The Earl of Lindsey | |
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Personal details | |
Born | 8 November 1630 |
Died | 8 May 1701 | (aged 70)
Spouse(s) | Mary Massingberd Hon. Elizabeth Wharton Lady Elizabeth Pope |
Children | 8 |
Parent(s) | Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey Martha Ramsay (née Cockayne), Dowager Countess of Holderness |
Robert Bertie, 3rd Earl of Lindsey PC FRS (8 November 1630 – 8 May 1701), styled Lord Willoughby de Eresby from 1642 to 1666, was an English nobleman.
He was the son of Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey and Martha Cokayne.[1] He travelled on the Continent, in France and Italy from 1647 to 1652, attending the University of Padua in 1651.
He contested Boston in 1661 and was returned to the Cavalier Parliament, in which he sat until he succeeded his father as Earl of Lindsey and Lord Great Chamberlain in 1666.[2]
Lindsey had inherited an electoral interest at Stamford, on which his brother Peregrine had been returned since 1665. In a 1677 by-election, Lindsey treated the voters lavishly and secured the election of his candidate against that of the 4th Earl of Exeter, heretofore the predominant interest in the borough. For a brief period, both Peregrine and their younger brother Charles Bertie sat for the borough, but the Exclusion crisis in 1679 temporarily destroyed Lindsey's influence and both were turned out. Lindsey's brothers regained both seats at the 1685 election, but in 1689, he compromised with the 5th Earl of Exeter and each chose one member, Lindsey's brother Charles holding the seat until 1711.[3] In 1694, he put in his younger son Philip at a by-election alongside Charles, but the Exeter interest put up a candidate again in 1698 and Philip did not stand.[4]
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