Difference between revisions of "Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton"

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(added life history facts)
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A. L. Rowse, in 'Shakespeare the Elizabethan', says that the Earl of Southampton had homosexual relations with Sir Henry Danvers, perhaps also with the Earl of Rutland, and lay in his tent with Captain Piers Edmonds, whom he 'would cull and hug him in his arms and play wantonly with him' during the Irish campaign <ref> British Library, MS M/485/41.Thanks to Rictor Norton for this reference </ref>.
 
A. L. Rowse, in 'Shakespeare the Elizabethan', says that the Earl of Southampton had homosexual relations with Sir Henry Danvers, perhaps also with the Earl of Rutland, and lay in his tent with Captain Piers Edmonds, whom he 'would cull and hug him in his arms and play wantonly with him' during the Irish campaign <ref> British Library, MS M/485/41.Thanks to Rictor Norton for this reference </ref>.
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Southampton was deeply involved in the Essex's Rebellion of 1601, and in February of that year he was sentenced to death. Sir Robert Cecil, who urged the Queen to show the greatest possible degree of clemency, obtained the commutation of his penalty to life imprisonment. He was restored to court under [James 1]].
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He married and had several children.
 
He married and had several children.
 
He is buried in the parish church of Titchfield, Hampshire, U.K.
 
He is buried in the parish church of Titchfield, Hampshire, U.K.

Revision as of 15:54, 30 December 2018

Southampton in his teens: the Cobbe Portrait, now at Hatchlands Park, Surrey. It was at one time thought to have been the portrait of a woman
Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton (1573–1624) was a patron of William Shakespeare and thought to have been the "fair youth" mentioned in Shakespeare's sonnets.

Just before his eighth birthday his father died and he inherited the Earldom.

A. L. Rowse, in 'Shakespeare the Elizabethan', says that the Earl of Southampton had homosexual relations with Sir Henry Danvers, perhaps also with the Earl of Rutland, and lay in his tent with Captain Piers Edmonds, whom he 'would cull and hug him in his arms and play wantonly with him' during the Irish campaign [1].

Southampton was deeply involved in the Essex's Rebellion of 1601, and in February of that year he was sentenced to death. Sir Robert Cecil, who urged the Queen to show the greatest possible degree of clemency, obtained the commutation of his penalty to life imprisonment. He was restored to court under [James 1]].

He married and had several children.

He is buried in the parish church of Titchfield, Hampshire, U.K.
  1. British Library, MS M/485/41.Thanks to Rictor Norton for this reference