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Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset

Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, 1st Earl of Hertford, 1st Viscount Beauchamp KG, PC (1500[1] – 22 January 1552), also known as Edward Semel,[2] was an English nobleman and politician who served as Lord Protector of England from 1547 to 1549 during the minority of his nephew King Edward VI. He was the eldest surviving brother of Queen Jane Seymour, the third wife of King Henry VIII.

The Duke of Somerset
Portrait of Edward Seymour as 1st Earl of Hertford (cr 1537), wearing the Collar of the Order of the Garter. By unknown artist, Longleat House, Wiltshire.
Lord High Treasurer
In office
10 February 1547 – 10 October 1549
MonarchEdward VI
Preceded byThe Duke of Norfolk
Succeeded byThe Marquess of Winchester
Lord Protector of the Realm
In office
4 February 1547 – 11 October 1549
MonarchEdward VI
Lord Great Chamberlain
In office
c.1543–c.1549
MonarchsHenry VIII
Edward VI
Preceded byThe Earl of Sussex
Succeeded byThe Earl of Warwick
Personal details
Born1500
Died22 January 1552(1552-01-22) (aged 51–52)
Tower Hill, London
Cause of deathDecapitation
Resting placeChapel Royal of St. Peter ad Vincula, Tower of London, London, United Kingdom
51°30′31″N 0°04′37″W / 51.508611°N 0.076944°W / 51.508611; -0.076944
NationalityEnglish
Spouses
Childrenwith Catherine: with Anne:
Parents
Residences
Signature
Military service
AllegianceKingdom of England
Battles/wars

Seymour grew rapidly in favour with Henry VIII following Jane's marriage to the king in 1536, and was subsequently made Earl of Hertford. On Henry's death in 1547, he was appointed protector by the Regency Council on the accession of the nine-year-old Edward VI. Rewarded with the title Duke of Somerset, Seymour became the effective ruler of England. Somerset continued Henry's military campaign against the Scots and achieved a sound victory at the Battle of Pinkie, but ultimately he was unable to maintain his position in Scotland. Domestically, Somerset pursued further reforms as an extension of the English Reformation, and in 1549 imposed the first Book of Common Prayer through the Act of Uniformity, offering a compromise between Protestant and Roman Catholic teachings. The unpopularity of Somerset's religious measures, along with agrarian grievances, resulted in unrest in England and provoked a series of uprisings (including the Prayer Book Rebellion and Kett's Rebellion). Costly wars and economic mismanagement brought the Crown to financial ruin, further undermining his government.

In October 1549, Somerset was forced out of power and imprisoned in the Tower of London by John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and a group of privy councillors. He was later released and reconciled with Warwick (now Duke of Northumberland), but in 1551 Northumberland accused him of treason, and he was executed in January 1552. Until the 1970s, historians had a highly positive view of Somerset, seeing him as a champion of political liberty and the common people, but since then he has also often been portrayed as an arrogant and inept ruler of the Tudor state.

Origins and early career

Edward Seymour was born c. 1500, the son of Sir John Seymour (1474–1536), feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset, by his wife Margery Wentworth, eldest daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead, Suffolk, and descended from Edward III.[3] In 1514, aged about 14, he received an appointment in the household of Mary Tudor, Queen of France, and was enfant d’honneur at her marriage with Louis XII.[4]

Seymour served in the Duke of Suffolk's campaign in France in 1523, being knighted by the duke on 1 November, and accompanied Cardinal Wolsey on his embassy to France in 1527. Appointed Esquire of the Body to Henry VIII in 1529, he grew in favour with the king, who visited his manor at Elvetham in Hampshire in October 1535.[4]

Rise under Henry VIII

When Seymour's sister, Jane, married King Henry VIII in 1536, Edward was created Viscount Beauchamp on 5 June 1536, and Earl of Hertford on 15 October 1537. He became Warden of the Scottish Marches and continued in royal favour after his sister's death on 24 October 1537.

 
Coat of Arms of Edward Seymour, Viscount Beauchamp: Quarterly of six. 1. Or, on a pile, gules, between six fleurs de lys, azure three lions of England. (Augmentation granted by Henry VIII on his marriage to Jane Seymour). 2. Seymour: gules, two wings conjoined in lure, or. 3. Beauchamp of Hache: Vair. 4. Esturmy: Argent, three demi-lions rampant, gules. 5. MacWilliams: Per bend, argent and gules, three roses, bend-wise, counterchanged. 6. Coker: Argent, on a bend, gules, three leopards’ heads, or.[5][6]

In 1541, during Henry's absence in the north, Hertford, Thomas Cranmer and Thomas Audley had the chief management of affairs in London. In September 1542 he was appointed Warden of the Scottish Marches, and a few months later Lord High Admiral, a post which he almost immediately relinquished in favour of John Dudley, the future duke of Northumberland. In March 1544 he was made lieutenant-general of the north and instructed to punish the Scots for their repudiation of the treaty of marriage between Prince Edward and the infant Mary, Queen of Scots. He landed at Leith on 3 May 1544, captured and pillaged Edinburgh, and returned by land burning villages and castles along the way.[4]

In July 1544 he was appointed lieutenant of the realm under Catherine Parr, Henry's sixth wife and regent, during Henry's absence at Boulogne, but in August he joined the king and was present at the surrender of the town. In the autumn he was one of the commissioners sent to Flanders to keep Emperor Charles V to the terms of his treaty with England, and in January 1545 he was placed in command at Boulogne, where on the 26th he repelled an attempt of Marshal de Biez to recapture the town. In May he was once more appointed lieutenant-general in the north to avenge the Scottish victory at the Battle of Ancrum Moor; this he did by a savage foray into Scotland in September. He reported that on 16 September 1545 he had "sent forth a good band to the number of 1500 light horsemen in the leading of me [and] Sir Robert Bowes, which from 5 a.m. till 3 p.m., forayed along the waters of Tyvyote and Rowle, 6 or 7 miles beyond Jedburgh, and burnt 14 or 15 towns and a great quantity of all kinds of corn".[7]

In March 1546 he was sent back to Boulogne to supersede the Earl of Surrey, whose command had not been a success; and in June he was engaged in negotiations for peace with France and for the delimitation of the English conquests.[4]

From October to the end of Henry's reign he was in attendance on the king, engaged in the struggle for predominance which was to determine the complexion of the government during the coming minority. Personal, political and religious rivalry separated him and Baron Lisle from the Howards, and Surrey's hasty temper precipitated his own ruin and that of his father, the duke of Norfolk. They could not acquiesce in the Imperial ambassador's verdict that Hertford and Lisle were the only noblemen of fit age and capacity to carry on the government; and Surrey's attempt to secure the predominance of his family led to his own execution and to his father's imprisonment in the Tower of London.[4]

Seymour's Protectorate

Council of Regency

 
Arms of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset: Quarterly, 1st and 4th: Or, on a pile gules between six fleurs-de-lys azure three lions of England (special grant); 2nd and 3rd: Gules, two wings conjoined in lure or (Seymour)[8] These arms concede the positions of greatest honour, the 1st & 4th quarters, to a special grant of arms incorporating the fleurs-de-lys and lions of the royal arms of Plantagenet

Upon the death of Henry VIII (28 January 1547), Seymour's nephew became king as Edward VI. Henry VIII's will named sixteen executors, who were to act as Edward's Council until he reached the age of 18. These executors were supplemented by twelve men "of counsail" who would assist the executors when called on.[9] The final state of Henry VIII's will has occasioned controversy. Some historians suggest that those close to the king manipulated either him or the will itself to ensure a shareout of power to their benefit, both material and religious. In this reading, the composition of the Privy Chamber shifted towards the end of 1546 in favour of the Protestant faction.[10] In addition, two leading conservative Privy Councillors were removed from the centre of power. Stephen Gardiner was refused access to Henry during his last months. Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, found himself accused of treason; on 24–25 December, he offered his vast estates to the Crown making them available for redistribution, and he spent the whole of Edward's reign in the Tower of London.[11]

