Earl of Salisbury

Title in the Peerage of England

Earldom of Salisbury
subsidiary of
Marquessate of Salisbury
since 1789

Cecil
Arms of Cecil-Gascogne, Marquess and Earl of Salisbury: Quarterly, 1st and 4th, Barry of ten Argent and Azure over all six Escutcheons Sable three two and one each charged with a Lion rampant of the First a Crescent for difference (Cecil); 2nd and 3rd, Argent on a Pale Sable a Conger's Head erased and erect Or charged with an Ermine Spot (Gascoyne)
Creation date1149 (first creation)
1337 (second creation)
1472 (third creation)
1478 (fourth creation)
1512 (restoration)
1605 (sixth creation)
Created byEmpress Matilda (first creation)
Edward III (second creation)
Edward IV (third and fourth creation)
Henry VIII (restoration)
James I (fifth creation)
PeeragePeerage of England
First holderPatrick of Salisbury, 1st Earl of Salisbury
Present holderRobert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury
Heir apparentRobert Gascoyne-Cecil, Viscount Cranborne
Remainder toHeirs male of the first earl's body lawfully begotten
Extinction date1322 (first creation)
1471 (second creation)
1478 (third creation)
1484 (fourth creation)
1539 (fifth creation)
Seat(s)Hatfield House, Cranborne Manor

Earl of Salisbury is a title that has been created several times in English and British history. It has a complex history and is now a subsidiary title to the marquessate of Salisbury.

Background

The title was first created for Patrick de Salisbury in the middle twelfth century. In 1196 the title passed to Patrick’s granddaughter, Ela, who married William Longespée, an illegitimate son of Henry II the same year. Ela was predeceased by husband, son and grandson, and was succeeded by her great-granddaughter, Margaret Longespée. Margaret married Henry de Lacy, 3rd Earl of Lincoln, and their daughter Alice eventually became Countess of Salisbury, in 1310, and of Lincoln, in 1311. Alice had married Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, in 1294. When the Earl of Lancaster lost his titles and was executed for treason in 1322, the Countess surrendered all of her titles to the King, and the titles lapsed.

The title was created for a second time in 1337 for William Montacute of the noble House of Montagu. This line ended in the sole heiress, Alice Montacute, and her husband Richard Neville took up the earldom 'by right of his wife'.[Note 1][1]

After Richard's death at the Battle of Barnet, in 1471 , the title was granted in 1472 to George, Duke of Clarence, who was married to Richard's eldest daughter. When the Duke of Clarence was executed in 1478 for treason (supposedly by being drowned in a vat of Malmsey wine), the title was forfeit. It was then granted to Edward of Middleham (who was his nephew via the Duke's brother Richard), who died in 1484 at the age of 10.

It was restored to two of George of Clarence's children: to his son Edward in 1485 until his execution for treason in 1499, and to Edward's sister, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, in 1513 until she was also executed, and the title again forfeited, in 1539.

In 1605 the title was given to Robert Cecil, a close advisor to James I. Cecil was a son of Queen Elizabeth I's chief advisor, William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, and half-brother to Thomas Cecil, 1st Earl of Exeter. In 1789 James Cecil, the 7th Earl, was created the Marquess of Salisbury by George III.

Titleholders

First creation (1145)

Second creation (1337)

Arms of Montacute family
Arms of Neville "the Kingmaker"

Third creation (1472)

Fourth creation (1478)

Restoration of second or third creation (1512)

Fifth creation (1605)

