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House of Seymour

Seymour, Semel or St. Maur, is the name of an English family in which several titles of nobility have from time to time been created, and of which the Duke of Somerset is the head.

Seymour
Coat of arms of the
Seymour Dukes of Somerset
CountryKingdom of England
United Kingdom
Founded11th century
FounderWido de St Maur
Current headJohn Seymour, 19th Duke of Somerset
Titles

Hertford branch:

Origins edit

The family was settled in Monmouthshire in the 13th century. The original form of the name, which was resumed by the dukes of Somerset from early in the 19th century to 1923, seems to have been St. Maur, of which William Camden says that Seymour was a later corruption. It appears that about the year 1240 Gilbert Marshal, Earl of Pembroke, assisted William St. Maur to wrest a place called Woundy (now Undy), near Caldicot in Monmouthshire, from the Welsh. Woundy and Penhow, at the latter of which he made his residence, were the property of Sir Richard St. Maur at the end of the 13th century, but they were lost by the family through the marriage of Sir Richard's great-great-granddaughter, the only child of John St. Maur, who died in 1359. John St. Maur's younger brother Roger married Cecily de Beauchamp (d.1393), one of the daughters and eventual co-heiresses of John III de Beauchamp, 2nd Baron Beauchamp (1306-1343), feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset, who brought to her husband the greater part of her father's extensive estates in Somerset, Devon, Buckinghamshire and Suffolk. The eldest son of this marriage was Sir William St. Maur (d.1390), or Seymour (the modernised form of the name appears to have come into use about this date), who was an attendant on the Black Prince, and who died in his mother's lifetime, leaving a son Roger St Maur (c.1366-1420), who inherited his grandmother's estates and added to them by his marriage with Maud Esturmy, daughter of Sir William Esturmy (died 1427) of Wolf Hall, Wiltshire.

According to Agnes Strickland:

Sir John Seymour, of Wolf-hall, Wiltshire, and Margaret Wentworth, daughter of Sir John Wentworth, of Nettlestead, in Suffolk. The Seymours were a family of country gentry who, like most holders of manorial rights, traced their ancestry to a Norman origin. One or two had been knighted in the wars of France, but their names had never emerged from the herald's visitation-rolls into historical celebrity. They increased their boundaries by fortunate alliances with heiresses, and the head of the family married into a collateral branch of the lordly line of Beauchamp. After that event, two instances are quoted of Seymours serving as high sheriff of Wilts. Through Margaret Wentworth, the mother of Jane Seymour, a descent from the blood-royal of England was claimed from an intermarriage with a Wentworth and a supposed daughter of Hotspur and lady Elizabeth Mortimer, grand-daughter to Lionel duke of Clarence. Few persons dared dispute a pedigree with Henry VIII., and Cranmer granted a dispensation for nearness of kin between Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour – rather a work of supererogation, since the parties could not be related within the forbidden degree. Although the royal kindred appears somewhat doubtful, yet it is undeniable that the sovereign of England gained by this alliance one brother in-law who bore the name of Smith, and another whose grandfather was a blacksmith at Putney.[1]

Sir John Seymour edit

During the next three or four generations the wealth and importance of the Seymours in the western counties increased, until in the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII Sir John Seymour of Wolf Hall became a personage of note in public affairs. He took an active part in suppressing the Cornish Rebellion of 1497; and afterwards attended Henry at the Field of the Cloth of Gold, and on the occasion of the emperor Charles V's visit to England in 1522. The eldest of his ten children was Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, the famous Protector in the reign of Edward VI; his third son was Thomas Seymour, Baron Seymour of Sudeley; and his eldest daughter Jane was third wife of King Henry VIII, and mother of Edward VI. The Protector was married twice; and, probably owing to the adultery of his first wife whom he repudiated about 1535, his titles and estates were entailed first on the issue of his second marriage with Anne, daughter of Sir Edward Stanhope.

