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Francis Lovell, 1st Viscount Lovell

Francis Lovell, 9th Baron Lovell, 6th Baron Holand, later 1st Viscount Lovell, KG (1456 – probably 1487) was an English nobleman who was an ally of King Richard III during the War of the Roses. Sir William Catesby, Sir Richard Ratcliffe and he were among Richard's closest supporters, famously called "the Cat, the Rat and Lovell our dog" in an anti-Ricardian squib. In addition to being an ally, Lovell is described as Richard's best friend.[1]

Arms of Sir Francis Lovell, 1st Viscount Lovell, KG

Lovell continued the Yorkist resistance into the early years of Henry VII's reign, but his fate is unknown after he disappeared following the final defeat of the Yorkists at the Battle of Stoke Field in 1487.

Early life Edit

Francis was the son of John Lovell, 8th Baron Lovel, and Joan Beaumont, daughter of John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont. When his father died, the probably eight-year-old[2][3][4] Francis inherited the titles of Baron Lovel and Baron Holand. He became a ward of Edward IV of England, who gave him into the charge of Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick,[5] where Edward's youngest brother Richard, Duke of Gloucester, also spent some time. It may have been there that the two young men first formed their close association.[6]

By 1466, he was married to Anne FitzHugh,[2] daughter of Henry FitzHugh, 5th Baron FitzHugh. They had a daughter named Agnes and a son whose name is unknown.[7] Neither child seems to have survived past the age of four. FitzHugh had married the Earl of Warwick's sister Alice Neville and supported Warwick's rebellion against Edward IV in 1470. As the pardon issued to Henry, Lord FitzHugh includes Francis Lovell it can be assumed that Francis lived with his father-in-law at this time.[8] When Edward IV had re-established his rule in 1471, he granted the wardship of Francis Lovell, who was still underage, to his sister Elizabeth and her husband John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk.[9]

Upon the death of his paternal grandmother Alice Deincourt in 1474 he inherited a large estate, including the lands of the baronies of Deincourt, Grey of Rotherfield, and the feudal barony of Bedale, long a possession of the Stapleton family. The arms of these families all appear on his Garter stall plate in St George's Chapel, and in stained glass windows at Carlton Towers. He was now one of the wealthiest barons in England not holding an Earldom or Dukedom.[6]

Follower of Richard III Edit

Lovell became a follower of his friend, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, to whom he was also linked through their respective marriages: his wife, Anne FitzHugh was the first cousin of Richard's wife Anne Neville. Lovell served under Richard in the expedition to Scotland in 1482, and was knighted by Richard for it, the same year. After the death of Edward IV on 9 April 1483 he became one of his patron's strongest supporters,[10] though he seems not to have taken an active political part in the proceedings at that time. He had been created a viscount on 4 January 1483, and while still Lord Protector Richard made him Chief Butler and constable of Wallingford Castle.[11]

Richard acceded to the throne on 26 June 1483; at his coronation on 6 July 1483, Francis Lovell bore the third sword of state.[12] His wife, Anne, was part of the coronation train of the new queen along with her mother, Lady FitzHugh, and sister, Lady Elizabeth Parr.[13] Lovell was promoted to the office of Lord Chamberlain, replacing the late William Hastings,[14] and was made a Knight of the Garter in 1483.[15] Lovell helped in the suppression of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham's rebellion (1483).

In July 1484, William Collingbourne, a Tudor agent, tacked up a lampooning poem at St Paul's Cathedral, which mentions Lovell, whose family's heraldic symbol was a silver wolf,[16][17] among the three aides to King Richard, whose emblem was a white boar:

The Catte, the Ratte and Lovell our dogge
Rulyth all Englande under a hogge.

The poem was interpolated into Laurence Olivier's film Richard III, a screen adaptation of Shakespeare's play.

