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Gentleman's Magazine 1839 part 1 p.520
[Car]lisle," of which we are told at p.438 that it "was
given to Ranulph de Meschines by William the Conqueror, but
surrendered by his son of the same name, to Henry I.;" that
it was "revived in the person of Sir Andrew de
Harcla, in 1322, but was extinct in the following year, when
he was executed;" that "in 1622 Sir James Hay was created
Earl of Carlisle; but in 1660 the title again became
extinct by the death of James the second Earl, without
issue;" and lastly, that "the Earldom of Carlisle was
again revived in 1661, in the person of Charles
Howard," in which family it still remains.
Now, we are aware that the above statement is the same which
has long been copied from book to book; but the fault we
have to find is, that in a History of Carlisle so important
a feature as the earldom (if an Earldom there was) should
not be more fully investigated.
With respect to the person first mentioned, we find it
stated in Brooke's Catalogue, 1619, p.51:
"Randolphe de Meschines, sonne of Randolphe Viscount of
Baieulx, and Alice his wife, base daughter of Richard the
third Duke of Normandy, came into England with William the
Conqueror, who gave him the Earldom of Carlisle."
and of his son, the second Randolph (in p.38) that,
succeeding in right of his mother to the Earldom of Chester,
he "surrendered Carlisle, his father's earledome, to king
Henry the first." But Sir Harris Nicolas, in his Synopsis of
the Peerage, remarks, without noticing the first Ranulph,
"Ranulph de Meschines, afterwards Earl of Chester, is by
many writers called Earl of Carlsle, though there is but
little, if any, authority for the statement."
Then, with regard to Sir Andrew de Harcla, it would have
well become our historian to have inquired what authority
there is for attributing to him the title of Earl, beyond
the circumstance of his having been Governor of the royal
castle of Carlisle; and if Edward II. really did, in the
warmth of his favour, confer that dignity upon him, whether
or no it should not be considered the creation of
Cumberland into an earldom, for in ancient times the
dignity of Earl always implied jurisdiction over a
considerable district or county; and though some Earls might
chose (sic) to be designated by the name of their chief
residence, yet that was merely the head, of which the county
at large was the body. Thus the Earl of Salisbury was, in
fact, Earl of Wiltshire; the Earl of Striguil was Earl of
Pembrokeshire; the Earl of Arundel was Earl of Sussex, and
sometimes, if he moved his residences, was called Earl of
Chichester.
History seems to mention no Earl of Cumberland until that
dignity was conferred on the Clifford family by Henry the
Eighth: but Brooke states (ubi supra) that John Duke
of Bedford (the Regent of France), and Richard, Duke of
Gloucester (afterwards King Richard III.) both bore among
their titles that of Earl of Carlisle, which is not
mentioned by our author. The fact of the latter being
governor of the castle and sheriff of the county is
noticed by Mr. Jefferson at p.96; and its memory is
preserved to modern times by a tower called after his name.
We may here remark that the chronological list of the
governors at page 119 should have been made more complete by
the additions of such dates as might have been ascertained.
With respect to the title of Earl as enjoyed by the families
of Hay and Howard (by the way, "Sir James Hay" was
previously Lord Hay and Viscount of Doncaster), it had been
evidently a mere nominal dignity, like all those of
modern origin, the creation of which has been found
compatible with the existence of other earldoms derived from
the county; so much so that we have now a Duke of Buckingham
and an Earl of Buckinghamshire; an Earl of Devon, a Duke of
Devonshire, and a Marquess of Exeter, and indeed there are
few counties that do not furnish many titles of earldoms
instead of only one.
These remarks we have made merely to point out a line of
research which an historian of Carlisle should have taken:
to pursue it further is beyond both our limits and our
means; but our author will, probably, allow there must be
some relation, if not identity, in the titles of earl of
Cumberland and Earl of Carlisle, when we merely point out to
him in the second page onwards
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