Other historians have argued that Gardiner's exclusion had non-religious causes, that Norfolk was not noticeably conservative in religion, that conservatives remained on the council, and that the radicalism of men such as Sir Anthony Denny, who controlled the dry stamp that replicated the king's signature, is debatable.[12] Whatever the case, Henry's death was followed by a lavish hand-out of lands and honours to the new power group.[13] The will contained an "unfulfilled gifts" clause, added at the last minute, which allowed Henry's executors to freely distribute lands and honours to themselves and the court,[14] particularly to Seymour (then known as Earl of Hertford), who became the Lord Protector of the Realm and Governor of the King's Person, and who created himself Duke of Somerset.[13]

Henry VIII's will did not provide for the appointment of a Protector. It entrusted the government of the realm during his son's minority to a Regency Council that would rule collectively, by majority decision, with "like and equal charge".[15] Nevertheless, a few days after Henry's death, on 4 February, the executors chose to invest almost regal power in Edward Seymour.[16] Thirteen out of the sixteen (the others being absent) agreed to his appointment as Protector, which they justified as their joint decision "by virtue of the authority" of Henry's will.[17] Seymour may have done a deal with some of the executors, who almost all received hand-outs.[18]

He is known to have done so with William Paget, private secretary to Henry VIII,[19] and to have secured the support of Sir Anthony Browne of the Privy Chamber.[20]

Seymour's appointment was in keeping with historical precedent,[21] and his eligibility for the role was reinforced by his military successes in Scotland and France. He was senior to his ally Lisle in the peerage, and was the new king's closest relative.[4]

In March 1547, he secured letters patent from King Edward granting him the almost monarchical right to appoint members to the Privy Council himself and to consult them only when he wished.[22] In the words of historian G. R. Elton, "from that moment his autocratic system was complete".[23] He proceeded to rule largely by proclamation, calling on the Privy Council to do little more than rubber-stamp his decisions.[24]

Seymour's takeover of power was smooth and efficient. The imperial ambassador, Francis van der Delft, reported that he "governs everything absolutely", with Paget operating as his secretary, although he predicted trouble from John Dudley, Viscount Lisle, who had recently been raised to Earl of Warwick in the share-out of honours.[25]

In fact, in the early weeks of his Protectorate, Seymour met opposition only from the Lord Chancellor, Thomas Wriothesley, whom the Earldom of Southampton had evidently failed to buy off, and from his own brother.[26] Wriothesley, a religious conservative, objected to Seymour's assumption of monarchical power over the council. He then found himself abruptly dismissed from the chancellorship on charges of selling off some of his offices to delegates.[27]

In his first parliament, which met in November 1547, Seymour procured the repeal of all the heresy laws and nearly all the treason laws passed since Edward III. He sought to win over the Scots by those promises of autonomy, free trade, and equal privileges with England. But the Scots were not to be won over yet, and would not be persuaded; the protector led another army into Scotland in September 1547, and won the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh on 10 September. He trusted the garrisons he established throughout the Lowlands to wear down Scottish opposition; but their pressure was soon weakened by troubles in England and abroad, and Mary, Queen of Scots was transported to France to marry Francis II in 1558.[4]

Seymour also attempted to bring uniformity to forms of worship, and in 1549 the first Act of Uniformity introduced a Book of Common Prayer that attempted to compromise between different teachings; it was replaced by a more severe form in 1552, after his fall.[3] Prior to and during the Protectorate, the Book of Common Prayer was a central element of the emerging Protestant literature.[28]

Thomas Seymour

 
Thomas Seymour, Lord Admiral and brother of Edward Seymour

Edward Seymour faced less manageable opposition from his younger brother Thomas, who has been described as a "worm in the bud".[29] As King Edward's uncle, Thomas Seymour demanded the governorship of the king's person and a greater share of power.[30] Seymour tried to buy his brother off with a barony, an appointment to the Lord Admiralship, and a seat on the Privy Council—but Thomas was bent on scheming for power. He began smuggling pocket money to King Edward, telling him that the Duke of Somerset held the purse strings too tight, making him a "beggarly king".[31] He also urged him to throw off the Protector within two years and "bear rule as other kings do"; but Edward, schooled to defer to the council, failed to co-operate.[32]

In April 1547, using King Edward's support to circumvent his brother's opposition, Thomas Seymour secretly married Henry VIII's widow Catherine Parr, whose Protestant household included the 11-year-old Lady Jane Grey and the 13-year-old Princess Elizabeth.[33]

In summer 1548, a pregnant Catherine Parr discovered Thomas Seymour embracing Princess Elizabeth.[34] As a result, Elizabeth was removed from Catherine Parr's household and transferred to Sir Anthony Denny's. That September, Catherine Parr died in childbirth, and Thomas Seymour promptly resumed his attentions to Elizabeth by letter, planning to marry her. Elizabeth was receptive, but, like Edward, unready to agree to anything unless permitted by the council.[35] In January 1549, the council had Thomas Seymour arrested on various charges, including embezzlement at the Bristol mint. King Edward himself testified about the pocket money.[36] Most importantly, Thomas Seymour had sought to officially receive the governorship of King Edward, as no earlier Lord Protectors, unlike Edward Seymour, had ever held both functions. Lack of clear evidence for treason ruled out a trial, so Thomas was condemned instead by an Act of Attainder and beheaded on 20 March 1549.[37]

War

Edward Seymour's only undoubted skill was as a soldier, which he had proved on his expeditions to Scotland and in the defence of Boulogne in 1546. From the first, his main interest as Protector was the war against Scotland.[38] After a crushing victory at the Battle of Pinkie in September 1547, he set up a network of garrisons in Scotland, stretching as far north as Dundee.[39] His initial successes, however, were followed by a loss of direction, as his aim of uniting the realms through conquest became increasingly unrealistic. The Scots allied with France, who sent reinforcements for the defence of Edinburgh in 1548,[40] while Mary, Queen of Scots, was removed to France, where she was betrothed to the dauphin.[41] The cost of maintaining the Protector's massive armies and his permanent garrisons in Scotland also placed an unsustainable burden on the royal finances.[42] A French attack on Boulogne in August 1549 at last forced Seymour to begin a withdrawal from Scotland.[43]

Rebellion

During 1548, England was subject to social unrest. After April 1549, a series of armed revolts broke out, fuelled by various religious and agrarian grievances. The two most serious rebellions, which required major military intervention to put down, were in Devon and Cornwall and in Norfolk. The first, called the Prayer Book Rebellion (also known as the Western rebellion) arose mainly from the imposition of church services in English, and the second, led by a tradesman called Robert Kett, mainly from the encroachment of landlords on common grazing ground.[44] A complex aspect of the social unrest was that the protestors believed they were acting legitimately against enclosing landlords with the Protector's support, convinced that the landlords were the lawbreakers.[45]

The same justification for outbreaks of unrest was voiced throughout the country, not only in Norfolk and the west. The origin of the popular view of Edward Seymour as sympathetic to the rebel cause lies partly in his series of sometimes liberal, often contradictory, proclamations.[46] and partly in the uncoordinated activities of the commissions he sent out in 1548 and 1549 to investigate grievances about loss of tillage, encroachment of large sheep flocks on common land, and similar issues.[47] Seymour's commissions were led by the evangelical M.P. John Hales, whose socially liberal rhetoric linked the issue of enclosure with Reformation theology and the notion of a godly commonwealth.[48] Local groups often assumed that the findings of these commissions entitled them to act against offending landlords themselves.[49] King Edward wrote in his Chronicle that the 1549 risings began "because certain commissions were sent down to pluck down enclosures".[50]

Whatever the popular view of the Duke of Somerset, the disastrous events of 1549 were taken as evidence of a colossal failure of government, and the Council laid the responsibility at the Protector's door.[51] In July 1549, Paget wrote to Seymour: "Every man of the council have misliked your proceedings ... would to God, that, at the first stir you had followed the matter hotly, and caused justice to be ministered in solemn fashion to the terror of others ...".[52]

Fall from power

The sequence of events that led to Seymour's removal from power has often been called a coup d'état.[51] By 1 October 1549, Seymour had been alerted that his rule faced a serious threat. He issued a proclamation calling for assistance, took possession of the king's person, and withdrew for safety to the fortified Windsor Castle, where Edward said, "Methinks I am in prison".[53]

Meanwhile, a united Council published details of Seymour's mismanagement of government. They made clear that the Protector's power came from them, not from Henry VIII's will. On 11 October, the council had Seymour arrested and brought the king to Richmond.[51] Edward summarised the charges against Somerset in his Chronicle: "ambition, vainglory, entering into rash wars in mine youth, negligent looking on Newhaven, enriching himself of my treasure, following his own opinion, and doing all by his own authority, etc."[54]

In February 1550, John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, emerged as the leader of the Council and, in effect, as Seymour's successor. Although Seymour was released from the Tower and restored to the council in early 1550, in October 1551 he was sent to the Tower on an exaggerated charge of treason.[4] Instead, he was executed for felony (that of seeking a change of government) on 22 January 1552 after scheming to overthrow Dudley's regime.[4][55] Edward noted his uncle's death in his Chronicle: "the duke of Somerset had his head cut off upon Tower Hill between eight and nine o'clock in the morning".[56] Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset was interred at St. Peter ad Vincula, Tower of London.

