After the
Stuart Restoration in 1660, he returned to England and became even closer to the royal family through the marriage of his daughter
Anne to the King's brother
James, Duke of York. Contemporaries naturally assumed that Hyde had arranged the royal marriage of his daughter, but modern historians, in general, accept his repeated claims that he had no hand in it, and that indeed it came as an unwelcome shock to him. He is supposed to have told Anne that he would rather see her dead than to so disgrace her family. There were good reasons for his opposition, since he may have hoped to arrange a marriage for James with a foreign princess, and he was well aware that nobody regarded his daughter as a suitable royal match, a view Clarendon shared. On the personal level, he seems to have disliked James, whose impulsive attempt to repudiate the marriage can hardly have endeared him to his father-in-law. Anne enforced the rules of
etiquette governing such marriages with great strictness, and thus caused her parents some social embarrassment: as commoners, they were not permitted to sit down in Anne's presence, or to refer to her as their daughter. As
Cardinal Mazarin remarked, the marriage damaged Hyde's reputation as a politician, whether he was responsible for it or not. On 3 November 1660, he was raised to the peerage as
Baron Hyde, of
Hindon in the County of Wiltshire, and on 20 April the next year, at the coronation, he was created Viscount Cornbury and
Earl of Clarendon. He served as Chancellor of the
University of Oxford from 1660 to 1667. As effective
chief minister in the early years of the reign, he accepted the need to fulfil most of what had been promised in the
Declaration of Breda, which he had partly drafted. In particular, he worked hard to fulfil the promise of mercy to all the King's enemies, except the
regicides, and this was largely achieved in the
Act of Indemnity and Oblivion. Most other problems he was content to leave to Parliament, and in particular to the restored
House of Lords; his speech welcoming the Lords' return shows his ingrained dislike of democracy. He played a key role in Charles' marriage to
Catherine of Braganza, with ultimately harmful consequences to himself. Clarendon liked and admired the Queen, and disapproved of the King's openly maintaining his mistresses. The King, however, resented any interference with his private life. Catherine's failure to bear children also was damaging to Clarendon, given the nearness of his own grandchildren to the throne, although it is most unlikely, as was alleged, that Clarendon had planned deliberately for Charles to marry an infertile bride. He and Catherine remained on friendly terms; one of his last letters thanked her for her kindness to his family. As Lord Chancellor, it is commonly thought that Clarendon was the author of the "
Clarendon Code", designed to preserve the supremacy of the
Church of England. In reality, he was not very heavily involved with its drafting and actually disapproved of much of its content. The "Great Tew Circle" of which he had been a leading member prided itself on tolerance and respect for religious differences. The code was thus merely named after him as chief minister. In 1663, he was one of eight
Lords Proprietor given title to a huge tract of land in North America which became the
Province of Carolina. Shortly after this, an attempt was made to
impeach him by
George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol, a longstanding political opponent from the Civil War. He was accused of arranging for Charles to marry a woman he knew to be barren in order to secure the throne for the children of his daughter Anne, while
Clarendon House, his palatial new mansion in
Piccadilly, was cited as evidence of corruption. He was also blamed for the
Sale of Dunkirk, and the cost of supporting the colony of
Tangiers, acquired along with
Bombay as part of Catherine's
dowry. The windows of Clarendon House were broken, and a placard fixed to the house blaming Hyde for "Dunkirk, Tangiers and a barren Queen". While these allegations were not taken seriously, and ended by damaging Bristol more than Hyde, he became increasingly unpopular with the public and with Charles, whom he subjected to frequent lectures on his shortcomings. His contempt for Charles' mistress
Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland, earned him her enmity, and she worked with the future members of the
Cabal ministry to destroy him. His authority was weakened by increasing ill-health, in particular attacks of
gout and back pain that became so severe that he was often incapacitated for months on end:
Samuel Pepys records that early in 1665 Hyde was forced to lie on a couch during Council meetings. Even neutrals began to see him as a liability, and when attempts to persuade him to retire failed, some spread false reports that he was anxious to step down. These included Sir
William Coventry who later admitted to
Samuel Pepys that he was largely responsible for these reports; he claimed this was because Clarendon's dominance of policy and refusal to consider alternatives made even their discussion impossible. In his memoirs, Clarendon makes clear his bitterness against Coventry for what he regarded as betrayal, which he contrasted with the loyalty shown by his brother
Henry. Above all, the military setbacks of the
Second Anglo-Dutch War of 1665 to 1667, together with the disasters of the
Plague of 1665 and the
Great Fire of London, led to his downfall, and the successful Dutch
raid on the Medway in June 1667 was the final blow to his career. Despite having opposed the war, unlike many of his accusers, he was removed from office; as he left
Whitehall, Barbara Villiers shouted abuse at him, to which he replied with simple dignity: "Madam, pray remember that if you live, you will also be old". At almost the same time he suffered a great personal blow when his wife died after a short illness: in a will drawn up the previous year, he described her as "my dearly beloved wife, who hath accompanied and assisted me in all my distresses". Clarendon was impeached by the
House of Commons for blatant violations of
Habeas Corpus, for having sent prisoners out of England to places like
Jersey and holding them there without benefit of trial. He was forced to flee to
France in November 1667. The King made it clear that he would not defend him, and this betrayal of his old and loyal servant harmed Charles's reputation. Efforts to pass an
Act of Attainder against him failed, but an Act providing for his
banishment (
19 & 20 Cha. 2. c. 2) was passed in December and received the
royal assent. Apart from the Duke of York (Clarendon's son-in-law) and Henry Coventry, few spoke in his defence. Clarendon was accompanied to France by his private chaplain and ally
William Levett, later Dean of Bristol. ==Exile, death, and legacy==