Robert Spencer, 1st Viscount Teviot

Robert Spencer, 1st Viscount Teviot (1629 – 20 May 1694), styled The Honourable Robert Spencer until 1685, was an English politician from the Spencer family who sat in the House of Commons from 1660 to 1679.

Spencer was a younger son of William Spencer, 2nd Baron Spencer of Wormleighton, and his wife Lady Penelope Wriothesley, daughter of Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton. Henry Spencer, 1st Earl of Sunderland was his elder brother. He was baptised on 2 February 1629. He studied at Christ Church, Oxford[1] and was admitted at King's College, Cambridge in 1646. He also studied at the university of Padua in 1648 while travelling in France and Italy, returning to England in 1651.[2] He was made Doctor of Civil Law (DCL) at Oxford in 1669.[3]

In 1660, Spencer was elected Member of Parliament for Great Bedwyn in the Convention Parliament. In 1661 he was elected MP for Brackley in the Cavalier Parliament and sat until 1679.[2]

He held a number of offices as: commissioner of assessment of taxes in Northamptonshire (1661–74) and Middlesex (1664–69); commissioner for excise appeals (1663–89), joint farmer of Barbados sugar duties (1670–77) and commissioner of the Privy Seal (1685–87).[2]

He was created Viscount Teviot in the Peerage of Scotland on 10 October 1685.[3]

Spencer married Jane Spencer, daughter of Sir Thomas Spencer, of Yarnton, Oxfordshire.[3] He died childless, aged 65, in May 1694, having committed suicide by cutting his own throat when "sick of a fever and light headed".[2]

References

  1. His History of Parliament article does not mention this.
  2. 1 2 3 4 History of Parliament Online - Spencer, Hon. Robert
  3. 1 2 3 "Spencer, Robert (SPNR646R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Edmund Harvey
Vacant
Member of Parliament for Great Bedwyn
1660–1661
With: Thomas Gape
Succeeded by
Duke Stonehouse
Henry Clerke
Preceded by
Sir Thomas Crew
William Lisle
Member of Parliament for Brackley
1661–1679
With: Sir Thomas Crew
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Crew
William Lisle
Peerage of Scotland
New creation Viscount Teviot
1685–1694
Extinct
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