Historiography

Historians have contrasted the efficiency of Edward Seymour's takeover of power in 1547 with the subsequent ineptitude of his rule.[57] By autumn 1549, his costly wars had lost momentum, the crown faced financial ruin, and riots and rebellions had broken out around the country. Until recent decades, Seymour's reputation with historians was high, in view of his many proclamations that appeared to back the common people against a rapacious landowning class.[58] In the early 20th century this line was taken by the influential A. F. Pollard, to be echoed by Edward VI's 1960s biographer W. K. Jordan. A more critical approach was initiated by M. L. Bush and Dale Hoak in the mid-1970s. Since then, the first Duke of Somerset has often been portrayed as an arrogant ruler, devoid of the political and administrative skills necessary for governing the Tudor state.[59][60]

Marriages and children

 
Monument to Lord Edward Seymour (d.1593), and to his son and daughter-in-law, St Mary's Church, Berry Pomeroy

Edward Seymour married twice:

  • Firstly by 1518, to Catherine Fillol (or Filliol) (d. c. 1535), a daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Fillol (1453–1527), of Fillol's Hall, Essex and Woodlands, Horton, Dorset.[1][61] Catherine bore two sons, whose paternity was questioned by her husband after it was discovered that she was "apt to bestow her favours too liberally",[62][63] which resulted in both being excluded in 1540 from their paternal and maternal inheritances, and all their claims to their father's dignities being postponed to his children by his second wife.[64] Ironically these two sons remained faithful to their father during his misfortunes and both were imprisoned with him in the Tower of London:
    • John Seymour (1527 – 19 December 1552) was sent to the Tower where he died in December 1552,[64] having survived his father by 11 months. He successfully petitioned Parliament for the restoration of his maternal inheritance, but as her lands had been sold, he was awarded compensation in the form of the estate of Maiden Bradley, an Augustinian priory in Wiltshire granted to his father at the Dissolution by Henry VIII, which had descended to his half-siblings.[65] However, he did not live to enjoy the grant and bequeathed it with all his other lands and goods to his younger brother Lord Edward Seymour.
    • Lord Edward Seymour (1529–1593)[a] of Berry Pomeroy, Devon, Sheriff of Devon.[66] He was sent to the Tower in 1551 but was later released, and became heir to his elder brother, from whom he inherited Maiden Bradley, where today Bradley House is the seat of his descendant, the present Duke of Somerset.
 
Anne Stanhope

The male line of Edward Seymour and Anne Stanhope died out with the seventh Duke of Somerset in 1750, when the descendants of Edward Seymour by his first wife, Catherine Fillol, inherited the Somerset dukedom in accordance with the Private Act of 1541.[67] However, the female line continued, and Queen Elizabeth II was descended from Somerset through his grandchild by Catherine Grey.

In popular culture

Books

Television

Film

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Name 'Lord Edward Seymour' is per Vivian, Herald's Visitations of Devon, 1895, p.702,[better source needed] and as shown on the inscription on his monument in Berry Pomeroy Church: Here lyeth the bodies of the Honorable Lord Edward Seymour, knight, sonne unto th Right Honorable Edward Seymour Duke of Somerset...

Citations

  1. ^ a b Beer 2009.
  2. ^ "She is the sister of one Edward Semel [...] – Eustace Chapuys to Antoine Perrenot, 18 May 1536, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, Volume 10, January – June 1536, (1887)
  3. ^ a b Pollard 1911.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainPollard, Albert Frederick (1911). "Somerset, Edward Seymour, Duke of". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 386–387.
  5. ^ MacCulloch 2018, pp. 427–8, plate 9..
  6. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 243.
  7. ^ James Gairdner & R H Brodie, Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, vol. 20:2 (London, 1907), no. 400: State Papers Henry the Eighth, Part IV (London, 1836), pp. 521-2.
  8. ^ a b Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.1036
  9. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 17–18; Jordan 1968, p. 56
  10. ^ Starkey 2002, pp. 130–145
  11. ^ Starkey 2002, pp. 130–145, incorrectly dates the surrender to 12 January, the date of Norfolk's final confession of treason; see also Elton 1977, pp. 330–331. In his letter offering his lands, now lost but quoted in Herbert of Cherbury, Henry the Eight (1649), p. 566, Norfolk asserted that he was as innocent as "the childe that was born this night", the Christ child born on Christmas Day.
  12. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 19–25 In addressing these views, Loach cites, among others: G. Redworth, In Defence of the Church Catholic: the Life of Stephen Gardiner (Oxford, 1990), pp. 231–237; Susan Brigden, "Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, and the Conjoured League", Historical Journal, xxxvii (1994), pp. 507–537; and Eric Ives, "Henry VIII's Will: A Forensic Conundrum", Historical Journal (1992), pp. 792–799.
  13. ^ a b Loach 1999, pp. 19–25
  14. ^ Starkey 2002, p. 142; Elton 1977, p. 332 David Starkey describes this distribution of benefits as typical of "the shameless back-scratching of the alliance"; G. R. Elton calls the changes to the will "convenient".
  15. ^ Starkey 2002, pp. 138–139; Alford 2002, p. 69 The existence of a council of executors alongside the Privy Council was rationalised in March when the two became one, incorporating the executors and most of their appointed assistants and adding Thomas Seymour, who had protested at his exclusion from power.
  16. ^ MacCulloch 2002, p. 7; Alford 2002, p. 65
  17. ^ Starkey 2002, pp. 138–139; Alford 2002, p. 67
  18. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 26–27; Elton 1962, p. 203
  19. ^ In 1549, Paget was to remind Seymour: "Remember what you promised me in the gallery at Westminster before the breath was out of the body of the king that dead is. Remember what you promised immediately after, devising with me concerning the place which you now occupy ... and that was to follow mine advice in all your proceedings more than any other man's". Quoted in Guy 1988, p. 211
  20. ^ Alford 2002, pp. 67–68
  21. ^ Alford 2002, pp. 49–50, 91–92; Elton 1977, p. 333 Uncles of the king had been made Protector in 1422 and 1483 during the minorities of Henry VI and Edward V (though not also Governor of the King's Person, as Hertford's brother Thomas, who coveted the role for himself, pointed out).
  22. ^ Alford 2002, p. 70 ; Jordan 1968, pp. 73–75 In 1549, William Paget described him as king in all but name.
  23. ^ Elton 1977, pp. 334, 338
  24. ^ Alford 2002, p. 66
  25. ^ Jordan 1968, pp. 69, 76–77; Skidmore 2007, pp. 64–63
  26. ^ Elton 1977, p. 333
  27. ^ Loades 2004, pp. 33–34; Elton 1977, p. 333
  28. ^ King, John N. (1982). English Reformation Literature: the Tudor Origins of the Protestant Tradition. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press; ISBN 9780691065021
  29. ^ Loades 2004, p. 34
  30. ^ Elton 1977, pp. 333, 346.
  31. ^ Loades 2004, p. 36
  32. ^ Loades 2004, pp. 36–37; Brigden 2000, p. 182
  33. ^ Erickson 1978, p. 234
  34. ^ Somerset 2003, p. 19
  35. ^ Loades 2004, pp. 37–38
  36. ^ Loades 2004, pp. 40–41; Alford 2002, pp. 96–97
  37. ^ Alford 2002, pp. 91–97
  38. ^ Brigden 2000, p. 183; MacCulloch 2002, p. 42
  39. ^ Mackie 1952, p. 484
  40. ^ Mackie 1952, p. 485
  41. ^ Wormald 2001, p. 62; Loach 1999, pp. 52–53. The dauphin was the future Francis II of France, son of Henry II of France.
  42. ^ Brigden 2000, p. 183
  43. ^ Elton 1977, pp. 340–41
  44. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 70–83
  45. ^ Elton 1977, pp. 347–350; Loach 1999, pp. 66–67, 86. For example, in Hereford, a man was recorded as saying that "by the king's proclamation all enclosures were to be broken up".
  46. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 60–61, 66–68, 89; Elton 1962, p. 207. Some proclamations expressed sympathy for the victims of enclosure and announced action; some condemned the destruction of enclosures and associated riots; another announced pardons for those who had destroyed enclosures by mistake ("of folly and of mistaking") after misunderstanding the meaning of proclamations, so long as they were sorry.
  47. ^ Loach 1999, pp. 61–66.
  48. ^ MacCulloch 2002, pp. 49–51; Dickens 1967, p. 310
  49. ^ "Their aim was not to bring down government, but to help it correct the faults of local magistrates and identify the ways in which England could be reformed." MacCulloch 2002, p. 126
  50. ^ Loach 1999, p. 85
  51. ^ a b c Elton 1977, p. 350
  52. ^ Loach 1999, p. 87
  53. ^ Brigden 2000, p. 192
  54. ^ Quoted in Loach 1999, p. 91. By "Newhaven" is meant Ambleteuse, near Boulogne.
  55. ^ Guy 1988, pp. 212–15; Loach 1999, pp. 101–102
  56. ^ Loach 1999, p. 102
  57. ^ MacCulloch 2002, p. 104; Dickens 1967, p. 279
  58. ^ Elton 1977, p. 333n; Alford 2002, p. 65.
  59. ^ Elton 1977, pp. 334–350
  60. ^ David Loades, "The reign of Edward VI: An historiographical survey" Historian 67#1 (2000): 22+ online
  61. ^ Vivian 1895, p. 702, pedigree of Seymour
  62. ^ Beer 2009: "Reports that Katherine was repudiated by her husband because of misconduct, and that the paternity of her eldest son was suspect, circulated during the seventeenth century."
  63. ^ Seymour 1972, pp. 116–117.
  64. ^ a b Locke, A. Audrey, The Seymour Family: History and Romance, London, 1911, p. 193
  65. ^ Locke, A. Audrey, The Seymour Family: History and Romance, London, 1911, p. 194
  66. ^ The Complete Peerage vol.XIIpI, p.84
  67. ^ a b Lee, Sidney, ed. (1897). "Seymour, Edward (1506?-1552)". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 51. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  68. ^ a b Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson, Vol IV:619
  69. ^ Genealogies of Virginia Vamilies From William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine, Vol V, p186
  70. ^ "ROGERS, Andrew (died c. 1599), of Bryanston, Dorset. – History of Parliament Online". Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  71. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Peyton, Sir Henry". Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  72. ^ See image: Monument to Lady Elizabeth Seymour (1552 – 3 June 1602), wife of Sir Richard Knightley, of Fawsley, Northamptonshire, Norton Church, Northamptonshire.
  73. ^ "The Path to Somerset". Publishers Weekly. 8 October 2018. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  74. ^ Robison, William B. (11 February 2017). History, Fiction, and The Tudors: Sex, Politics, Power, and Artistic License in the Showtime Television Series. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-43883-6.
  75. ^ "BFI Screenonline: Henry VIII and His Six Wives (1972) Credits". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 30 December 2019.
  76. ^ Parrill, Sue; Robison, William B. (4 February 2013). The Tudors on Film and Television. McFarland. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-7864-5891-2.