Bosworth and aftermath Edit

In June 1485, Lovell was appointed to guard the south coast to prevent the landing of Henry Tudor.[18] However, Henry Tudor landed in Wales near Milford Haven avoiding the stronger defences of the English south coast. While no chronicle account of the battle mentions Lovell, it seems certain that he fought for Richard at the Battle of Bosworth Field (22 August 1485). Two reports written in the immediate aftermath of the battle list him as among the fallen.[19] In fact, he escaped. After the battle, Lovell fled to sanctuary at Colchester and from there escaped the following year to organise a revolt in Yorkshire that attempted to seize Henry VII. After the failure of this plot, Lovell tried seizing Henry VII in York by himself,[20] and is believed to have been behind an attempted assassination of Henry in York. After the failure of both these attempts, he first joined fellow rebels at Furness Fells, and later fled to Margaret of York in Flanders.[21]

As a chief leader of the Yorkist party, Lovell took a prominent part in Lambert Simnel's enterprise. With John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, he accompanied the pretender to Ireland and fought for him at the Battle of Stoke Field on 16 June 1487. He was seen escaping from the battle[10] and may have eventually fled to Scotland, where on 19 June 1488 James IV issued a safe conduct to him.[18] There is, however, no indication that Lovell ever arrived or lived in Scotland, and no further information about his fate.[22]

Lovell's wife, Anne Fitzhugh, was granted an annuity of £20 in 1489.[23] She was still alive in 1495; the date of her death is not known.[24]

Later reports about his death Edit

 
Plaque to Francis Lovell at Mottram in Longendale. The date of his death is unknown, and may have been after 1487.
 
Spire of All Hallows' Church, Gedling

Francis Bacon relates that according to one report he lived long afterward in a cave or vault.[10][25]

More than 200 years later, in 1708, the skeleton of a man was found in a secret chamber in the family mansion at Minster Lovell in Oxfordshire, and it was supposed that Lovell had hidden himself there and died of starvation.[10][26] While this story is very picturesque, it seems unlikely to be true. Lovell had hardly spent any time at Minster Lovell, and would not have had a faithful servant there who would hide him for years. Additionally, the manor had been granted to Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford, Henry Tudor's uncle,[27] and was therefore hardly an appropriate hiding place for Francis Lovell.[28]

On the Nottinghamshire History website, a reference is made to the Transactions of the Thoroton Society and the Society's visit on 30 June 1903 to All Hallows' Church, Gedling, Nottinghamshire. It notes that there were only three pre-Reformation sepulchral slabs:

The third slab, an alabaster one, lies at the south end of the altar-table. A few lines in black wax constitute the remains of an inscription and effigy of a knight of the 15th century. The late Mr. Lawson Lowe, of Chepstow, said in December, 1882, that when he visited the church in 1865, the date could be made out, and he thought the effigy might be that of a knight who fought at the battle of Stoke, near Newark, in 1487.

Gedling Church and Stoke Bardolph Castle, the ancestral home of Joan Bardolph who was Francis's great-grandmother, lie just a few miles away from the battlefield of Stoke. It is feasible that Francis attempted to escape across the river at the Fiskerton shallows but was either killed or died later of his wounds, his body being buried under the flagstones in the Gedling Church in order to prevent the certain fate of then being 'hung, drawn and quartered'.[29]

