Background
Robert was a younger son of Sir Edmund Sawyer, of Heywood Lodge, at White Waltham, in Berkshire, who was Auditor of the Exchequer.
Robert was a younger son of Sir Edmund Sawyer, of Heywood Lodge, at White Waltham, in Berkshire, who was Auditor of the Exchequer.
He attended Magdalene College, Cambridge, where he was a contemporary of Samuel Pepys and later became a benefactor of the library there.
Upon leaving university, he became a barrister of the Inner Temple and took part in a number of well-known cases. He later became treasurer of Inner Temple. Sawyer was elected Member of Parliament for High Wycombe in 1673 and was knighted four years later.
He was elected speaker in 1678, but had to resign in under a month because of health problems.
Three years later he was made attorney-general. He returned to private practice, and scored a great triumph as defence counsel in the Trial of the Seven Bishops
Sawyer settled at Highclere in Hampshire where he built the house that preceded the present castle.
He died on 30 July 1692 and was buried in the old church there. Their descendants the Earls of Carnarvon eventually inherited Highclere.
He also had a son George, and through George"s daughter Catherine was ancestor of the Marquess of Anglesey.
Cavalier Parliament]
Sir Robert prosecuted members of the Rye House Plot and also Titus Oates.