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Daniel Harvey (diplomat)


Sir Daniel Harvey (10 November 1631 – August 1672) was a merchant and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1660. He was English Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1668 to 1672.

Harvey was born in Croydon, the fourth son of Daniel Harvey, a grocer and merchant of London and Combe Nevill Surrey, and his wife Elizabeth Kinnersley. His uncle was the doctor William Harvey, who first described the circulation of the blood. Harvey was educated at Croydon under Mr Webb and was admitted at Pembroke College, Oxford on 3 March 1643. He was admitted at Caius College, Cambridge on 12 November 1646 and was awarded BA in 1647. He was a director of the East India Company and a member of the Levant Company. He was appointed Sheriff of Surrey for 1654.

In 1660, Harvey was elected Member of Parliament for Surrey in the Convention Parliament. He was knighted by King Charles II on 27 May 1660 and in the same year was appointed custodian of Richmond Park. He gave a home to Lady Castlemaine during her quarrel with the king. This is turn led to a noisy public feud between Lady Castlemaine and Harvey's wife, which persisted until the Harveys went to Constantinople.

Harvey was nominated by the King to the Levant Company as ambassador to the Ottoman Empire on 2 January 1668. The King's Instructions arrived dated on 3 August. He arrived by ship on 20 December. His secretary in the Company was the Restoration playwright George Etherege. Harvey died in Constantinople on 26 August 1672 at the age of 40 and was buried at Hempstead, Essex.


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