Leicestershire-born George Villiers is the son of…
1623 CE
Leicestershire-born George Villiers is the son of the minor gentleman Sir George Villiers.
His mother, Mary, who had been left a widow early, had educated her son for a courtier's life, sending him to France with Sir John Eliot.
Villiers took very well to the training, learning to dance well, fence well, and speak a little French.
Villiers, reputedly "the handsomest-bodied man in all of England," is in August 1614 brought before the king, in the hope that the king would take a fancy to him, diminishing the power at court of the Earl of Somerset.
Following Villiers' introduction to James, the king has developed a strong affection for Villiers, calling him his 'sweet child and wife'; the personal relationships of James are a much debated topic, with Villers making the last of a succession of favorites on whom James has lavished affection and rewards. (The extent to which there was a sexual element, or a physical sexual relationship, involved in these cases remains controversial. Villiers reciprocated the king's love and wrote to James: "I naturally so love your person, and adore all your other parts, which are more than ever one man had" and "I desire only to live in the world for your sake". However, restoration of Apethorpe Hall, undertaken 2004-2008, revealed a previously unknown passage linking the bedchambers of James and Villiers.)
Villiers had gained support from those opposed to Somerset, and has prospered greatly under the king's patronage.
Knighted in 1615 as a Gentleman of the Bedchamber, he has been rapidly advanced through the peerage, created Baron Whaddon and Viscount Villiers in 1616, Earl of Buckingham in 1617, Marquess of Buckingham in 1618 and finally Earl of Coventry and Duke of Buckingham in 1623, by which time the king’s lavish endowments of pensions and monopolies have made him extremely wealthy.
After the reductions in the peerage that had taken place during the Tudor period, Buckingham is left as the highest-ranking subject outside the Royal Family.
Buckingham in 1623 accompanies the Prince of Wales to Spain for marriage negotiations regarding the Infanta Maria.
The negotiations had long been stuck, but it is believed that Buckingham's crassness is key to the total collapse of agreement; the Spanish ambassador asks Parliament to have Buckingham executed for his behavior in Madrid; but Buckingham gains popularity by calling for war with Spain on his return.