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Charles Middleton, 2nd Earl of Middleton

English and Scottish politician (1649/50–1719)


English and Scottish politician (1649/50–1719)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Right Honourable
nameThe Earl of Middleton
honorific-suffixPC
imageEarl of Middleton arms.svg
captionCoat of arms of the Earl of Middleton
officeSecretary of State for the Southern Department
term_start28 October 1688
term_end2 December 1688
monarchJames II
predecessorThe Earl of Sunderland
successorThe Earl of Shrewsbury
office1Secretary of State for the Northern Department
term_start124 August 1684
term_end128 October 1688
monarch1Charles II
James II
predecessor1Sidney Godolphin
successor1The Viscount Preston
office2Secretary of State in Scotland
term_start226 September 1682
term_end224 August 1684
alongside2The Earl of Moray
monarch2Charles II
predecessor2The Earl of Moray
successor2The Earl of Moray
John Drummond
office3Jacobite Secretary of State
term_start31693
term_end31713
monarch3James II
James III
predecessor3The Duke of Melfort
successor3Thomas Higgons
birthnameCharles Middleton
birth_date1650
death_date
restingplaceSaint-Germain, France
nationalityScottish
occupationPolitician and soldier
spouseLady Catherine Brudenell ( 1648–1743)
fatherJohn Middleton, 1st Earl of Middleton

| honorific-prefix = The Right Honourable | honorific-suffix = PC James II John Drummond James III Charles Middleton, 2nd Earl of Middleton, Jacobite 1st Earl of Monmouth, PC (1649/1650 – 9 August 1719) was a Scottish and English politician who held several offices under Charles II and James II & VII. He served as Secretary of State for Scotland, the Northern Department and the Southern Department, before acting as Jacobite Secretary of State and chief advisor to James II and then his son James III during their exile in France.

Life

Charles Middleton was born around 1650, the only son of John Middleton, 1st Earl of Middleton, and his first wife Grizel Durham. He had two elder sisters, Helen and Grizel.

Originally from Kincardineshire, in the first part of the 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms, John Middleton supported the Covenanters, who appointed him commander-in-chief in 1644. After switching sides in 1648, he accompanied Charles II into exile, and Charles grew up in exile, returning home in the 1660 Restoration.

His father died in 1674 leaving him little except for the title and debts; in 1683, Charles married Lady Catherine Brudenell, (1648–1743), daughter of the Catholic Earl of Cardigan. They had four children:

  • John Drummond (1683–1746);
  • Katherine Drummond (1685–1763);
  • Charles Drummond (1688–1738); and
  • Elizabeth Drummond (26 June 1690 – 1773), who married 25 November 1709 at St Germain's to Edward Drummond (died 7 February 1760 at Paris), 6th Duke of Perth (in the Jacobite peerage), titular 9th Earl of Perth, the 1st Duke's third son.

Middleton was described by Gilbert Burnet as ‘a man of generous temper, but without much religion’; he remained a Protestant until 1701, when he converted to Catholicism at the request of the dying James II.

Career

Middleton is thought to have spent 1669 to 1671 in France and Italy; in 1673, he was commissioned as a captain in the 3rd Foot, later the Buffs, which served in the 1672-1678 Franco-Dutch War as part of the Dutch Scots Brigade. By 1678, he was a Lieutenant-Colonel and governor of Bruges.

Shortly after this, he was suggested as Secretary of State for Scotland, in place of the Duke of Lauderdale. This went to Alexander Stuart, 5th Earl of Moray and in June 1680, Middleton was made envoy to Emperor Leopold I.

He returned to Scotland in July 1681, where he became a close associate of James and his wife Mary of Modena. He was appointed to the Scottish Privy Council and made joint Secretary of State for Scotland with Moray on 26 September 1682.

In 1684, he relocated to London and joined the English Privy Council in July and Secretary of State for the Northern Department in August. After James succeeded as king in February 1685, he was elected for Winchelsea and given the task of managing the House of Commons. Parliament was suspended for refusing to repeal the Test Act, while James' reliance on a small circle of Catholics made Middleton suspect as one of the few remaining Protestants.

He was present at the birth of the Prince of Wales in June 1688 and became Secretary of State for the Southern Department in September 1688. When James fled to France after the November 1688 Glorious Revolution, he remained in England; in 1692, he was held in the Tower of London for plotting to restore him and after his release, joined the exiled court at Saint-Germain.

He proposed a more moderate declaration for a Jacobite restoration than James' chief advisor and Secretary of State, John Drummond, 1st Earl of Melfort. He became joint Secretary of State with Melfort, responsible for correspondence with England and Scotland, and became sole Secretary of State after Melfort was dismissed in June 1694. In England, he was tried in absentia for treason and outlawed on 23 July 1694, and attainted on 2 July 1695.

He continued as Secretary until James' death in September 1701, when he was appointed to the Regency Council during the minority of his son, James III. Despite his wish to resign, he was persuaded to remain in office and made the Earl of Monmouth in the Jacobite peerage.

With his two sons, Middleton accompanied James in 1708 during the attempted Franco-Jacobite landing in Scotland and allowed to resign as Secretary in 1713. He briefly joined James in Scotland during the 1715 Rising, before returning to France, where he served as Mary's Lord Chamberlain until her death in 1718. Granted a pension by the French government, he died on 9 August 1719 and was buried at the parish church of Saint-Germain.

References

Sources

References

  1. {{Cite EB1911
  2. "Middleton, Earl of (S, 1660 - forfeited 1695)".
  3. Red Book of Scotland
  4. "MIDDLETON, Charles, 2nd Earl of Middleton [S]. (c.1650-1719).The House of Commons 1660-1690 (Online ed.).". Boydell and Brewer.
  5. (1812). "Proceedings against John Earl of Melfort, John Earl of Middletoun, Richard Earl of Lauderdale, and several others, for treason and rebellion, inciting the French King to invade their Majesties Dominions, and remaining subject to the French King". A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and Other Crimes and Misdemeanors.
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