Francis Bacon 1561-1626
Francis BACON, Viscount St Alban 1561-1626
Biographical Note
Born at York House in the Strand, London, son of Sir Nicholas Bacon (1510–1579), lord keeper, and Anne (c.1528–1610), daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge; admitted to Gray’s Inn, 1576. Admitted to the bar 1582, bencher 1586, reader 1587. MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis, Dorset in 1584, 1586 and for Taunton, Somerset in 1586. Knighted in 1603 and was made Solicitor General in 1607, Lord Keeper in 1617 and Lord Chancellor and Baron Veralum in 1618. He became Viscount St Alban in 1621 but was impeached in the same year. He married Alice, daughter of Benedict Barnham, Alderman of London in 1606; the pair had no children. Bacon is well-known for his works on science and natural philosophy, particularly the Novum Organum.
Books
Numerous books survive with his armorial stamp.
Sources
- British Armorial Bindings.
- History of Parliament.
- Peltonen, Markku. "Bacon, Francis, Viscount St Alban (1561–1626), lord chancellor, politician, and philosopher." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Rogers, D. The Bodleian Library and its treasures, 1991, 124-5.