References

  • Alford, Stephen (2002), Kingship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-03971-1.
  • Beer, Barrett L. (January 2009) [First published 2004]. "Seymour, Edward, duke of Somerset [known as Protector Somerset]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25159. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.).
  • Boutell, Charles (1863), A Manual of Heraldry, Historical and Popular, London: Winsor & Newton
  • Brigden, Susan (2000), New Worlds, Lost Worlds: The Rule of the Tudors, 1485–1603, London: Allen Lane/Penguin, ISBN 0-7139-9067-8.
  • Dickens, A. G. (1967), The English Reformation, London: Fontana, ISBN 0-00-686115-6.
  • Elton, G. R. (1962), England Under the Tudors, London: Methuen, OCLC 154186398.
  • Elton, G. R. (1977), Reform and Reformation, London: Edward Arnold, ISBN 0-7131-5953-7.
  • Erickson, Carolly (1978), Bloody Mary, New York: Doubleday, ISBN 0-385-11663-2.
  • Guy, John (1988), Tudor England, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-285213-2.
  • Jordan, W. K. (1968), Edward VI: The Young King. The Protectorship of the Duke of Somerset, London: George Allen & Unwin, OCLC 40403.
  • Loach, Jennifer (1999), Bernard, George; Williams, Penry (eds.), Edward VI, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-07992-3.
  • Loades, David (2004), Intrigue and Treason: The Tudor Court, 1547–1558, London: Pearson Longman, ISBN 0-582-77226-5
  • MacCulloch, Diarmaid (2002), The Boy King: Edward VI and the Protestant Reformation, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-23402-2.
  • MacCulloch, Diarmaid (2018), Thomas Cromwell: A Life, London: Allen Lane, ISBN 9780141967660.
  • Mackie, J. D. (1952), The Earlier Tudors, 1485–1558, Oxford: Clarendon Press, OCLC 186603282.
  • Seymour, William (1972), Ordeal by Ambition: An English Family in the Shadow of the Tudors, London: Sidgwick & Jackson, ISBN 978-0283978661
  • Skidmore, Chris (2007), Edward VI: The Lost King of England, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 978-0-297-84649-9.
  • Somerset, Anne (2003). Elizabeth I. New York: Anchor Books. ISBN 978-0-307-77399-9. OCLC 697656720.
  • Starkey, David (2002), The Reign of Henry VIII, London: Vintage, ISBN 0-09-944510-7.
  • Vivian, J.L. (1895). The Visitations of the County of Devon, Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564, to 1620, with additions by J. L. Vivian. Exeter: H.S. Eland..
  • Wormald, Jenny (2001), Mary, Queen of Scots: Politics, Passion and a Kingdom Lost, London: Tauris Parke, ISBN 1-86064-588-7.

Historiography

  • Loades, David. "The reign of Edward VI: An historiographical survey" Historian 67#1 (2000): 22+ online
Political offices
Preceded by Lord High Admiral
1542–1543
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord High Treasurer
1547–1549
Succeeded by
Earl Marshal
1547–1549
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
The Duke of Gloucester
Lord Protector of the Realm
1547–1549
Vacant
Title next held by
Oliver Cromwell
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire
1551–1552
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
New creation Duke of Somerset
1547–1552
Forfeit
Title next held by
William Seymour

