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Francis Windebank
SirFrancisWindebank
Historical Figure
Nationality: England
Year of Birth: 1582
Year of Death: 1646
Cause of Death: Natural causes
Occupation: Secretary of State
Fictional Appearances:
1632 series
POD: May, 1631
Appearance(s): 1634: The Baltic War
Type of Appearance: Direct

Sir Francis Windebank (1582 – 1 September 1646) was an English politician, who was Secretary of State (1632-1640) under Charles I of England. Throughout his career, he was alternatively helped and hobbled by his Catholic sympathies. He was eventually forced to flee to France in 1640, where he spent the remainder of his life in exile.

Francis Windebank in 1632[]

Sir Francis Windebank was secretary of state and and Constable of the Tower of London. Like some of the English nobles, Windebank was a potential threat to de facto prime minister, Thomas Wentworth.

Following Richard Boyle's rise to power, Windebank throws his support to the Earl of Cork. Although, Boyle (secretly) loathed Windebank for his ego and insufferable arrogance but realized that his influence in powerful circles made suffering him a necessity. Because of this, Windebank was assigned to the Tower at the benefit of keeping him out from underfoot constantly at the real center of power in Whitehall. As constable of the Tower, he was responsible in overseeing Wentworth, William Laud, and Oliver Cromwell's imprisonment.

Windebank was involved in seeking the capture of Anthony Leebrick and his men to add the fabricated evidences against Wentworth, in which he decidedly recommended that Leebrick and his men's escape was sufficient evidence itself especially from the murder of Endymion Porter. Windebank and the conspirators decided to quietly let the search for Leebrick lapse into dormancy. Oftentimes, Windebank established a near-long term quarrel to Boyle's closest ally Sir Paul Pindar.

In 1633, the embassy from the United States of Europe was held in the Tower. Windebank was forbidden by Richard Boyle from searching the USE Embassy's quarters and belongings despite Windebank's deep suspicions of the dangerous kind of possessions they have, as any provocation towards the embassy would further exacerbate England's relationship with the United States of Europe in the Ostend War. When Windebank petulantly pressed his concerns on simply releasing the embassy to avoid any further conflict with the USE, Boyle annoyingly responded that using the untouched embassy would provide a valuable peace broker between England and the USE. This decision gave the USE the opportunity to connect with Cromwell through hand-held radio, and eventually escape along with the prisoners and the Yeomen Warders in 1634 during a commando raid by Harry Lefferts.


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