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Elizabeth Seymour, Lady Cromwell

Elizabeth Seymour (c. 1518[5] – 19 March 1568[3][5]) was a younger daughter of Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall, Wiltshire and Margery Wentworth.[6] Elizabeth and her sister Jane served in the household of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII.[7][8][9] The Seymours rose to prominence after the king's attention turned to Jane.[10] In May 1536, Anne Boleyn was accused of treason and adultery, and subsequently executed. On 30 May 1536, eleven days after Anne's execution, Henry VIII and Jane were married.[11] Elizabeth was not included in her sister's household during her brief reign, although she would serve two of Henry VIII's later wives, Anne of Cleves[12] and Catherine Howard.[13] Jane died 24 October 1537, twelve days after giving birth to a healthy son, Edward VI.[14]

Elizabeth Seymour
Countess of Wiltshire
Baroness Cromwell
Baroness St. John
Portrait of a lady, probably a Member of the Cromwell Family, perhaps Elizabeth Seymour, circa 1535–1540, Hans Holbein the Younger[1][2]
Bornc. 1518
Died19 March 1568[3][4] (aged 49–50)
BuriedSt. Mary's Church, Basing, Hampshire
51°16′17″N 1°02′48″W / 51.271389°N 1.046667°W / 51.271389; -1.046667
Spouse(s)
Issue
FatherSir John Seymour
MotherMargery Wentworth

Elizabeth lived under four Tudor monarchs and was married three times. By July 1530[5] she had married Sir Anthony Ughtred, Governor of Jersey, who died in 1534. She then married Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell, the son of Thomas Cromwell, chief minister to Henry VIII in 1537, who died in 1551. She married her third and last husband, Sir John Paulet, later Lord St. John, the son of William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester in 1554.[15]

Seymour family

The Seymour family took its name from St. Maur-sur-Loire in Touraine. William de St. Maur in 1240 held the manors of Penhow and Woundy (now called Undy in Monmouthshire). William's great-grandson, Sir Roger de St. Maur, had two sons: John, whose granddaughter conveyed these manors by marriage into the family of Bowlay of Penhow, who bore the Seymour arms; and Sir Roger (c. 1308 – Bef. 1366), who married Cicely, eldest sister and heir of John de Beauchamp, 3rd Baron Beauchamp. Cicely brought to the Seymours the manor of Hache, Somerset, and her grandson, Roger Seymour, by his marriage with Maud, daughter and heir of Sir William Esturmy, acquired Wolf Hall in Wiltshire.[16] Elizabeth's father, Sir John Seymour, was a great-great-grandson of this Roger Seymour.[17]

Sir John Seymour was born in 1474.[18][19] He succeeded his father in 1492, was knighted by Henry VII for his services against the Cornish rebels at Blackheath in 1497, and was sheriff of Wiltshire in 1508. He was present at the sieges of Thérouanne and Tournay in 1513, at the two interviews between Henry VIII and Francis I in 1520 and 1532, and died on 21 December 1536.

He married Margery, the daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead, Suffolk, and his wife Anne Say.[17] Anne was the daughter of Sir John Say and his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Lawrence Cheney (or Cheyne) (c. 1396 – 1461) and Elizabeth Cokayne.[17] Margery Wentworth's grandfather, Sir Philip Wentworth, had married Mary, daughter of John Clifford, 7th Baron de Clifford, whose mother Elizabeth was daughter of Henry Percy (Hotspur) and great-great-granddaughter of Edward III.[18]

Sir John Seymour (1474 – 21 December 1536),[19][20] of Wulfhall, Savernake, Wiltshire, and Margery Wentworth (c. 1478c. October 1550) were married 22 October 1494.[6] The couple had ten children: [6][15]

Of the ten children born at Wulfhall, six survived:– three sons: Edward, Henry and Thomas, and three daughters: Jane, Elizabeth and Dorothy. Edward, Thomas, Jane and Elizabeth were courtiers. Edward and Thomas were both executed during the reign of Edward VI. Henry Seymour, who did not share his brothers' ambition, escaped their fate.[25]

Early life

Elizabeth Seymour was known to have been born by 1518, probably at Wulfhall.[5] Her letters to Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII show that she was both intelligent and astute.[33][34][35] She was also skilled in needlework.[36] She played a brief but prominent role in the 1530s and 1540s, during the rise to power of her father-in-law, Thomas Cromwell, and her brother, Edward.[37] Elizabeth and her sister, Jane, served in the household of Henry VIII's second wife, Anne Boleyn, their second cousin.[38][39] She married three times and by her first two marriages had seven children. She is best known as the wife of Gregory Cromwell.

First marriage

 
Mont Orgueil Castle, Jersey

By July 1530,[5][40] Elizabeth had married, as his second wife,[41] Sir Anthony Ughtred, of Kexby, Yorkshire.[15][42] The couple had two children:

In January 1531, Henry VIII granted the couple the manors of Lepington and Kexby (Yorkshire), previously held by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey.[49] She was well-placed at court, in the service of Anne Boleyn, to support her husband's interests.[36][39][50] In August 1532, when the pro-Boleyn Sir Anthony Ughtred was appointed captain and Governor of Jersey, it was almost certainly due to the influence of Anne Boleyn.[39][45] He served in person, and remained in the post until his death.[45]

On Saturday, 31 May 1533, Lady Ughtred was one of the ladies and gentlewomen attendant on horseback who accompanied Queen Anne Boleyn in a procession from the Tower of London to Westminster Hall.[51]

Sir Anthony Ughtred died 6 October 1534 in Jersey, and was buried in the chapel of St George, in the castle of Mont Orgueil.[42] After her husband's death, the young widow returned to England, to serve her mistress and cousin, the queen.[43] Her daughter, Margery was probably born in Kexby, Yorkshire in the same year.[48] Her one-year-old son, Henry, remained on the island for a time, in the care of Helier de Carteret, Bailiff of Jersey.[43][45]

The Queen's sister

 

When Anne Boleyn failed to produce a male heir after almost three years of marriage, the able and ambitious Edward Seymour and his family, gained wealth and power as Jane supplanted Anne in the king's affections. In March 1536, Edward was made a gentleman of the privy chamber, and a few days later, he and his wife Anne together with his sister Jane, were lodged at the palace at Greenwich in apartments which the king could reach through a private passage.[52]

In May 1536, accused of treason, incest and plotting the king's death, Anne was imprisoned in the Tower, awaiting her trial. Jane Seymour resided with members of her family, first at the home of Sir Nicholas Carew in Surrey and then moved closer to the king, to a house at Chelsea, formerly owned by Thomas More.[53] While the king's second wife prepared for her execution, Jane was planning her wedding, "splendidly served by the King's cook and other officers" and "most richly dressed".[54] On 30 May 1536, eleven days after Anne Boleyn's execution, Henry VIII and Jane were married.[11] On 5 June, a week after his sister's marriage to the king, Edward Seymour was created Viscount Beauchamp.[17] Two days later he received a grant of numerous manors in Wiltshire, including Ambresbury, Easton Priory, Chippenham, and Maiden Bradley.[17] On 7 July he was made governor and captain of Jersey, and in August, chancellor of North Wales.[17] He had livery of his father's lands in the following year, was on 30 January granted the manor of Muchelney, Somerset, and on 22 May sworn of the privy council. In the same month he was on the commission appointed to try Lords Darcy and Hussey for their role in the pilgrimage of grace.[17] On 15 October he carried Princess Elizabeth at Edward VI's christening,[55] and 18 October was created Earl of Hertford.[17] Thomas Seymour was also made a gentleman of the privy chamber in 1536, and knighted 18 October of the same year. He was made captain of the Sweepstake in 1537.[26]

When Henry VIII sought to divorce his first wife, Catherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn, Jane, who had previously served in Catherine's household, had remained loyal to her and her daughter, Mary.[7] Elizabeth and her first husband, Sir Anthony Ughtred had supported Anne Boleyn and benefited from her rise.[39][45] It is not surprising therefore, that she was not included in the new queen's household.[56] There is no evidence that Elizabeth benefited directly from her sister's royal status, before the news of a royal pregnancy became public knowledge in 1537. The impending birth of an heir to the throne would dramatically increase her value as a potential bride.

On 18 March 1537, then a young widow of reduced means, residing in York, Elizabeth had written to Thomas Cromwell, then Baron Cromwell, who had previously offered to help her, if she was ever in need.[57][58] She had hoped to "be holpen to obtain of the king's grace to be farmer of one of these abbeys if they fortune to go down ..." Cromwell, probably encouraged by Edward Seymour, proposed instead that she marry his only son and heir, Gregory.[59] By June, it appears that Cromwell's offer had been accepted. Arthur Darcy, the son of Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy de Darcy, assured her that "I would have been glad to have had you likewise, but sure it is, as I said, that some southern lord shall make you forget the North."[60]

Second marriage

which doth comfort me most in the world, that I find your lordship is contented with me, and that you will be my good lord and father the which, I trust, never to deserve other, but rather to give cause for the continuance of the same.

