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Arwenack

Arwenack is a historic manor on the site of what is today the town of Falmouth, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. Historically in the parish of St Budock, it was partly destroyed in 1646, and only a remnant survives today. It was long held by the Killigrew family, which was responsible for the development of the town of Falmouth, Sir Peter Killigrew (died 1667), MP, having received a royal charter for its foundation in 1661.[1]

Arwenack
Arwenack House today, remnant of the former fortified manor house
LocationFalmouth, Cornwall, England
Coordinates50°09′01″N 5°03′49″W / 50.1504°N 5.0636°W / 50.1504; -5.0636
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameArwenack House/Arwenack Manor
Designated22 July 1949
Reference no.1270061
Location of Arwenack in Cornwall

Etymology edit

Arwenack is said to signify in the ancient Cornish language either "the beloved, still cove", or "upon the marsh".[2]

Descent edit

 
Aerial view circa 1870 from north-east of estate of Arwenack: left on top of hill: Pendennis Castle, built on land belonging to the Killigrew family. Right: Arwenack House. Centre: the developing harbour and town of Falmouth
 
Map showing location of Arwenack, today the location of the town of Falmouth. The Carrick Roads are the world's third-largest natural harbour

de Arwenack edit

The earliest recorded lord of the manor of Arwenack was the de Arwenack family:[3]

  • Thomas de Arwenack
  • John de Arwenack, son and heir
  • Robert de Arwenack, son and heir, who died with no sons, leaving a daughter and sole heiress Jane de Arwenack, who married Simon Killigrew (fl.1377)

Killigrew edit

 
Ancient arms of Killigrew: Gules, three mascles or[4][5][a]
 
Modern arms of Killigrew: Argent, an eagle displayed with two heads sable a bordure of the second bezantée. The bezantée bordure reflects the border found in the arms of the ancient Earls of Cornwall

Simon Killigrew edit

Simon Killigrew (fl.1377), married Jane de Arwenack, daughter and sole heiress of Robert de Arwenack. He was the son of John Killigrew of Killigrew, by his wife Mary Poltesmore, daughter of Sir Richard Poltesmore,[3] and was the first of the family to hold Arwenack.

Thomas Killigrew edit

Thomas Killigrew, son, whose wife was a member of the Beaupell family[3] (possibly Beauple of Knowstone[6] and Landkey in Devon, the heiress of which Margaret de Beaupel, married Sir Neil Loring, KG (c. 1320 – 1386), one of the founding members and 20th Knight of the Order of the Garter, established by King Edward III in 1348). He had two sons:

    • John Killigrew, Senior, of Arwenack, eldest son and heir (see below)
    • John Killigrew, Junior (died 1461), of Penryn (the local town to Arwenack), whose descendants soon inherited Arwenack.[3] This branch of the family bore arms: Gules, three mascles or.[4]

John Killigrew, senior edit

John Killigrew, senior, of Arwenack, eldest son and heir, who married Mary Boleigh, daughter and heiress of John Boleigh.[3] The Killigrews later quartered the arms of Boleigh: Argent, on a chevron sable between three torteaux as many bezants,[7] as visible on the monumental brass in St Budock's Church to John Killigrew (died 1567) of Arwenack, first Governor of Pendennis Castle.

John Killigrew (died pre-1513) edit

John Killigrew (died pre-1513), son and heir, who died with no sons, leaving a daughter and sole heiress Elizabeth Killigrew, wife of John Godolphin of Godolphin, Cornwall.[3] The estates however descended to his younger brother as heir male under an entail.

Thomas Killigrew (died 1513) edit

Thomas Killigrew (died 1513), of Arwenack, younger brother. he died on 20 September 1513 at Biscay in the Kingdom of Aragon in Spain. He married twice, firstly to Jane Darrell, daughter and heiress of William Darrell of Andover, Hampshire, by whom he had a son and heir Alexander Killigrew, and secondly in 1512 to Johanna Herry, daughter of John Herry of Ruddeford (possibly John Harris of Radford[3])

Alexander Killigrew (born 1493) edit

Alexander Killigrew (born 1493), of Arwenack, eldest son and heir by his father's first marriage. He appears to have died without children since his heir was his second cousin once removed John Killigrew (died 1567), the son of his second cousin John Killigrew (died 1536) of Penryn by his wife Jane Petit, daughter and co-heiress of John Petit of Ardevera.[8]

John Killigrew (died 1567) edit

 
Monumental brass of John Killigrew (died 1567) of Arwenack, Falmouth, first Governor of Pendennis Castle. St Budock's Church, Budock Water, near Falmouth

John Killigrew (died 1567) of Arwenack, second cousin once removed of Alexander Killigrew (born 1493), of Arwenack. He was the first Governor of Pendennis Castle, situated on land within the Arwenack estate on the tip of a peninsula about 1 mile south-east of Arwenack House, appointed by King Henry VIII.[9] He married Elizabeth Trewennard, 2nd daughter of James Trewennard of Trewennard,[8] in the parish of St Erth.[10] His monumental brass survives in St Budock's Church, Budock Water, immediately to the west of Arwenack, inscribed as follows:

"Heere lyeth John Killigrew, Esquier, of Arwenack and lord of ye manor of Killigrew in Cornewall, and Elizabeth Trewinnard his wife. He was the first Captaine of Pendennis Castle, made by King Henry the eight and so continued untill the nynth of Queene Elizabeth at which time God tooke him to his mercye, being the yeare of Our Lord 1567. Sr John Killigrew, Knight, his son(n)e succeeded him in ye same place by the gift of Queene Elizabeth".[11]

