[2] He also studied under the Cambridge scholar Robert Naunton, although no record of his formal admission to the university is known.
He traveled widely on the Continent to complete his education, returning to sit as Member of Parliament for Warwick in 1614 through the patronage of his uncle.
[1] Following his marriage the next year to the step-daughter of Lord Kinclaven he was given use of Kineton, Warwickshire, which his uncle had recently purchased.
[7][1] His death on the eve of the English Civil War, the first battle of which took place near Kineton, deprived Warwickshire of one of its political leaders.
[1] Children:[8] He died on 12 May 1642 when the title passed to his son Greville Verney, 8th Baron Willoughby de Broke.