Clarendon ministry
The Clarendon ministry was forged out of the royalist camp of Charles II, who was returned to the throne in 1660. Two years previously, Lord Hyde had been appointed Lord Chancellor, and in 1660, he was joined by several other powerful statesmen, including the heir presumptive of the English throne, the Duke of York. After the Second Anglo-Dutch War, however, Charles lost confidence in his ministers, and in 1667, five statesmen took cooperative power in the Cabal ministry.
Lord Clarendon was impeached by the House of Commons and forced to flee; the Duke of Albemarle sold his position to George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham; and Sir George Carteret simply left his position, eventually being forced out of the House two years later.
Committee for Foreign Affairs
The Privy Council Committee for Foreign Affairs served as the Ministry; other significant statesmen not in the committee are listed in the next section. As the name of the ministry would suggest, Lord Clarendon was, in effect, the leader of the government.Office | Name | Term | Notes |
Lord Chancellor | The Lord Hyde | 1660-1667 | appointed 1658; created Earl of Clarendon in 1661 |
Lord High Treasurer | The Earl of Southampton | 1660-1667 | died before government was dissolved |
Lord Steward | The Duke of Ormonde | 1660-1667 | also Lord Lieutenant of Ireland |
Master of the Horse | The Duke of Albemarle | 1660-1667 | also Lord Lieutenant of Ireland |
Southern Secretary | Sir Edward Nicholas | 1660-1662 | appointed 1654 |
Southern Secretary | Sir Henry Bennet, Bt. | 1662-1667 | created Baron Arlington in 1664 |
Northern Secretary | Sir William Morice | 1660-1667 | created a baronet in 1661 |
Secretary to the Admiralty | Sir William Coventry | 1665-1667 |