He rebuilt Arwenack House, described by Martin Lister-Killigrew (died 1745) as "the finest and most costly then in the county, as to this time in part appears by the stately hall window thereof, still standing, and was possessed of one of the largest estates in the county, his lands on those parts extending from Arwenack, to Helford passage, and had the propriety of sixteen parish tythes".[12] Despite their rich inheritance, later generations of the family were chronically debt-ridden. He had five sons, including:

  • Sir John Killigrew (died 1584) of Arwenack, eldest son and heir, 2nd Governor of Pendennis Castle,[8] (see below).
  • Peter Killigrew (died 1603), 2nd son, Controller of Customs at Plymouth and Fowey.[7]
  • Sir Henry Killigrew (c. 1528 – 1603), 4th son, an ambassador to Queen Elizabeth I and Member of Parliament for Newport & Launceston in 1553, Saltash in 1563 and for Truro in 1571-2.
  • Sir William Killigrew (died 1622) of Hanworth, Middlesex, 5th son, Groom of the Privy Chamber to King James I, several of whose descendants were also royal courtiers and were buried in Westminster Abbey where survive various monuments to the family.[13]

He also had several daughters, including

Sir John Killigrew (died 1584) edit

Sir John Killigrew (died 1584) of Arwenack, son, 2nd Governor of Pendennis Castle[8] (1568–1584)[15] appointed by Queen Elizabeth I, as stated on his father's brass in St Budock's Church. He was MP for Lostwithiel in 1563 and twice for the family's pocket borough of Penryn, in 1571 and 1572.[16] Together with his father he opposed the Catholic Queen Mary (1553–1558) and her Spanish husband, and used his fleet of ships to keep the Protestant exiles in France abreast of political developments and attacked Spanish shipping in the Channel. In 1556 he was imprisoned by Mary with his father in the Fleet, but released after three weeks. On the succession of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603), he was restored to royal favour.[15] He became notorious for engaging in cattle theft, "evil usage in keeping of a castle" and as a Justice of the peace for abuses in arranging the quarter sessions. Having been appointed a Commissioner to inquire into piracy, he himself was heavily engaged in that activity and traded with smugglers and pirates who frequented the waters around Arwenack. He was the subject of an official investigation in 1565. In January 1582 both he and his wife Mary Wolverston[b] were suspected of involvement in a notorious act of piracy concerning a Spanish ship which had sheltered from a storm in an anchorage opposite Arwenack. It was said that he and his wife had acted together to overpower or murder the crew and steal the cargo of cloth, before ordering the ship to be disposed of in Ireland.[c] He married Mary Wolverston, daughter of Philip Wolverston (often described as a "gentleman pirate") of Wolverston Hall in Suffolk, and widow of Henry Knyvett. A mural monument to the couple was erected by their son in St Budock's Church, showing them facing each other kneeling in prayer. His youngest daughter Katherine Killigrew (died 1598) became the 3rd wife of Sir Henry Billingsley (c. 1538 – 1606) Lord Mayor of London.[3][17]

John Killigrew (c. 1557 – 1605) edit

John Killigrew (c. 1557 – 1605), of Arwennack, son, was Vice-Admiral of Cornwall and the third Governor of Pendennis Castle (1584–98)(from which office he was ejected in 1598),[18] and was three times MP for Penryn in 1584, 1586 and 1597. He had notorious dealings with local pirates. Due to his father's debts and his own extravagance he died in poverty.[18] He married Dorothy Monck, a daughter of Sir Thomas Monk of Potheridge,[19] Merton, Devon. By his wife he had children 6 sons and 4 daughters, including:[19]

  • Sir John Killigrew (1583–1633), of Arwenack, eldest son and heir, who died without children and was succeeded by his younger brother Sir Peter Killigrew (1593–1668).
  • Sir Peter Killigrew (1593–1668), MP, 4th son.
  • Sir William Killigrew, 1st Baronet (died 1665), 6th son, created a baronet at the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660, which event was largely brought about by his uncle the Duke of Albemarle. As he was childless the title was created with special remainder to his nephew Peter Killigrew (1634–1705), son of his elder brother Peter Killigrew (1593–1667), MP for Camelford.
  • Elizabeth Killigrew, wife of Edmond Yeo (died 1636) of North Petherwin in Cornwall and Chittlehampton in Devon, son of Leonard Yeo (died 1624)[d] of North Petherwin, a junior branch of the ancient Yeo family of Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe in Devon.[20]

Sir John Killigrew (1583–1633) edit

Sir John Killigrew (1583–1633), the eldest son, married Jane Fermor, daughter of Sir George Fermor of Northampton. She was confused by the Cornwall historian William Hals (1655–1737) in his History of Cornwall for her grandmother-in-law the pirate Mary Wolverston.[21] She was accused by her husband of engaging in prostitution and is said to have been "first debauched by the Governor of Pendennis Castle".[22] He at last obtained a divorce in the Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury, but at such great expense that he faced ruin. He died without children, the last of the "John Killigrews" of Arwenack, and was succeeded by his younger brother Peter. Lady Jane had been supported by the mayor and corporation of Penryn, which borough was jealous to preserve its ancient pre-eminence in face of the growing town of Falmouth, fostered by the Killigrews. She fled to Penryn where she was hospitably received by the mayor and corporation, to whom, after her husband's death in 1633 she presented a two-foot high silver cup inscribed:[23]

"1633. From Maior to Maior. To the Town of Permarin where they received mee that was in great misery. Kane Killygrew".

Her husband was described as a sober and good man, but one who was always unfortunate.