The Protector's eldest surviving son by his first marriage, Sir Edward Seymour (died 1593), knight, of Berry Pomeroy, Devon, was father of Sir Edward Seymour (died 1613) who was created a baronet in 1611; and the baronetcy then descended for six generations from father to son, all of whom were named Edward, until, in 1750, on the failure of heirs of the Protector by his second marriage, Sir Edward Seymour, 6th baronet of Berry Pomeroy, succeeded to the dukedom of Somerset. The 3rd baronet, in whose time the family seat at Berry Pomeroy was plundered and burnt by the Roundheads, had a younger brother Henry (1612–1686), who was a close personal attendant of Prince Charles during the Civil War, and bore the prince's last message to his father, Charles I, before the latter's execution. Henry Seymour continued his service to Charles II in exile, and at the Restoration he received several valuable offices from the king. In 1669 he bought the estate of Langley in Buckinghamshire, where he lived till his death in 1686. In 1681, his son Henry, at the age of seven years, was created a baronet.

Family tree edit

Sir Edward Seymour, 4th Baronet edit

Sir Edward Seymour, 4th Baronet (1633–1708), speaker of the House of Commons, was elected member of parliament for Gloucester in 1661, and his influence at Court together with his natural abilities procured for him a position of weight in the House of Commons. He was appointed to the lucrative post of treasurer of the navy; and in 1667 he moved the impeachment of Lord Clarendon, which he carried to the House of Lords. In 1672 he was elected speaker, an office which he filled with distinction until 1679, when, having been unanimously re-elected to the chair, the king refused to confirm the choice of the Commons. On the accession of James II, Seymour courageously opposed the arbitrary measures of the Crown; and at the revolution he adhered to the Prince of Orange. In 1691 he became a lord of the treasury, but losing his place three years Later he took an active part in the Tory opposition to William's Whig ministers; and in later years he was not less hostile to those of Queen Anne, but owing to the ascendancy of Marlborough he lost all influence for some time before his death, which took place in 1708. Seymour was not less arrogant than his relative the proud Duke of Somerset; but he was described by Burnet as the ablest man of his party, the first speaker of the House of Commons that was not bred to the law; a graceful man, bold and quick, and of high birth. Sir Edward Seymour was twice married. By his first wife he had two sons, Edward, 5th baronet, whose son Edward became the 8th duke of Somerset, and William, who became a lieutenant-general; by his second wife, a daughter of Alexander Popham of Littlecote House, he had six sons, the eldest of whom, Popham, on succeeding to the estates of his mother's cousin, Edward, Earl of Conway, assumed the name of Conway in addition to that of Seymour. Popham was killed in a duel with Colonel Kirk in 1669, and his estates devolved on his next brother, Francis, who likewise assumed the name of Conway, and having been created Baron Conway in 1703 was the father of Francis Seymour Conway (1719–1794), created Marquess of Hertford in 1793, and of field-marshal Henry Seymour Conway.

Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford edit

The eldest son of the Protector's second marriage, Edward Seymour (1537–1621), was relieved by act of parliament in the reign of Queen Mary from the attainder passed on his father in 1551, and was created Baron Beauchamp and earl of Hertford in 1559. In 1560 he secretly married Lady Catherine Grey, second daughter of Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and sister of Lady Jane Grey, claimant of the crown as great-granddaughter of Henry VII, on whose death Catherine stood next in succession to the throne after Queen Elizabeth under the will of Henry VIII. On this account both parties to the marriage incurred the displeasure of Queen Elizabeth; they were imprisoned in the Tower of London, and the fact of their marriage, together with the legitimacy of their two sons, was denied. The eldest of these sons was Edward Seymour (1561–1612), styled Lord Beauchamp notwithstanding the question as to his legitimacy, who in 1608 obtained a patent declaring that, after his father's death he should become earl of Hertford. He, however, died before his father, leaving three sons, one of whom, William, became 2nd duke of Somerset; and another, Francis, was created Baron Seymour of Trowbridge in 1641. The latter had at first taken an active part in the opposition in the House of Commons to the government of Charles I, having been elected member for Wiltshire in 1620. He represented the same constituency in both the Short and the Long Parliaments; and he refused to pay ship money in 1639. When, however, the popular party proceeded to more extreme measures, Francis Seymour refused his support, and was rewarded by being raised to the peerage; he voted in the House of Lords against the attainder of Strafford, and in 1642 he joined Charles at York and fought on the royalist side throughout the Great Rebellion. He died in 1664. His grandson Francis, 3rd baron, succeeded to the dukedom of Somerset in 1675; and on the death of his nephew Algernon, 7th duke of Somerset, in 1750, the male line of the Protector by his second marriage became extinct, and the dukedom reverted to the elder line, the 6th baronet of Berry Pomeroy becoming 8th duke of Somerset.