See also Edit

References Edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lovell, Francis Lovell". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 71.
  • Archbold, W.A.J. (1893). "Francis Lovell, Viscount Lovell (1454-1487?)". Dictionary of National Biography. 34: 172–173.
  • Ross, Charles (1981). Richard III. ISBN 9780520045897.
  • Williams, Joanna M. (1990). "The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell (1456–?)" (PDF). The Ricardian. 8 (109): 382–402. ISSN 0048-8267.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Ross, p.159
  2. ^ a b Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1467-1477
  3. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls 1476–1485 pp. 14, 62
  4. ^ Williams 1990, p. 382.
  5. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1467-1477, p. 51.
  6. ^ a b Ross, p. 49.
  7. ^ The Stonor letters and papers, 1290-1483; ed. For the Royal historical society, from the origial documents in the Public record office, by Charles Lethbridge Kingsford. 2006.
  8. ^ Pollard, A.J., "Lord FitzHugh’s Rising in 1470", BIHR 53 (1979), p. 170-171.
  9. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1467-1477, pp. 261, 312.
  10. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911.
  11. ^ R. Horrox and P. Hammond (eds.), British Library Manuscript. 433 (Gloucester, 1983), vol. iii, p. 3-4.
  12. ^ Anne F. Sutton and P.W. Hammond (eds.), The Coronation of Richard III. The Extant Documents (Gloucester, 1983), p. 37.
  13. ^ Michèle Schindler. Lovell Our Dogge: The Life of Viscount Lovell, Closest Friend of Richard III and Failed Regicide, 2019 Google eBook
  14. ^ Rosemary Horrox, Richard III, p. 249.
  15. ^ Complete Peerage, vol. ii, Appendix B.
  16. ^ Robert Fabyan, The New Chronicles of England and France in to Parts (London, 1811), p. 672.
  17. ^ Fields, Bertram. Royal Blood: Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes. 2000
  18. ^ a b Horrox, Rosemary. "Lovell, Francis". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17058. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  19. ^ M. Bennett, The Battle of Bosworth (Stroud, 1993), p. 155.
  20. ^ Roger Lockyer, Andrew Trush, "Henry VII"
  21. ^ J. Williams, 'The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell. 1456-?', The Ricardian 8 (1990), pp. 393-94.
  22. ^ Joanna M. Williams, "The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell (1456–?)"
  23. ^ J.G. Gairdner (ed.), Letters and Papers of the Reign of Richard III and Henry VII, RS 24 (London, 1861), vol. ii, p. 71.
  24. ^ J. Williams, p. 397.
  25. ^ Lumby, Joseph Rawson ed. History of Henry VII, p. 37
  26. ^ For the discovery at Minster Lovell see Notes and Queries, 2nd series i. and 5th series x; F. Peck, Memoirs of Oliver Cromwell, p. 87, cited after A.J. Taylor, Minster Lovell Hall. Oxfordshire (English Heritage)(1958), p. 19.
  27. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1485-1494, p. 64.
  28. ^ https://sparkypus.com/2020/06/24/minster-lovell-hall-home-to-francis-lovell-viscount-lovell. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  29. ^ Whitbread, Richard (1903). "Gedling church". Transactions of the Thoroton Society X. nottshistory.org.uk. Retrieved 20 April 2018.
Political offices
Preceded by Lord Chamberlain
1483–1485
Succeeded by

