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  1. Edward Sackville, 4th Earl of Dorset KG (1591 – 17 July 1652) was an English courtier, soldier and politician. He sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1622 and became Earl of Dorset in 1624. He fought a duel in his early life, and was later involved in colonisation in North America.

  2. 3 de may. de 2022 · July 1652. Age 61. Burial of Edward Sackville, 4th Earl of Dorset. St Michael and All Angels, Withyham, Sussex, England (United Kingdom) Genealogy for Edward Sackville (c.1591 - 1652) family tree on Geni, with over 255 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • July 18, 1652
  3. Edward Sackville, 4o Conde de Dorset KG (1591 – 17 julio 1652) fue un cortesano, soldado y político inglés. Se sentó en la Casa de los Comunes de 1621 a 1622 y se convirtió en Earl de Dorset en 1624.

  4. When Edward Sackville, 4th Earl of Dorset was born in 1590, in Charterhouse St Mary, London, England, United Kingdom, his father, Sir Robert Sackville 2nd Earl of Dorset, was 29 and his mother, Margaret Howard, was 30. He married Mary Curzon on 2 March 1611, in London, England. They were the parents of at least 4 sons.

    • Male
    • Mary Curzon, Mary
  5. SACKVILLE, Sir Edward (1590-1652), of South Berwick, Suss. and Dorset Court, Fleet Street, London. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1604-1629, ed. Andrew Thrush and John P. Ferris, 2010. Available from Cambridge University Press.

  6. 'Dorset became a Privy Councillor in 1626 and Lord Chamberlain to Queen Henrietta Maria in 1628. During the Civil War he was a moderate Royalist. For a full-length study, see David L. Smith, 'The Political Career of Edward Sackville, fourth Earl of Dorset (1590-1652)' (unpubl. Ph.D. thesis, Univ. of Cambridge, 199o). For detailed analyses of

  7. Thus Vita Sackville-West on her seventeenth-century ancestor, Edward Sackville, fourth earl of Dorset. Such labelling indicates the problems which still bedevil any study of Civil War royalism. Brian Wormald's Clarendon brilliantly revealed that the men who joined Charles I in 1642 represented a broad range of opinion.