Henry Seymour edit

Henry Seymour (1729–1805), a son of the 8th duke of Somerset's brother Francis, was elected to the House of Commons in 1763; in 1778 he went to France, and fixing his residence at Prunay, near Versailles, he became the lover of Madame du Barry, many of whose letters to him are preserved in Paris. He was twice married, and in addition to children by both wives he left an illegitimate daughter, Henriette Felicity, who married Sir James Doughty-Tichborne, by whom she was the mother of Roger Tichborne, impersonated in 1871 by the famous impostor Arthur Orton.

Lord Hugh Seymour edit

Lord Hugh Seymour (1759–1801), a younger son of Francis Seymour-Conway, marquess of Hertford, was a distinguished naval officer who saw much active service especially under Lord Howe, in whose famous action on 1 June 1794 he took a conspicuous part. His son Sir George Francis Seymour (1787–1870), admiral of the fleet, began his naval career by serving under Nelson; in 1818 he became Sergeant-at-arms in the House of Lords, a post which he retained till 1841, when he was promoted to the rank of rear-admiral and appointed a lord of the admiralty; his eldest son, Francis George Hugh Seymour (1812–1884), succeeded his cousin Richard Seymour-Conway as 5th marquess of Hertford in 1870. Lord Hugh Seymour's younger son, Sir Horace Beauchamp Seymour, was the father of Frederick Beauchamp Paget Seymour, Baron Alcester.

Sir Michael Seymour edit

A younger branch of the great house of Seymour is said to have settled in Ireland in the reign of Elizabeth, from which Sir Michael Seymour, 1st Baronet (1768–1834) claimed descent. Sir Michael, like so many of his name, was an officer in the navy, in which he rendered much distinguished service in the last decade of the 18th century. He lost an arm in Howe's action on 1 June 1794; and between 1796 and 1810 as commander of the Spitfire, and afterwards of the Amethyst, he captured a great number of prizes from the French in the English Channel. In 1809 he was created a baronet (see Culme-Seymour baronets). Seymour became a rear-admiral in 1832, and died two years later while in chief command on the South American station. His son, Sir Michael Seymour (1802–1887), entered the navy in 1813, and attained the rank of rear-admiral in 1854, in which year he served under Sir Charles Napier in the Baltic Sea during the war with Russia. In 1856 he was in command of the China station, and conducted the operations arising out of the affair of the lorcha Arrow; he destroyed the Qing Chinese fleet in June 1857, took Canton in December, and in 1858 he captured the forts on the Pei Ho (Hai River), compelling the Chinese government to consent to the Treaty of Tientsin. In 1864 he was promoted to the rank of admiral. Admiral Sir Edward Hobart Seymour was the nephew of Sir Michael Seymour (1802–1887).