— Elizabeth Cromwell, letter to her father-in-law, Thomas Cromwell, 1537 [61][62]
 
Possibly Gregory Cromwell, circa 1535–1540, Hans Holbein the Younger

On 3 August 1537, Elizabeth married Gregory Cromwell at Mortlake.[63][64] Edward Seymour, then Viscount Beauchamp wrote to Cromwell on 2 September 1537, to know how he has fared since the writer's departure. Wishes Cromwell were with him, when he should have had the best sport with bow, hounds, and hawks and sends commendations to his brother-in-law and sister, adding: "and I pray God to send me by them shortly a nephew."[65]

The couple had five children:[15][66][67]

 
Portrait Miniature of Anne of Cleves, Hans Holbein the Younger

On 12 November, three months after their wedding, Elizabeth and Gregory took part in the queen's funeral procession.[74] Jane's death on 24 October,[14] after being delivered of the king's longed-for son, naturally came as a blow to the Seymour family. It proved to be a setback to Edward Seymour's influence. He was described in the following year as "young and wise," but "of small power".[75] The death of the queen would have disastrous consequences for Thomas Cromwell.

The couple's first child, Henry was born in 1538,[68][69] shortly before their arrival at Lewes Priory in Sussex, recently acquired by Thomas Cromwell,[76] where they resided until early 1539.[77] Another son, Edward, followed in 1539,[69] who may have been born, at Leeds Castle in Kent.[78][79]

Gregory Cromwell appears to have been devoted to his wife and children. In December 1539, while in Calais waiting to welcome Henry VIII's new bride, Anne of Cleves, he wrote to his wife at Leeds Castle,[78] addressing her as his "loving bedfellow", describing the arrival of Anne of Cleves, and requesting news "as well of yourself as also my little boys, of whose increase and towardness be you assured I am not a little desirous to be advertised".[69] In January 1540, Elizabeth was appointed to the household of the new Queen, Anne of Cleves.[12]

Thomas Cromwell was created Earl of Essex on 17 April,[80] and his son, Gregory assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell[81] In May, Lady Cromwell watched her husband compete in the May Day jousts at the Palace of Westminster and afterwards feasted with the queen and her ladies.[82][83] Anne of Cleves would not remain as queen for long, however, as the mercurial Henry VIII wanted a divorce.

 
Portrait of Thomas Cromwell, wearing the Garter collar (c. 1485-1540)

Thomas Cromwell was at the height of his ascendancy, however his political enemies were gaining ground and his time in power would soon come to an end. He was arrested at a council meeting at 3.00 p.m. on the afternoon of 10 June 1540, accused of treason and heresy, taken to the Tower and his possessions seized.[84][85][86][87] He was condemned without a trial and his sentence was later confirmed by an act of attainder.[88][89] There are no surviving records of Gregory and Elizabeth's whereabouts at this time.

Thomas Cromwell wrote a desperate letter from the tower to the king to plead his innocence and appealed to him to be merciful to his son and the rest of his family.

Sir, upon [my kne]es I most humbly beseech your most gracious Majesty [to be goo]d and gracious lord to my poor son, the good and virtu[ous lady his] wife, and their poor children [90][91]

Elizabeth also wrote to Henry VIII, to assure him of her loyalty and that of her husband:

After the bounden duty of my most humble submission unto your excellent majesty, whereas it hath pleased the same, of your mere mercy and infinite goodness, notwithstanding the heinous trespasses and most grievous offences of my father-in-law, yet so graciously to extend your benign pity towards my poor husband and me, as the extreme indigence and poverty wherewith my said father-in-law's most detestable offences hath oppressed us, is thereby right much holpen and relieved, like as I have of long time been right desirous presently as well to render most humble thanks, as also to desire continuance of the same your highness' most benign goodness. So, considering your grace's most high and weighty affairs at this present, fear of molesting or being troublesome unto your highness hath disuaded me as yet otherwise to sue unto your grace than alonely by these my most humble letters, until your grace's said affairs shall be partly overpast. Most humbly beseeching your majesty in the mean season mercifully to accept this my most obedient suit, and to extend your accustomed pity and gracious goodness towards my said poor husband and me, who never hath, nor, God willing, never shall offend your majesty, but continually pray for the prosperous estate of the same long time to remain and continue."[92]

This undated letter is placed at the end of July 1540 in Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII.[93] It was probably written while Thomas Cromwell was imprisoned in the Tower, as Elizabeth refers to her father-in-law, and not her late father-in-law. Moreover, it was customary at that time to write "may his soul God pardon" or something similar when referring to someone who had recently died, which she did not do.[94] The letter was almost certainly written on the advice of her brother, Edward.

Thomas Cromwell was beheaded on Tower Hill on 28 July 1540,[84][95][96] the same day as the king's marriage to Catherine Howard. He was buried in an unmarked grave in the Chapel of St. Peter ad Vincula in the Tower. It is unknown if Gregory and his family were present at his execution or burial.[97]

Gregory and Elizabeth were not implicated, although it would be almost six months before their desperate situation was to be resolved. They had been dependants of Thomas Cromwell, with no home and little income of their own, and would have had to rely on the generosity of family and friends. The king was inclined to be generous and Elizabeth was included in the future queen Catherine Howard's household as one of her attendant ladies.[98]

On 18 December 1540, less than five months after his father's execution, Gregory Cromwell was created Baron Cromwell by letters patent, and summoned to Parliament as a peer of the realm.[99][100] This title was a new creation,[101] rather than a restoration of his father's forfeited barony.[102] The following February he received a royal grant of lands that had been owned by his late father.[103]

At the coronation of King Edward VI, on 20 February 1547, Elizabeth's husband and her brother, Henry were invested as Knights of the Order of the Bath.–[99][100][104] Her brother, Thomas was found guilty of treason and executed 20 March 1549.[26]

Elizabeth became a widow again upon the death of Gregory Cromwell from sweating sickness in 1551.[100] He died at Launde Abbey 4 July 1551 and was buried three days later in the chapel at Launde.[70] In London, Henry Machyn recorded the events in his diary:

And died my Lord Cromwell in Leicestershire and was buried with a standard, a banner of arms, and coat, helmet, sword, target, and escutcheons and herald.[105]

Gregory lies buried under a magnificent monument in the chapel at Launde. The initials "E C" can be seen in the intricate entablature beneath the pediment.[106]

Edward, Duke of Somerset, who had always been a constant source of support to his sister Elizabeth, went to the block 22 January 1552 and his wife remained in the Tower.[17] Since he had been found guilty of the lesser charge of felony, and not for treason, his lands and dignities were not thereby affected; however an act of Parliament was passed on 12 April 1552 declaring them forfeited and confirming his attainder.[107] In May, his four younger daughters were placed in Elizabeth's care.[108] She was granted 100 marks for the provision and education of each of her nieces per year, as well as the lease of her minor son's house of Launde Abbey, by way of an inducement. However, by October, the arrangement was placing the widow under a considerable strain.[108][109] On 25 October 1552, she wrote to her friend, Sir William Cecil, of the Privy Council, requesting to be relieved of her troublesome nieces, who did not take her advice "in such good part as my good meaning was, nor according to my expectation in them".[109] Her husband's family were all dead, her own surviving family did not live nearby, and she no longer had the support of her husband or her brother, Edward. She reminded Cecil that she had no near relations who could give her advice.[109] Her pleas fell on deaf ears and her nieces would remain with her until their mother, Anne, Duchess of Somerset, was released from the Tower by Mary I in August 1553.[110]

Third marriage

 
Church of St Mary, Old Basing, Hampshire

Between 10 March and 24 April 1554,[111] Elizabeth married, as his second wife, Sir John Paulet, later Lord St. John, who outlived her.[111] There were no children by this marriage. Elizabeth's two eldest sons married John Paulet's daughters. Henry Ughtred married the widowed Elizabeth after 1557[47] and Henry Cromwell married Mary sometime before 1560.[70] Details of her later life remain obscure, however she and her husband appear in the records from time to time in matters relating to her son, Henry Cromwell's minority and suits for the continuation of royal grants at the commencement of each new reign.[112]

Death

Elizabeth died 19 March 1568,[3] and was buried 5 April[3][4] in St. Mary's Church, Basing, Hampshire.[70][113] John Paulet, Lord St. John married, before 30 September 1568, Winifred, widow of Sir Richard Sackville, and daughter of John Brydges, a former Lord Mayor of London.[114] He succeeded his father as Marquess of Winchester in 1572.[115]

Arms of Seymour

In the Seymour arms, an augmentation of honour was granted to Edward Seymour, Viscount Beauchamp, (later Earl of Hertford and Duke of Somerset), following Henry VIII's marriage to Jane Seymour: Or, on a pile gules between six fleurs-de-lys azure three lions of England.[116][117] Note the six fleurs-de-lis on the lady's left sleeve in the Holbein portrait at the head of the page.[5]

Portraits

In 1909 British art historian, Sir Lionel Cust, then Director of the National Portrait Gallery in London, identified a portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger that had belonged to the Cromwell family for centuries as a likeness of Queen Catherine Howard.[5][118][119] Inscribed ETATIS SVÆ 21, indicating that the sitter was depicted at the age of twenty-one, the portrait has long been associated with Henry VIII's young queen, but the lady is now thought to be a member of the Cromwell family.[2][5][120][121]

The portrait shown on this page, dated circa 1535–1540, is exhibited at the Toledo Museum of Art as Portrait of a Lady, probably a Member of the Cromwell Family (1926.57).[2] A sixteenth-century version of the portrait, at Hever Castle in Kent, is exhibited as Portrait of a Lady, thought to be Catherine Howard.[5][118] The National Portrait Gallery exhibits a similar painting, Unknown woman, formerly known as Catherine Howard (NPG 1119),[121] dating from the late seventeenth century.

