Everything about Henry Herbert totally explained
Sir
Henry Herbert (
1595 –
1673) was
Master of the Revels to both King
Charles I and King
Charles II of England.
Biography
Herbert was the son of Richard Herbert of Montgomery Castle, and a younger brother of
Edward Herbert, Baron Herbert of Cherbury and the poet
George Herbert. (They were related to the Herberts who were the Earls of Pembroke, prominent figures in English government and society throughout the
Jacobean and
Caroline eras—
William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, and his brother and successor
Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke, Lords Chamberlain.) Henry Herbert was knighted in 1623.
Henry Herbert's role as Master of the Revels involved reading and licensing plays and supervising all kinds of public entertainment. Officially, Herbert became Master of the Revels in 1641; in actuality he'd been doing the work of the office since 1623. John Astley, the official Master from 1622 to his death in January 1641, had appointed Herbert his deputy in 1623; Herbert paid Astley £150 per year, in return for the income the office provided (and clearly, he wouldn't have continued this arrangement if it hadn't been profitable for him).
Censor
Since Herbert was responsible for licensing and also censoring plays, he'd a powerful influence on English drama for two decades, 1623-42. Herbert had barely gained the official position of master in 1641 when the theatres were closed at the start of the
English Civil War in August 1642. Herbert retained the office throughout the time it was dormant, down to the re-opening of the theatres at the
Restoration in 1660. When
Charles II allowed
Thomas Killigrew and Sir
William Davenant to form two theatre companies under royal patronage, the
King's Company and the
Duke's Company, in August 1660, Herbert complained bitterly at what he perceived as the violation of his rights, and started court actions; he was especially irate with Davenant, who had carried on clandestine theatrical performances in the 1656-60 period, without Herbert benefitting. Over the next two years, Herbert's claims were adjusted and the two royal companies had their privileges renewed by royal patent in 1662. Afterward, he was no longer the power in the theatre that he'd been before.
Charles I gave the manor of
Ribbesford (in whose parish the Borough of
Bewdley lies) to his brothers in 1627 and they passed it to him. He was member of Parliament for
Bewdley in 1640, but was disabled from sitting by resolution of the Commons in 1642 because he put into execution the king's commission of array. Hen again sat for Bewdley from the
Restoration until his death.
Posterity
Herbert was succeeded by his son
Henry, for whom the barony of Cherbury was revived. Both he and his son served as Members of Parliament for Bewdley. Henry died in January 1709, and his son, another
Henry, became 2nd Lord Herbert of Cherbury of the second creation. He died without issue in April 1738, and again the barony became extinct. In 1743 it was revived for
Henry Arthur Herbert (c. 1703-1772), who five years later was created
Earl of Powis. This nobleman was a great-grandson of the 2nd Lord Herbert of Cherbury of the first creation, and since his time the barony has been held by the Earls of Powis. However the Ribbesford estate passed to his cousin Charles Morley, who took the suranme Herbert.
Further Information
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