Descent of the estate edit

Esturmy edit

 
Arms of Esturmy

Wilhelmina, Duchess of Cleveland (1819–1901), in her 1889 work The Battle Abbey Roll with some Account of the Norman Lineages wrote about the Esturmy family, which held the estates of Tottenham, Wulfhall and the Savernake Forest.[2]

Sir William Esturmy (c. 1356 – 1427)[3]) was a Speaker of the House of Commons, a Knight of the Shire and an hereditary Warden of the royal forest of Savernake Forest. He was the son of Geoffrey Sturmy (died 1381) and nephew and heir of Sir Henry Sturmy of Wolfhall. He inherited in 1381 and was knighted by October 1388. He held the post of hereditary warden of Savernake Forest from 1381 to 1417 and from 1420 until his death in 1427. He served as knight of the shire for Hampshire in 1384 and again in 1390, and also eight times for Wiltshire and twice for Devon between then and 1422. He was elected Speaker of the House of Commons in 1404. He was appointed High Sheriff of Wiltshire for 1418. He held a number of public posts and served several times as an ambassador abroad. He married Joan Crawthorne, the widow of Sir John Beaumont of Shirwell and Saunton in North Devon, by whom he had no male progeny, only two daughters and co-heiresses including Maud Esturmy, wife of Roger II Seymour (c.1367/70-1420),[4] feudal barony of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset, by whom she had a son John Seymour (died 1464). He died at Wolfhall in 1427.

Seymour edit

 
Arms of Seymour

The Seymour family (anciently de St. Maur) is earliest recorded seated at Penhow Castle in Glamorgan in the 12th century. The parish church of Penhow is dedicated to St Maur.

Roger Seymour (c. 1367/70 – 1420), who married Maud Esturmy (alias Esturmi, etc.), a daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Esturmy (died 1427), of Wolfhall in Wiltshire, Speaker of the House of Commons and hereditary Warden of Savernake Forest in Wiltshire. Following his wife's inheritance, he moved his principal seat from Undy to Wolfhall.

His son and heir was Sir John Seymour (c. 1395/1402 – 1464), of Wulfhall in Savernake Forest, and of Hatch Beauchamp. He served as Member of Parliament in 1422 and Knight of the Shire for Wiltshire in 1435, 1439, and 1445[5] He was also High Sheriff of Wiltshire in 1431–1432.[6]

He was succeeded by John Seymour (died 1491), his grandson and heir; and then Sir John Seymour (1474–1536), the eldest son, knighted in 1497 after the Battle of Deptford Bridge, the father of Queen Jane Seymour (1508–1537).

John's eldest son and heir was Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, (c. 1500 – 1552), uncle of King Edward VI and Lord Protector of England. In 1536 he was created Viscount Beauchamp of Hache[7] and in 1537 was created Earl of Hertford. In 1531 he had served as Sheriff of Somerset and during this time he probably resided at Hache Court.[8] Thomas Gerard in his "Description of Somerset" (1633) wrote as follows:[9]

"The mansion house in which theis nobleman lived which I went to see is soe ruined that were it not called Hach Court you would not believe that it were any of the remaynes of a Barons house. yet I sawe in the Hall Beauchampes Armes and in a little Chappell on the top of the house Seymer's, Winges "Or" in a red shield, and going a little further to the church to see some monuments I find not one, the church having bin new built long since the Beauchamps time".

The Duke was executed in 1552 for felony on the order of his nephew King Edward VI, and was attainted by Parliament shortly thereafter when all his titles were forfeited.

It was probably Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford (1539–1621), son and heir of the 1st Duke, of nearby Wulfhall, who in about 1575 built the first Tottenham House, then known as Totnam Lodge, and enclosed its surrounding land to form a deer park.[10] The Seymours were hereditary Wardens of Savernake Forest, which office together with most of their Wiltshire estates had been inherited by marriage to the daughter and heiress of Sir William Esturmy (died 1427), of Wulfhall. They were also hereditary Wardens of the royal forest of Savernake.[citation needed] The house was still known as the Lodge in 1623, in which year the parish register of Great Bedwyn records the baptism of the 1st Earl's great-granddaughter Frances Seymour, which was performed "at the Lodge in the Great Parke by Henrie Taylor, Vicar of Great Bedwin".[11]