Art historian Sir Roy Strong, following the lead of Charles Kingsley Adams,[122] noted that both the Toledo portrait and the National Portrait Gallery version appear in the context of a series of portraits of members of the family of the Protector's uncle, Sir Oliver Cromwell (c. 1562–1655), and have provenances linking them with the Cromwell family. He argued that the portrait in the Toledo Museum of Art, "should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c.1535–40" and suggested that the lady might be Elizabeth Seymour, wife of Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell, son of Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex.[120] He stated that a "dated parallel for costume, notably the distinctive cut of the sleeves, is Holbein's Christina of Denmark of 1538."[123] Herbert Norris claimed that the sitter is wearing a sleeve which follows a style set by Anne of Cleves,[124] which would date the portrait to after 6 January 1540, when Anne's marriage to Henry VIII took place.[125]

Historians Antonia Fraser and Derek Wilson believe that the portrait is very likely to depict Elizabeth Seymour.[126][127] Antonia Fraser has argued that the sitter is Jane Seymour's sister, Elizabeth, the widow of Sir Anthony Ughtred (d. 1534), on the grounds that the lady bears a resemblance to Jane, especially around the nose and chin, and wears widow's black.[126] The lady's sumptuous black clothing, an indication of wealth and status, did not necessarily signify mourning; her jewellery suggests otherwise. Derek Wilson observed that "In August 1537 Cromwell succeeded in marrying his son, Gregory, to Elizabeth Seymour", the queen's younger sister. He was therefore related by marriage to the king, "an event worth recording for posterity, by a portrait of his daughter-in-law".[127]

Lineage

References

  1. ^ Strong 1995, pp. 78−81, pl. 68−70: "The portrait should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c.1535–40..."
  2. ^ a b c "Portrait of a Lady, probably a Member of the Cromwell Family, c. 1535-40, Hans Holbein the Younger". Toledo Museum of Art. Toledo, Ohio. Retrieved 25 March 2020. "The painting belonged to the Cromwells for centuries, so she was probably a member of that prominent family. It has been suggested that she may be Elizabeth Seymour, daughter-in-law of Henry's powerful government minister Thomas Cromwell and sister of Henry's third wife, Jane Seymour."
  3. ^ a b c d e College of Arms 2012, p. 63.
  4. ^ a b c d Carthew II 1878, p. 522.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fitzgerald 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d Norton 2009, p. 11.
  7. ^ a b Beer 2004.
  8. ^ Syvret 1832, pp. 59–61.
  9. ^ Soberton 2022, pp. 247–248.
  10. ^ a b Wagner & Schmid 2012, p. 1000.
  11. ^ a b Starkey 2004, p. 591.
  12. ^ a b Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 15, 21.
  13. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 16, 1489
    Under the heading "Rewards given on Saturday, New Year's Day at Hampton Court, anno xxxii", appearing with other ladies of the royal household, Lady Cromwell is granted 13s. 4d.
  14. ^ a b Starkey 2004, pp. 607–608.
  15. ^ a b c d e Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011, p. 111.
  16. ^ Roskell & Knightly 1993.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Pollard 1897, pp. 299–310.
  18. ^ a b Seymour 1972, p. 18.
  19. ^ a b Aubrey 1862, p. 375–376:John Seymour's monument gives his age as 60. "This Knight departed this Lyfe at LX years of age, the XXI day of December, Anno 1536 ..."
  20. ^ Seymour 1972, pp. 18, 52.
  21. ^ a b c Norton 2009, p. 13.
  22. ^ a b Aubrey 1862, p. 377.
  23. ^ Beer 2009.
  24. ^ Pole 2008, p. 481.
  25. ^ a b Hawkyard 1982b.
  26. ^ a b c Hawkyard 1982c.
  27. ^ Seymour 1972, p. 65.
  28. ^ a b Burke III 1836, p. 201.
  29. ^ Andrews 1886, p. 5.
  30. ^ Machyn 1848, p. 24, 326.
  31. ^ Shingle Hall is also listed as Shingey, Shingley and Shinglehall in various sources.
  32. ^ Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011, p. 82.
  33. ^ Wood II 1846, pp. 353–354
  34. ^ Wood II 1846, pp. 355–356
  35. ^ Wood III 1846, pp. 159–160
  36. ^ a b Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 5, 686: Elizabeth presented the king with "A fine shirt with a high collar" as a new year's gift in 1532.
  37. ^ Loades 2013, pp. 96–97.
  38. ^ Norton 2009, p. 9.
  39. ^ a b c d Syvret 1832, pp. 59–60.
  40. ^ Brown 2 2013, pp. 162–163.
  41. ^ Collins, Yorkshire Fines: 1511-15 1887, pp. 24–30 "Anthony Ughtred, kt., and Alianora his wife" are listed under "1513–14—Hilary Term, 5 Henry VIII".
  42. ^ a b MacMahon 2004.
  43. ^ a b c Syvret 1832, pp. 60–61.
  44. ^ MacCarthy-Morrogh 2016, p. 395.
  45. ^ a b c d e Thornton 2012, p. 71.
  46. ^ a b Fuidge 1981.
  47. ^ a b Cokayne IV 1916, pp. 332–333.
  48. ^ a b Flower 1881, p. 166.
  49. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 5, 80(14).
  50. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 6, 32.
  51. ^ Soberton 2022, pp. 95–96.
  52. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 10, 601.
  53. ^ Russell 2010.
  54. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 10, 908:The imperial ambassador, Chapuys in formed Charles V: "The day before the putain's condemnation he sent for Mrs. Semel by the Grand Esquire and some others, and made her come within a mile of his lodging, where she is splendidly served by the King's cook and other officers. She is most richly dressed. One of her relations, who dined with her on the day of the said condemnation, told me that the King sent that morning to tell her that he would send her news at 3 o'clock of the condemnation of the putain, which he did by Mr. Briant, whom he sent in all haste. To judge by appearances, there is no doubt that he will take the said Semel to wife; and some think the agreements and promises are already made."
  55. ^ Wriothesley 1875, p. 68.
  56. ^ Norton 2009, p. 135.
  57. ^ Norton 2009, pp. 135–136.
  58. ^ Wood II 1846, pp. 353–354.
  59. ^ Loades 2013, pp. 95–97.
  60. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 12(2), 97.
  61. ^ Wood II 1846, pp. 355–356.
  62. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 12(2), 881.
  63. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 14(2), 782: "the same day he was married at Moretelacke".
  64. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 12(2), 423.
  65. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 12(2), 629.
  66. ^ Cokayne III 1913, pp. 557–558.
  67. ^ a b Noble 1784, pp. 8–9.
  68. ^ a b MacCulloch 2018, pp. 440–441: Henry was baptised 1 March, probably at Hampton Court. The Lady Mary gave forty shillings to the nurse and midwife as well as an expensive cup for "my lady Outred Child".
  69. ^ a b c d e Wood II 1846, pp. 357–358: Gregory and Elizabeth were married by 3 August 1537 and had two "little boys" by December 1539. Henry was born in 1538 and Edward in 1539.
  70. ^ a b c d e Cokayne III 1913, p. 558.
  71. ^ N.M.S. 1981.
  72. ^ Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011, pp. 604.
  73. ^ a b Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011, pp. 605, 628.
  74. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 12(2), 1060.
  75. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 13(2), 732.
  76. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 13(1), 384(74).
  77. ^ Ellis, third series III 1846, pp. 192–194:The Priory House at Lewes, in which they resided, afterwards named "The Lord's Place", was destroyed by fire in the seventeenth century. It lay a short distance to the south-east of the present Southover Church.
  78. ^ a b Thomas Cromwell was the constable of Leeds Castle from January 1539 to 1540 Bindoff 1982
  79. ^ Gregory Cromwell was elected to the House of Commons as one of the knights of the shire for Kent, and summoned to Parliament in April 1539. Hawkyard 1982a
  80. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 15, 611(37).
  81. ^ Holinshed 1808, p. 815, After his father's creation as Earl of Essex in April, Gregory assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell.
  82. ^ Wriothesley 1875, pp. 116–117.
  83. ^ Holinshed 1808, pp. 815–816.
  84. ^ a b Foxe V 1838, p. 398.
  85. ^ Holinshed 1808, p. 816.
  86. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 15, 804.
  87. ^ Journal of the House of Lords 1, 10 June 1540.
  88. ^ Bindoff 1982.
  89. ^ Schofield 2011, p. 396.
  90. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 15, 824.
  91. ^ Ellis, second series II 1827, pp. 160–161.
  92. ^ Wood III 1846, p. 159.
  93. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 15, 940.
  94. ^ See Wood II 1846, pp. 353–354, the widow, Lady Ughtred's first letter to Thomas Cromwell; Wood II 1846, pp. 209–212, Lady Berkeley's letter to Thomas Cromwell after the death of her husband, Thomas Berkeley, 6th Baron Berkeley; and Ellis II 1825, pp. 67–68, Lady Rochford's letter to Thomas Cromwell after the execution of her husband George Boleyn, Viscount Rochford.
  95. ^ Hall 1809, p. 839.
  96. ^ Holinshed 1808, p. 817.
  97. ^ Roper 2003, p. 57, Sir Thomas More's family had been given the king's permission to do so. "And I beseech you, good Mr. Pope, to be a mean unto his Highness, that my daughter Margaret may be present at my burial."
    "The King is well contended already" (quoth Mr. Pope) "that your wife, children, and other friends shall have free liberty to be present thereat."
  98. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 16, 1489: Under the heading 'Rewards given on Saturday, New Year's Day at Hampton Court, anno xxxii', appearing with other ladies of the royal household, Lady Crumwell is granted 13s. 4d.
  99. ^ a b Cokayne III 1913, pp. 557–559.
  100. ^ a b c Hawkyard 1982a.
  101. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 16, 379(34).
  102. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 11, 202(14).
  103. ^ Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 16, 580(49).
  104. ^ Strype II(I) 1822, p. 36.
  105. ^ Machyn 1848, p. 7, 317.
  106. ^ Pevsner 2003, pp. 198, 288, plate 28 The monument to Gregory Cromwell, which is to the left of the altar, is said to be one of the finest examples of early English Renaissance sculpture in the country, very "grand and restrained"
  107. ^ Journal of the House of Lords 1, 12 April 1552.
  108. ^ a b Acts of the Privy Council IV: 1552–1554, pp. 33, 43, 62.
  109. ^ a b c Wood III 1846, pp. 260–262.
  110. ^ Seymour 1972, p. 365.
  111. ^ a b Faris 1999, p. 269.
  112. ^ CPR Elizabeth I, 1: 1558-1560, p. 83.
  113. ^ Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011, p. 111–112.
  114. ^ Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011, p. 311.
  115. ^ Cokayne VIII 1898, p. 173.
  116. ^ MacCulloch 2018, pp. 427–8, pl. 8, 9.
  117. ^ Boutell 1863, p. 243.
  118. ^ a b Russell 2017, pp. 385–387.
  119. ^ Cust 1910, pp. 193–199.
  120. ^ a b Strong 1967, pp. 278–281: "The portrait should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c.1535–40..."
  121. ^ a b "Unknown woman, formerly known as Catherine Howard, late 17th century". National Portrait Gallery. London. Retrieved 25 March 2020. "This portrait was previously identified as Catherine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII. The sitter is now thought to be a member of the Cromwell family, perhaps Elizabeth Seymour (c.1518–1568), sister of Henry VIII's third wife, Jane Seymour, and wife of Thomas Cromwell's son Gregory."
  122. ^ Adams 1964, pp. 386–387.
  123. ^ Strong 1967, p. 281.
  124. ^ Norris 1998, p. 281.
  125. ^ Wagner & Schmid 2012, p. 38 Anne of Cleves was queen consort from 6 January – 9 July 1540. Until 1752, the year commenced on Lady Day, 25 March.
  126. ^ a b Fraser 2002, p. 386.
  127. ^ a b Wilson 2006, p. 215.
  128. ^ Also known as Sir Robert Coker of Lydeard St Lawrence.
Attribution