Sir Peter Killigrew (c. 1593 – 1668) edit

Sir Peter Killigrew (c. 1593 – 1668), younger brother, MP for Orkney, Shetland and Caithness in 1659 and for Helston in Cornwall from 1661 - July 1668,[24] known as Peter the Post from the speed and efficiency with which during the Civil War he despatched messages and other commissions entrusted to him in the cause of King Charles I".[25] He was briefly Governor of Pendennis Castle from March to September 1660.[26] He inherited Arwenack in 1633 on the death of his elder brother without children. he married Mary Lucas, daughter of Thomas Lucas, MP, of St. John's Abbey, Colchester,[19] and sister of Margaret Lucas, wife of William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle (1592–1676) and an attendant of Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of King Charles I, with whom she went into exile in France, having departed with her son prince Charles in 1644 from Pendennis Castle near Arwenack, en route for the Scilly Isles. His support for the Royalists during the Civil War caused the destruction of Arwenack House by the Parliamentarians during their 5-month siege of Pendennis Castle in 1646. It was never rebuilt again on the former grand scale. He obtained a grant to hold markets at Smithwick, next to Arwenack, which became the nucleus of the town of Falmouth, for the establishment of which new town in 1661 he received a royal charter from King Charles II, following the Restoration of the Monarchy. The document refers to Sir Peter Killigrew as "our beloved and faithful subject" and states that it is given "in consideration of the good, faithful, and acceptable services, by him the said Peter as well to Us, as to our most dear Father, the Lord Charles, late king of England (of glorious memory)"[1] He received licence to transfer of the customs house from Penryn to Falmouth and established a new parish (separate from St Budock's) for his new town served by a new church dedicated to "King Charles the Martyr", the executed Charles I, in which he was buried in 1668.[26]

Sir Peter Killigrew, 2nd Baronet (1634–1705) edit

Sir Peter Killigrew, 2nd Baronet (1634–1705), son, who inherited his uncle's baronetcy under the special remainder. In 1660 he was elected Member of Parliament for Camelford in Cornwall, which election was declared void later the same year. He married Frances Twisden (died 1711), a daughter and co-heiress of Sir Roger Twisden, of East Peckham, Kent. In 1697 he moved away from Arwenack to Ludlow in Shropshire,[27] where he died in 1705, but was returned for burial in Falmouth.[19] By his wife he had the following children:[19]

  • Peter Killigrew, died an infant
  • George Killigrew (died 1687), who predeceased his father, having been killed in a duel in a tavern in Penryn by Captain Walter Vincent, Barrister-at-Law. He married Anne St Aubyn, daughter of Sir John St Aubyn, Baronet, by whom he had a daughter Amye Killigrew (living in 1743), wife of Major John Dunbar of Bally Carney, Ireland.[19]
  • Frances Killigrew (died 1736), eldest daughter and co-heiress, wife of Richard Erissey, by whom she had an only daughter and sole heiress to Arwenack, Mary Erissey (died 1718), who in 1711 had married Col. John West of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk.[19]
  • Anne Killigrew (died 1727), youngest daughter and co-heiress, wife of Martin Lister (1666–1745), born at Liston in Staffordshire, who under the terms of her father's will adopted the additional surname of Killigrew. The marriage was childless.

Lister-Killigrew edit

 
 
The Killigrew Pyramid, between Arwenack House and the waterfront, Falmouth.[e] Left: oil painting of deconstruction prior to move in 1836/8, Falmouth Art Gallery.[28] Right: the same view today, with viewer's back to Arwenack house.[f]

Martin Lister Killigrew (1666–1745) was born Martin Lister, of Liston, Staffordshire, and as a junior army officer was stationed at Pendennis Castle during the Governorship of the Earl of Bath.[30] In 1689 at the time he resigned from the army he married Anne Killigrew (died 1727), the youngest daughter of Sir Peter Killigrew, 2nd Baronet (died 1705), of Arwenack, the last male Killigrew of Arwenack. Under the terms of his wife's inheritance, on his marriage he adopted the additional surname of Killigrew, but died childless when the ancient name became extinct at Arwenack,[19] and the estate became the inheritance of Lord Wodehouse.[31] He wrote a history of the Killigrew family, which is the main source for the early history of Falmouth.[32] He left Falmouth in 1725 and in 1737 wrote a series of letters to his steward at Arwenack, Abraham Hall, instructing him to build a stone pyramid monument at Arwenack. His instructions were detailed, but he insisted there should be no inscription. It stood originally in the centre of a grove of trees, but in 1836 was moved to the hilltop at the southern end of The Avenue, and was again moved to its present position on Arwenack Green in 1871.[28] As a junior soldier he witnessed the brutal hangings of rebels in July 1685 at Taunton by Lieutenant General Percy Kirke (died 1691) following the Battle of Sedgemoor, and wrote an account of it which was eventually published by in the Sun newspaper of London on 3 September 1796.[33]

In literature edit

Arwenack is the setting for the historical novel The Grove of Eagles by Winston Graham, which chronicles the lives of the Killigrew family in the 1590s. The narrator, an illegitimate son of John Killigrew, notes the extraordinary unhappiness and ill-fortune which visited so many of those who lived in Arwenack in his lifetime, and led to a local legend that Arwenack was under a curse. The narrator's own view was that the only curse was excessive ambition: his great-grandfather, Sir John Killigrew, had built his new house on a scale so lavish that it drained the family's resources, so that "from his time on, there was always a hint of the feverish and the insolvent in our lives".

