Edward Weld was the eldest of the four sons and one daughter of
Edward Weld (1705–1761) and his second wife, Dame Maria née Vaughan. He was heir to the enormous
Lulworth Estate with its magnificent
Jurassic coastline and
its castle in the county of
Dorset,
England and to other estates. He was a member of the well connected notable
recusant family and one of the wealthiest people in the kingdom. As was usual for the sons of Catholic gentry at that time, Edward and his younger brother, John, were sent to be educated abroad. While away, their mother died in 1754. They had been despatched at around the age of nine into the hands of British Jesuit preceptors at
Watten in the
Austrian Netherlands and thence to
St Omer. There, in 1759, Edward's brother, John fell ill and died, probably in September. At age twenty, having concluded his education, Edward prepared for the
Grand Tour by honing the manners of a young gentleman at the Jesuit house in
Rheims and a stay at the court of the former Polish King
Stanislaw Leszczynski in
Lorraine. On his return to England, he had been orphaned by his father, Edward Sr., and as his heir had become immensely rich and was eligible for the hand of a suitable lady. He was widowed after his first marriage in 1763 to Juliana Petre, daughter of
Robert James Petre, 8th Baron Petre, who died in 1772. In 1775, he married the impecunious
Maria Smythe, sixteen years his junior, and became her little-known first husband. Three months after the wedding, he fell off his horse and died of his injuries, before having had time to sign his new will. As there was no issue from either marriage, the estate passed to his surviving younger brother, nine years his junior,
Thomas. Meanwhile, his widow, was left without provision and soon married Thomas Fitzherbert of
Swynnerton. Before long, he too died in 1781 but left her well provided for and known to history as "
Mrs Fitzherbert". She went on to contract a
morganatic marriage in 1785 with the Prince of Wales, the future
George IV. ==The trials of his widow==