The
Dukedom of Marlborough
(named after Marlborough
, "Maul bruh"), is a hereditary title
in the Peerage of England.
The first holder of the title was
John Churchill, 1st Duke
of Marlborough (1650–1722), the noted English general, and
indeed an unqualified reference to
the Duke of Marlborough
in a historical text will almost certainly refer to him.
History
The
dukedom was created in 1702 by Queen Anne; John Churchill, whose wife
was a favourite of the queen, had earlier been made Lord
Churchill of Eyemouth in the Scottish
peerage (1682), which became extinct with his death,
and Earl of Marlborough (1689) by King William III. Anne further honoured
Churchill, after his leadership of the victories against the
French
of 13 August 1704 near the village of Blenheim (German Blindheim
) on the river Danube
(Battle of
Blenheim
), by granting him the royal manor of Woodstock
, and building him a house at her own expense to be
called Blenheim. It was commenced in 1705 and was completed
in 1722, the year of his death.
Blenheim Palace
remains the Marlborough ducal seat.
The first
duke was also honoured with Imperial titles: Emperor Joseph I created him a
Prince of the Holy Roman
Empire in 1704, and in 1705, he was created Imperial Prince of
Mindelheim
(once the lordship of the noted soldier Georg von Frundsberg).
However,
he was obliged to surrender Mindelheim in 1714 by the Treaty of Utrecht, which returned it to
Bavaria
. According to some sources, he received the
principality of
Mellenburg in exchange. Regardless, his Imperial
titles did not pass to his daughters (the Empire operated Salic Law
which prevented female succession), so became extinct on his death
in 1722.
The Duke of Marlborough holds certain subsidiary titles:
Marquess of Blandford (created 1702),
Earl of
Sunderland (1643),
Earl of
Marlborough (1689),
Baron Spencer of
Wormleighton (1603),
Baron Churchill of
Eyemouth (1682) and
Baron Churchill of
Sandridge (1685) (all are in the English peerage.) The
title
Marquess of Blandford is used as the
courtesy title for the Duke's eldest son and
heir. The Duke's eldest son's eldest son in turn can use the
courtesy title
Earl of Sunderland.
The later Dukes of Marlborough are descended from the first duke,
but not in the male line. Because the first duke had no surviving
sons, the title was allowed (by a special
Act of Parliament) to pass to his eldest
daughter in her own right. A younger daughter,
Lady Anne Churchill, married
Charles Spencer, 3rd
Earl of Sunderland (
c. 1674–1722), and from this
marriage descend the modern Dukes of Marlborough. They therefore
originally bore the
surname Spencer. However, George Spencer, the
5th Duke of Marlborough, obtained a
Royal
Licence to assume and bear the additional surname and arms of
his famous ancestor, the 1st Duke of Marlborough, and thus became
George Spencer-Churchill. This
double-barrelled surname has remained
in the family to this day, though some of the most famous members
have preferred to style themselves as merely
"Churchill".
The
Dukedom of Marlborough is the only dukedom in the United Kingdom
that can still pass in the female line.
However, the Dukedom does not follow
male-preference primogeniture
as most other peerages that can pass in the female line do. It
actually follows a kind of semi-
Salic Law.
The succession for the Dukedom is as follows:
- The heirs-male of the 1st Duke's body lawfully begotten;
- his eldest daughter and the heirs-male of her body lawfully
begotten;
- his second and other daughters, in seniority, and the
heirs-male of their bodies lawfully begotten;
- his eldest daughter's oldest daughter and the heirs male of her
body lawfully begotten;
- all other daughters of his daughters and the heirs male of
their bodies;
- and other descendants into the future in like fashion, with the
intent that the Marlborough title never become extinct.
However, it is now very unlikely that the Dukedom will be inherited
in the female line again, as all the male heirs of Anne Spencer,
Countess of Sunderland - including the line of the
Earls Spencer as well as the Spencer-Churchill
family - would have to go extinct. If that were to happen, the
Churchill titles would pass to the
Earl
of Jersey, the heir-male of Anne Villiers, Countess of Jersey,
daughter of Elizabeth Egerton, Duchess of Bridgwater, a younger
daughter of the first Duke.
The 7th
Duke of Marlborough was the paternal grandfather of the British Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill (who was born at
Blenheim
Palace
on 30 November, 1874).
The present Duke of Marlborough is
John George Vanderbilt Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of
Marlborough.
The title of
Earl of Marlborough, which was
created for Churchill in 1689, had been created one time previously
in British history, for
James Ley, in 1626. This
title had become extinct in 1679.
Spanish motto
The meaning of the motto
Fiel pero desdichado
(
Faithful but unfortunate) may allude to the first duke's
losing his home and lands as a consequence of his loyalty to the
king.
Unusually, it is in the Spanish language rather than Latin, possibly because the first duke was
honoured after the Battle of Blenheim
, a major victory which helped the position of the
(ultimately unsuccessful) Austrian claimant in the War of the Spanish
Succession.
Earls of Marlborough, first creation (1626)
Subsidiary titles: Baronet (1618) and Baron Ley (1624)
Earls of Marlborough, second creation (1689)
Dukes of Marlborough (1702)
- John
Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722)
- Henrietta
Godolphin, 2nd Duchess of Marlborough (1681–1733)
- Charles
Spencer, 3rd Duke of Marlborough (1706–1758)
- George
Spencer, 4th Duke of Marlborough (1739–1817)
- George
Spencer-Churchill, 5th Duke of Marlborough (1766–1840)
- George
Spencer-Churchill, 6th Duke of Marlborough (1793–1857)
- John
Winston Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough
(1822–1883)
- George Charles
Spencer-Churchill, 8th Duke of Marlborough (1844–1892)
- Charles
Richard Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough
(1871–1934)
- John Albert
William Spencer-Churchill, 10th Duke of Marlborough
(1897–1972)
- John George
Vanderbilt Spencer-Churchill, 11th Duke of Marlborough (b.
1926)
External links