Meade was the only son of
Richard Meade, 2nd Earl of Clanwilliam, and his Austrian wife, Countess Caroline von
Thun und Hohenstein, and succeeded in the earldom at the age of ten. His early years were spent in
Vienna, where his father had moved after a series of bitter quarrels with his own parents about his marriage and about their enormous debts, which deprived him of what should have been a great inheritance. After his father's death Richard was raised by relatives in England. He was educated at
Eton. In his 1848
memoirs,
François-René de Chateaubriand writes of Meade that "at the head of the younger [London
dandies of the 1820s] . . . Lord Clanwilliam was prominent, the son, it was said, of the
Duc de Richelieu. He did wonderful things: he rode his horse to
Richmond and returned to
Almack's having fallen off twice. He had a certain trick of speaking in the manner of
Alcibiades, which delighted." ==Diplomatic and political career==