Notes edit

  1. ^ These mascle arms are also visible on the Wrey monument (see File:BlancheKilligrew TawstockChurch.JPG) now in Tawstock Church, Devon, (moved from St Ive Church, Cornwall) of Blanche Killigrew (died 1595) and her husband John Wrey (died 1597) of Trebeigh, St Ive, Cornwall. The monument was moved from St Ive Church to its present position against the east wall of the north transept of St Peter's Church, Tawstock, Devon, in 1924 by Sir Philip Bourchier Sherard Wrey, 12th Baronet (1858–1936), of Tawstock Court.(Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.790)
  2. ^ Sources are very confused as to the identity of the female Killigrew supposed to have been engaged in piracy, the most reliable ones giving her as Mary Wolverston
  3. ^ Fuidge; The original source for this famous story, which has been much added to and embroidered by several writers, is Calendar of State Papers, Domestic, 15 January 1582 & 2 March 1582
  4. ^ Date of death 1624 per his inscribed monumental brass in North Petherwin Church [1]
  5. ^ Erected in 1737/8[3] by Martin Lister (died 1745), of Staffordshire, who adopted the surname Killigrew in lieu of his patronymic, having married in 1689 Anne Killigrew (died 1727), youngest daughter of Sir Peter Killigrew, 2nd Baronet (died 1705), of Arwenack. He died without children, being thus the last of the Killigrews. He wrote the History of the Killigrew Family.
  6. ^ Tregellas (1884): "This monument was originally placed on a site which overlooked on one side the remains of the family mansion, and on the other the little lake (formerly an arm of the sea, and known in Leland's time as 'Levine Prisklo'), which was once the well-filled swannery of the Killigrews. It was moved in 1836 to make way for the houses now known as 'Grove Place' and again in 1871 to its present appropriate site opposite the Arwenack Manor-office"[29]

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 9 April 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  2. ^ Tregellas, p.117
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vivian (1887), p.267
  4. ^ a b Dunkin, p.20
  5. ^ Tregellas, p.116, footnote.
  6. ^ Risdon, Tristram (died 1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.303
  7. ^ a b Dunkin, p.36
  8. ^ a b c d Vivian (1887), p.268
  9. ^ Dunkin, pp. 36–7
  10. ^ Tregellas, p.119
  11. ^ Dunkin, pp. 36–7, Plate 31
  12. ^ "Mocavo and Findmypast are coming together | findmypast.com". Retrieved on 12 January 2017.
  13. ^ pixeltocode.uk, PixelToCode. . Westminster Abbey. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
  14. ^ Collins, Arthur Peerage of England London 1779 Vol. VII p.294
  15. ^ a b Fuidge
  16. ^ Fuidge, N.M., biography of Killigrew, John I (died 1584), of Arwennack, Cornw., published in History of Parliament: House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981 [2]
  17. ^ Biography of Henry Billingsley History of Parliament
  18. ^ a b History of Parliament biography [3]
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Vivian (1887), p.269
  20. ^ Vivian (Devon, 1895), pp. 834–7, pedigree of Yeo.
  21. ^ Baring-Gould
  22. ^ Lister-Killigrew, Martin, quoted in Baring-Gould, Sabine
  23. ^ Baring-Gould, with image of cup
  24. ^ History of Parliament biography [4]
  25. ^ Footnote in 1893 edition of Pepys' Diary [5]; Burke, John A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies
  26. ^ a b History of Parliament biography
  27. ^ Lister-Killigrew, Martin
  28. ^ a b "Unknown artist (19th century): The Killigrew Monument (The Pyramid, Arwenack), oil on canvas, 49.5 x 63 cms (sic)." Falmouth Art Gallery. Retrieved on 12 January 2017.
  29. ^ Tregellas (1884), footnote pp. 115–116; Gay, Susan, pp. 188–190, details of Pyramid
  30. ^ Gay, Susan E. (1 January 1903). "Old Falmouth". Lulu.com. Retrieved on 12 January 2017 – via Google Books.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
  32. ^ [6][dead link]
  33. ^ Childs, John (25 February 2014). "General Percy Kirke and the Later Stuart Army". A&C Black. Retrieved on 12 January 2017 – via Google Books.

Sources edit

  • Baring Gould, Sabine, Cornish Characters and Strange Events, London, 1909, Dame Killigrew
  • Gay, Susan E. Old Falmouth, The Story of the town from the days of the Killigrews to the earliest part of the 19th Century Second Impression, 1903. See also Miss Susan Gay's Falmouth chronology
  • Gilbert, Davies (1767–1839), (ed.), Parochial History of Cornwall, Founded of the Manuscript Histories of Mr Hals (Hals, William (1655–1737), History of Cornwall) and Mr Tonkin, 4 vols., Vol. 2, Exeter, 1838.
  • Dunkin, Edwin Hadlow Wise, The Monumental Brasses of Cornwall with Descriptive, Genealogical and Heraldic Notes, 1882.
  • Hals, William (1655–1737), History of Cornwall
  • Jeffery, H. M., (ed.), "Two Historical Sketches of the Killigrew Family of Arwenack Composed by Martin Lister Killigrew in 1737-8 and Known as the Killigrew MS and the Falmouth MS"; Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, Vol.9, pp. 182 et seq.
  • Lister-Killigrew, Martin. History of the Killigrew Family, published (in part) in: Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, Vol III, 1868-70.
  • Lysons, Magna Britannia, Vol.3, Cornwall, 1814, pp. 102–3, "Arwenack"
  • Tregellas, Walter Hawken (1831–1894), Cornish Worthies, 1884, Vol.2, pp. 115–195, The Killigrews: Diplomatists, Warriors, Courtiers and Poets
  • Vivian, Lt.Col. J. L., (ed.) The Visitations of Cornwall: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1530, 1573 & 1620 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine; with additions by J. L. Vivian, Exeter, 1887.
  • Vivian, Lt.Col. J. L., (ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620. Exeter, 1895.
  • Whitley, H. M., Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall, Vol. VII, 1881-3, p. 286, re account of piracy of Mary Wolverston, wife of Sir John Killigrew (died 1584). This is the most reliable account, followed by Baring-Gould. Inaccurate report on Piracy of Lady Killigrew, as noted by Baring-Gould.
  • Heritage Gateway, "Arwenack"

