 1572, however, Lord Winchester, who had been Lord High Treasurer under Edward, Mary and Elizabeth, died, and Burghley succeeded to his post. It was a signal triumph over Leicester; and, although Burghley had still to reckon with cabals in the council and at court, his hold over the queen strengthened with the lapse of years. He collapsed (possibly from a stroke or heart attack) in 1592. Before he died, Robert, his only surviving son by his second wife, was ready to step into his shoes as the Queen's principal adviser. Having survived all his rivals, and all his children except Robert and Thomas, Burghley died at his London residence on 4 August 1598, and was buried in St Martin's Church, Stamford.
His younger son, Sir Robert Cecil (later created Baron Cecil, Viscount Cranborne and finally Earl of Salisbury), inherited his political mantle, taking on the role of chief minister and arranging a smooth transfer of power to the Stuart administration under King James I. His elder son, Sir Thomas Cecil, who inherited the Barony of Burghley on his death, was later created Earl of Exeter.
Private life
In strange contrast to his public unscrupulousness, Burghley's private life seems to have been upright; he was a faithful husband, a careful father and a dutiful master. A book-lover and antiquarian, he made a special hobby of heraldry and genealogy. It was the conscious and unconscious aim of the age to reconstruct a new landed aristocracy on the ruins of the old, Catholic order. As such, Burghley was a great builder, planter and patron. All the arts of architecture and horticulture were lavished on Burghley House and Theobalds (which his son, Robert, was to exchange with James I for Hatfield House). As the Marquess of Winchester (Burghley's predecessor as Lord High Treasurer) had said of himself, Burghley was "sprung from the willow rather than the oak". The interests of the State were his supreme consideration and to that end he felt no hesitation in sacrificing his conscience. He frankly disbelieved in toleration: "That State...could never be in safety where there was a toleration of two religions. For there is no enmity so great as that for religion; and therefore they that differ in the service of their God can never agree in the service of their country." With a maxim such as this, it was easy for him to maintain that Elizabeth's--and his--brutal measures were political and not religious. To say that he was Machiavellian is pointless, for every statesman is so, more or less; especially in the 16th century men preferred efficiency over principle. On the other hand, Burghley may have felt that principles are valueless without law and order; and that his craft and subtlety prepared a security in which principles might find some scope.
Burghley's descendants include the Marquesses of Exeter, descended from his elder son Thomas; and the Marquesses of Salisbury, descended from his younger son Robert. One of the latter branch, Robert Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830-1903), served three times as Prime Minister under Queen Victoria and Edward VII.
Nicholas White
The most prolonged of Cecil's surviving personal correspondences is with an Irish judge, Nicholas White, lasting from 1566 until 1590; it is contained in the State Papers Ireland 63 and Lansdowne MS 102, but receives hardly a mention in the literature on Cecil.
White had been a tutor to Cecil's children during his student days in London, and the correspondence suggests that he was held in lasting affection by the family. In the end, White fell into a Dublin controversy over the confessions of an intriguing priest, which threatened the authority of the Queen's deputised government in Ireland; out of caution Cecil withdrew his longstanding protection, and the judge was imprisoned in London and died soon after.
White's most remarked-upon service for Cecil is his report on his visit with Mary, Queen of Scots in 1569, during the early years of her imprisonment by Queen Elizabeth. He may have published an English translation of the Argonautica in the 1560s, but no copy has survived.
Description
"This Cecil, who was a man of extraordinary abilities, and of still greater prudence and cunning, was the chief prop of her (Elizabeth's) throne for nearly forty of the forty-three years of her reign. He died in 1598, in the seventy-seventh year of his age; and if success in unprincipled artifice, if fertility in cunning devices, if the obtaining of one's ends without any regard to the means, if in this pursuit sincerity be set at nought, and truth, law, justice, and mercy be trampled underfoot, if, so that you succeed in your end, apostasy, forgery, perjury, and the shedding of innocent blood be thought nothing of, this Cecil was certainly the greatest statesman that ever lived." William Cobbet - "The History of the Protestant Reformation in England and Ireland"
In Popular Culture
William Cecil has been a character in many works of fiction and documentary essay concerned with Elizabeth I's reign. The most recent, and perhaps best known depiction is by Sir Richard Attenborough in the films Elizabeth and its sequel, Elizabeth: The Golden Age. He was also a prominent supporting character in the 1937 film Fire Over England, starring Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, and Flora Robson. Burghley (spelled Burleigh in the fim) was played by Morton Selten.
The line "History teaches: never trust a Cecil!" was quoted, inter alia, in regards Lord Cranborne, a contemporary member of the Cecil family who was dismissed from his Conservative Party office in the House of Lords for conducting unauthorised negotiations with the Labour government.
Notes
1. ^ Hans J. Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations. The Struggle for Power and Peace. Fifth Edition (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1976), p. 242.
2. ^ Conyers Read, Lord Burghley and Queen Elizabeth (London: Jonathan Cape, 1960), p. 190, p. 561, n. 83.
Further Reading
* Burghley, William Cecil, baron, The Execution of Justice in England, 1583. Facsimile ed., 1936, Scholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, ISBN 9780820111759.
* Stephen Alford, Burghley: William Cecil at the Court of Elizabeth I (Yale University Press, 2008)
* Brett Usher, William Cecil and episcopacy, 1559–1577 (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003) (St Andrews Studies in Reformation History), Pp. xix+246.
* Calendar of Manuscripts of the Marquis of Salisbury: The Cecil Manuscripts (1306-1595) (TannerRitchie Publishing, 2008)
* This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
External links
Sister project Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley
* Archival material relating to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley listed at the UK National Register of Archives
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Categories: Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge | Barons in the Peerage of England | Chancellors of the University of Cambridge | Chancellors of the University of Dublin | Knights of the Garter | Lord High Treasurers | Lord-Lieutenants of Essex | Lord-Lieutenants of Hertfordshire | Lord-Lieutenants of Lincolnshire | Lords Privy Seal | Old Stamfordians | People associated with Trinity College, Dublin | People from Bourne, Lincolnshire | Secretaries of State of the Kingdom of England | Tudor people | 1520 births | 1598 deaths | Cecil family
Through "Y" paternal DNA testing, I (and others) share a common paternal ancestor with William Cecil Lord Burghley. The common ancestor in my case is currently estimated to have lived around 1300 AD. A professional researcher at Hereford Records Office has traced my earliest known paternal ancestor to Ganarew about 2 miles outside the town of Monmouth at the end of the 1600's. Where he was born is not known. Subsequently, my immediate paternal ancestors were living in the Vowchurch area of Herefordshire which is about 10 miles from Alt Yr Ynys, Walterstone. This seems to suggest that the connection between Lord Burghley and the Alt Yr Ynys Cecils may well be valid. We are trying to recruit other "Y" DNA male testers with relevant surnames with known ancestry in the Ewyas Lacy area and more broadly around the Herefordshire/Monmouthshire/Gloucestershire border areas. A simple and inexpensive "Y" DNA test would indicate whether or not an individual shares paternal ancestry with the Lord Burghley Cecils
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