William Fiennes, 1st Viscount Saye and Sele
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person William Fiennes, 1st Viscount Saye and Sele (28 June 1582Template:Snd14 April 1662) was an English nobleman and politician. He was a leading critic of Charles I's rule during the 1620s and 1630s. He was known also for his involvement in several companies for setting up overseas colonies.<ref>John Burke, A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire, Volume 2 (H. Colburn and R. Bentley, 1832), 402.</ref>
Early life
He was born at the family home of Broughton Castle near Banbury, in Oxfordshire, the only son of Richard Fiennes, 7th Baron Saye and Sele, and his wife Constance, daughter of Sir William Kingsmill.<ref name="DNB">Template:Cite DNB</ref> He was educated at New College, Oxford. He was a descendant and heir of the sister of William of Wykeham, the college's founder. Fiennes succeeded to his father's barony in 1613.<ref>Arthur Collins and Sir Egerton Brydges, Peerage of England: genealogical, biographical, and historical (F.C. and J. Rivington, 1812), 31–32.</ref>
1620s
During the latter part of James I's reign, Saye was one of the most prominent opponents of the court. In 1621 he was active against Francis Bacon, and urged that he should be degraded from the peerage. In 1622 he opposed the benevolence levied by the king, saying that he knew no law besides parliament to persuade men to give away their own goods; he spent six months in the Fleet Prison, and then had a period of house arrest. When George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham returned from Spain and proposed to break the Spanish match, the duke and baron became temporary allies. Saye became Viscount Saye and Sele in 1624.<ref>The Peerage of England, Scotland, and Ireland: The peerage of Scotland (W. Owen [and 2 others], 1790), 296.</ref> He pressed home the attack on Lionel Cranfield, 1st Earl of Middlesex.<ref name="DNB"/>
In the parliament of 1626, Saye was back in opposition; he defended the privileges of the peerage against the new king Charles I in the cases of John Digby, 1st Earl of Bristol and Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel, and intervened on behalf of Dudley Digges when Buckingham accused him of speaking treason. In the autumn of the same year, he was among those who refused to pay the forced loan. In the parliament of 1628, he employed with success the right of peers to protest. In the debates on the Petition of Right, he opposed the reservations and amendments of the court party.<ref name="DNB"/>
Colonist
During the personal rule of Charles I, Saye devoted time and money to schemes of colonisation: his motives were in part financial, but also religious and political.<ref name="DNB"/>
Providence Island
Template:Further In 1630 he established, together with Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke, John Pym, and others from the group of Puritan entrepreneurs, a company to settle the Providence Island colony. It was to be developed on what is now known as Isla de Providencia in the Caribbean Sea, part of the Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina, and a department of the nation of Colombia.<ref name="DNB"/>
New England
Template:Further Saye obtained a patent for a large tract of land on the Connecticut River on 19 March 1632 from Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick and the New England Company, again in association with Lord Brooke and ten others.
They appointed John Winthrop the Younger to act as governor and established a fort at the mouth of the river, to which they gave the name of "Sayebrook." Next they sent over a shipload of colonists. In 1633, Saye and Brooke also purchased a plantation at Cocheco or Dover, in what is now New Hampshire, from some Bristol merchants.
The two men both contemplated settling in New England, but they demanded that an emigrant hereditary aristocracy be established as a preliminary, from which the governors were to be chosen. After Saye's constitutional idea received a hostile reception, the partners in the colony compromised to obtain colonists.<ref name="DNB"/>
Aftermath
Saye concentrated his energies on the settlement of Providence Island, while spreading disparaging reports about New England, including its climate and land. He soon abandoned his enterprises there and surrendered his rights. The New Hampshire settlements were made over to Massachusetts in 1641, and Sayebrook was sold to Connecticut three years later.<ref name="DNB"/>
Saye was one of the commissioners for the government from Westminster of the plantations appointed on 2 November 1643.<ref name="DNB"/>
Old Saybrook, Connecticut is named after Viscount Saye and Lord Brooke.