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External links

  • Teri Fitzgerald, All that Glitters: Hans Holbein's Lady of the Cromwell Family
  • Portrait of a Lady, probably a Member of the Cromwell Family at the Toledo Museum of Art
  • Unknown Woman, Formerly Known as Catherine Howard at the National Portrait Gallery, London
  • St Mary's Church, Basing Paulet monuments
  • Letter from Gregory Cromwell to his wife
  • Elizabeth, Lady Ughtred's letters to Thomas Cromwell
  • Elizabeth, Lady Cromwell's letter to Henry VIII

elizabeth, seymour, lady, cromwell, elizabeth, seymour, 1518, march, 1568, younger, daughter, john, seymour, wulfhall, wiltshire, margery, wentworth, elizabeth, sister, jane, served, household, anne, boleyn, second, wife, henry, viii, seymours, rose, prominenc. Elizabeth Seymour c 1518 5 19 March 1568 3 5 was a younger daughter of Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall Wiltshire and Margery Wentworth 6 Elizabeth and her sister Jane served in the household of Anne Boleyn the second wife of Henry VIII 7 8 9 The Seymours rose to prominence after the king s attention turned to Jane 10 In May 1536 Anne Boleyn was accused of treason and adultery and subsequently executed On 30 May 1536 eleven days after Anne s execution Henry VIII and Jane were married 11 Elizabeth was not included in her sister s household during her brief reign although she would serve two of Henry VIII s later wives Anne of Cleves 12 and Catherine Howard 13 Jane died 24 October 1537 twelve days after giving birth to a healthy son Edward VI 14 Elizabeth SeymourCountess of WiltshireBaroness CromwellBaroness St JohnPortrait of a lady probably a Member of the Cromwell Family perhaps Elizabeth Seymour circa 1535 1540 Hans Holbein the Younger 1 2 Bornc 1518Died19 March 1568 3 4 aged 49 50 BuriedSt Mary s Church Basing Hampshire 51 16 17 N 1 02 48 W 51 271389 N 1 046667 W 51 271389 1 046667Spouse s Sir Anthony Ughtred Gregory Cromwell 1st Baron Cromwell John Paulet 2nd Marquess of WinchesterIssueSir Henry Ughtred Margery Ughtred Henry Cromwell 2nd Baron Cromwell Edward Cromwell Thomas Cromwell Katherine Cromwell Frances CromwellFatherSir John SeymourMotherMargery WentworthElizabeth lived under four Tudor monarchs and was married three times By July 1530 5 she had married Sir Anthony Ughtred Governor of Jersey who died in 1534 She then married Gregory Cromwell 1st Baron Cromwell the son of Thomas Cromwell chief minister to Henry VIII in 1537 who died in 1551 She married her third and last husband Sir John Paulet later Lord St John the son of William Paulet 1st Marquess of Winchester in 1554 15 Contents 1 Seymour family 2 Early life 3 First marriage 4 The Queen s sister 5 Second marriage 6 Third marriage 7 Death 8 Arms of Seymour 9 Portraits 10 Lineage 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksSeymour family EditThe Seymour family took its name from St Maur sur Loire in Touraine William de St Maur in 1240 held the manors of Penhow and Woundy now called Undy in Monmouthshire William s great grandson Sir Roger de St Maur had two sons John whose granddaughter conveyed these manors by marriage into the family of Bowlay of Penhow who bore the Seymour arms and Sir Roger c 1308 Bef 1366 who married Cicely eldest sister and heir of John de Beauchamp 3rd Baron Beauchamp Cicely brought to the Seymours the manor of Hache Somerset and her grandson Roger Seymour by his marriage with Maud daughter and heir of Sir William Esturmy acquired Wolf Hall in Wiltshire 16 Elizabeth s father Sir John Seymour was a great great grandson of this Roger Seymour 17 Sir John Seymour was born in 1474 18 19 He succeeded his father in 1492 was knighted by Henry VII for his services against the Cornish rebels at Blackheath in 1497 and was sheriff of Wiltshire in 1508 He was present at the sieges of Therouanne and Tournay in 1513 at the two interviews between Henry VIII and Francis I in 1520 and 1532 and died on 21 December 1536 He married Margery the daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead Suffolk and his wife Anne Say 17 Anne was the daughter of Sir John Say and his wife Elizabeth daughter of Lawrence Cheney or Cheyne c 1396 1461 and Elizabeth Cokayne 17 Margery Wentworth s grandfather Sir Philip Wentworth had married Mary daughter of John Clifford 7th Baron de Clifford whose mother Elizabeth was daughter of Henry Percy Hotspur and great great granddaughter of Edward III 18 Sir John Seymour 1474 21 December 1536 19 20 of Wulfhall Savernake Wiltshire and Margery Wentworth c 1478 c October 1550 were married 22 October 1494 6 The couple had ten children 6 15 John Seymour died 15 July 1510 21 22 Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset Lord Protector of Edward VI c 1500 23 1506 17 22 January 1552 24 married firstly Catherine daughter of Sir William Fillol 17 and secondly Anne daughter of Sir Edward Stanhope 17 Sir Henry Seymour 1503 1578 married Barbara daughter of Morgan Wolfe 25 Thomas Seymour 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley c 1508 20 March 1549 married Catherine Parr widow of Henry VIII 26 27 John Seymour died young 28 Anthony Seymour died c 1528 21 Jane Seymour queen Consort of Henry VIII c 1509 24 October 1537 6 10 Margery Seymour died c 1528 21 Elizabeth Seymour c 1518 5 19 Mar 1568 3 Dorothy Seymour c 1519 4 January 1574 29 married firstly Sir Clement Smith c 1515 26 August 1552 of Little Baddow Essex 22 30 and secondly Thomas Leventhorpe of Shingle Hall 31 Hertfordshire 28 32 Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset Thomas Seymour Baron Seymour Jane Seymour portrait miniature c 1536 37 Lucas HorenboutOf the ten children born at Wulfhall six survived three sons Edward Henry and Thomas and three daughters Jane Elizabeth and Dorothy Edward Thomas Jane and Elizabeth were courtiers Edward and Thomas were both executed during the reign of Edward VI Henry Seymour who did not share his brothers ambition escaped their fate 25 Early life EditElizabeth Seymour was known to have been born by 1518 probably at Wulfhall 5 Her letters to Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII show that she was both intelligent and astute 33 34 35 She was also skilled in needlework 36 She played a brief but prominent role in the 1530s and 1540s during the rise to power of her father in law Thomas Cromwell and her brother Edward 37 Elizabeth and her sister Jane served in the household of Henry VIII s second wife Anne Boleyn their second cousin 38 39 She married three times and by her first two marriages had seven children She is best known as the wife of Gregory Cromwell First marriage Edit Mont Orgueil Castle Jersey By July 1530 5 40 Elizabeth had married as his second wife 41 Sir Anthony Ughtred of Kexby Yorkshire 15 42 The couple had two children Sir Henry Ughtred c 1533 4 43 1599 44 born at Mont Orgueil Jersey 45 married Elizabeth daughter to John Paulet Lord St John and his first wife Elizabeth Willoughby and the widow of Sir William Courtenay 46 After his wife s death in 1576 47 Henry remarried however the identity of his second wife is not recorded 46 Margery Ughtred c 1535 married William Hungate of Burnby Yorkshire 48 In January 1531 Henry VIII granted the couple the manors of Lepington and Kexby Yorkshire previously held by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey 49 She was well placed at court in the service of Anne Boleyn to support her husband s interests 36 39 50 In August 1532 when the pro Boleyn Sir Anthony Ughtred was appointed captain and Governor of Jersey it was almost certainly due to the influence of Anne Boleyn 39 45 He served in person and remained in the post until his death 45 On Saturday 31 May 1533 Lady Ughtred was one of the ladies and gentlewomen attendant on horseback who accompanied Queen Anne Boleyn in a procession from the Tower of London to Westminster Hall 51 Sir Anthony Ughtred died 6 October 1534 in Jersey and was buried in the chapel of St George in the castle of Mont Orgueil 42 After her husband s death the young widow returned to England to serve her mistress and cousin the queen 43 Her daughter Margery was probably born in Kexby Yorkshire in the same year 48 Her one year old son Henry remained on the island for a time in the care of Helier de Carteret Bailiff of Jersey 43 45 The Queen s sister Edit Anne Boleyn portrait at Hever Castle When Anne Boleyn failed to produce a male heir after almost three years of marriage the able and ambitious Edward Seymour and his family gained wealth and power as Jane supplanted Anne in the king s affections In March 1536 Edward was made a gentleman of the privy chamber and a few days later he and his wife Anne together with his sister Jane were lodged at the palace at Greenwich in apartments which the king could reach through a private passage 52 In May 1536 accused of treason incest and plotting the king s death Anne was imprisoned in the Tower awaiting her trial Jane Seymour resided with members of her family first at the home of Sir Nicholas Carew in Surrey and then moved closer to the king to a house at Chelsea formerly owned by Thomas More 53 While the king s second wife prepared for her execution Jane was planning her wedding splendidly served by the King s cook and other officers and most richly dressed 54 On 30 May 1536 eleven days after Anne Boleyn s execution Henry VIII and Jane were married 11 On 5 June a week after his sister s marriage to the king Edward Seymour was created Viscount Beauchamp 17 Two days later he received a grant of numerous manors in Wiltshire including Ambresbury Easton Priory Chippenham and Maiden Bradley 17 On 7 