50°09′01″N 5°03′49″W / 50.1504°N 5.0636°W / 50.1504; -5.0636

arwenack, historic, manor, site, what, today, town, falmouth, cornwall, england, united, kingdom, historically, parish, budock, partly, destroyed, 1646, only, remnant, survives, today, long, held, killigrew, family, which, responsible, development, town, falmo. Arwenack is a historic manor on the site of what is today the town of Falmouth Cornwall England United Kingdom Historically in the parish of St Budock it was partly destroyed in 1646 and only a remnant survives today It was long held by the Killigrew family which was responsible for the development of the town of Falmouth Sir Peter Killigrew died 1667 MP having received a royal charter for its foundation in 1661 1 ArwenackArwenack House today remnant of the former fortified manor houseLocationFalmouth Cornwall EnglandCoordinates50 09 01 N 5 03 49 W 50 1504 N 5 0636 W 50 1504 5 0636Listed Building Grade II Official nameArwenack House Arwenack ManorDesignated22 July 1949Reference no 1270061Location of Arwenack in Cornwall Contents 1 Etymology 2 Descent 2 1 de Arwenack 2 2 Killigrew 2 2 1 Simon Killigrew 2 2 2 Thomas Killigrew 2 2 3 John Killigrew senior 2 2 4 John Killigrew died pre 1513 2 2 5 Thomas Killigrew died 1513 2 2 6 Alexander Killigrew born 1493 2 2 7 John Killigrew died 1567 2 2 8 Sir John Killigrew died 1584 2 2 9 John Killigrew c 1557 1605 2 2 10 Sir John Killigrew 1583 1633 2 2 11 Sir Peter Killigrew c 1593 1668 2 2 12 Sir Peter Killigrew 2nd Baronet 1634 1705 2 3 Lister Killigrew 3 In literature 4 Notes 5 References 6 SourcesEtymology editArwenack is said to signify in the ancient Cornish language either the beloved still cove or upon the marsh 2 Descent edit nbsp Aerial view circa 1870 from north east of estate of Arwenack left on top of hill Pendennis Castle built on land belonging to the Killigrew family Right Arwenack House Centre the developing harbour and town of Falmouth nbsp Map showing location of Arwenack today the location of the town of Falmouth The Carrick Roads are the world s third largest natural harbourde Arwenack edit The earliest recorded lord of the manor of Arwenack was the de Arwenack family 3 Thomas de Arwenack John de Arwenack son and heir Robert de Arwenack son and heir who died with no sons leaving a daughter and sole heiress Jane de Arwenack who married Simon Killigrew fl 1377 Killigrew edit nbsp Ancient arms of Killigrew Gules three mascles or 4 5 a nbsp Modern arms of Killigrew Argent an eagle displayed with two heads sable a bordure of the second bezantee The bezantee bordure reflects the border found in the arms of the ancient Earls of CornwallSimon Killigrew edit Simon Killigrew fl 1377 married Jane de Arwenack daughter and sole heiress of Robert de Arwenack He was the son of John Killigrew of Killigrew by his wife Mary Poltesmore daughter of Sir Richard Poltesmore 3 and was the first of the family to hold Arwenack Thomas Killigrew edit Thomas Killigrew son whose wife was a member of the Beaupell family 3 possibly Beauple of Knowstone 6 and Landkey in Devon the heiress of which Margaret de Beaupel married Sir Neil Loring KG c 1320 1386 one of the founding members and 20th Knight of the Order of the Garter established by King Edward III in 1348 He had two sons John Killigrew Senior of Arwenack eldest son and heir see below John Killigrew Junior died 1461 of Penryn the local town to Arwenack whose descendants soon inherited Arwenack 3 This branch of the family bore arms Gules three mascles or 4 John Killigrew senior edit John Killigrew senior of Arwenack eldest son and heir who married Mary Boleigh daughter and heiress of John Boleigh 3 The Killigrews later quartered the arms of Boleigh Argent on a chevron sable between three torteaux as many bezants 7 as visible on the monumental brass in St Budock s Church to John Killigrew died 1567 of Arwenack first Governor of Pendennis Castle John Killigrew died pre 1513 edit John Killigrew died pre 1513 son and heir who died with no sons leaving a daughter and sole heiress Elizabeth Killigrew wife of John Godolphin of Godolphin Cornwall 3 The estates however descended to his younger brother as heir male under an entail Thomas Killigrew died 1513 edit Thomas Killigrew died 1513 of Arwenack younger brother he died on 20 September 1513 at Biscay in the Kingdom of Aragon in Spain He married twice firstly to Jane Darrell daughter and heiress of William Darrell of Andover Hampshire by whom he had a son and heir Alexander Killigrew and secondly in 1512 to Johanna Herry daughter of John Herry of Ruddeford possibly John Harris of Radford 3 Alexander Killigrew born 1493 edit Alexander Killigrew born 1493 of Arwenack eldest son and heir by his father s first marriage He appears to have died without children since his heir was his second cousin once removed John Killigrew died 1567 the son of his second cousin John Killigrew died 1536 of Penryn by his wife Jane Petit daughter and co heiress of John Petit of Ardevera 8 John Killigrew died 1567 edit nbsp Monumental brass of John Killigrew died 1567 of Arwenack Falmouth first Governor of Pendennis Castle St Budock s Church Budock Water near FalmouthJohn Killigrew died 1567 of Arwenack second cousin once removed of Alexander Killigrew born 1493 of Arwenack He was the first Governor of Pendennis Castle situated on land within the Arwenack estate on the tip of a peninsula about 1 mile south east of Arwenack House appointed by King Henry VIII 9 He married Elizabeth Trewennard 2nd daughter of James Trewennard of Trewennard 8 in the parish of St Erth 10 His monumental brass survives in St Budock s Church Budock Water immediately to the west of Arwenack inscribed as follows Heere lyeth John Killigrew Esquier of Arwenack and lord of ye manor of Killigrew in Cornewall and Elizabeth Trewinnard his wife He was the first Captaine of Pendennis Castle made by King Henry the eight and so continued untill the