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Fitzwilliam Coningsby

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Name
  
Fitzwilliam Coningsby

Role
  
Politician


Died
  
1666

Children
  
Humphrey Coningsby

Fitzwilliam Coningsby

Grandchildren
  
Thomas Coningsby, 1st Earl Coningsby

Fitzwilliam Coningsby (died August 1666) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1621 and in 1640. He supported the Royalist cause in the English Civil War.

Contents

Biography

Coningsby was born at Hampton Court, Herefordshire, the eldest son of the eminent soldier and politician Sir Thomas Coningsby, and his wife Phillipa Fitzwilliam, daughter of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Milton. He was High Steward of Leominster in 1605.

In 1621, Coningsby was elected Member of Parliament for Herefordshire. In 1625 he inherited Hampton Court on the death of his father. He was High Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1626-27 and 1642-43.

In November 1640, Coningsby was elected again as MP for Herefordshire in the Long Parliament, but was expelled in 1641 for being a monopolist, He was one of the "Nine Worthies" - nine justices who formed the royalist leadership in Herefordshire in the summer of 1642. The other "worthies" were Sir William Croft, Wallop Brabazon, Thomas Wigmore of Shobden, Thomas Price of Wisterdon, William Smallman, Henry Lingen, William Rudhall and John Scudamore.

He fought for the King throughout the Civil War until in 1646 he is found at the Siege of Worcester protesting against the surrender of the city by the Royalist commander. Fitzwilliam then went into exile and suffered heavily in the sequestration of his estates, his wife Cecily and his children being reduced to comparative poverty. His petitions and those of his wife and of his sons, with the counter petitions of his tennants and of Sir Thomas Allen to whom the bulk of his estates had been granted occupy six pages (2064–71) of the Callendar of the Committee for Compounding, etc., and in 1653 he was still desperatly pleading "the starving condition" of himself and his family. At the Restoration of Charles II Fitzwiliam recovered his estates.

Coningsby died in 1666 and was buried on 23 August 1666 at Hope under Dinmore, Herefordshire,

Family

Coningsby married Cecily Nevill, daughter of Henry Nevill, 9th Baron Bergavenny and his first wife Lady Mary Sackville, on 12 July 1617 at St. Alphage, London. She was considered one of the beauties of the Jacobean court, and was painted several times, notably by John Hoskins. They had five children : Cecilia, Philippa, Humphrey, Thomas and Henry. Humphrey Coningsby replaced his father in the Long Parliament and was the father of Thomas Coningsby, 1st Earl Coningsby

References

Fitzwilliam Coningsby Wikipedia