Page:Biographical catalogue of the portraits at Weston, the seat of the Earl of Bradford (IA gri 33125003402027).pdf/82

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No. 16.


WILLIAM RUSSELL, FIFTH EARL, FIRST DUKE
OF BEDFORD.

In armour. Lace cravat. Wig.

BORN 1613, DIED 1700.

By Sir Godfrey Kneller.

He was the eldest son of Francis Russell, fourth Earl of Bedford, by Catherine Brydges, daughter and co-heir of Lord Chandos. He was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford; and after travelling abroad for two years, we are told he returned home in 1634, a very handsome and accomplished gentleman. Of his personal beauty and noble bearing the fine portrait of William Russell, and Lord Digby, by Vandyck, bears undoubted testimony. He had been created Knight of the Bath at the coronation of Charles the First. The representative of a high-born family, and heir to a very large fortune, young Lord Russell was keenly watched by the match-*makers of the day. At that time three rival beauties divided the admiration of the Court—Lady Elizabeth Cecil, Lady Dorothy Sidney, and Lady Anne Carr, the only child of the Earl and Countess of Somerset. She was born in the Tower at the time of her mother's imprisonment for the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, and had been brought up in total ignorance of her parents' ignominy. 'The voice goes,' says a contemporary writer, 'that young Russell bends somewhat towards the Lady Anne Carr.' One would not be surprised to hear that Lord Bedford was most adverse to the union. He trembled for the future welfare of his son, and the honour of his house, for heavy was the blot on the young lady's 'scutcheon. He promised his consent to any other union his