, descended in a direct line from Robert Fitzharding, who was of the royal
, descended in a direct
line from Robert Fitzharding, who was of the royal house
of Denmark. He with his nephew, Charles Berkeley, had
the principal management of the duke of York’s family,
and was one of the privy council in the reign of Charles II.
James II. and William III. At the restoration he manifested great loyalty for Charles II. and was advanced to the
dignity of viscount Dursley and earl of Berkeley in 1679.
One of his most munificent acts was his bestowing on the
public library of Sion college, a valuable collection of
books formed by sir Robert Coke. He died Oct. 14, 1698,
aged seventy-one, and was buried at Cranford in Middlesex. Lord Orford attributes to him, on good authority,
a curious and scarce work of the religious cast, entitled
“Historical applications and occasional meditations upon
several subjects. Written by a person of honour,
” Lord Plausible,
” in the Plain Dealer, from him a circumstance that
cannot detract much from his lordship’s reputation, for
Wycherley was a poor judge of men of “strict virtue and
piety.
” Besides the above work, of which a third edition
appeared in 1680, lord Berkeley published, the same year,
“A speech to the Levant Company at their annual election, Feb. 9, 1680.
”