francis, lovell, viscount, lovell, francis, lovell, baron, lovell, baron, holand, later, viscount, lovell, 1456, probably, 1487, english, nobleman, ally, king, richard, during, roses, william, catesby, richard, ratcliffe, were, among, richard, closest, support. Francis Lovell 9th Baron Lovell 6th Baron Holand later 1st Viscount Lovell KG 1456 probably 1487 was an English nobleman who was an ally of King Richard III during the War of the Roses Sir William Catesby Sir Richard Ratcliffe and he were among Richard s closest supporters famously called the Cat the Rat and Lovell our dog in an anti Ricardian squib In addition to being an ally Lovell is described as Richard s best friend 1 Arms of Sir Francis Lovell 1st Viscount Lovell KGLovell continued the Yorkist resistance into the early years of Henry VII s reign but his fate is unknown after he disappeared following the final defeat of the Yorkists at the Battle of Stoke Field in 1487 Contents 1 Early life 2 Follower of Richard III 3 Bosworth and aftermath 4 Later reports about his death 5 See also 6 References 7 NotesEarly life EditFrancis was the son of John Lovell 8th Baron Lovel and Joan Beaumont daughter of John Beaumont 1st Viscount Beaumont When his father died the probably eight year old 2 3 4 Francis inherited the titles of Baron Lovel and Baron Holand He became a ward of Edward IV of England who gave him into the charge of Richard Neville 16th Earl of Warwick 5 where Edward s youngest brother Richard Duke of Gloucester also spent some time It may have been there that the two young men first formed their close association 6 By 1466 he was married to Anne FitzHugh 2 daughter of Henry FitzHugh 5th Baron FitzHugh They had a daughter named Agnes and a son whose name is unknown 7 Neither child seems to have survived past the age of four FitzHugh had married the Earl of Warwick s sister Alice Neville and supported Warwick s rebellion against Edward IV in 1470 As the pardon issued to Henry Lord FitzHugh includes Francis Lovell it can be assumed that Francis lived with his father in law at this time 8 When Edward IV had re established his rule in 1471 he granted the wardship of Francis Lovell who was still underage to his sister Elizabeth and her husband John de la Pole 2nd Duke of Suffolk 9 Upon the death of his paternal grandmother Alice Deincourt in 1474 he inherited a large estate including the lands of the baronies of Deincourt Grey of Rotherfield and the feudal barony of Bedale long a possession of the Stapleton family The arms of these families all appear on his Garter stall plate in St George s Chapel and in stained glass windows at Carlton Towers He was now one of the wealthiest barons in England not holding an Earldom or Dukedom 6 Follower of Richard III EditLovell became a follower of his friend Richard Duke of Gloucester to whom he was also linked through their respective marriages his wife Anne FitzHugh was the first cousin of Richard s wife Anne Neville Lovell served under Richard in the expedition to Scotland in 1482 and was knighted by Richard for it the same year After the death of Edward IV on 9 April 1483 he became one of his patron s strongest supporters 10 though he seems not to have taken an active political part in the proceedings at that time He had been created a viscount on 4 January 1483 and while still Lord Protector Richard made him Chief Butler and constable of Wallingford Castle 11 Richard acceded to the throne on 26 June 1483 at his coronation on 6 July 1483 Francis Lovell bore the third sword of state 12 His wife Anne was part of the coronation train of the new queen along with her mother Lady FitzHugh and sister Lady Elizabeth Parr 13 Lovell was promoted to the office of Lord Chamberlain replacing the late William Hastings 14 and was made a Knight of the Garter in 1483 15 Lovell helped in the suppression of Henry Stafford 2nd Duke of Buckingham s rebellion 1483 In July 1484 William Collingbourne a Tudor agent tacked up a lampooning poem at St Paul s Cathedral which mentions Lovell whose family s heraldic symbol was a silver wolf 16 17 among the three aides to King Richard whose emblem was a white boar The Catte the Ratte and Lovell our doggeRulyth all Englande under a hogge The poem was interpolated into Laurence Olivier s film Richard III a screen adaptation of Shakespeare s play Bosworth and aftermath EditIn June 1485 Lovell was appointed to guard the south coast to prevent the landing of Henry Tudor 18 However Henry Tudor landed in Wales near Milford Haven avoiding the stronger defences of the English south coast While no chronicle account of the battle mentions Lovell it seems certain that he fought for Richard at the Battle of Bosworth Field 22 August 1485 Two reports written in the immediate aftermath of the battle list him as among the fallen 19 In fact he escaped After the battle Lovell fled to sanctuary at Colchester and from there escaped the following year to organise a revolt in Yorkshire that attempted to seize Henry VII After the failure of this plot Lovell tried seizing Henry VII in York by himself 20 and is believed to have been behind an attempted assassination of Henry in York After the failure of both these attempts he first joined fellow rebels at Furness Fells and later fled to Margaret of York in Flanders 21 As a chief leader of the Yorkist party Lovell took a prominent part in Lambert Simnel s enterprise With John de la Pole Earl of Lincoln he accompanied the pretender to Ireland and fought