edward, seymour, duke, somerset, other, people, titled, duke, somerset, duke, somerset, earl, hertford, viscount, beauchamp, 1500, january, 1552, also, known, edward, semel, english, nobleman, politician, served, lord, protector, england, from, 1547, 1549, dur. For other people titled 1st Duke of Somerset see Duke of Somerset Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset 1st Earl of Hertford 1st Viscount Beauchamp KG PC 1500 1 22 January 1552 also known as Edward Semel 2 was an English nobleman and politician who served as Lord Protector of England from 1547 to 1549 during the minority of his nephew King Edward VI He was the eldest surviving brother of Queen Jane Seymour the third wife of King Henry VIII His GraceThe Duke of SomersetKG PCPortrait of Edward Seymour as 1st Earl of Hertford cr 1537 wearing the Collar of the Order of the Garter By unknown artist Longleat House Wiltshire Lord High TreasurerIn office 10 February 1547 10 October 1549MonarchEdward VIPreceded byThe Duke of NorfolkSucceeded byThe Marquess of WinchesterLord Protector of the RealmIn office 4 February 1547 11 October 1549MonarchEdward VILord Great ChamberlainIn office c 1543 c 1549MonarchsHenry VIIIEdward VIPreceded byThe Earl of SussexSucceeded byThe Earl of WarwickPersonal detailsBorn1500Died22 January 1552 1552 01 22 aged 51 52 Tower Hill LondonCause of deathDecapitationResting placeChapel Royal of St Peter ad Vincula Tower of London London United Kingdom51 30 31 N 0 04 37 W 51 508611 N 0 076944 W 51 508611 0 076944NationalityEnglishSpousesCatherine FillolAnne StanhopeChildrenwith Catherine John SeymourLord Edward Seymour with Anne Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp of HacheLady Anne SeymourEdward Seymour 1st Earl of Hertford and 7 others ParentsSir John SeymourMargery WentworthResidencesSomerset House London Syon House Isleworth Middlesex Woodmancote Place West SussexSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceKingdom of EnglandBattles warsFrench wars 1522 1524 The Rough Wooing Siege of Boulogne 1544 Battle of PinkieSeymour grew rapidly in favour with Henry VIII following Jane s marriage to the king in 1536 and was subsequently made Earl of Hertford On Henry s death in 1547 he was appointed protector by the Regency Council on the accession of the nine year old Edward VI Rewarded with the title Duke of Somerset Seymour became the effective ruler of England Somerset continued Henry s military campaign against the Scots and achieved a sound victory at the Battle of Pinkie but ultimately he was unable to maintain his position in Scotland Domestically Somerset pursued further reforms as an extension of the English Reformation and in 1549 imposed the first Book of Common Prayer through the Act of Uniformity offering a compromise between Protestant and Roman Catholic teachings The unpopularity of Somerset s religious measures along with agrarian grievances resulted in unrest in England and provoked a series of uprisings including the Prayer Book Rebellion and Kett s Rebellion Costly wars and economic mismanagement brought the Crown to financial ruin further undermining his government In October 1549 Somerset was forced out of power and imprisoned in the Tower of London by John Dudley Earl of Warwick and a group of privy councillors He was later released and reconciled with Warwick now Duke of Northumberland but in 1551 Northumberland accused him of treason and he was executed in January 1552 Until the 1970s historians had a highly positive view of Somerset seeing him as a champion of political liberty and the common people but since then he has also often been portrayed as an arrogant and inept ruler of the Tudor state Contents 1 Origins and early career 2 Rise under Henry VIII 3 Seymour s Protectorate 3 1 Council of Regency 3 2 Thomas Seymour 3 3 War 3 4 Rebellion 3 5 Fall from power 3 6 Historiography 4 Marriages and children 5 In popular culture 5 1 Books 5 2 Television 5 3 Film 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 9 1 HistoriographyOrigins and early career EditEdward Seymour was born c 1500 the son of Sir John Seymour 1474 1536 feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset by his wife Margery Wentworth eldest daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead Suffolk and descended from Edward III 3 In 1514 aged about 14 he received an appointment in the household of Mary Tudor Queen of France and was enfant d honneur at her marriage with Louis XII 4 Seymour served in the Duke of Suffolk s campaign in France in 1523 being knighted by the duke on 1 November and accompanied Cardinal Wolsey on his embassy to France in 1527 Appointed Esquire of the Body to Henry VIII in 1529 he grew in favour with the king who visited his manor at Elvetham in Hampshire in October 1535 4 Rise under Henry VIII EditWhen Seymour s sister Jane married King Henry VIII in 1536 Edward was created Viscount Beauchamp on 5 June 1536 and Earl of Hertford on 15 October 1537 He became Warden of the Scottish Marches and continued in royal favour after his sister s death on 24 October 1537 Coat of Arms of Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp Quarterly of six 1 Or on a pile gules between six fleurs de lys azure three lions of England Augmentation granted by Henry VIII on his marriage to Jane Seymour 2 Seymour gules two wings conjoined in lure or 3 Beauchamp of Hache Vair 4 Esturmy Argent three demi lions rampant gules 5 MacWilliams Per bend argent and gules three roses bend wise counterchanged 6 Coker Argent on a bend gules three leopards heads or 5 6 In 1541 during Henry s absence in the north Hertford Thomas Cranmer and Thomas Audley had the chief management of affairs in London In September 1542 he was appointed Warden of the Scottish Marches and a few months later Lord High Admiral a post which he almost immediately relinquished in favour of John Dudley the future duke of Northumberland In March 1544 he was made lieutenant general of the north and instructed to punish the Scots for their repudiation of the treaty of marriage between Prince Edward and the infant Mary Queen of Scots He landed at Leith on 3 May 1544 captured and pillaged Edinburgh and returned by land burning villages and castles along the way 4 In July 1544 he was appointed lieutenant of the realm under Catherine Parr Henry s sixth wife and regent during Henry s absence at Boulogne but in August he joined the king and was present at the surrender of the town In the autumn he was one of the commissioners sent to Flanders to keep Emperor Charles V to the terms of his treaty with England and in January 1545 he was placed in command at Boulogne where on the 26th he repelled an attempt of Marshal de Biez to recapture the town In May he was once more appointed lieutenant general in the north to avenge the Scottish victory at the Battle of Ancrum Moor this he did by a savage foray into Scotland in September He reported that on 16 September 1545 he had sent forth a good band to the number of 1500 light horsemen in the leading of me and Sir Robert Bowes which from 5 a m till 3 p m forayed along the waters of Tyvyote and Rowle 6 or 7 miles beyond Jedburgh and burnt 14 or 15 towns and a great quantity of all kinds of corn 7 In March 1546 he was sent back to Boulogne to supersede the Earl of Surrey whose command had not been a success and in June he was engaged in negotiations for peace with France and for the delimitation of the English conquests 4 From October to the end of Henry s reign he was in attendance on the king engaged in the struggle for predominance which was to determine the complexion of the government during the coming minority Personal political and religious rivalry separated him and Baron Lisle from the Howards and Surrey s hasty temper precipitated his own ruin and that of his father the duke of Norfolk They could not acquiesce in the Imperial ambassador s verdict that Hertford and Lisle were the only noblemen of fit age and capacity to carry on the government and Surrey s attempt to secure the predominance of his family led to his own execution and to his father s imprisonment in the Tower of London 4 Seymour s Protectorate EditCouncil of Regency Edit Arms of Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset Quarterly 1st and 4th Or on a pile gules between six fleurs de lys azure three lions of England special grant 2nd and 3rd Gules two wings conjoined in lure or Seymour 8 These arms concede the positions of greatest honour the 1st amp 4th quarters to a special grant of arms incorporating the fleurs de lys and lions of the royal arms of Plantagenet Upon the death of Henry VIII 28 January 1547 Seymour s nephew became king as Edward VI Henry VIII s will named sixteen executors who were to act as Edward s Council until he reached the age of 18 These executors were supplemented by twelve men of counsail who would assist the executors when called on 9 The final state of Henry VIII s will has occasioned controversy Some historians suggest that those close to the king manipulated either him or the will itself to ensure a shareout of power to their benefit both material and religious In this reading the composition of the Privy Chamber shifted towards the end of 1546 in favour of the Protestant faction 10 In addition two leading conservative Privy Councillors were removed from the centre of power Stephen Gardiner