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Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton

Edward Robert Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton, GCB, GCSI, GCIE, PC (8 November 1831 – 24 November 1891) was an English statesman, Conservative politician and poet who used the pseudonym Owen Meredith. During his tenure as Viceroy of India between 1876 and 1880, Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India. He served as British Ambassador to France from 1887 to 1891.

The Earl of Lytton

8 November 1831 (1831-11-08)

24 November 1891(1891-11-24) (aged 60)

7

His tenure as Viceroy was controversial for its ruthlessness in both domestic and foreign affairs, especially for his handling of the Great Famine of 1876–78 and the Second Anglo-Afghan War. His policies were alleged to be informed by his Social Darwinism. His son Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton, who was born in India, later served as Governor of Bengal and briefly as acting Viceroy. The senior earl was also the father-in-law of the architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, who designed New Delhi.


Lytton was a protégé of Benjamin Disraeli in domestic affairs, and of Richard Lyons, 1st Viscount Lyons, who was his predecessor as Ambassador to France, in foreign affairs. His tenure as Ambassador to Paris was successful, and Lytton was afforded the rare tribute – especially for an Englishman – of a French state funeral in Paris.

Domestic politics[edit]

In 1880, Lytton resigned his Viceroyalty at the same time that Benjamin Disraeli resigned the premiership. Lytton was created Earl of Lytton, in the County of Derby, and Viscount Knebworth, of Knebworth in the County of Hertford.[6] On 10 January 1881, Lytton made his maiden speech in the House of Lords, in which he censured in Gladstone's devolutionist Afghan policy. In the summer session of 1881, Lytton joined others in opposing Gladstone's second Irish Land Bill.[10] As soon as the summer session was over, he undertook "a solitary ramble about the country". He visited Oxford for the first time, went for a trip on the Thames, and then revisited the hydropathic establishment at Malvern, where he had been with his father as a boy".[11] He saw this as an antidote to the otherwise indulgent lifestyle that came with his career, and used his sojourn there to undertake a critique of a new volume of poetry by his friend Wilfrid Blunt.[12]

Ambassador to Paris: 1887–1891[edit]

Lytton was Ambassador to France from 1887 to 1891. During the second half of the 1880s, before his appointment as Ambassador in 1887, Lytton served as Secretary to the Ambassador to Paris, Lord Lyons.[13] He succeeded Lyons, as Ambassador, subsequent to the resignation of Lyons in 1887.[13][6] Lytton had previously expressed an interest in the post and enjoyed himself "once more back in his old profession".[14]


Lord Lytton died in Paris on 24 November 1891, where he was given the rare honour of a state funeral. His body was then brought back for interment in the private family mausoleum in Knebworth Park.


There is also a memorial to him in St Paul's Cathedral, London.[15]

Clytemnestra, The Earl's Return, The Artist and Other Poems (1855)

[1]

The Wanderer (1859), a Byron-esque lyric of Continental adventures that was popular on its release

[1]

Lucile (1860). Lytton was accused of plagiarizing 's novel Lavinia for the story.[16][17]

George Sand

Serbski Pesme (1861). Plagiarized from a French translation of Serbian poems.[19]

[18]

The Ring of Ainasis (1863)

Fables in Song (1874)

Speeches of Edward Lord Lytton with some of his Political Writings, Hitherto unpublished, and a Prefactory Memoir by His Son (1874)

The Life Letters and Literary Remains of Edward Bulwer, Lord Lytton (1883)

Glenaveril (1885)

After Paradise, or Legends of Exile (1887)

King Poppy: A Story Without End (partially composed in early 1870s: only first published in 1892), an allegorical romance in blank verse that was Lytton's favourite of his verse romances[1]

[1]

Edward Rowland John Bulwer-Lytton (1865–1871)

(1867–1942).[23] Married Gerald Balfour, 2nd Earl of Balfour, brother of Prime Minister Arthur Balfour.

Lady Elizabeth Edith "Betty" Bulwer-Lytton

(1869–1923)[23]

Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton

Hon. Henry Meredith Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1872–1874)

(1874–1964). Married Edwin Lutyens. Associate of Krishnamurti

Lady Emily Bulwer-Lytton

(1876–1947)[23]

Victor Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Earl of Lytton

(1879–1951)[23]

Neville Bulwer-Lytton, 3rd Earl of Lytton

On 4 October 1864 Lytton married Edith Villiers. She was the daughter of Edward Ernest Villiers (1806–1843) and Elizabeth Charlotte Liddell and the granddaughter of George Villiers.[23]


They had at least seven children:

at Project Gutenberg

Works by Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton

at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)

Works by Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton

an academic effort to recover the publishing history of Lucile (which went through at least 2000 editions by nearly 100 publishers).

The LUCILE Project

His profile in ancestry.com