Bentinck family
The House of Bentinck is a prominent European family belonging to Dutch, German and British nobility. Its members have served in the armed forces and as ambassadors and politicians, including as Governor General of India and as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. The family is related to the British royal family through the maternal Cavendish-Bentinck line of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.
Lord William Henry Cavendish-Bentinck 1774–1839, Governor General of India, son of Lord William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Earl of Portland is missing from the family tree.
History
The name Bentinck is a patronymic variation of the Old Germanic name Bento. The family is originally from the east of the Netherlands and is regarded as Uradel nobility, or noble from earliest times. The oldest known ancestor is Johan Bentinck, who owned land near Heerde and is mentioned in documents between 1343 and 1386.An important British branch was founded by Hans Willem Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland, who accompanied William Henry, Prince of Orange to England during the Glorious Revolution. The head of this line was initially given the title of Earl of Portland.
In 1732, the title of Count Bentinck, of the Holy Roman Empire, was created for Willem Bentinck, the second surviving son of the 1st Earl of Portland. A Royal Licence of 1886 was created which allowed the use of this title in Britain. The Royal Warrant of 27 April 1932 abolished the use of foreign titles in the United Kingdom but extended the special allowance in 13 cases, including the Bentinck comital title "during the lives of the present holders, their heirs, and their heir's heir, provided such heir's heir is now in existence." That exception has now expired. Another branch with the title of count existed in the Netherlands, but it died out in the male line.
The Dutch and British branches of the family continue to exist and belong to the Dutch nobility, German nobility and British nobility.
The Lordship of In- and Kniphausen
The counts of Bentinck were sovereign rulers of the Lordship of In- and Kniphausen, a territory of two parts in and around what is now the city of Wilhelmshaven. Originally subject to Brussels, the general reorganisation of the Holy Empire in 1803 granted Imperial immediacy until the dissolution of the Holy Empire in 1806. The Lordship maintained a precarious independence until 1810, when France annexed it and the whole German North Sea coast to enforce the Continental System. At the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Lordship was denied admittance to the German Confederation in deference to Tsar Alexander I, who wished to see the territory annexed by his cousin, the Grand Duke of Oldenburg. Count Bentinck fought for his little state, however, and at the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1818, the Great Powers agreed that the Count's territory should be granted limited sovereignty.The Frankfurt Convention of 10 July 1819 recognised In- and Kniphausen as sovereign within its own borders but under the protection of Oldenburg. The Treaty of Berlin on 8 June 1825 finalized the terms. In- and Kniphausen was permitted its own commercial flag, which its vessels bore on the high seas. Nevertheless, there was a long dispute between the Oldenburg and the Bentinck families in the latter's inheritance. This dispute was not ended until 1854 with a settlement in which the Bentinck family renounced its sovereignty for financial compensation and certain property rights. The Counts of Bentinck no longer claimed sovereignty over In- and Kniphausen.
Even before the final settlement, Oldenburg and Prussia had negotiated the Treaty of Jade of 1853 in which Oldenburg agreed to sell 340 hectares of Kniphausen territory to Prussia as a naval station for its North Sea Fleet. The cession became the city of Wilhelmshaven.
Today
The Dutch estate of the Bentinck family since the 16th century,, is situated between the villages Heeten and Raalte in Overijssel. The area contains of forests and cultivated land. Today the family mainly earns its living by forestry, agriculture and renting holiday houses. The British branch of the family owns Bothal Castle in Northumberland and Welbeck Abbey, the ancestral seat of the Dukes of Portland in Nottinghamshire.Gary Ramsay Bentinck, Baron Bentinck, is head of both the British baronial branch and the Dutch family. At the moment, there are not so many of the Dutch Bentincks bearing this surname and belonging to the branch of the original family, such as Maxim Bentinck and Anna Bentinck, direct descendants who are aristocrats.