was refused access to Henry during his last months Thomas Howard 3rd Duke of Norfolk found himself accused of treason on 24 25 December he offered his vast estates to the Crown making them available for redistribution and he spent the whole of Edward s reign in the Tower of London 11 Other historians have argued that Gardiner s exclusion had non religious causes that Norfolk was not noticeably conservative in religion that conservatives remained on the council and that the radicalism of men such as Sir Anthony Denny who controlled the dry stamp that replicated the king s signature is debatable 12 Whatever the case Henry s death was followed by a lavish hand out of lands and honours to the new power group 13 The will contained an unfulfilled gifts clause added at the last minute which allowed Henry s executors to freely distribute lands and honours to themselves and the court 14 particularly to Seymour then known as Earl of Hertford who became the Lord Protector of the Realm and Governor of the King s Person and who created himself Duke of Somerset 13 Henry VIII s will did not provide for the appointment of a Protector It entrusted the government of the realm during his son s minority to a Regency Council that would rule collectively by majority decision with like and equal charge 15 Nevertheless a few days after Henry s death on 4 February the executors chose to invest almost regal power in Edward Seymour 16 Thirteen out of the sixteen the others being absent agreed to his appointment as Protector which they justified as their joint decision by virtue of the authority of Henry s will 17 Seymour may have done a deal with some of the executors who almost all received hand outs 18 He is known to have done so with William Paget private secretary to Henry VIII 19 and to have secured the support of Sir Anthony Browne of the Privy Chamber 20 Seymour s appointment was in keeping with historical precedent 21 and his eligibility for the role was reinforced by his military successes in Scotland and France He was senior to his ally Lisle in the peerage and was the new king s closest relative 4 In March 1547 he secured letters patent from King Edward granting him the almost monarchical right to appoint members to the Privy Council himself and to consult them only when he wished 22 In the words of historian G R Elton from that moment his autocratic system was complete 23 He proceeded to rule largely by proclamation calling on the Privy Council to do little more than rubber stamp his decisions 24 Seymour s takeover of power was smooth and efficient The imperial ambassador Francis van der Delft reported that he governs everything absolutely with Paget operating as his secretary although he predicted trouble from John Dudley Viscount Lisle who had recently been raised to Earl of Warwick in the share out of honours 25 In fact in the early weeks of his Protectorate Seymour met opposition only from the Lord Chancellor Thomas Wriothesley whom the Earldom of Southampton had evidently failed to buy off and from his own brother 26 Wriothesley a religious conservative objected to Seymour s assumption of monarchical power over the council He then found himself abruptly dismissed from the chancellorship on charges of selling off some of his offices to delegates 27 In his first parliament which met in November 1547 Seymour procured the repeal of all the heresy laws and nearly all the treason laws passed since Edward III He sought to win over the Scots by those promises of autonomy free trade and equal privileges with England But the Scots were not to be won over yet and would not be persuaded the protector led another army into Scotland in September 1547 and won the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh on 10 September He trusted the garrisons he established throughout the Lowlands to wear down Scottish opposition but their pressure was soon weakened by troubles in England and abroad and Mary Queen of Scots was transported to France to marry Francis II in 1558 4 Seymour also attempted to bring uniformity to forms of worship and in 1549 the first Act of Uniformity introduced a Book of Common Prayer that attempted to compromise between different teachings it was replaced by a more severe form in 1552 after his fall 3 Prior to and during the Protectorate the Book of Common Prayer was a central element of the emerging Protestant literature 28 Thomas Seymour Edit Thomas Seymour Lord Admiral and brother of Edward Seymour Edward Seymour faced less manageable opposition from his younger brother Thomas who has been described as a worm in the bud 29 As King Edward s uncle Thomas Seymour demanded the governorship of the king s person and a greater share of power 30 Seymour tried to buy his brother off with a barony an appointment to the Lord Admiralship and a seat on the Privy Council but Thomas was bent on scheming for power He began smuggling pocket money to King Edward telling him that the Duke of Somerset held the purse strings too tight making him a beggarly king 31 He also urged him to throw off the Protector within two years and bear rule as other kings do but Edward schooled to defer to the council failed to co operate 32 In April 1547 using King Edward s support to circumvent his brother s opposition Thomas Seymour secretly married Henry VIII s widow Catherine Parr whose Protestant household included the 11 year old Lady Jane Grey and the 13 year old Princess Elizabeth 33 In summer 1548 a pregnant Catherine Parr discovered Thomas Seymour embracing Princess Elizabeth 34 As a result Elizabeth was removed from Catherine Parr s household and transferred to Sir Anthony Denny s That September Catherine Parr died in childbirth and Thomas Seymour promptly resumed his attentions to Elizabeth by letter planning to marry her Elizabeth was receptive but like Edward unready to agree to anything unless permitted by the council 35 In January 1549 the council had Thomas Seymour arrested on various charges including embezzlement at the Bristol mint King Edward himself testified about the pocket money 36 Most importantly Thomas Seymour had sought to officially receive the governorship of King Edward as no earlier Lord Protectors unlike Edward Seymour had ever held both functions Lack of clear evidence for treason ruled out a trial so Thomas was condemned instead by an Act of Attainder and beheaded on 20 March 1549 37 War Edit Edward Seymour s only undoubted skill was as a soldier which he had proved on his expeditions to Scotland and in the defence of Boulogne in 1546 From the first his main interest as Protector was the war against Scotland 38 After a crushing victory at the Battle of Pinkie in September 1547 he set up a network of garrisons in Scotland stretching as far north as Dundee 39 His initial successes however were followed by a loss of direction as his aim of uniting the realms through conquest became increasingly unrealistic The Scots allied with France who sent reinforcements for the defence of Edinburgh in 1548 40 while Mary Queen of Scots was removed to France where she was betrothed to the dauphin 41 The cost of maintaining the Protector s massive armies and his permanent garrisons in Scotland also placed an unsustainable burden on the royal finances 42 A French attack on Boulogne in August 1549 at last forced Seymour to begin a withdrawal from Scotland 43 Rebellion Edit During 1548 England was subject to social unrest After April 1549 a series of armed revolts broke out fuelled by various religious and agrarian grievances The two most serious rebellions which required major military intervention to put down were in Devon and Cornwall and in Norfolk The first called the Prayer Book Rebellion also known as the Western rebellion arose mainly from the imposition of church services in English and the second led by a tradesman called Robert Kett mainly from the encroachment of landlords on common grazing ground 44 A complex aspect of the social unrest was that the protestors believed they were acting legitimately against enclosing landlords with the Protector s support convinced that the landlords were the lawbreakers 45 The same justification for outbreaks of unrest was voiced throughout the country not only in Norfolk and the west The origin of the popular view of Edward Seymour as sympathetic to the rebel cause lies partly in his series of sometimes liberal often contradictory proclamations 46 and partly in the uncoordinated activities of the commissions he sent out in 1548 and 1549 to investigate grievances about loss of tillage encroachment of large sheep flocks on common land and similar issues 47 Seymour s commissions were led by the evangelical M P John Hales whose socially liberal rhetoric linked the issue of enclosure with Reformation theology and the notion of a godly commonwealth 48 Local groups often assumed that the findings of these commissions entitled them to act against offending landlords themselves 49 King Edward wrote in his Chronicle that the 1549 risings began because certain commissions were sent down to pluck down enclosures 50 Whatever the popular view of the Duke of Somerset the disastrous events of 1549 were taken as evidence of a colossal failure of government and the Council laid the responsibility at the Protector s door 51 In July 1549 Paget wrote to Seymour Every man of the council have misliked your proceedings