nynth of Queene Elizabeth at which time God tooke him to his mercye being the yeare of Our Lord 1567 Sr John Killigrew Knight his son n e succeeded him in ye same place by the gift of Queene Elizabeth 11 dd He rebuilt Arwenack House described by Martin Lister Killigrew died 1745 as the finest and most costly then in the county as to this time in part appears by the stately hall window thereof still standing and was possessed of one of the largest estates in the county his lands on those parts extending from Arwenack to Helford passage and had the propriety of sixteen parish tythes 12 Despite their rich inheritance later generations of the family were chronically debt ridden He had five sons including Sir John Killigrew died 1584 of Arwenack eldest son and heir 2nd Governor of Pendennis Castle 8 see below Peter Killigrew died 1603 2nd son Controller of Customs at Plymouth and Fowey 7 Sir Henry Killigrew c 1528 1603 4th son an ambassador to Queen Elizabeth I and Member of Parliament for Newport amp Launceston in 1553 Saltash in 1563 and for Truro in 1571 2 Sir William Killigrew died 1622 of Hanworth Middlesex 5th son Groom of the Privy Chamber to King James I several of whose descendants were also royal courtiers and were buried in Westminster Abbey where survive various monuments to the family 13 He also had several daughters including Margaret who married Sir Francis Godolphin 1540 1608 14 Alice who married Richard Bonython of Carclew House Jane who married John Michell of Harlyn M P Mayor of Truro Grace who married John Trethurffe of Trethurffe Ladock Sir John Killigrew died 1584 edit Sir John Killigrew died 1584 of Arwenack son 2nd Governor of Pendennis Castle 8 1568 1584 15 appointed by Queen Elizabeth I as stated on his father s brass in St Budock s Church He was MP for Lostwithiel in 1563 and twice for the family s pocket borough of Penryn in 1571 and 1572 16 Together with his father he opposed the Catholic Queen Mary 1553 1558 and her Spanish husband and used his fleet of ships to keep the Protestant exiles in France abreast of political developments and attacked Spanish shipping in the Channel In 1556 he was imprisoned by Mary with his father in the Fleet but released after three weeks On the succession of the Protestant Queen Elizabeth I 1558 1603 he was restored to royal favour 15 He became notorious for engaging in cattle theft evil usage in keeping of a castle and as a Justice of the peace for abuses in arranging the quarter sessions Having been appointed a Commissioner to inquire into piracy he himself was heavily engaged in that activity and traded with smugglers and pirates who frequented the waters around Arwenack He was the subject of an official investigation in 1565 In January 1582 both he and his wife Mary Wolverston b were suspected of involvement in a notorious act of piracy concerning a Spanish ship which had sheltered from a storm in an anchorage opposite Arwenack It was said that he and his wife had acted together to overpower or murder the crew and steal the cargo of cloth before ordering the ship to be disposed of in Ireland c He married Mary Wolverston daughter of Philip Wolverston often described as a gentleman pirate of Wolverston Hall in Suffolk and widow of Henry Knyvett A mural monument to the couple was erected by their son in St Budock s Church showing them facing each other kneeling in prayer His youngest daughter Katherine Killigrew died 1598 became the 3rd wife of Sir Henry Billingsley c 1538 1606 Lord Mayor of London 3 17 John Killigrew c 1557 1605 edit John Killigrew c 1557 1605 of Arwennack son was Vice Admiral of Cornwall and the third Governor of Pendennis Castle 1584 98 from which office he was ejected in 1598 18 and was three times MP for Penryn in 1584 1586 and 1597 He had notorious dealings with local pirates Due to his father s debts and his own extravagance he died in poverty 18 He married Dorothy Monck a daughter of Sir Thomas Monk of Potheridge 19 Merton Devon By his wife he had children 6 sons and 4 daughters including 19 Sir John Killigrew 1583 1633 of Arwenack eldest son and heir who died without children and was succeeded by his younger brother Sir Peter Killigrew 1593 1668 Sir Peter Killigrew 1593 1668 MP 4th son Sir William Killigrew 1st Baronet died 1665 6th son created a baronet at the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660 which event was largely brought about by his uncle the Duke of Albemarle As he was childless the title was created with special remainder to his nephew Peter Killigrew 1634 1705 son of his elder brother Peter Killigrew 1593 1667 MP for Camelford Elizabeth Killigrew wife of Edmond Yeo died 1636 of North Petherwin in Cornwall and Chittlehampton in Devon son of Leonard Yeo died 1624 d of North Petherwin a junior branch of the ancient Yeo family of Heanton Satchville Petrockstowe in Devon 20 Sir John Killigrew 1583 1633 edit Sir John Killigrew 1583 1633 the eldest son married Jane Fermor daughter of Sir George Fermor of Northampton She was confused by the Cornwall historian William Hals 1655 1737 in his History of Cornwall for her grandmother in law the pirate Mary Wolverston 21 She was accused by her husband of engaging in prostitution and is said to have been first debauched by the Governor of Pendennis Castle 22 He at last obtained a divorce in the Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury but at such great expense that he faced ruin He died without children the last of the John Killigrews of Arwenack and was succeeded by his younger brother Peter Lady Jane had been supported by the mayor and corporation of Penryn which borough was jealous to preserve its ancient pre eminence in face of the growing town of Falmouth fostered by the Killigrews She fled to Penryn where she was hospitably received by the mayor and corporation to whom after her husband s death in 1633 she presented a two foot high silver cup inscribed 23 1633 From