of Littleton, after Van Dyck In 1641, when the previous keeper,
John Finch, fled into exile, Littleton was appointed
Lord Keeper of the Great Seal. He was raised to
the Peerage as
Baron Lyttelton of Munslow. As the Lord Keeper Littleton had begun to display a certain amount of indifference to the royal cause. In January 1642, he refused to put the
Great Seal to the proclamation for the arrest of five members and he also incurred the displeasure of Charles by voting for the
Militia ordinance. However, he assured his friend
Edward Hyde, afterwards
Earl of Clarendon, that he had only taken this step to allay the suspicions of the parliamentary party who contemplated depriving him of the seal, and he undertook to send this to the King. He fulfilled his promise, and in May 1642, he himself joined Charles at
York, but it was some time before he regained the favour of the king and the custody of the seal. ==Death==