for him at the Battle of Stoke Field on 16 June 1487 He was seen escaping from the battle 10 and may have eventually fled to Scotland where on 19 June 1488 James IV issued a safe conduct to him 18 There is however no indication that Lovell ever arrived or lived in Scotland and no further information about his fate 22 Lovell s wife Anne Fitzhugh was granted an annuity of 20 in 1489 23 She was still alive in 1495 the date of her death is not known 24 Later reports about his death Edit nbsp Plaque to Francis Lovell at Mottram in Longendale The date of his death is unknown and may have been after 1487 nbsp Spire of All Hallows Church GedlingFrancis Bacon relates that according to one report he lived long afterward in a cave or vault 10 25 More than 200 years later in 1708 the skeleton of a man was found in a secret chamber in the family mansion at Minster Lovell in Oxfordshire and it was supposed that Lovell had hidden himself there and died of starvation 10 26 While this story is very picturesque it seems unlikely to be true Lovell had hardly spent any time at Minster Lovell and would not have had a faithful servant there who would hide him for years Additionally the manor had been granted to Jasper Tudor Duke of Bedford Henry Tudor s uncle 27 and was therefore hardly an appropriate hiding place for Francis Lovell 28 On the Nottinghamshire History website a reference is made to the Transactions of the Thoroton Society and the Society s visit on 30 June 1903 to All Hallows Church Gedling Nottinghamshire It notes that there were only three pre Reformation sepulchral slabs The third slab an alabaster one lies at the south end of the altar table A few lines in black wax constitute the remains of an inscription and effigy of a knight of the 15th century The late Mr Lawson Lowe of Chepstow said in December 1882 that when he visited the church in 1865 the date could be made out and he thought the effigy might be that of a knight who fought at the battle of Stoke near Newark in 1487 Gedling Church and Stoke Bardolph Castle the ancestral home of Joan Bardolph who was Francis s great grandmother lie just a few miles away from the battlefield of Stoke It is feasible that Francis attempted to escape across the river at the Fiskerton shallows but was either killed or died later of his wounds his body being buried under the flagstones in the Gedling Church in order to prevent the certain fate of then being hung drawn and quartered 29 See also EditList of people who disappeared Stafford and Lovell rebellionReferences Edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lovell Francis Lovell Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 71 Archbold W A J 1893 Francis Lovell Viscount Lovell 1454 1487 Dictionary of National Biography 34 172 173 Ross Charles 1981 Richard III ISBN 9780520045897 Williams Joanna M 1990 The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell 1456 PDF The Ricardian 8 109 382 402 ISSN 0048 8267 Notes Edit Ross p 159 a b Calendar of Patent Rolls 1467 1477 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1476 1485 pp 14 62 Williams 1990 p 382 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1467 1477 p 51 a b Ross p 49 The Stonor letters and papers 1290 1483 ed For the Royal historical society from the origial documents in the Public record office by Charles Lethbridge Kingsford 2006 Pollard A J Lord FitzHugh s Rising in 1470 BIHR 53 1979 p 170 171 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1467 1477 pp 261 312 a b c d Chisholm 1911 R Horrox and P Hammond eds British Library Manuscript 433 Gloucester 1983 vol iii p 3 4 Anne F Sutton and P W Hammond eds The Coronation of Richard III The Extant Documents Gloucester 1983 p 37 Michele Schindler Lovell Our Dogge The Life of Viscount Lovell Closest Friend of Richard III and Failed Regicide 2019 Google eBook Rosemary Horrox Richard III p 249 Complete Peerage vol ii Appendix B Robert Fabyan The New Chronicles of England and France in to Parts London 1811 p 672 Fields Bertram Royal Blood Richard III and the Mystery of the Princes 2000 a b Horrox Rosemary Lovell Francis Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17058 Subscription or UK public library membership required M Bennett The Battle of Bosworth Stroud 1993 p 155 Roger Lockyer Andrew Trush Henry VII J Williams The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell 1456 The Ricardian 8 1990 pp 393 94 Joanna M Williams The Political Career of Francis Viscount Lovell 1456 J G Gairdner ed Letters and Papers of the Reign of Richard III and Henry VII RS 24 London 1861 vol ii p 71 J Williams p 397 Lumby Joseph Rawson ed History of Henry VII p 37 For the discovery at Minster Lovell see Notes and Queries 2nd series i and 5th series x F Peck Memoirs of Oliver Cromwell p 87 cited after A J Taylor Minster Lovell Hall Oxfordshire English Heritage 1958 p 19 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1485 1494 p 64 https sparkypus com 2020 06 24 minster lovell hall home to francis lovell viscount lovell Retrieved 13 January 2023 Whitbread Richard 1903 Gedling church Transactions of the Thoroton Society X nottshistory org uk Retrieved 20 April 2018 Political officesPreceded byLord Hastings Lord Chamberlain1483 1485 Succeeded byWilliam Stanley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francis Lovell 1st Viscount Lovell amp oldid 1165415574, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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