July he was made governor and captain of Jersey and in August chancellor of North Wales 17 He had livery of his father s lands in the following year was on 30 January granted the manor of Muchelney Somerset and on 22 May sworn of the privy council In the same month he was on the commission appointed to try Lords Darcy and Hussey for their role in the pilgrimage of grace 17 On 15 October he carried Princess Elizabeth at Edward VI s christening 55 and 18 October was created Earl of Hertford 17 Thomas Seymour was also made a gentleman of the privy chamber in 1536 and knighted 18 October of the same year He was made captain of the Sweepstake in 1537 26 Jane Seymour Queen of England Hans Holbein the younger When Henry VIII sought to divorce his first wife Catherine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn Jane who had previously served in Catherine s household had remained loyal to her and her daughter Mary 7 Elizabeth and her first husband Sir Anthony Ughtred had supported Anne Boleyn and benefited from her rise 39 45 It is not surprising therefore that she was not included in the new queen s household 56 There is no evidence that Elizabeth benefited directly from her sister s royal status before the news of a royal pregnancy became public knowledge in 1537 The impending birth of an heir to the throne would dramatically increase her value as a potential bride On 18 March 1537 then a young widow of reduced means residing in York Elizabeth had written to Thomas Cromwell then Baron Cromwell who had previously offered to help her if she was ever in need 57 58 She had hoped to be holpen to obtain of the king s grace to be farmer of one of these abbeys if they fortune to go down Cromwell probably encouraged by Edward Seymour proposed instead that she marry his only son and heir Gregory 59 By June it appears that Cromwell s offer had been accepted Arthur Darcy the son of Thomas Darcy 1st Baron Darcy de Darcy assured her that I would have been glad to have had you likewise but sure it is as I said that some southern lord shall make you forget the North 60 Second marriage Editwhich doth comfort me most in the world that I find your lordship is contented with me and that you will be my good lord and father the which I trust never to deserve other but rather to give cause for the continuance of the same Elizabeth Cromwell letter to her father in law Thomas Cromwell 1537 61 62 Possibly Gregory Cromwell circa 1535 1540 Hans Holbein the Younger On 3 August 1537 Elizabeth married Gregory Cromwell at Mortlake 63 64 Edward Seymour then Viscount Beauchamp wrote to Cromwell on 2 September 1537 to know how he has fared since the writer s departure Wishes Cromwell were with him when he should have had the best sport with bow hounds and hawks and sends commendations to his brother in law and sister adding and I pray God to send me by them shortly a nephew 65 The couple had five children 15 66 67 Henry Cromwell 2nd Baron Cromwell before 1 March 1538 68 69 16 December 1592 70 married Mary died 1592 4 the daughter of John Paulet Lord St John and his first wife Elizabeth Willoughby 70 Edward Cromwell 1539 67 69 died young Thomas Cromwell c 1540 died between February 1610 and April 1611 married 18 August 1580 4 Katherine died before 1 August 1616 daughter of Thomas Gardner of Coxford 71 Katherine Cromwell c 1541 probably named after Queen Catherine Howard married John Strode of Parnham Dorset 15 72 Frances Cromwell c 1544 73 7 February 1562 married Richard Strode of Newnham Devon 73 Portrait Miniature of Anne of Cleves Hans Holbein the Younger On 12 November three months after their wedding Elizabeth and Gregory took part in the queen s funeral procession 74 Jane s death on 24 October 14 after being delivered of the king s longed for son naturally came as a blow to the Seymour family It proved to be a setback to Edward Seymour s influence He was described in the following year as young and wise but of small power 75 The death of the queen would have disastrous consequences for Thomas Cromwell The couple s first child Henry was born in 1538 68 69 shortly before their arrival at Lewes Priory in Sussex recently acquired by Thomas Cromwell 76 where they resided until early 1539 77 Another son Edward followed in 1539 69 who may have been born at Leeds Castle in Kent 78 79 Gregory Cromwell appears to have been devoted to his wife and children In December 1539 while in Calais waiting to welcome Henry VIII s new bride Anne of Cleves he wrote to his wife at Leeds Castle 78 addressing her as his loving bedfellow describing the arrival of Anne of Cleves and requesting news as well of yourself as also my little boys of whose increase and towardness be you assured I am not a little desirous to be advertised 69 In January 1540 Elizabeth was appointed to the household of the new Queen Anne of Cleves 12 Thomas Cromwell was created Earl of Essex on 17 April 80 and his son Gregory assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell 81 In May Lady Cromwell watched her husband compete in the May Day jousts at the Palace of Westminster and afterwards feasted with the queen and her ladies 82 83 Anne of Cleves would not remain as queen for long however as the mercurial Henry VIII wanted a divorce Portrait of Thomas Cromwell wearing the Garter collar c 1485 1540 Thomas Cromwell was at the height of his ascendancy however his political enemies were gaining ground and his time in power would soon come to an end He was arrested at a council meeting at 3 00 p m on the afternoon of 10 June 1540 accused of treason and heresy taken to the Tower and his possessions seized 84 85 86 87 He was condemned without a trial and his sentence was later confirmed by an act of attainder 88 89 There are no surviving records of Gregory and Elizabeth s whereabouts at this time Thomas Cromwell wrote a desperate letter from the tower to the king to plead his innocence and appealed to him to be merciful to his son and the rest of his family Sir upon my kne es I most humbly beseech your most gracious Majesty to be goo d and gracious lord to my poor son the good and virtu ous lady his wife and their poor children 90 91 Elizabeth also wrote to Henry VIII to assure him of her loyalty and that of her husband After the bounden duty of my most humble submission unto your excellent majesty whereas it hath pleased the same of your mere mercy and infinite goodness notwithstanding the heinous trespasses and most grievous offences of my father in law yet so graciously to extend your benign pity towards my poor husband and me as the extreme indigence and poverty wherewith my said father in law s most detestable offences hath oppressed us is thereby right much holpen and relieved like as I have of long time been right desirous presently as well to render most humble thanks as also to desire continuance of the same your highness most benign goodness So considering your grace s most high and weighty affairs at this present fear of molesting or being troublesome unto your highness hath disuaded me as yet otherwise to sue unto your grace than alonely by these my most humble letters until your grace s said affairs shall be partly overpast Most humbly beseeching your majesty in the mean season mercifully to accept this my most obedient suit and to extend your accustomed pity and gracious goodness towards my said poor husband and me who never hath nor God willing never shall offend your majesty but continually pray for the prosperous estate of the same long time to remain and continue 92 Catherine Howard miniature by Hans Holbein the Younger This undated letter is placed at the end of July 1540 in Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII 93 It was probably written while Thomas Cromwell was imprisoned in the Tower as Elizabeth refers to her father in law and not her late father in law Moreover it was customary at that time to write may his soul God pardon or something similar when referring to someone who had recently died which she did not do 94 The letter was almost certainly written on the advice of her brother Edward Thomas Cromwell was beheaded on Tower Hill on 28 July 1540 84 95 96 the same day as the king s marriage to Catherine Howard He was buried in an unmarked grave in the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula in the Tower It is unknown if Gregory and his family were present at his execution or burial 97 Gregory and Elizabeth were not implicated although it would be almost six months before their desperate situation was to be resolved They had been dependants of Thomas Cromwell with no home and little income of their own and would have had to rely on the generosity of family and friends The king was inclined to be generous and Elizabeth was included in the future queen Catherine Howard s household as one of her attendant ladies 98 On 18 December 1540 less than five months after his father s execution Gregory Cromwell was created Baron Cromwell by letters patent and summoned to Parliament as a peer of the realm 99 100 This title was a new creation 101 rather than a restoration of his father s forfeited barony 102 The following February he received a royal grant of lands that had been owned by his late father 103 At the coronation of King Edward VI on 20 February 1547 Elizabeth s husband and her brother Henry were invested as Knights of the Order of the Bath 99 100 104 Her brother Thomas was found guilty of treason and executed 20 March 1549 26 Elizabeth became a widow again upon the death of Gregory Cromwell from sweating sickness in 1551 100 He died at Launde Abbey 4 July 1551 and was buried three days later in the