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  1. 25 de jul. de 2023 · Sir Robert Cecil (b. 1563–d. 1612), created 1st earl of Salisbury in 1605, was the most influential politician in the final years of Elizabeth I’s reign and played a leading role in the first decade of James VI & I’s occupancy of the English throne. Cecil’s political stature was perhaps all the more remarkable because of his scoliosis ...

  2. 14 de oct. de 2018 · Robert Cecil. Posted on October 14, 2018. Robert was born in 1563, the second son of William Cecil. His mother was Mildred Cooke. Robert had an elder half-brother called Thomas who would become the 1st Earl of Exeter but it was this younger, much more clever son, upon who William lavished his affection as well as training him to take over the ...

  3. Hace 5 días · In his essay “Of Deformity,” first published in 1612: and the whole world knew that he was referring to his cousin Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, who had just died. “For as nature hath done ill by them,” he went on, “so do they by nature; being for the most part (as the Scripture saith) void of natural affection.”.

  4. 27 de may. de 2024 · Search for: 'Robert Cecil' in Oxford Reference ». (1563–1612).Jacobean statesman. He was the younger son, but political heir, of Elizabeth I's chief minister William Cecil (Burghley). Small in stature, humpbacked, and frail, he entered Parliament in 1584. Knighted in 1591, he was already acting secretary of state, though not formally ...

  5. It is estimated that this concession was worth about £7,000 per annum. (85) In February 1612, Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, was taken very ill suffering from severe stomach pains. He went to Bath, his condition being made worse by the rattling of the coach on a five days' journey.

  6. Robert Cecil was the only son of William Cecil, Lord Burghley, with his second wife Mildred. Born in June 1563, he was an ungainly boy, with a humped back, yet he grew up at the heart of English politics.

  7. Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil was a British statesman and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1937. He was one of the principal draftsmen of the League of Nations Covenant in 1919 and one of the most loyal workers for the League until its supersession by the United Nations in 1945.