Notable members
- *Henrich Bentinck
- **, Dutch steward of the Veluwe region, and diplomat
- ***Willem Bentinck
- ****Eusebius Bentinck
- *****Hendrik Bentinck
- ******Berent Bentinck
- *******Eusebius Borchart Bentinck
- ********Willem Bentinck
- *********Berend Hendrik Bentinck
- **********Derk Bentinck
- ***********Berend Hendrik Wolter Jan Bentinck
- ************Walter Theodore Edward Bentinck
- *************Reginald Joseph Bentinck
- **************Moyra de Vere Bentinck, married to Dom Mintoff, Prime Minister of Malta
- ***************Yana Mintoff
- *************Sir Rudolph Walter Bentinck, Royal Navy admiral
- **************Wolf Walter Rudolph Bentinck
- ***************Vivian Mark Bentinck
- ****************Alice Bentinck, British entrepreneur
- *************Bernhard Bentinck, English cricketer
- **********, Dutch naval hero
- **********, Dutch lieutenant-general
- **********, Dutch soldier and statesman
- ********Hendrik Adolf Bentinck
- *********Willem Bentinck
- **********, Dutch politician
- ***********, Dutch politician
- ***********John Adolf Bentinck
- ************Johannes Adolf Bentinck
- *************Johannes Adolf Bentinck
- **************, Dutch major-general
- ***************, Dutch judge
- *******William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland, Dutch general and diplomat; English peer from 1689
- ********Henry Bentinck, 1st Duke of Portland, Dutch-born British politician and colonial statesman
- *********William Bentinck, 2nd Duke of Portland, British peer; married to Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland, Cavendish heiress and bluestocking
- **********William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland, British politician, twice Prime Minister; married to Dorothy Bentinck, Duchess of Portland
- ***********William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland, British politician
- ************William Cavendish-Scott-Bentinck, Marquess of Titchfield, British politician
- ************John Cavendish-Scott-Bentinck, 5th Duke of Portland, British aristocratic eccentric and recluse
- ************Lord George Bentinck, British politician and racehorse owner
- ************Lord Henry Bentinck, British politician
- ***********Lord William Bentinck, British soldier and statesman, Governor-General of India
- ***********Lord Charles Bentinck, British soldier and politician; married to Lady Charles Bentinck
- ************Charles Cavendish-Bentinck, Church of England clergyman; married Louisa Cavendish-Bentinck
- *************Cecilia Bowes-Lyon, Countess of Strathmore and Kinghorne, née Cavendish-Bentinck, maternal grandmother of Queen Elizabeth II
- ************Arthur Cavendish-Bentinck, British lieutenant-general
- *************William Cavendish-Bentinck, 6th Duke of Portland, British Conservative politician; married to Winifred Cavendish-Bentinck, Duchess of Portland
- **************William Cavendish-Bentinck, 7th Duke of Portland, British Conservative politician; married to Ivy Cavendish-Bentinck, Duchess of Portland
- ***************Lady Anne Cavendish-Bentinck, British landowner, charity worker, art collector and horsewoman
- *************Lady Ottoline Morrell, née Cavendish-Bentinck, British society hostess
- ***********Lord Frederick Guy Cavendish-Bentinck, British major-general
- ************George Augustus Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck
- *************William George Cavendish-Bentinck, British Member of Parliament; married to Elizabeth Livingston Cavendish-Bentinck
- *************Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck ; married Ruth Cavendish-Bentinck, suffragist
- **************Ferdinand Cavendish-Bentinck, 8th Duke of Portland
- **************Victor Cavendish-Bentinck, 9th Duke of Portland, British diplomat and businessman
- **********Lord Edward Bentinck
- *********Lord George Bentinck
- ********Mary Capel, Countess of Essex, née Bentinck
- ********Willem Bentinck van Rhoon, 1st Count Bentinck, Dutch politician; married Charlotte Sophie of Aldenburg, ruling Countess of Varel and Kniphausen
- *********Christiaan Frederik Anton Willem Karel Bentinck
- **********, 2nd Count Bentinck, Dutch politician
- ***********Willem Gustaaf Frederik Bentinck
- ************Wilhelmine Augusta Friederike Bentinck ; married in 1862 to James Smith
- *************Mary Bentinck Smith, headmistress of St Leonards School 1907–1921
- *************William Frederick Bentinck-Smith
- **************William Bentinck-Smith, Harvard University, administrator
- ************Willem Gustav Frederick Bentinck
- **********Jan Carel van Aldenburg Bentinck
- ***********Willem Frederik Christiaan Bentinck, 3rd Count Bentinck
- ***********Carel Anton Ferdinand van Aldenburg Bentinck, 4th Count Bentinck
- ************Henry Bentinck, 5th Count Bentinck, resigned his rights to his younger brothers 1874
- *************Count Robert Bentinck
- **************Henry Bentinck, 11th Earl of Portland, 10th Count Bentinck, British Army officer and non-conformist intellectual
- ***************Timothy Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland, 11th Count Bentinck, British actor and writer; married to Judy Bentinck, British milliner
- ****************William Bentinck, Viscount Woodstock, English social entrepreneur and speaker
- *************Sir Charles Henry Bentinck, British diplomat who, after retirement, became an Anglican priest
- ************Willem van Aldenburg Bentinck, 6th Count Bentinck
- *************Willem van Aldenburg Bentinck, 7th Count Bentinck
- **************
- ************Carel Reinhard Adelbert van Aldenburg Bentinck
- *************
- ************Godard Johan George Carel van Aldenburg Bentinck
- *************Carel van Aldenburg Bentinck, 8th Count Bentinck
- *************Adriaan van Aldenburg Bentinck, 9th Count Bentinck
- ***********Sir Henry John William Bentinck, British general
- **********Charles Ferdinand Bentinck, British colonial governor
- **********Henry William Bentinck, British colonial governor
- *********John Bentinck, Royal Navy captain, inventor and member of Parliament
- **********William Bentinck, Royal Navy admiral, Governor of St Vincent and the Grenadines
- ***********George William Pierrepont Bentinck, British politician