Henry Stanley, 4th Earl of DerbyKG (September 1531 – 25 September 1593) was a prominent English nobleman, diplomat, and politician. He was an ambassador and Privy Counsellor, and participated in the trials of Mary, Queen of Scots and the Earl of Arundel.
Henry and Margaret had four children in the next eight years, but then quarrelled and generally lived apart thereafter. In 1567, Lady Stanley petitioned the Queen's advisor, William Cecil, for a financial settlement from her estranged husband.[2] From about 1570 Henry Stanley lived with Jane Halsall of Knowsley, with whom he had a further four children.[3]
He was appointed ambassador to the court of Henry III of France in 1580. He was appointed to the Privy Council in 1585. He was among the chief officials of the trial of the deposed Scottish monarch Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1586.
In 1588, he was part of a mission which tried to negotiate an end to the Anglo-Spanish War following the defeat of the Spanish Armada.
Henry was also father to at least four illegitimate children by Jane Halsall of Knowsley:[5]
Henry Stanley, for whom provision was made in the form of land at Ormskirk and at Broughton.[5]
Thomas Stanley, the younger illegitimate son, who received an estate in Kirkby.[5]
Ursula Stanley, who married John Salusbury (d. 1613); the son of Sir John Salusbury and Katheryn of Berain. Ursula and John had four sons and three daughters.[6] Ursula and her husband may be the ideal couple celebrated in Shakespeare's poem The Phoenix and the Turtle.[7]
Dorothy Stanley, who married Sir Cuthbert Halsall (d. 1632), MP for Lancashire in 1614 [8]
^ abcBarry Coward. The Stanleys: Lords Stanley and Earls of Derby 1385–1672, Manchester University Press, 1983, p.31. Google eBook
^Sir John Bernard Burke and John Burke. A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies of England, Scott, Webster, and Geary, 1838. pg 471. Google eBook
^John Klause, "The Phoenix and the Turtle in its Time", in Gwynne Blakemore Evans (ed), In the Company of Shakespeare: Essays on English Renaissance Literature, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 2002, p.207.