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Edward Thornton, 1st Count of Cacilhas

British diplomat (1766–1852)


Summary

British diplomat (1766–1852)

FieldValue
honorific_prefixHis Excellency The Right Honourable
nameThe Count of Cacilhas
honorific_suffix
imageSir Edward Thornton (1766-1852), by Gilbert Stuart (Pembroke College, Cambridge).png
image_size220
captionSir Edward Thornton, , by Gilbert Stuart
officeEnvoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of Portugal
term_start1823
term_end1824
predecessorEdward Michael Ward
successorSir William à Court
term_start11817
term_end11820
predecessor1Thomas Sydenham
successor1Edward Michael Ward
office2Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of Stockholm
term_start21812
term_end21817
predecessor2Diplomatic relations severed due to Sweden's alliance with France
successor2Viscount Strangford
term_start31807
term_end31808
predecessor3Hon. Henry Pierrepont
successor3Anthony Merry
office4Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States
term_start41800
term_end41804
predecessor4Sir Robert Liston
successor4Anthony Merry
birth_nameEdward Thornton
birth_date
birth_placeLondon, England
death_date
death_placePlymouth, England
educationChrist's Hospital
alma_materPembroke College, Cambridge
occupationDiplomat
spouse
children7
relationsThomas Thornton (brother)

Sir Edward Thornton, 1st Count of Cacilhas, (22 October 1766 – 3 July 1852) was a British diplomat, and father of fellow diplomat, Sir Edward Thornton.

Early life

He was born in London, the third of three sons and two daughters, of William Thornton (1738–1769), and Dorothy (née Thompson) Thornton (d. 1769). His father, who was originally from Hull, East Yorkshire, established himself in London as a prosperous innkeeper and Freeman of the City of London. His mother, as later described by Sir Edward, was "a countrywoman... a native of the... East Riding, of a very respectable family". Dorothy died three months after the birth of a daughter, and eight months later, William was suddenly taken ill and died soon after, leaving their children orphaned.

Among his siblings was the merchant Thomas Thornton. Being left in the care of a family friend, using his guardian's connections Thornton was educated at Christ's Hospital and at Pembroke College, Cambridge.

Career

He became British vice-consul in Maryland in June 1793 and then served as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States from 1800 to 1804. After holding various diplomatic posts in Hamburg and the Hanse Towns, he was then posted to Sweden as Minister-Plenipotentiary in December 1807 with the objective of forming an alliance against Napoleon, returning to England in November 1808. In October 1811 he went again to Sweden (until 1817) on a special mission in HMS Victory and he successfully negotiated treaties of alliance with both Sweden and Russia, both called the Treaty of Örebro. This was the first stage in the creation of an alliance of Northern European States against Napoleon. He negotiated the Treaty of Kiel for the United Kingdom and was present with the prince royal of Sweden (Jean Baptiste Bernadotte) when the allies entered Paris in 1815.

He became a member of the Privy council in 1816. He was appointed minister to Portugal in July 1817 and joined the Portuguese court in Brazil. He was ambassador to Portugal from April 1819 to March 1821, when he returned to England. He returned again to Portugal as an ambassador from August 1823 to August 1824 during which time he invested the King of Portugal with the Order of the Garter and assisted the King during the insurrection. The title of Count of Cacilhas in the Portuguese nobility was conferred on Thornton and his heirs, for three generations, by the King of Portugal.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in June 1810, appointed GCB in 1822 and retired in August 1824.

Personal life

In 1812, Thornton married Magdalena Wilhelmina Amalia Kohp of Hanover, a daughter of Joannes Michael Kopf and Caecilia ( Roth) Kohp. Together, they had one daughter and six sons, including:

  • Edward Thornton, 2nd Count of Cacilhas (1817–1906), who married Mary Jane Maitland, a daughter of John Maitland.
  • George Reginald Thornton (–1841), a graduate of Pembroke College, Cambridge.
  • Maria Amalia Thornton (1819–1915), who married Signor Giovanni Tassinari of Tuscany in 1844.

In retirement he lived in Wembury House, Plymouth, Devon, where he died in 1852. His wife predeceased him, at Wembury, in January 1832.

Honours and legacy

In 1902, his alma mater, Christ's Hospital, named one of its boarding houses after him.

References

References

  1. (22 February 2018). "Holland House and Portugal, 17931840: English Whiggery and the Constitutional Cause in Iberia". Anthem Press.
  2. William Thomas Thornton's family, ancestry, and early years: Some Findings from recently discovered manuscripts and letters, Mark Donoghue, in History of Political Economy, vol. 40, issue 3, 2008 pp. 516-517
  3. A. N. Ryan, editor, ''The Saumarez papers'', Publications of the [[Navy Records Society]], vol. 110, p. 6 (1968).
  4. [https://runeberg.org/nfch/0619.html Thornton], entry in [[Nordisk familjebok]], vol. 28, 1177-1178 (1919)
  5. (1911). "Eight Centuries of Portuguese Monarchy: A Political Study". S. Swift.
  6. [http://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101027353 Edward Thornton], Oxford Biography Index entry.
  7. Burke's Great War Peerage, Burke's Peerage and Gentry (UK) Ltd, 2008 [a reprint of A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, 76th edition, ed. Ashworth P. Burke, Harrison & Sons, 1914], p. 2112
  8. William Thomas Thornton's family, ancestry, and early years: Some Findings from recently discovered manuscripts and letters, Mark Donoghue, in History of Political Economy, vol. 40, issue 3, 2008 pp. 516-517
  9. (December 2016). "Library and Archive Catalogue". Royal Society.
  10. (2004). "Thornton, Sir Edward, count of Cassilhas in the Portuguese nobility (1766–1852), diplomatist".
  11. (1914). "The Titled Nobility of Europe: An International Peerage, Or "Who's Who", of the Sovereigns, Princes and Nobles of Europe". Harrison & Sons.
  12. (1841). "Obituary". F. Jefferies.
  13. (15 September 2011). "Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  14. (26 December 2019). "The Anglo-Florentines: The British in Tuscany, 1814-1860". [[Bloomsbury Publishing]].
  15. (2002). "The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Her Sister Arabella". Wedgestone Press.
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