would to God that at the first stir you had followed the matter hotly and caused justice to be ministered in solemn fashion to the terror of others 52 Fall from power Edit The sequence of events that led to Seymour s removal from power has often been called a coup d etat 51 By 1 October 1549 Seymour had been alerted that his rule faced a serious threat He issued a proclamation calling for assistance took possession of the king s person and withdrew for safety to the fortified Windsor Castle where Edward said Methinks I am in prison 53 Meanwhile a united Council published details of Seymour s mismanagement of government They made clear that the Protector s power came from them not from Henry VIII s will On 11 October the council had Seymour arrested and brought the king to Richmond 51 Edward summarised the charges against Somerset in his Chronicle ambition vainglory entering into rash wars in mine youth negligent looking on Newhaven enriching himself of my treasure following his own opinion and doing all by his own authority etc 54 In February 1550 John Dudley Earl of Warwick emerged as the leader of the Council and in effect as Seymour s successor Although Seymour was released from the Tower and restored to the council in early 1550 in October 1551 he was sent to the Tower on an exaggerated charge of treason 4 Instead he was executed for felony that of seeking a change of government on 22 January 1552 after scheming to overthrow Dudley s regime 4 55 Edward noted his uncle s death in his Chronicle the duke of Somerset had his head cut off upon Tower Hill between eight and nine o clock in the morning 56 Edward Seymour Duke of Somerset was interred at St Peter ad Vincula Tower of London Historiography Edit Historians have contrasted the efficiency of Edward Seymour s takeover of power in 1547 with the subsequent ineptitude of his rule 57 By autumn 1549 his costly wars had lost momentum the crown faced financial ruin and riots and rebellions had broken out around the country Until recent decades Seymour s reputation with historians was high in view of his many proclamations that appeared to back the common people against a rapacious landowning class 58 In the early 20th century this line was taken by the influential A F Pollard to be echoed by Edward VI s 1960s biographer W K Jordan A more critical approach was initiated by M L Bush and Dale Hoak in the mid 1970s Since then the first Duke of Somerset has often been portrayed as an arrogant ruler devoid of the political and administrative skills necessary for governing the Tudor state 59 60 Marriages and children Edit Monument to Lord Edward Seymour d 1593 and to his son and daughter in law St Mary s Church Berry Pomeroy Edward Seymour married twice Firstly by 1518 to Catherine Fillol or Filliol d c 1535 a daughter and co heiress of Sir William Fillol 1453 1527 of Fillol s Hall Essex and Woodlands Horton Dorset 1 61 Catherine bore two sons whose paternity was questioned by her husband after it was discovered that she was apt to bestow her favours too liberally 62 63 which resulted in both being excluded in 1540 from their paternal and maternal inheritances and all their claims to their father s dignities being postponed to his children by his second wife 64 Ironically these two sons remained faithful to their father during his misfortunes and both were imprisoned with him in the Tower of London John Seymour 1527 19 December 1552 was sent to the Tower where he died in December 1552 64 having survived his father by 11 months He successfully petitioned Parliament for the restoration of his maternal inheritance but as her lands had been sold he was awarded compensation in the form of the estate of Maiden Bradley an Augustinian priory in Wiltshire granted to his father at the Dissolution by Henry VIII which had descended to his half siblings 65 However he did not live to enjoy the grant and bequeathed it with all his other lands and goods to his younger brother Lord Edward Seymour Lord Edward Seymour 1529 1593 a of Berry Pomeroy Devon Sheriff of Devon 66 He was sent to the Tower in 1551 but was later released and became heir to his elder brother from whom he inherited Maiden Bradley where today Bradley House is the seat of his descendant the present Duke of Somerset Anne Stanhope Secondly before 9 March 1535 to Anne Stanhope c 1510 1587 only child and sole heiress of Sir Edward Stanhope 1462 1511 by his wife Elizabeth Bourchier c 1473 1557 daughter of Fulk Bourchier 10th Baron FitzWarin 1445 1479 Seymour s suspicions about the fathering of Catherine Fillol s sons led him to pass an Act of Parliament in 1540 entailing his estates away from the children of his first wife in favour of the children of Anne Stanhope 67 By Anne he had ten children Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp of Hache 12 October 1537 1539 known by the courtesy title of one of his father s subsidiary titles He died as a two year old infant and predeceased his father Lady Anne Seymour 1538 1588 who married twice firstly to John Dudley 2nd Earl of Warwick secondly to Sir Edward Unton MP by whom she had children Edward Seymour 1st Earl of Hertford 22 May 1539 1621 in 1559 created Earl of Hertford and Baron Beauchamp of Hatch 8 by Queen Elizabeth I the half sister of King Edward VI He married three times firstly in November 1560 Lady Catherine Grey by whom he had two sons secondly in 1582 to Frances Howard daughter of Baron Howard of Effingham thirdly in 1601 to Frances Prannell Lord Henry Seymour 1540 married Lady Joan Percy daughter of Thomas Percy 7th Earl of Northumberland Lady Margaret Seymour born 1540 a noted author Lady Jane Seymour 1541 1561 Maid of Honour to Queen Elizabeth I also a noted author Lady Catherine Seymour Lady Mary Seymour born 1542 who married three times Firstly to Francis Cosby 68 69 lt The Early Descendants of Wm Overton amp Elizabeth Waters of Virginia and Allied Families W P Anderson p 17 gt 68 Secondly to Andrew Rogers died c 1599 MP 70 of Bryanstone Dorset They had no children Thirdly to Sir Henry Peyton 71 Lord Edward Seymour 1548 1574 died unmarried and childless Lady Elizabeth Seymour 1552 3 June 1602 who married Sir Richard Knightley of Fawsley Northamptonshire Her monument with effigy survives in All Saints church Norton Northamptonshire 72 The male line of Edward Seymour and Anne Stanhope died out with the seventh Duke of Somerset in 1750 when the descendants of Edward Seymour by his first wife Catherine Fillol inherited the Somerset dukedom in accordance with the Private Act of 1541 67 However the female line continued and Queen Elizabeth II was descended from Somerset through his grandchild by Catherine Grey In popular culture EditBooks Edit Edward Seymour appears in The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain Edward Seymour is the main character in The Path To Somerset by Janet Wertman which depicts Edward s rise to power and rivalry with Stephen Gardiner 73 Television Edit Laurence Naismith portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1962 Disneyland TV film The Prince and the Pauper Daniel Moynihan portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1970 BBC series The Six Wives of Henry VIII Michael Brill portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1969 musical film The Adventures of the Prince and the Pauper Bernard Kay portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1976 TV series The Prince and the Pauper John Bowe portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1996 miniseries The Prince and the Pauper Richard Felix portrayed Edward Seymour in the 2001 TV series The Six Wives of Henry VIII Thomas Lockyer portrayed Edward Seymour in the 2003 TV serial Henry VIII Max Brown portrayed Edward Seymour in Showtime s original historical fiction television series The Tudors which portrayed him as a shrewd and ambitious political player 74 Ed Speleers portrayed Edward Seymour in the 2015 miniseries Wolf Hall John Heffernan portrayed Edward in the 2022 Starz series Becoming Elizabeth Film Edit Felix Aylmer portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1936 film Tudor Rose Claude Rains portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1937 film The Prince and the Pauper Guy Rolfe portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1953 film Young Bess Michael Byrne portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1972 film Henry VIII and His Six Wives 75 Rex Harrison portrayed Edward Seymour in the 1977 film The Prince and the Pauper Jonathan Hyde portrayed Edward Seymour in the 2000 film The Prince and the Pauper Thomas Lockyer portrayed Edward Seymour in the 2003 film The Other Boleyn Girl 76 See also EditTudor periodNotes Edit Name Lord Edward Seymour is per Vivian Herald s Visitations of Devon 1895 p 702 better source needed and as shown on the inscription on his monument in Berry Pomeroy Church Here lyeth the bodies of the Honorable Lord Edward Seymour knight sonne unto th Right Honorable Edward Seymour Duke of Somerset Citations Edit a b Beer 2009 She is the sister of one Edward Semel Eustace Chapuys to Antoine Perrenot 18 May 1536 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII Volume 10 January June 1536 1887 a b Pollard 1911 a b c d e f g h i One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Pollard Albert Frederick 1911 Somerset Edward Seymour