William Compton, 1st Earl of Northampton

For other people named William Compton, see William Compton (disambiguation).
Portrait miniature of Sir William Compton as Baron Compton, c. 1600, by an unknown artist.
Arms of Sir William Compton, 1st Earl of Northampton, KG

William Compton, 1st Earl of Northampton, KG (died 24 June 1630), known as 2nd Baron Compton from 1589 to 1618, was an English peer.

Northampton was the son of Henry Compton, 1st Baron Compton, and Frances Hastings. His maternal grandparents were Francis Hastings, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon and Catherine Pole. Catherine was a daughter of Henry Pole, 11th Baron Montacute and Lady Jane Nevill. Jane was in turn a daughter of George Nevill, 4th Baron Bergavenny and Margaret Fenne.

He notably served as Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire and of Gloucestershire and as Lord President of the Marches and of the Dominion of Wales. In 1618 he was created Earl of Northampton.

Lord Northampton married in 1599 or 1600 to Elizabeth Spencer, a daughter of Sir John Spencer who had been Lord Mayor of London in 1594. Their children included:

Prince Henry's tournament

William Compton was a participant in the Accession Day tilts or tournaments at the royal court from 1589. When Prince Henry was made Prince of Wales in 1610, William distinguished himself at the tournament. He dressed as a shepherd knight and sat in a specially constructed "mount" or bower to accept challenges. An eyewitness reported:

He builded himself a bower upon the top of the wall next to St. James's Park, made in the manner of a sheepcote, and there he sat in a gray russet cloak and had a sheep crook in one hand as though he had been a shepherd, and through the top of the bower there stood up the mast of a ship gilded with gold and upon the top a pan with fire burning in it, as some thought with pitch and an iron mark to mark sheep. ...
Afterward, my Lord Compton descended from his sheepcote and mounted himself on a lofty steed, his men also attending him on horseback, every one wearing a hat of straw and their faces painted as black as the devil.[1]

The shepherd's bower was designed by Inigo Jones. The historian Roy Strong identifies this performance as a revival of Elizabethan pastoral themes, related to the shepherd knight Phillisides of Philip Sydney's Arcadia[2]

Notes

  1. Reports on various manuscripts: William Cleverly Alexander, vol.3, HMC (1904), pp.259–263, here spelling modernised and abbreviated.
  2. Strong, Roy, Henry Prince of Wales, Thames & Hudson (1986), p.159: The drawing by Jones is in the Devonshire Collection at Chatsworth House.

References

Political offices
Vacant
Title last held by
The Earl of Warwick
Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire
1603–1630
Succeeded by
The Earl of Northampton
Preceded by
The Lord Chandos
Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire
1622–1630
Preceded by
The Lord Gerard
Lord President of Wales
Lord Lieutenant of Wales (less Glamorgan
and Monmouthshire), Herefordshire,
Shropshire and Worcestershire

1617–1630
Succeeded by
The Earl of Bridgewater
Preceded by
The Earl of Worcester
Lord Lieutenant of Glamorgan and Monmouthshire
1629–1630
Honorary titles
Preceded by
Sir John Lewis
Custos Rotulorum of Cardiganshire
1626–1630
Succeeded by
Lord Vaughan
Peerage of England
New creation Earl of Northampton
5th creation
1618–1630
Succeeded by
Spencer Compton
Preceded by
Henry Compton
Baron Compton
(descended by acceleration)

1589–1626
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