Edward Conway, 1st Viscount Conway

The Viscount Conway
Lord President of the Council
In office
1628–1631
MonarchCharles I
Preceded byThe Earl of Marlborough
Personal details
Born
Edward Conway

1564 (1564)
Died3 January 1631(1631-01-03) (aged 66–67)
St Martin's Lane, London, England
Resting placeArrow, Warwickshire, England
NationalityEnglish
SpouseDorothy Tracy

Edward Conway, 1st Viscount Conway PC (1564 – 3 January 1631) was an English soldier and statesman. He was the son and heir of Sir John Conway of Arrow, and his wife Ellen or Eleanor, daughter of Sir Fulke Greville of Beauchamp's Court, Warwickshire and his wife Elizabeth Willoughby, 3rd Baroness Willoughby de Broke.[1]

Lord Conway commanded a foot regiment at the sack of Cadiz in 1596, where he was knighted.[2] He then served as governor of Brill, an English Cautionary Town near Rotterdam in the Netherlands, where his daughter Brilliana (who married Robert Harley) was born. In the first parliament held in the reign of James I, he sat as member for Penryn. When Brill was handed back to the States of Holland in 1616, he was given a pension.

Conway was appointed to the Privy Council in 1622 and made a Secretary of State in January 1623 for five years. In the parliament which convened on 19 February 1624 he was returned for Evesham. He was created Baron Conway, of Ragley, in 1624 or 1625 and Viscount Conway in 1627, and received the Irish peerage title of Viscount Killultagh. No doubt as a result of his time in the Netherlands, he was a supporter of a 'Protestant' foreign policy; he was sent as ambassador to Prague. In 1628, he was appointed Lord President of the Council, a post he held until his death on 3 January 1631.

  1. ^ s:Conway, Edward (DNB00)
  2. ^ Thomas Birch, Memoirs of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, vol. 2 (London, 1754), p. 50.