chapel at Launde 70 In London Henry Machyn recorded the events in his diary And died my Lord Cromwell in Leicestershire and was buried with a standard a banner of arms and coat helmet sword target and escutcheons and herald 105 Gregory lies buried under a magnificent monument in the chapel at Launde The initials E C can be seen in the intricate entablature beneath the pediment 106 Edward Duke of Somerset who had always been a constant source of support to his sister Elizabeth went to the block 22 January 1552 and his wife remained in the Tower 17 Since he had been found guilty of the lesser charge of felony and not for treason his lands and dignities were not thereby affected however an act of Parliament was passed on 12 April 1552 declaring them forfeited and confirming his attainder 107 In May his four younger daughters were placed in Elizabeth s care 108 She was granted 100 marks for the provision and education of each of her nieces per year as well as the lease of her minor son s house of Launde Abbey by way of an inducement However by October the arrangement was placing the widow under a considerable strain 108 109 On 25 October 1552 she wrote to her friend Sir William Cecil of the Privy Council requesting to be relieved of her troublesome nieces who did not take her advice in such good part as my good meaning was nor according to my expectation in them 109 Her husband s family were all dead her own surviving family did not live nearby and she no longer had the support of her husband or her brother Edward She reminded Cecil that she had no near relations who could give her advice 109 Her pleas fell on deaf ears and her nieces would remain with her until their mother Anne Duchess of Somerset was released from the Tower by Mary I in August 1553 110 Third marriage Edit Church of St Mary Old Basing HampshireBetween 10 March and 24 April 1554 111 Elizabeth married as his second wife Sir John Paulet later Lord St John who outlived her 111 There were no children by this marriage Elizabeth s two eldest sons married John Paulet s daughters Henry Ughtred married the widowed Elizabeth after 1557 47 and Henry Cromwell married Mary sometime before 1560 70 Details of her later life remain obscure however she and her husband appear in the records from time to time in matters relating to her son Henry Cromwell s minority and suits for the continuation of royal grants at the commencement of each new reign 112 Death EditElizabeth died 19 March 1568 3 and was buried 5 April 3 4 in St Mary s Church Basing Hampshire 70 113 John Paulet Lord St John married before 30 September 1568 Winifred widow of Sir Richard Sackville and daughter of John Brydges a former Lord Mayor of London 114 He succeeded his father as Marquess of Winchester in 1572 115 Arms of Seymour EditIn the Seymour arms an augmentation of honour was granted to Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp later Earl of Hertford and Duke of Somerset following Henry VIII s marriage to Jane Seymour Or on a pile gules between six fleurs de lys azure three lions of England 116 117 Note the six fleurs de lis on the lady s left sleeve in the Holbein portrait at the head of the page 5 Augmentation of honour granted to the Seymours following Henry VIII s marriage to Jane Coat of arms of Queen Jane Seymour Coat of Arms of Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp following his sister Jane s marriage to Henry VIII in 1536 Coat of arms of Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset Arms of Seymour quartering the augmentation of honourPortraits EditIn 1909 British art historian Sir Lionel Cust then Director of the National Portrait Gallery in London identified a portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger that had belonged to the Cromwell family for centuries as a likeness of Queen Catherine Howard 5 118 119 Inscribed ETATIS SVAE 21 indicating that the sitter was depicted at the age of twenty one the portrait has long been associated with Henry VIII s young queen but the lady is now thought to be a member of the Cromwell family 2 5 120 121 The portrait shown on this page dated circa 1535 1540 is exhibited at the Toledo Museum of Art as Portrait of a Lady probably a Member of the Cromwell Family 1926 57 2 A sixteenth century version of the portrait at Hever Castle in Kent is exhibited as Portrait of a Lady thought to be Catherine Howard 5 118 The National Portrait Gallery exhibits a similar painting Unknown woman formerly known as Catherine Howard NPG 1119 121 dating from the late seventeenth century Art historian Sir Roy Strong following the lead of Charles Kingsley Adams 122 noted that both the Toledo portrait and the National Portrait Gallery version appear in the context of a series of portraits of members of the family of the Protector s uncle Sir Oliver Cromwell c 1562 1655 and have provenances linking them with the Cromwell family He argued that the portrait in the Toledo Museum of Art should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c 1535 40 and suggested that the lady might be Elizabeth Seymour wife of Gregory Cromwell 1st Baron Cromwell son of Thomas Cromwell Earl of Essex 120 He stated that a dated parallel for costume notably the distinctive cut of the sleeves is Holbein s Christina of Denmark of 1538 123 Herbert Norris claimed that the sitter is wearing a sleeve which follows a style set by Anne of Cleves 124 which would date the portrait to after 6 January 1540 when Anne s marriage to Henry VIII took place 125 Historians Antonia Fraser and Derek Wilson believe that the portrait is very likely to depict Elizabeth Seymour 126 127 Antonia Fraser has argued that the sitter is Jane Seymour s sister Elizabeth the widow of Sir Anthony Ughtred d 1534 on the grounds that the lady bears a resemblance to Jane especially around the nose and chin and wears widow s black 126 The lady s sumptuous black clothing an indication of wealth and status did not necessarily signify mourning her jewellery suggests otherwise Derek Wilson observed that In August 1537 Cromwell succeeded in marrying his son Gregory to Elizabeth Seymour the queen s younger sister He was therefore related by marriage to the king an event worth recording for posterity by a portrait of his daughter in law 127 Lineage EditAncestors of Elizabeth Seymour Lady Cromwell16 Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall8 John Seymour of Stapleford17 Isabel Williams4 John Seymour of Wulfhall18 Sir John Croker of Lineham 128 9 Elizabeth Croker19 Elizabeth Fortescue2 Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall20 William Darrell10 Sir George Darrell of Littlecote21 Elizabeth Calston5 Elizabeth Darrell22 John Stourton 1st Baron Stourton11 Hon Margaret Stourton of Littlecote23 Margery Wadham1 Elizabeth Seymour24 Sir Roger Wentworth of Nettlestead12 Sir Philip Wentworth of Nettlestead25 Margaret Despenser6 Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead26 Sir John de Clifford 7th Lord Clifford13 Hon Mary Clifford27 Lady Elizabeth Percy3 Margaret Wentworth28 John Say14 Sir John Saye of Baas29 Maud 7 Anne Saye30 Sir Lawrence Cheyne15 Elizabeth Cheney31 Elizabeth CokayneReferences Edit Strong 1995 pp 78 81 pl 68 70 The portrait should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c 1535 40 a b c Portrait of a Lady probably a Member of the Cromwell Family c 1535 40 Hans Holbein the Younger Toledo Museum of Art Toledo Ohio Retrieved 25 March 2020 The painting belonged to the Cromwells for centuries so she was probably a member of that prominent family It has been suggested that she may be Elizabeth Seymour daughter in law of Henry s powerful government minister Thomas Cromwell and sister of Henry s third wife Jane Seymour a b c d e College of Arms 2012 p 63 a b c d Carthew II 1878 p 522 a b c d e f g h i j Fitzgerald 2019 a b c d Norton 2009 p 11 a b Beer 2004 Syvret 1832 pp 59 61 Soberton 2022 pp 247 248 a b Wagner amp Schmid 2012 p 1000 a b Starkey 2004 p 591 a b Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 15 21 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 16 1489Under the heading Rewards given on Saturday New Year s Day at Hampton Court anno xxxii appearing with other ladies of the royal household Lady Cromwell is granted 13s 4d a b Starkey 2004 pp 607 608 a b c d e Richardson Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011 p 111 Roskell amp Knightly 1993 a b c d e f g h i j k l Pollard 1897 pp 299 310 a b Seymour 1972 p 18 a b Aubrey 1862 p 375 376 John Seymour s monument gives his age as 60 This Knight departed this Lyfe at LX years of age the XXI day of December Anno 1536 Seymour 1972 pp 18 52 a b c Norton 2009 p 13 a b Aubrey 1862 p 377 Beer 2009 Pole 2008 p 481 a b Hawkyard 1982b a b c Hawkyard 1982c Seymour 1972 p 65 a b Burke III 1836 p 201 Andrews 1886 p 5 Machyn 1848 p 24 326 Shingle Hall is also listed as Shingey Shingley and Shinglehall in various sources Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011 p 82 Wood II 1846 pp 353 354 Wood II 1846 pp 355 356 Wood III 1846 pp 159 160 a b Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 5 686 Elizabeth presented the king with A fine shirt with a high collar as a new year s gift in 1532 Loades 2013 pp 96 97 Norton 2009 p 9 a b c d Syvret 1832 pp 59 60 Brown 2 2013 pp 162 163 Collins Yorkshire Fines 1511 15 1887 pp 24 30 Anthony Ughtred kt and Alianora his wife are listed under 1513 14 Hilary Term 5 Henry VIII a b MacMahon 2004 a b c Syvret 1832 pp 60 61 MacCarthy Morrogh 2016 p 395 a b c d e Thornton 2012 p 71 a b Fuidge 1981 a b Cokayne IV 1916 pp 332 333 a b Flower 1881 p 166 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 