Arms of the Cecil family

Family tree

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Cecil family tree, including earls of Exeter and Salisbury (1605) and marquesses of Exeter (1801) and Salisbury
David Cecil
c. 1460c. 1540
Richard Cecil
c. 1495–1553
Baron Burghley, 1571
William Cecil
1520–1598
1st Baron Burghley
Mildred Cooke
1526–1589
Earl of Exeter, 1605Baron Cecil, 1603
Viscount Cranborne, 1604
Earl of Salisbury (5th creation), 1605
Thomas Cecil
1542–1623
1st Earl of Exeter, 2nd Baron Burghley
Robert Cecil
1563–1612
1st Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Viscount Wimbledon and Baron Cecil of Putney, 1625
William Cecil
1566–1600
2nd Earl of Exeter, 3rd Baron Burghley
Richard Cecil
1570–1633
Edward Cecil
1572–1638
1st Viscount Wimbledon and Baron Cecil of Putney
Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Suffolk
1561–1626
1st Earl of Suffolk
Barony Cecil of Putney and viscounty Wimbledon extinct, 1638
David Cecil
c. 1600–1643
3rd Earl of Exeter, 4th Baron Burghley
William Cecil
1591–1668
2nd Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Catherine
c. 1590–1673
John Cecil
1628–1678
4th Earl of Exeter, 5th Baron Burghley
Charles Cecil
1619–1660
styled Viscount Cranborne
John Manners
1604–1679
8th Earl of Rutland
John Cecil
c. 1648–1700
5th Earl of Exeter, 6th Baron Burghley
James Cecil
1648–1683
3rd Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Margaret
d.c. 1682
John Cecil
1674–1721
6th Earl of Exeter, 7th Baron Burghley
James Cecil
1666–1694
4th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Thomas Tufton
1644–1729
6th Earl of Thanet
John Cecil
c. 1700–1722
7th Earl of Exeter, 8th Baron Burghley
Brownlow Cecil
1701–1754
8th Earl of Exeter, 9th Baron Burghley
James Cecil
1691–1728
5th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Anne
1693–1757
Brownlow Cecil
1725–1793
9th Earl of Exeter, 10th Baron Burghley
James Cecil
1713–1780
6th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Wills Hill
1718–1793
1st Marquess of Downshire
Marquess of Exeter (2nd creation), 1801Marquess of Salisbury, 1789
Henry Cecil
1725–1793
1st Marquess of Exeter, 10th Earl of Exeter, 11th Baron Burghley
James Cecil
1743–1823
1st Marquess of Salisbury, 7th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Emily
1750–1835
Brownlow Cecil
1795–1867
2nd Marquess of Exeter, 11th Earl of Exeter, 12th Baron Burghley
James Brownlow William Gascoyne-Cecil
1791–1868
2nd Marquess of Salisbury, 8th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
William Allen Cecil
1825–1895
3rd Marquess of Exeter, 12th Earl of Exeter, 13th Baron Burghley
James Emilius William Evelyn Gascoyne-Cecil
1821–1865
styled Viscount Cranborne
Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil
1830–1903
3rd Marquess of Salisbury, 9th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, 1923
Brownlow Henry George Cecil
1849–1898
4th Marquess of Exeter, 13th Earl of Exeter, 14th Baron Burghley
Mary Rothes Margaret Cecil
1857–1919
2nd Baroness Amherst of Hackney
William Cecil
1854–1943
James Edward Hubert Gascoyne-Cecil
1861–1947
4th Marquess of Salisbury, 10th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Edgar Algernon Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
1864–1958
1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood
Viscounty Cecil of Chelwood extinct, 1958
William Thomas Brownlow Cecil
1876–1956
5th Marquess of Exeter, 14th Earl of Exeter, 15th Baron Burghley
William Amherst Cecil
1886–1914
Robert Arthur James Gascoyne-Cecil
1893–1972
5th Marquess of Salisbury, 11th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
David George Brownlow Cecil
1905–1981
6th Marquess of Exeter, 15th Earl of Exeter, 16th Baron Burghley
William Martin Alleyne Cecil
1909–1988
7th Marquess of Exeter, 16th Earl of Exeter, 17th Baron Burghley
William Alexander Evering Cecil
1912–1980
3rd Baron Amherst of Hackney
Robert Edward Peter Gascoyne-Cecil
1916–2003
6th Marquess of Salisbury, 12th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
William Michael Anthony Cecil
b. 1935
8th Marquess of Exeter, 17th Earl of Exeter, 18th Baron Burghley
William Hugh Amherst Cecil
1940–2009
4th Baron Amherst of Hackney
Robert Edward Peter Gascoyne-Cecil
b. 1946
7th Marquess of Salisbury, 13th Earl of Salisbury, Viscount Cranborne, and Baron Cecil of Essendon
Anthony Cecil
b. 1970
styled Lord Burghley
Exeter heir apparent
Hugh William Amherst Cecil
b. 1968
5th Baron Amherst of Hackney
2nd in line to Exeter
Robert Edward "Ned" William Gascoyne-Cecil
b. 1970
styled Viscount Cranborne
Salisbury heir apparent
James Richard Gascoyne-Cecil
b. 1976
2nd in line to Salisbury

Notes

  1. ^ Complete Peerage records (XI, p. 395, note (o)) that Parliament agreed to this until the king came of age. The question then is whether this was or was not a creation of a new line. Complete Peerage did not think so and treated all earls up to and including Margaret Plantagenet as part of the one line created in 1337. Certainly the earldom was inherited later by Richard Neville the Kingmaker, upon whose death the title went into abeyance because multiple individuals were entitled to inherit it. However in those days the modern doctrine of abeyance had not been formulated, certainly on Richard the Kingmaker's death there were only his two daughters and daughters were always regarded as equal in status unlike sons where the first son was always first in status and inheritance; so without a Royal initiative it was impossible to say to which daughter the title should go, not to mention that Richard earl of Warwick and Salisbury had been in rebellion against the sovereign and died in battle.
  2. ^ Edward was son of George of Clarence above, and the other grandson of the last Neville earl; if the modern doctrine of abeyance were retroactively applied to earldoms - as it has not been - he would have inherited the Earldom of Salisbury in 1484; unless the creation of 1472 would be the termination of the abeyance. After 1485 he was kept in custody and did not attend the House of Lords under any title; in the intervening months, he was too young to sit. He was executed and attainted in 1499 at the age of 24, at which point all his titles, whatever they may have been, were forfeit. It is possible, however, that he had used it as a courtesy title, as it was a subsidiary title of his father.

References

  1. ^ Complete Peerage vol XI, pp.395-399
  2. ^ Complete Peerage, Vol. XI p. 399