, prime minister between 1762 and 1763, and a major target for Wilkes' paper
The North Briton. It angered Wilkes that Bute had displaced
Pitt the Elder, and he attacked the terms of the
Treaty of Paris (1763). When the Scottish
John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, came to head the government in 1762, Wilkes started a
radical weekly publication,
The North Briton, to attack him, using an anti-Scots tone. Typical of Wilkes, the title made satirical reference to the pro-government newspaper,
The Briton, with "North Briton" referring to
Scotland. Wilkes became particularly incensed by what he regarded as Bute's betrayal in agreeing to overly generous peace terms with France to end the war. On 5 October 1762, Wilkes fought a
duel with
William Talbot, 1st Earl Talbot. Talbot was the
Lord Steward and a follower of Bute; he challenged Wilkes to a pistol duel after being ridiculed in issue 12 of
The North Briton. The encounter took place at
Bagshot – at night, to avoid attracting judicial attention. At a range of eight yards, Talbot and Wilkes both fired their pistols but neither was hit. Somewhat reconciled, they then went to a nearby inn and shared a bottle of claret. When the affair later became widely known, some viewed it as comical, and a satirical print made fun of the duellists. Some commentators even denounced the duel as a stunt, stage-managed to enhance the reputations of both men. '' Wilkes faced a charge of
seditious libel over attacks on
George III's speech endorsing the
Paris Peace Treaty of 1763 at the opening of Parliament on 23 April 1763. Wilkes was highly critical of the King's speech, which was recognised as having been written by Bute . He attacked it in an article of issue 45 of
The North Briton. The issue number in which Wilkes published his critical editorial was appropriate because the number 45 was synonymous with the
Jacobite Rising of 1745, commonly known as "The '45". Popular perception associated Bute – Scottish, and politically controversial as an adviser to the King – with Jacobitism, a perception that Wilkes played on. ", a satirical engraving by
William Hogarth, who shows him with a demonic-looking wig,
crossed eyes, and two editions of his
The North Briton: Numbers 17 (in which he attacked, among others, Hogarth) and the famous 45 The King felt personally insulted and ordered the issuing of
general warrants for the arrest of Wilkes and the publishers on 30 April 1763. Forty-nine people, including Wilkes, were arrested, but general warrants were unpopular, and Wilkes gained considerable popular support as he asserted their unconstitutionality. At his court hearing he claimed that
parliamentary privilege protected him, as an MP, from arrest on a charge of libel.
Chief Justice Pratt ruled that parliamentary privilege did indeed protect him and he was soon restored to his seat. Wilkes sued his arresters for trespass. As a result of this episode, people were chanting, "Wilkes, Liberty and Number 45", referring to the newspaper. Parliament swiftly voted in a measure that removed protection of MPs from arrest for the writing and publishing of seditious libel. Bute had resigned (8 April 1763), but Wilkes opposed Bute's successor as chief advisor to the King,
George Grenville, just as strenuously. On 4 May 1763, Grenville – himself a former officer of the Bucks Militia – ordered his brother
Richard Grenville-Temple, 2nd Earl Temple, as Lord Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire to dismiss Wilkes from his militia command. Wilkes was afterwards accused of fraud concerning the clothing of the regiment, a charge that he denied. On 16 November 1763,
Samuel Martin, a supporter of George III, challenged Wilkes to a duel. Martin shot Wilkes in the belly. ==Outlaw==