Wake’s ancestors first represented Northamptonshire in 1300, though none had sat in the Commons since 1478.
Soon after leaving Oxford in 1609, Wake undertook a grand tour of France, the Low Countries, and Italy. At Venice, where he resided for the next five years, he became the secretary of the newly appointed ambassador, Sir Dudley Carleton, to whom he had probably been recommended by Savile and by his own kinsman, Sir John Digby*, ambassador to Spain.
Early in 1624 Chamberlain wrote that Wake was to return to Italy as ambassador to Venice, ‘with a large commission for all Italy’, but his precise instructions would depend upon how Parliament responded to the failure of the Spanish Match; as Chamberlain shrewdly observed, ‘his employment is at the stake to stand or fall as matters pass there, though he have received his letters and instructions, and lords it handsomely already’. It was thus not simply as a Crown servant, but as one with a special task to perform, that Wake was returned to the Parliament of 1624 for Oxford University. Chamberlain commented upon Wake’s regular attendance in the House, and it is clear that he made a significant contribution to the revelations of Spanish treachery.
Wake remained in Italy, even matriculating at the university of Padua in 1625, until his transfer to the Paris embassy in 1631. Early the following year he threw his hat in to the competition to succeed Carleton as secretary of state; but he died intestate ‘of a burning fever’ at Paris in June 1632.