1630s politics
Leading puritans, including John Pym, who were members of the Providence Island Company met Saye at Broughton Castle to coordinate their opposition to the King. On several occasions, Saye outwitted the advisers of Charles I by his strict compliance with legal forms,<ref name="EB1911">{{#if: |
|{{#ifeq: Saye and Sele, William Fiennes, 1st Viscount |
|{{#ifeq: |
|
|
}}
|
}}
}}{{#ifeq: |
|{{#ifeq: y |
|This article
|One or more of the preceding sentences
}} incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain:
}}{{#invoke:template wrapper|{{#if:|list|wrap}}|_template=cite EB1911
|_exclude=footnote, inline, noicon, no-icon, noprescript, no-prescript, _debug
| noicon=1
}}{{#ifeq: ||}}</ref> earning him the nickname "old subtlety".
Although Saye resisted the levy of ship money, he accompanied Charles on his march against the Scots in 1639; but, with only one other peer, he refused to take the oath binding him to fight for the king "to the utmost of my power and hazard of my life". Then Charles I sought to win his favour by making him a Privy Councillor and Master of the Court of Wards.<ref name="EB1911"/>
He was the uncle and patron of Henry Parker whose early works are close to Saye's direct political concerns.<ref name = Tuck>Richard Tuck, Philosophy and Government 1572–1651 (1993), p. 227.</ref><ref>Jason Peacey, Politicians and Pamphleteers: Propaganda During the English Civil Wars and Interregnum (2004), pp. 113–5.</ref>
Civil War and Restoration
When the Civil War broke out, however, Saye was on the committee of safety. He was appointed as Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Cheshire, and raised a regiment that briefly occupied Oxford. However, "during his brief occupation of the city he neglected to fortify it against the king, fearing to anger the university" and the Royalists seized Oxford shortly afterwards.<ref>https://historyofparliament.com/2025/01/14/lord-saye-and-sele/. Retrieved 8 August 2025.</ref>
Saye was a member of the committee of both kingdoms; was mainly responsible for passing the self-denying ordinance through the House of Lords; and in 1647 stood up for the army in its struggle with the parliament.<ref name="EB1911"/>
In 1648, both at the treaty of Newport and elsewhere, Saye was anxious that Charles should come to terms. After the king was executed, Saye retired into private life. In 1656 he recovered £500 damages from James Whinnel, gentleman of Wisbech. He agreed to donate £100 to the town of Wisbech in the Isle of Ely, with the interest to be used for providing clothing for the poor and administered by his son Richard Fiennes. <ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Saye became a privy counsellor again upon the restoration of Charles II. He died at Broughton Castle on 14 April 1662.<ref name="EB1911"/>
Family
Fiennes married Elizabeth, youngest daughter of John Temple of Stowe, in 1600.<ref>Huntington Library, Ca. STT Manorial Box 9, folder 21 for her baptism and marriage.</ref> She was born in May 1585 and was about fifteen at marriage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Their eldest son James (c. 1603–1674) succeeded him as 2nd viscount; other sons were the Parliamentarians Nathaniel Fiennes and John Fiennes.<ref name="EB1911"/> His daughter Bridget married her remote cousin Theophilus Clinton, 4th Earl of Lincoln, son of the 3rd Earl of Lincoln. Another daughter Ann married Sir Charles Wolseley, 2nd Baronet.
The viscounty of Saye and Sele became extinct in 1781,<ref name="EB1911"/> and the barony was subsequently held by the descendants of John Twisleton (died 1682) and his wife Elizabeth (died 1674), a daughter of the 2nd viscount.<ref>Arthur Collins and Sir Egerton Brydges, Peerage of England: genealogical, biographical, and historical (F.C. and J. Rivington, 1812), 32.</ref>
Ancestry
Notes
References
Template:S-start Template:S-reg Template:S-new Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-break Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-end
- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1582 births
- 1662 deaths
- Alumni of New College, Oxford
- Fiennes family
- Lord-lieutenants of Cheshire
- Lord-lieutenants of Gloucestershire
- Lord-lieutenants of Oxfordshire
- Members of the Privy Council of England
- Lay members of the Westminster Assembly
- Barons Saye and Sele
- Viscounts Saye and Sele
- Lords of the Admiralty
- 17th-century English Puritans