5 80 14 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 6 32 Soberton 2022 pp 95 96 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 10 601 Russell 2010 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 10 908 The imperial ambassador Chapuys in formed Charles V The day before the putain s condemnation he sent for Mrs Semel by the Grand Esquire and some others and made her come within a mile of his lodging where she is splendidly served by the King s cook and other officers She is most richly dressed One of her relations who dined with her on the day of the said condemnation told me that the King sent that morning to tell her that he would send her news at 3 o clock of the condemnation of the putain which he did by Mr Briant whom he sent in all haste To judge by appearances there is no doubt that he will take the said Semel to wife and some think the agreements and promises are already made Wriothesley 1875 p 68 Norton 2009 p 135 Norton 2009 pp 135 136 Wood II 1846 pp 353 354 Loades 2013 pp 95 97 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 12 2 97 Wood II 1846 pp 355 356 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 12 2 881 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 14 2 782 the same day he was married at Moretelacke Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 12 2 423 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 12 2 629 Cokayne III 1913 pp 557 558 a b Noble 1784 pp 8 9 a b MacCulloch 2018 pp 440 441 Henry was baptised 1 March probably at Hampton Court The Lady Mary gave forty shillings to the nurse and midwife as well as an expensive cup for my lady Outred Child a b c d e Wood II 1846 pp 357 358 Gregory and Elizabeth were married by 3 August 1537 and had two little boys by December 1539 Henry was born in 1538 and Edward in 1539 a b c d e Cokayne III 1913 p 558 N M S 1981 Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011 pp 604 a b Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry III 2011 pp 605 628 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 12 2 1060 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 13 2 732 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 13 1 384 74 Ellis third series III 1846 pp 192 194 The Priory House at Lewes in which they resided afterwards named The Lord s Place was destroyed by fire in the seventeenth century It lay a short distance to the south east of the present Southover Church a b Thomas Cromwell was the constable of Leeds Castle from January 1539 to 1540 Bindoff 1982 Gregory Cromwell was elected to the House of Commons as one of the knights of the shire for Kent and summoned to Parliament in April 1539 Hawkyard 1982a Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 15 611 37 Holinshed 1808 p 815 After his father s creation as Earl of Essex in April Gregory assumed the courtesy title of Lord Cromwell Wriothesley 1875 pp 116 117 Holinshed 1808 pp 815 816 a b Foxe V 1838 p 398 Holinshed 1808 p 816 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 15 804 Journal of the House of Lords 1 10 June 1540 Bindoff 1982 Schofield 2011 p 396 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 15 824 Ellis second series II 1827 pp 160 161 Wood III 1846 p 159 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 15 940 See Wood II 1846 pp 353 354 the widow Lady Ughtred s first letter to Thomas Cromwell Wood II 1846 pp 209 212 Lady Berkeley s letter to Thomas Cromwell after the death of her husband Thomas Berkeley 6th Baron Berkeley and Ellis II 1825 pp 67 68 Lady Rochford s letter to Thomas Cromwell after the execution of her husband George Boleyn Viscount Rochford Hall 1809 p 839 Holinshed 1808 p 817 Roper 2003 p 57 Sir Thomas More s family had been given the king s permission to do so And I beseech you good Mr Pope to be a mean unto his Highness that my daughter Margaret may be present at my burial The King is well contended already quoth Mr Pope that your wife children and other friends shall have free liberty to be present thereat Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 16 1489 Under the heading Rewards given on Saturday New Year s Day at Hampton Court anno xxxii appearing with other ladies of the royal household Lady Crumwell is granted 13s 4d a b Cokayne III 1913 pp 557 559 a b c Hawkyard 1982a Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 16 379 34 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 11 202 14 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 16 580 49 Strype II I 1822 p 36 Machyn 1848 p 7 317 Pevsner 2003 pp 198 288 plate 28 The monument to Gregory Cromwell which is to the left of the altar is said to be one of the finest examples of early English Renaissance sculpture in the country very grand and restrained Journal of the House of Lords 1 12 April 1552 a b Acts of the Privy Council IV 1552 1554 pp 33 43 62 a b c Wood III 1846 pp 260 262 Seymour 1972 p 365 a b Faris 1999 p 269 CPR Elizabeth I 1 1558 1560 p 83 Richardson Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011 p 111 112 Richardson Magna Carta Ancestry III 2011 p 311 Cokayne VIII 1898 p 173 MacCulloch 2018 pp 427 8 pl 8 9 Boutell 1863 p 243 a b Russell 2017 pp 385 387 Cust 1910 pp 193 199 a b Strong 1967 pp 278 281 The portrait should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c 1535 40 a b Unknown woman formerly known as Catherine Howard late 17th century National Portrait Gallery London Retrieved 25 March 2020 This portrait was previously identified as Catherine Howard fifth wife of Henry VIII The sitter is now thought to be a member of the Cromwell family perhaps Elizabeth Seymour c 1518 1568 sister of Henry VIII s third wife Jane Seymour and wife of Thomas Cromwell s son Gregory Adams 1964 pp 386 387 Strong 1967 p 281 Norris 1998 p 281 Wagner amp Schmid 2012 p 38 Anne of Cleves was queen consort from 6 January 9 July 1540 Until 1752 the year commenced on Lady Day 25 March a b Fraser 2002 p 386 a b Wilson 2006 p 215 Also known as Sir Robert Coker of Lydeard St Lawrence Attribution This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Lee Sidney ed 1897 Seymour Edward Dictionary of National Biography Vol 51 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 299 310 Retrieved 25 June 2015 Bibliography EditAdams Charles Kingsley September 1964 Portraiture Problems and Genealogy The Genealogists Magazine 14 11 382 388 Andrews William Frampton 1886 Memorial Brasses in Hertfordshire Churches Hertford Stephen Austin and Sons Aubrey John Jackson John Edward 1862 Wiltshire The Topographical Collections of John Aubrey F R S A D 1659 70 With Illustrations Corrected and enlarged by John Edward Jackson London UK Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society Beer Barrett L 2004 Jane nee Jane Seymour Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14647 Subscription or UK public library membership required 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 Bernard G W May 2011 2004 Seymour Thomas Baron Seymour of Sudeley Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25181 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bindoff S T 1982 Bindoff S T ed Cromwell Thomas by 1485 1540 of London Members The History of Parliament The House of Commons 1509 1558 Vol 1 Appendices constituencies members A C London UK Secker amp Warburg ISBN 0436042827 Boutell Charles 1863 A Manual of Heraldry Historical and Popular London Winsor amp Newton Brown William ed 2013 Yorkshire Deeds Vol 2 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108058414 Burke John 1836 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Enjoying Territorial Possessions or High Official Rank But Invested With Heritable Honours Vol III London UK Published for Henry Colburn by R Bentley Calendar of State Papers Spain British history ac uk Retrieved 9 February 2014 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Elizabeth I London UK H M S O 1939 Retrieved 19 April 2014 at HathiTrust Carthew G A 1878 The Hundred of Launditch and Deanery of Brisley in the County of Norfolk Evidences and Topographical Notes from public records Heralds Visitations Wills Court Rolls Old Charters Parish Registers Town books and Other Private Sources Digested and Arranged as Materials for Parochial Manorial and Family History Vol II Collected by G A Carthew Norwich UK Printed by Miller and Leavins Cokayne G E 1913 Gibbs Vicary Doubleday H Arthur eds The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol III London UK St Catherine Press Cokayne G E 2000 Gibbs Vicary Doubleday H A White Geoffrey H Warrand Duncan Lord Howard de Walden eds The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol III new ed Gloucester UK Alan Sutton Publishing pp 555 557 558 Cokayne G E 1916 Gibbs Vicary ed The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol IV London UK St Catherine Press Cokayne G E 1898 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol VIII Exeter William Pollard Colby Frederic Thomas ed 1872 The Visitation of the County of Devon in the Year 1620 Publications of the Harleian Society Vol VI Edited by Frederic Thomas Colby London UK Printed by Taylor and Co College of Arms 1829 S and R Bentley London 1829 Catalogue of the Arundel Manuscripts in the Library of the College of Arms William Henry Black With a preface signed C G Y i e Sir Charles George Young Rarebooksclub com published 20 May 2012 ISBN 9781236284259 Collins Francis ed 1887 Yorkshire Fines 1511 15 Feet of Fines of the Tudor period Yorks part 1 1486 1571 British history ac uk Retrieved 19 April 2014 Cust Lionel July 1910 A portrait of Queen Catherine Howard by Hans Holbein