Maior to Maior To the Town of Permarin where they received mee that was in great misery Kane Killygrew Her husband was described as a sober and good man but one who was always unfortunate Sir Peter Killigrew c 1593 1668 edit Sir Peter Killigrew c 1593 1668 younger brother MP for Orkney Shetland and Caithness in 1659 and for Helston in Cornwall from 1661 July 1668 24 known as Peter the Post from the speed and efficiency with which during the Civil War he despatched messages and other commissions entrusted to him in the cause of King Charles I 25 He was briefly Governor of Pendennis Castle from March to September 1660 26 He inherited Arwenack in 1633 on the death of his elder brother without children he married Mary Lucas daughter of Thomas Lucas MP of St John s Abbey Colchester 19 and sister of Margaret Lucas wife of William Cavendish 1st Duke of Newcastle 1592 1676 and an attendant of Queen Henrietta Maria wife of King Charles I with whom she went into exile in France having departed with her son prince Charles in 1644 from Pendennis Castle near Arwenack en route for the Scilly Isles His support for the Royalists during the Civil War caused the destruction of Arwenack House by the Parliamentarians during their 5 month siege of Pendennis Castle in 1646 It was never rebuilt again on the former grand scale He obtained a grant to hold markets at Smithwick next to Arwenack which became the nucleus of the town of Falmouth for the establishment of which new town in 1661 he received a royal charter from King Charles II following the Restoration of the Monarchy The document refers to Sir Peter Killigrew as our beloved and faithful subject and states that it is given in consideration of the good faithful and acceptable services by him the said Peter as well to Us as to our most dear Father the Lord Charles late king of England of glorious memory 1 He received licence to transfer of the customs house from Penryn to Falmouth and established a new parish separate from St Budock s for his new town served by a new church dedicated to King Charles the Martyr the executed Charles I in which he was buried in 1668 26 Sir Peter Killigrew 2nd Baronet 1634 1705 edit Sir Peter Killigrew 2nd Baronet 1634 1705 son who inherited his uncle s baronetcy under the special remainder In 1660 he was elected Member of Parliament for Camelford in Cornwall which election was declared void later the same year He married Frances Twisden died 1711 a daughter and co heiress of Sir Roger Twisden of East Peckham Kent In 1697 he moved away from Arwenack to Ludlow in Shropshire 27 where he died in 1705 but was returned for burial in Falmouth 19 By his wife he had the following children 19 Peter Killigrew died an infant George Killigrew died 1687 who predeceased his father having been killed in a duel in a tavern in Penryn by Captain Walter Vincent Barrister at Law He married Anne St Aubyn daughter of Sir John St Aubyn Baronet by whom he had a daughter Amye Killigrew living in 1743 wife of Major John Dunbar of Bally Carney Ireland 19 Frances Killigrew died 1736 eldest daughter and co heiress wife of Richard Erissey by whom she had an only daughter and sole heiress to Arwenack Mary Erissey died 1718 who in 1711 had married Col John West of Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk 19 Anne Killigrew died 1727 youngest daughter and co heiress wife of Martin Lister 1666 1745 born at Liston in Staffordshire who under the terms of her father s will adopted the additional surname of Killigrew The marriage was childless Lister Killigrew edit nbsp nbsp The Killigrew Pyramid between Arwenack House and the waterfront Falmouth e Left oil painting of deconstruction prior to move in 1836 8 Falmouth Art Gallery 28 Right the same view today with viewer s back to Arwenack house f Martin Lister Killigrew 1666 1745 was born Martin Lister of Liston Staffordshire and as a junior army officer was stationed at Pendennis Castle during the Governorship of the Earl of Bath 30 In 1689 at the time he resigned from the army he married Anne Killigrew died 1727 the youngest daughter of Sir Peter Killigrew 2nd Baronet died 1705 of Arwenack the last male Killigrew of Arwenack Under the terms of his wife s inheritance on his marriage he adopted the additional surname of Killigrew but died childless when the ancient name became extinct at Arwenack 19 and the estate became the inheritance of Lord Wodehouse 31 He wrote a history of the Killigrew family which is the main source for the early history of Falmouth 32 He left Falmouth in 1725 and in 1737 wrote a series of letters to his steward at Arwenack Abraham Hall instructing him to build a stone pyramid monument at Arwenack His instructions were detailed but he insisted there should be no inscription It stood originally in the centre of a grove of trees but in 1836 was moved to the hilltop at the southern end of The Avenue and was again moved to its present position on Arwenack Green in 1871 28 As a junior soldier he witnessed the brutal hangings of rebels in July 1685 at Taunton by Lieutenant General Percy Kirke died 1691 following the Battle of Sedgemoor and wrote an account of it which was eventually published by in the Sun newspaper of London on 3 September 1796 33 In literature editArwenack is the setting for the historical novel The Grove of Eagles by Winston Graham which chronicles the lives of the Killigrew family in the 1590s The narrator an illegitimate son of John Killigrew notes the extraordinary unhappiness and ill fortune which visited so many of those who lived in Arwenack in his lifetime and led to a local legend that Arwenack was under a curse The narrator s own view was that the only curse was excessive ambition his great grandfather Sir John Killigrew had built his new house on a scale so lavish that it drained the family s resources so that from his time on there was always a hint of the feverish and the insolvent in our lives Notes