1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Molesworth, Robert Molesworth, 1st Viscount

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22066141911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 18 — Molesworth, Robert Molesworth, 1st Viscount

MOLESWORTH, ROBERT MOLESWORTH, 1st Viscount (1656–1725), came of an old Northamptonshire family. His father Robert (d. 1656) was a Cromwellian who made a fortune in Dublin, and he himself supported William of Orange and in 1695 became a prominent member of the Irish privy council. In 1716 he was created a viscount. He was succeeded by his two sons, John, 2nd viscount (1679–1726), and Richard 3rd viscount (1680–1758), the latter of whom saved Marlborough’s life at the battle of Ramillies and rose to be a field-marshal. The 3rd viscount’s son Richard Nassau (1748–1793) succeeded to the title, which has descended accordingly.

A great-grandson of the 1st viscount, John Edward Nassau Molesworth (1790–1877), vicar of Rochdale, was a well-known High Churchman and controversialist; and two of his sons became prominent men—William Nassau Molesworth (1816–1890), author of History of England 1830–1871 (1871–1873), History of the Reform Bill (1865), and History of the Church of England (1882); and Sir Guilford Molesworth (b. 1828), an eminent engineer and economist.