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Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth

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Education
  
Spain

Name
  
Charles 1st

Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth
Born
  
c. 1657
Westminster, England

Died
  
October 17, 1680, English Tangier

Spouse
  
Lady Bridget Osborne (m. 1678–1680)

Parents
  
Catherine Pegge, Charles II of England

Grandparents
  
Charles I of England, Henrietta Maria of France

Cousins
  
Anne - Queen of Great Brit, William III of England, Mary II of England, James Francis Edward S, Marie Louise of Orleans

Similar People
  
Charles II of England, Catherine Pegge, Charles Beauclerk - 1st Duke, Charlotte Lee - Countess, James Scott - 1st Duke of

Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth (1657 – 17 October 1680) was the illegitimate son of King Charles II of England, by Catherine Pegge. He had a sister called Catherine FitzCharles who became a nun. His mother went on to marry Sir Edward Greene of Samford in Essex, but they had no children. His subsidiary titles were Viscount Totness and Baron Dartmouth.

Contents

In the time of his youth, he was elevated to the peerage, 28 July 1675, as Baron of Dartmouth, Viscount Totness, and Earl of Plymouth, to the end he might be the more encouraged to persist in the paths of virtue, and thereby be the better fitted for the managery of great affairs when he should attain to riper years.

Life

Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth

Charles FitzCharles was born in or about 1657. He was the illegitimate son of Charles II, by Catherine, daughter of Thomas Pegge of Yeldersley, Derbyshire. Charles II had the affair with Catherine (or Katherine) Pegge whilst he was abroad in exile. Charles the younger was allowed to use the Royal arms with a "baton sinister, Vaire.. and was bred to the sea". He was educated abroad, probably in Spain and he was known by the nickname of "Don Carlos".

Sir William Dugdale wrote, giving much testimony of his singular accomplishments:

In the time of his youth, he was elevated to the peerage, 28 July 1675, as Baron of Dartmouth, Viscount Totness, and Earl of Plymouth, to the end he might be the more encouraged to persist in the paths of virtue, and thereby be the better fitted for the managery of great affairs when he should attain to riper years.

He married on 19 September 1678 in Wimbledon, Surrey, Lady Bridget Osborne, third daughter of Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of Leeds, Lord High Treasurer.

He was a friend of the dramatic poet, Thomas Otway, for whom he procured a cornet's commission in a regiment of horse serving in Flanders. Later when his friend, John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Normanby in consequence of his attachment to Queen Anne, then Princess of Denmark, was sent to the Colony of Tangier, it was reported that the Duke was purposely despatched in a leaky vessel in order to get rid of him. Nevertheless the Earl of Plymouth, notwithstanding he was sensible of the danger, insisted on accompanying him.

Death

The Sultan Moulay Ismail of Morocco had made an unsuccessful attempt to seize the town of Tangier in 1679, but ended up imposing a crippling blockade. The King's Own Royal Regiment was formed on the 13 July 1680 as the 2nd Tangier, or Earl of Plymouth's Regiment of Foot, with Charles as the founding Colonel. Charles died of dysentery without issue on 17 October 1680, aged 23, and the English were ultimately forced to withdraw, ending their presence in Tangier. The title of Earl of Plymouth became extinct, but it was recreated two years later for Thomas Hickman-Windsor, 1st Earl of Plymouth (born 1682).

Plymouth's body was returned to England and he was buried on 18 January 1681 in Westminster Abbey. His wife, the Countess, remarried in 1706, Philip Bisse, Bishop of Hereford, and she died on 9 May 1718. Bridget left the Bishop a widower and he erected a handsome tablet in her honour in Hereford Cathedral.

References

Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth Wikipedia