edit These mascle arms are also visible on the Wrey monument see File BlancheKilligrew TawstockChurch JPG now in Tawstock Church Devon moved from St Ive Church Cornwall of Blanche Killigrew died 1595 and her husband John Wrey died 1597 of Trebeigh St Ive Cornwall The monument was moved from St Ive Church to its present position against the east wall of the north transept of St Peter s Church Tawstock Devon in 1924 by Sir Philip Bourchier Sherard Wrey 12th Baronet 1858 1936 of Tawstock Court Pevsner Nikolaus amp Cherry Bridget The Buildings of England Devon London 2004 p 790 Sources are very confused as to the identity of the female Killigrew supposed to have been engaged in piracy the most reliable ones giving her as Mary Wolverston Fuidge The original source for this famous story which has been much added to and embroidered by several writers is Calendar of State Papers Domestic 15 January 1582 amp 2 March 1582 Date of death 1624 per his inscribed monumental brass in North Petherwin Church 1 Erected in 1737 8 3 by Martin Lister died 1745 of Staffordshire who adopted the surname Killigrew in lieu of his patronymic having married in 1689 Anne Killigrew died 1727 youngest daughter of Sir Peter Killigrew 2nd Baronet died 1705 of Arwenack He died without children being thus the last of the Killigrews He wrote the History of the Killigrew Family Tregellas 1884 This monument was originally placed on a site which overlooked on one side the remains of the family mansion and on the other the little lake formerly an arm of the sea and known in Leland s time as Levine Prisklo which was once the well filled swannery of the Killigrews It was moved in 1836 to make way for the houses now known as Grove Place and again in 1871 to its present appropriate site opposite the Arwenack Manor office 29 References edit a b National Maritime Museum Cornwall Falmouth Cornwall Archived from the original on 9 April 2016 Retrieved 8 May 2021 Tregellas p 117 a b c d e f g h i Vivian 1887 p 267 a b Dunkin p 20 Tregellas p 116 footnote Risdon Tristram died 1640 Survey of Devon 1811 edition London 1811 with 1810 Additions p 303 a b Dunkin p 36 a b c d Vivian 1887 p 268 Dunkin pp 36 7 Tregellas p 119 Dunkin pp 36 7 Plate 31 Mocavo and Findmypast are coming together findmypast com Retrieved on 12 January 2017 pixeltocode uk PixelToCode Dame Mary James Westminster Abbey Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Collins Arthur Peerage of England London 1779 Vol VII p 294 a b Fuidge Fuidge N M biography of Killigrew John I died 1584 of Arwennack Cornw published in History of Parliament House of Commons 1558 1603 ed P W Hasler 1981 2 Biography of Henry Billingsley History of Parliament a b History of Parliament biography 3 a b c d e f g h Vivian 1887 p 269 Vivian Devon 1895 pp 834 7 pedigree of Yeo Baring Gould Lister Killigrew Martin quoted in Baring Gould Sabine Baring Gould with image of cup History of Parliament biography 4 Footnote in 1893 edition of Pepys Diary 5 Burke John A genealogical and heraldic history of the extinct and dormant baronetcies a b History of Parliament biography Lister Killigrew Martin a b Unknown artist 19th century The Killigrew Monument The Pyramid Arwenack oil on canvas 49 5 x 63 cms sic Falmouth Art Gallery Retrieved on 12 January 2017 Tregellas 1884 footnote pp 115 116 Gay Susan pp 188 190 details of Pyramid Gay Susan E 1 January 1903 Old Falmouth Lulu com Retrieved on 12 January 2017 via Google Books See p 134 5 An Illustrated Itinerary of the County of Cornwall Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 6 dead link Childs John 25 February 2014 General Percy Kirke and the Later Stuart Army A amp C Black Retrieved on 12 January 2017 via Google Books Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arwenack Falmouth Baring Gould Sabine Cornish Characters and Strange Events London 1909 Dame Killigrew Gay Susan E Old Falmouth The Story of the town from the days of the Killigrews to the earliest part of the 19th Century Second Impression 1903 See also Miss Susan Gay s Falmouth chronology Gilbert Davies 1767 1839 ed Parochial History of Cornwall Founded of the Manuscript Histories of Mr Hals Hals William 1655 1737 History of Cornwall and Mr Tonkin 4 vols Vol 2 Exeter 1838 Dunkin Edwin Hadlow Wise The Monumental Brasses of Cornwall with Descriptive Genealogical and Heraldic Notes 1882 Hals William 1655 1737 History of Cornwall Jeffery H M ed Two Historical Sketches of the Killigrew Family of Arwenack Composed by Martin Lister Killigrew in 1737 8 and Known as the Killigrew MS and the Falmouth MS Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Vol 9 pp 182 et seq Lister Killigrew Martin History of the Killigrew Family published in part in Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Vol III 1868 70 Lysons Magna Britannia Vol 3 Cornwall 1814 pp 102 3 Arwenack Tregellas Walter Hawken 1831 1894 Cornish Worthies 1884 Vol 2 pp 115 195 The Killigrews Diplomatists Warriors Courtiers and Poets Vivian Lt Col J L ed The Visitations of Cornwall Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1530 1573 amp 1620 Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine with additions by J L Vivian Exeter 1887 Vivian Lt Col J L ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 Whitley H M Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall Vol VII 1881 3 p 286 re account of piracy of Mary Wolverston wife of Sir John Killigrew died 1584 This is the most reliable account followed by Baring Gould Inaccurate report on Piracy of Lady Killigrew as noted by Baring Gould Heritage Gateway Arwenack Portals nbsp Cornwall nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Architecture 50 09 01 N 5 03 49 W 50 1504 N 5 0636 W 50 1504 5 0636 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arwenack amp oldid 1170389251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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