Early life and family Richard Lovelace was born on 9 December 1617. His exact birthplace is unknown, and may have been
Woolwich, Kent, or
Holland. He was the oldest son of Sir William Lovelace and Anne Barne Lovelace. He had four brothers and three sisters. His father was from a distinguished military and legal family; the Lovelace family owned a considerable amount of property in Kent. His father, Sir William Lovelace, was a member of the Virginia Company and an incorporator in the second
Virginia Company in 1609. He was a soldier and died during the war with Spain and the Dutch Republic in the
Siege of Groenlo (1627) a few days before the town fell. Richard was nine years old when his father died. Lovelace's father was the son of Sir William Lovelace and Elizabeth Aucher, who was the daughter of Mabel Wroths and Edward Aucher, who inherited, under his father's will, the manors of
Bishopsbourne and Hautsborne. Elizabeth's nephew was Sir
Anthony Aucher (1614 – 31 May 1692) an English politician and Cavalier during the
English Civil War. He was the son of her brother Sir Anthony Aucher and his wife Hester Collett. Lovelace's mother, Anne Barne (1587–1633), was the daughter of Sir William Barne and the granddaughter of Sir
George Barne III (1532–1593), the
Lord Mayor of London and a prominent merchant and public official from London during the reign of
Elizabeth I and Anne Gerrard, daughter of Sir
William Garrard, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1555. Lovelace's maternal grandmother was Anne Sandys. His great-grandmother was Cicely Wilford and his great-grandfather
Most Reverend Dr
Edwin Sandys, an
Anglican church leader who successively held the posts of
Bishop of Worcester (1559–1570),
Bishop of London (1570–1576), and
Archbishop of York (1576–1588) and was one of the translators of the
Bishops' Bible. His mother, Anne Barne Lovelace, married as her second husband, on 20 January 1630, at
Greenwich, England, the Very Rev Dr
Jonathan Browne. They were the parents of one child, Anne Browne, Richard's half-sister, who married
Herbert Croft, later
Bishop of Hereford, and was the mother of
Sir Herbert Croft, the first of the
Croft baronets. Lovelace's brother,
Francis Lovelace (1621–1675), was the second governor of the
New York Colony appointed by the
Duke of York, later King
James II of England. They were also great nephews of both
George Sandys (2 March 1577 – March 1644), an English traveller, colonist and poet; and of
Sir Edwin Sandys (9 December 1561 – October 1629), an English statesman and one of the founders of the
London Company. In 1629, when Lovelace was eleven, he went to Sutton's Foundation at
Charterhouse School, then in London. There is no clear record that Lovelace actually attended; it is believed that he studied as a "boarder" because he did not need financial assistance like the "scholars". He spent five years at Charterhouse, three of which were spent with
Richard Crashaw, who also became a poet. On 5 May 1631, Lovelace was sworn in as a Gentleman Wayter Extraordinary to
King Charles I, an honorary position for which one paid a fee. He went on to
Gloucester Hall, Oxford, in 1634. ==Collegiate career==