Viscount Bolingbroke
On this date in 1678, Henry St. John,
who later became Viscount Bolingbroke, was born near Battersea,
England. Brought up by grandparents when his mother died soon after his
birth, he was educated at Eton and Oxford. St. John became a prominent
Tory in Parliament, where he was first elected in 1701. He served as
Secretary of War from 1704-1708, and from 1710 -1714 was Secretary of
State for Foreign Affairs, negotiating the Treaty of Utrecht. He became a
favorite counselor of Queen Anne, was named Viscount Bolingbroke in
1712 and entered the House of Lords. Bolingbroke was forced to flee to
France after being impeached for high treason by King George I in 1715.
The witty Deist, who criticized the bible, dismissed the idea of an
anthropomorphic god, rejected prayer and miracles, doubted the existence
of a soul or immortality, argued against divine morality, and wrote
that Platonism had corrupted Christianity, met and impressed Voltaire.
In 1725, Bolingbroke was permitted to return to England and claim his
property but was never reseated to Parliament. His Tory-sympathizing
circle of friends included Swift and Pope,
and Voltaire visited him in England. "The Idea of a Patriot King" was
Bolingbroke's most significant political contribution. His irreligious
views, which influenced friends such as Voltaire, were only published
posthumously, and created a sensation. D. 1751.
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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Sunday, September 16, 2012
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