William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset (1587–1660), grandson, inherited the estates on the death of his grandfather the 1st Earl, his father having predeceased the latter. His grandson, William Seymour, 3rd Duke of Somerset (1652–1671) inherited at the age of 8 and died aged 19 when his heir became his uncle John Seymour, 4th Duke of Somerset (1629–1675). However, the heir to his estates in Hampshire, namely Netley Abbey (where the 1st Earl had died) and Hound[clarification needed], was his sister Elizabeth Seymour, wife of Thomas Bruce, 2nd earl of Ailesbury, which were soon sold in 1676 to the Marquess of Worcester.[citation needed]

John Seymour, 4th Duke of Somerset (1629–1675), uncle, inherited the estate in 1671 on the death of the 3rd Duke, and in 1672 he rebuilt Totnam Lodge and redesigned the deer park, which at that date included long tree-lined walks and a deer "chase".[12] He died in 1675, aged 46, only three years after having started the rebuilding. Being childless and faced with the dukedom passing by law to his first cousin once removed and heir male the 5th Duke, who was seated at Marlborough Castle in Wiltshire, he bequeathed the unentailed Seymour estates to his niece Elizabeth Seymour,[citation needed] the wife of Thomas Bruce, 2nd Earl of Ailesbury (1656–1741), and thus the Seymour estates passed to the Bruce family.

Bruce edit

 
Arms of Bruce

Elizabeth Seymour's son and heir was Charles Bruce, 3rd Earl of Ailesbury (died 1747), of Houghton House in the parish of Maulden, in Bedfordshire, who in 1721 rebuilt Totnam Lodge to the design of his brother-in-law the pioneering Palladian architect Lord Burlington. Henry Flitcroft was the executant architect.[13] The 3rd Earl added wings to Burlington's block in the 1730s, and also built in 1743 a Banqueting House in the park to the design of Burlington (demolished in 1824).[14] In 1746, one year before the death of the 3rd Earl, who had no son, it was apparent that on his death the Earldom of Ailesbury would become extinct and his other Earldom of Elgin would pass to a distant cousin and heir male. The former Seymour estates however he was free to dispose of as he pleased. He persuaded the king to create him Baron Bruce of Tottenham, with special remainder to his younger nephew Hon. Thomas Brudenell (1739–1814), 4th son of George Brudenell, 3rd Earl of Cardigan (1685–1732) by his wife Elizabeth Bruce, to whom he also bequeathed his estates with the proviso that he should adopt the additional surname of Bruce, thus having created a new noble family bearing doubly the Bruce name, to continue the custodianship of the Seymour lands.

Brudenell edit

 
Arms of Brudenell

On the 3rd Earl's death in 1747 his 8 year old nephew Thomas Brudenell duly became Thomas Brudenell-Bruce, 2nd Baron Bruce of Tottenham, having inherited the barony, the estates and the Wardenship of Savernake Forest. In 1776 King George III created him Earl of Ailesbury. In 1814 he was succeeded by his son Charles Brudenell-Bruce, 2nd Earl of Ailesbury (1773–1856).

Charles Brudenell-Bruce, 2nd Earl of Ailesbury (1773–1856) in 1818 added stables to the design of Thomas Cundy II. In 1821 he was granted three further titles, Viscount Savernake, Earl Bruce and Marquess of Ailesbury. In 1823–26 he enlarged and re-modelled the house, again to designs of Thomas Cundy.[15]

George Brudenell-Bruce succeeded to his father's titles in 1856. A large church for the estate, St Katherine's, was built 0.6 miles (1 km) north of the house in 1861 by T.H. Wyatt for the marchioness, Mary Caroline (née Herbert).[16]

