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Matthew Robinson-Morris, 2nd Baron Rokeby : ウィキペディア英語版 | Matthew Robinson, 2nd Baron Rokeby
Matthew Robinson, 2nd Baron Rokeby (1712 – 30 November 1800) was an English landowner, politician and nobleman. In later life he was considered an eccentric. ==Early life== Lord Rokeby was born Matthew Robinson in a large family from Yorkshire. His parents were Matthew Robinson (1694–1778) of Edgely and West Layton, Yorkshire, and Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Drake of Cambridge; his sisters included the novelists Elizabeth Montagu and Sarah Scott. Of his six brothers, Thomas the second was known as a legal writer, William the fifth as a cleric, and the youngest, Charles, as a Member of Parliament. His father inherited property in the neighbourhood of Rokeby from his great-uncle Matthew Robinson, rector of Burneston; and his mother inherited estates at Monks Horton, near Hythe, Kent, from her brother Morris Drake Morris, which Rokeby in turn succeeded to in 1746. Robinson was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1730, and to Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1731. He became a Fellow there in 1734. In 1746 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society, and in the same year his mother died: he was heir to her Monks Horton property. As a consequence, he then assumed the additional name of Morris.〔 Robinson-Morris represented Canterbury in Parliament, from 1747 to 1761;〔 in politics he was a Whig.〔(historyofparliamentonline.org, ''Robinson (afterwards Robinson Morris), Matthew (1713-1800), of Monks Horton, nr. Hythe, Kent.'' )〕 He inherited the title Lord Rokeby in 1794 after the death of his cousin, The 1st Baron Rokeby, Church of Ireland Lord Primate of All Ireland and Lord Archbishop of Armagh.
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