Duke of In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 386 387 MacCulloch 2018 pp 427 8 plate 9 Boutell 1863 p 243 James Gairdner amp R H Brodie Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII vol 20 2 London 1907 no 400 State Papers Henry the Eighth Part IV London 1836 pp 521 2 a b Debrett s Peerage 1968 p 1036 Loach 1999 pp 17 18 Jordan 1968 p 56 Starkey 2002 pp 130 145 Starkey 2002 pp 130 145 incorrectly dates the surrender to 12 January the date of Norfolk s final confession of treason see also Elton 1977 pp 330 331 In his letter offering his lands now lost but quoted in Herbert of Cherbury Henry the Eight 1649 p 566 Norfolk asserted that he was as innocent as the childe that was born this night the Christ child born on Christmas Day Loach 1999 pp 19 25 In addressing these views Loach cites among others G Redworth In Defence of the Church Catholic the Life of Stephen Gardiner Oxford 1990 pp 231 237 Susan Brigden Henry Howard Earl of Surrey and the Conjoured League Historical Journal xxxvii 1994 pp 507 537 and Eric Ives Henry VIII s Will A Forensic Conundrum Historical Journal 1992 pp 792 799 a b Loach 1999 pp 19 25 Starkey 2002 p 142 Elton 1977 p 332 David Starkey describes this distribution of benefits as typical of the shameless back scratching of the alliance G R Elton calls the changes to the will convenient Starkey 2002 pp 138 139 Alford 2002 p 69 The existence of a council of executors alongside the Privy Council was rationalised in March when the two became one incorporating the executors and most of their appointed assistants and adding Thomas Seymour who had protested at his exclusion from power MacCulloch 2002 p 7 Alford 2002 p 65 Starkey 2002 pp 138 139 Alford 2002 p 67 Loach 1999 pp 26 27 Elton 1962 p 203 In 1549 Paget was to remind Seymour Remember what you promised me in the gallery at Westminster before the breath was out of the body of the king that dead is Remember what you promised immediately after devising with me concerning the place which you now occupy and that was to follow mine advice in all your proceedings more than any other man s Quoted in Guy 1988 p 211 Alford 2002 pp 67 68 Alford 2002 pp 49 50 91 92 Elton 1977 p 333 Uncles of the king had been made Protector in 1422 and 1483 during the minorities of Henry VI and Edward V though not also Governor of the King s Person as Hertford s brother Thomas who coveted the role for himself pointed out Alford 2002 p 70 Jordan 1968 pp 73 75 In 1549 William Paget described him as king in all but name Elton 1977 pp 334 338 Alford 2002 p 66 Jordan 1968 pp 69 76 77 Skidmore 2007 pp 64 63 Elton 1977 p 333 Loades 2004 pp 33 34 Elton 1977 p 333 King John N 1982 English Reformation Literature the Tudor Origins of the Protestant Tradition Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691065021 Loades 2004 p 34 Elton 1977 pp 333 346 Loades 2004 p 36 Loades 2004 pp 36 37 Brigden 2000 p 182 Erickson 1978 p 234 Somerset 2003 p 19 Loades 2004 pp 37 38 Loades 2004 pp 40 41 Alford 2002 pp 96 97 Alford 2002 pp 91 97 Brigden 2000 p 183 MacCulloch 2002 p 42 Mackie 1952 p 484 Mackie 1952 p 485 Wormald 2001 p 62 Loach 1999 pp 52 53 The dauphin was the future Francis II of France son of Henry II of France Brigden 2000 p 183 Elton 1977 pp 340 41 Loach 1999 pp 70 83 Elton 1977 pp 347 350 Loach 1999 pp 66 67 86 For example in Hereford a man was recorded as saying that by the king s proclamation all enclosures were to be broken up Loach 1999 pp 60 61 66 68 89 Elton 1962 p 207 Some proclamations expressed sympathy for the victims of enclosure and announced action some condemned the destruction of enclosures and associated riots another announced pardons for those who had destroyed enclosures by mistake of folly and of mistaking after misunderstanding the meaning of proclamations so long as they were sorry Loach 1999 pp 61 66 MacCulloch 2002 pp 49 51 Dickens 1967 p 310 Their aim was not to bring down government but to help it correct the faults of local magistrates and identify the ways in which England could be reformed MacCulloch 2002 p 126 Loach 1999 p 85 a b c Elton 1977 p 350 Loach 1999 p 87 Brigden 2000 p 192 Quoted in Loach 1999 p 91 By Newhaven is meant Ambleteuse near Boulogne Guy 1988 pp 212 15 Loach 1999 pp 101 102 Loach 1999 p 102 MacCulloch 2002 p 104 Dickens 1967 p 279 Elton 1977 p 333n Alford 2002 p 65 Elton 1977 pp 334 350 David Loades The reign of Edward VI An historiographical survey Historian 67 1 2000 22 online Vivian 1895 p 702 pedigree of Seymour Beer 2009 Reports that Katherine was repudiated by her husband because of misconduct and that the paternity of her eldest son was suspect circulated during the seventeenth century Seymour 1972 pp 116 117 a b Locke A Audrey The Seymour Family History and Romance London 1911 p 193 Locke A Audrey The Seymour Family History and Romance London 1911 p 194 The Complete Peerage vol XIIpI p 84 a b Lee Sidney ed 1897 Seymour Edward 1506 1552 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 51 London Smith Elder amp Co a b Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol IV 619 Genealogies of Virginia Vamilies From William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine Vol V p186 ROGERS Andrew died c 1599 of Bryanston Dorset History of Parliament Online Retrieved 31 August 2016 Lee Sidney ed 1896 Peyton Sir Henry Dictionary of National Biography Vol 45 London Smith Elder amp Co See image Monument to Lady Elizabeth Seymour 1552 3 June 1602 wife of Sir Richard Knightley of Fawsley Northamptonshire Norton Church Northamptonshire The Path to Somerset Publishers Weekly 8 October 2018 Retrieved 30 December 2019 Robison William B 11 February 2017 History Fiction and The Tudors Sex Politics Power and Artistic License in the Showtime Television Series Springer ISBN 978 1 137 43883 6 BFI Screenonline Henry VIII and His Six Wives 1972 Credits www screenonline org uk Retrieved 30 December 2019 Parrill Sue Robison William B 4 February 2013 The Tudors on Film and Television McFarland p 98 ISBN 978 0 7864 5891 2 References EditAlford Stephen 2002 Kingship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 03971 1 Beer Barrett L January 2009 First published 2004 Seymour Edward duke of Somerset known as Protector Somerset Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25159 Subscription or UK public library membership required Boutell Charles 1863 A Manual of Heraldry Historical and Popular London Winsor amp Newton Brigden Susan 2000 New Worlds Lost Worlds The Rule of the Tudors 1485 1603 London Allen Lane Penguin ISBN 0 7139 9067 8 Dickens A G 1967 The English Reformation London Fontana ISBN 0 00 686115 6 Elton G R 1962 England Under the Tudors London Methuen OCLC 154186398 Elton G R 1977 Reform and Reformation London Edward Arnold ISBN 0 7131 5953 7 Erickson Carolly 1978 Bloody Mary New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 11663 2 Guy John 1988 Tudor England Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 285213 2 Jordan W K 1968 Edward VI The Young King The Protectorship of the Duke of Somerset London George Allen amp Unwin OCLC 40403 Loach Jennifer 1999 Bernard George Williams Penry eds Edward VI New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 07992 3 Loades David 2004 Intrigue and Treason The Tudor Court 1547 1558 London Pearson Longman ISBN 0 582 77226 5 MacCulloch Diarmaid 2002 The Boy King Edward VI and the Protestant Reformation Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23402 2 MacCulloch Diarmaid 2018 Thomas Cromwell A Life London Allen Lane ISBN 9780141967660 Mackie J D 1952 The Earlier Tudors 1485 1558 Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 186603282 Seymour William 1972 Ordeal by Ambition An English Family in the Shadow of the Tudors London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 978 0283978661 Skidmore Chris 2007 Edward VI The Lost King of England London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84649 9 Somerset Anne 2003 Elizabeth I New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 307 77399 9 OCLC 697656720 Starkey David 2002 The Reign of Henry VIII London Vintage ISBN 0 09 944510 7 Vivian J L 1895 The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 to 1620 with additions by J L Vivian Exeter H S Eland Wormald Jenny 2001 Mary Queen of Scots Politics Passion and a Kingdom Lost London Tauris Parke ISBN 1 86064 588 7 Historiography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset Loades David The reign of Edward VI An historiographical survey Historian 67 1 2000 22 onlinePolitical officesPreceded byThe Lord Russell Lord High Admiral1542 1543 Succeeded byThe Viscount LislePreceded byThe Duke of Norfolk Lord High Treasurer1547 1549 Succeeded byThe Marquess of WinchesterEarl Marshal1547 1549 Succeeded byThe Earl of WarwickVacantTitle last held byThe Duke of Gloucester Lord Protector of the Realm1547 1549 VacantTitle next held byOliver CromwellHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Duke of Suffolk Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire1551 1552 Succeeded byThe Marquess of NorthamptonPeerage of EnglandNew creation Duke of Somerset1547 1552 ForfeitTitle next held byWilliam Seymour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset amp oldid 1161450432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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