Anthony Charles FitzClarence, 7th Earl of Munster, FRSA (21 March 1926 – 30 December 2000) was the last Earl of Munster, Viscount FitzClarence and Baron Tewkesbury.
He was granted arms at the same time, consisting of the royal arms of Great Britain surmounted by a baton sinister charged with roses, as a mark of bastardy.
The seventh earl made his way in the world without trading on his lineage, working variously as a publican, a graphic designer on newspapers, and latterly as an expert on medieval stained glass.
On 15 November 1983, he inherited the earldom on the death of his father Edward FitzClarence, 6th Earl of Munster.
From then until the Government's expulsion of the hereditary peers in 1999, as part of the House of Lords Act, he was a regular attender at the House of Lords.
For a short time he sat on the cross benches, but soon moved to the Conservative side of the House.
A shy man, he spoke rarely there, content to be one of those silent peers that made the Lords, as Byron thought, so formidable an audience.