the Younger The Burlington Magazine 17 88 193 199 JSTOR 858358 Dasent John Roche ed 1892 First published HMSO 1892 Acts of the Privy Council of England New Series Vol IV 1552 1554 British history ac uk Retrieved 18 April 2014 Davids R L 1982 Bindoff S T ed Seymour Sir John 1473 74 1536 of Wolf Hall Wilts Members The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 10 March 2014 Ellis Henry 1825 Original Letters Illustrative of English History Second Series Vol II 2nd ed London UK Harding and Lepard Ellis Henry 1827 Original Letters Illustrative of English History Second Series Vol II London UK Harding and Lepard Ellis Henry 1846 Original Letters Illustrative of English History third series Vol III London UK RichardBentley Faris David 1999 Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth Century Colonists The Descent from the Later Plantagenet Kings of England Henry III Edward I Edward II and Edward III of Emigrants from England and Wales to the North American Colonies Before 1701 2nd ed Boston MA New England Historic Genealogical Society ISBN 0880821078 Fitzgerald Teri 18 August 2019 All that Glitters Hans Holbein s Lady of the Cromwell Family queenanneboleyn com Retrieved 5 October 2019 Fitzgerald Teri MacCulloch Diarmaid 2016 Gregory Cromwell two portrait miniatures by Hans Holbein the Younger The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 67 3 587 601 doi 10 1017 S0022046915003322 subscription required Flower William 1881 Norcliffe Charles Best ed The Visitation of Yorkshire in the Years 1563 and 1564 Made by William Flower Esquire Norroy king of Arms Publications of the Harleian Society Vol XVI Edited by Charles Best Norcliffe London UK Mitchell and Hughes Printers Foxe John 1838 Cattley S R ed The Acts and Monuments of John Foxe Vol V Fraser Antonia 2002 The Six Wives of Henry VIII London UK Phoenix ISBN 978 1 8421 2633 2 Fuidge N M 1981 Hasler P W ed Ughtred Henry by 1534 aft October 1598 of Southampton and Ireland Members The History of Parliament The House of Commons 1558 1603 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 19 April 2014 Hall Edward 1809 Hall s chronicle Containing the History of England During the Reign of Henry the Fourth and the Succeeding Monarchs to the End of the Reign of Henry the Eighth in Which are Particularly Described the Manners and Customs of Those Periods London UK J Johnson F C and J Rivington T Payne Wilkie and Robinson Longman Hurst Rees and Orme Cadell and Davies and J Mawman Hawkyard A D K 1982 Bindoff S T ed Cromwell Gregory by 1516 51 of Lewes Suss Leeds Castle Kent and Launde Leics Members The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 19 April 2014 Hawkyard A D K 1982 Bindoff S T ed Seymour Sir Henry by 1503 78 of Marwell Hants Members The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 10 March 2014 Hawkyard A D K 1982 Bindoff S T ed Seymour Sir Thomas II by 1509 49 of Bromham Wilts Seymour Place London and Sudeley Castle Glos The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1509 1558 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 10 March 2014 Holinshed Raphael 1808 Holinshed s Chronicles of England Scotland and Ireland Vol 3 England London UK J Johnson et al Journal of the House of Lords British history ac uk Retrieved 19 April 2014 Leithead Howard 2008 2004 Cromwell Thomas Earl of Essex Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 6769 Subscription or UK public library membership required Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 1509 1547 British History Online Lipscomb Suzannah April 2013 Why Did Anne Boleyn Have to Die BBC History Magazine 14 4 18 24 Loades David 2013 Jane Seymour Henry VIII s Favourite Wife hardback Stroud UK Amberley ISBN 9781445611570 MacCarthy Morrogh Michael 2016 July 1983 The Munster Plantation 1583 1641 PDF PhD Ann Arbor 10097527 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Machyn Henry 1848 Nichols John Gough ed The Diary of Henry Machyn Citizen and Merchant Taylor of London from A D 1550 to A D 1563 Camden Society Publications Vol XLII Edited by John Gough Nichols London UK Camden Society by J B Nichols and Son MacCulloch Diarmaid 2018 Thomas Cromwell A Life London Allen Lane ISBN 9780141967660 MacMahon Luke 2004 Ughtred Sir Anthony Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27979 Subscription or UK public library membership required Nichols John Gough ed 1846 Chronicle of Calais in the Reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII to the Year 1540 Camden Society Publications Vol 35 London UK Camden Society by J B Nichols and Son N M S 1981 Hasler P W ed Cromwell Thomas c 1540 c 1611 of King s Lynn Norf The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 4 March 2014 Noble Mark 1784 Memoirs of Several Persons and Families Who by Females are Allied to or Descended from the Protectorate House of Cromwell Birmingham UK Pearson and Rollason p 8 Norris Herbert 1998 Tudor Costume and Fashion With a new introduction written by Richard Martin new ed New York Dover Publications ISBN 0486298450 Norton Elizabeth 2009 Jane Seymour Henry VIII s True Love hardback Chalford UK Amberley Publishing ISBN 9781848681026 Pevsner Nikolaus Williamson Elizabeth Brandwood Geoffrey K 2003 The Buildings of England Leicestershire and Rutland hardback 2nd ed New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09618 6 Pole Reginald Mayer Thomas F Walters Courtney B 2008 A Biographical Companion The British Isles hardback The Correspondence of Reginald Pole Vol 4 Thomas F Mayer and Courtney B Walters St Andrews Studies in Reformation History Aldershot UK Ashgate Publishing ISBN 9780754603290 Pollard Albert Frederick 1897 Seymour Edward 1506 1552 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 51 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 299 310 25159 Richardson Douglas 2011 Everingham Kimball G ed Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Vol III 2nd ed CreateSpace ISBN 978 1461045205 Richardson Douglas 2011 Everingham Kimball G ed Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Vol III 2nd ed CreateSpace ISBN 978 1461045137 Roper William 2003 Wegemer Gerard B Smith Stephen W eds The Life of Sir Thomas More c 1556 PDF Center for Thomas More Studies Roskell J S Knightly Charles 1993 Roskell J S Clark C Rawcliffe eds Sturmy Esturmy Sir William c 1356 1427 of Wolf Hall in Great Bedwyn Wilts and Elvetham Hants Members The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1386 1421 Historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 11 March 2014 Russell Gareth 14 May 2010 14 May 1536 Mistress Seymour s New Lodgings Confessions of a Ci Devant Garethrussellcidevant blogspot com au Retrieved 3 April 2014 Russell Gareth 2017 Young and Damned and Fair the Life of Catherine Howard London William Collins ISBN 9780008128296 Schofield John 2011 The Rise amp Fall of Thomas Cromwell Henry VIII s Most Faithful Servant The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 5866 3 Seymour William 1972 Ordeal by Ambition An English Family in the Shadow of the Tudors London UK Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 028397866X Soberton Sylvia Barbara 2022 Ladies In Waiting Women Who Served Anne Boleyn Golden Age Publishing ISBN 9798826326022 Starkey David 2004 Six Wives The Queens of Henry VIII London UK Vintage ISBN 9780099437246 Strong Roy May 1967 Holbein in England I and II The Burlington Magazine 109 770 276 281 JSTOR 875299 Strong Roy 1995 The Tudor and Stuart Monarchy Pageantry Painting Iconography Vol I Tudor Woodbridge UK The Boydell Press ISBN 085115400X Strype John 1822 Ecclesiastical Memorials Vol II Oxford UK Clarendon Press Syvret George S Carteret Samuel de 1832 Chroniques des Iles de Jersey Guernesey Auregny et Serk in French Auquel on a ajoute un Abrege Historique des dites Iles par Samuel de Carteret Guernesey de l imprimerie de Thomas James Mauger Thornton Tim 2012 The Channel Islands 1370 1640 Between England and Normandy Woodbridge UK The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 711 4 Wagner John A Schmid Susan Walters 2012 Encyclopedia of Tudor England hardback Vol 3 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 9781598842982 Wilson Derek 2006 Hans Holbein Portrait of an Unknown Man revised ed London UK Random House ISBN 9781844139187 Wood Mary Anne Everett ed 1846 Letters of Royal and Illustrious Ladies of Great Britain from the Commencement of the Twelfth Century to the Close of the Reign of Queen Mary Vol II London UK Henry Colburn Wood Mary Anne Everett ed 1846 Letters of Royal and Illustrious Ladies of Great Britain from the Commencement of the Twelfth Century to the Close of the Reign of Queen Mary Vol III London UK Henry Colburn Wriothesley Charles 1875 Hamilton William Douglas ed A Chronicle Of England During The Reigns Of The Tudors From A D 1485 To 1559 I Camden Society New Series Vol XI London UK Camden Society External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elizabeth Seymour Lady Cromwell Teri Fitzgerald All that Glitters Hans Holbein s Lady of the Cromwell Family Portrait of a Lady probably a Member of the Cromwell Family at the Toledo Museum of Art Unknown Woman Formerly Known as Catherine Howard at the National Portrait Gallery London St Mary s Church Basing Paulet monuments Letter from Gregory Cromwell to his wife Elizabeth Lady Ughtred s letters to Thomas Cromwell Elizabeth Lady Cromwell s letter to Henry VIII Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth Seymour Lady Cromwell amp oldid 1139562718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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