References edit

  1. ^ Strickland, Agnes. [1843]. "Jane Seymour," in Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest. New York: Miller.
  2. ^ Powlett, Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina (1899). The Battle Abbey Roll: With Some Account of the Norman Lineages. J. Murray. p. 15. Retrieved 29 November 2015. esturny.
  3. ^ Easton Royal History 2011-10-04 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Loades, David (15 June 2015). "1: The Origins". The Seymours of Wolf Hall: A Tudor Family Story. ISBN 9781445635163.
  5. ^ J. S. Roskell, The Commons in the Parliament of 1422 (Manchester University Press), p. 126 (see footnotes)
  6. ^ Mervyn Archdall, The Peerage of Ireland, p. 16
  7. ^ Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.1036
  8. ^ Cookson
  9. ^ Quoted in Cookson
  10. ^ Historic England. "TOTTENHAM HOUSE AND SAVERNAKE FOREST, Burbage (1000472)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  11. ^ Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica, Volume 5 edited by Frederic Madden, Bulkeley Bandinel, John Gough Nichols, p.31 [1]
  12. ^ "Marquess of Ailesbury, 1962", quoted in
  13. ^ Rudolf Wittkower, in Architectural Journal 102 1945, noted in Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600–1840, 3rd ed. 1995, s.v. "Boyle, Richard, Earl of Burlington".
  14. ^ Colvin, "Boyle".
  15. ^ Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600–1840, 3rd ed. 1995, s.v. "Cundy, Thomas", "Wyatville, Sir Jeffry".
  16. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Katherine, Great Bedwyn (1183857)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 November 2015.

Further reading edit

Seymour, William. 1972. Ordeal by Ambition: An English Family in the Shadow of the Tudors. New York: St. Martin's.

Strickland, Agnes, and Antonia Fraser. 2011. Agnes Strickland's Lives of the Queens of England. New York: Continuum International Publishing Group.

house, seymour, seymour, semel, maur, name, english, family, which, several, titles, nobility, have, from, time, time, been, created, which, duke, somerset, head, seymourcoat, arms, theseymour, dukes, somersetcountrykingdom, englandunited, kingdomfounded11th, . Seymour Semel or St Maur is the name of an English family in which several titles of nobility have from time to time been created and of which the Duke of Somerset is the head SeymourCoat of arms of theSeymour Dukes of SomersetCountryKingdom of EnglandUnited KingdomFounded11th centuryFounderWido de St MaurCurrent headJohn Seymour 19th Duke of SomersetTitlesDuke of Somerset Baron Seymour Hertford branch Marquess of Hertford Earl of Yarmouth Contents 1 Origins 2 Sir John Seymour 2 1 Family tree 3 Sir Edward Seymour 4th Baronet 4 Edward Seymour 1st Earl of Hertford 5 Henry Seymour 6 Lord Hugh Seymour 7 Sir Michael Seymour 8 Descent of the estate 8 1 Esturmy 8 2 Seymour 8 3 Bruce 8 4 Brudenell 9 References 10 Further readingOrigins editThe family was settled in Monmouthshire in the 13th century The original form of the name which was resumed by the dukes of Somerset from early in the 19th century to 1923 seems to have been St Maur of which William Camden says that Seymour was a later corruption It appears that about the year 1240 Gilbert Marshal Earl of Pembroke assisted William St Maur to wrest a place called Woundy now Undy near Caldicot in Monmouthshire from the Welsh Woundy and Penhow at the latter of which he made his residence were the property of Sir Richard St Maur at the end of the 13th century but they were lost by the family through the marriage of Sir Richard s great great granddaughter the only child of John St Maur who died in 1359 John St Maur s younger brother Roger married Cecily de Beauchamp d 1393 one of the daughters and eventual co heiresses of John III de Beauchamp 2nd Baron Beauchamp 1306 1343 feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset who brought to her husband the greater part of her father s extensive estates in Somerset Devon Buckinghamshire and Suffolk The eldest son of this marriage was Sir William St Maur d 1390 or Seymour the modernised form of the name appears to have come into use about this date who was an attendant on the Black Prince and who died in his mother s lifetime leaving a son Roger St Maur c 1366 1420 who inherited his grandmother s estates and added to them by his marriage with Maud Esturmy daughter of Sir William Esturmy died 1427 of Wolf Hall Wiltshire According to Agnes Strickland Sir John Seymour of Wolf hall Wiltshire and Margaret Wentworth daughter of Sir John Wentworth of Nettlestead in Suffolk The Seymours were a family of country gentry who like most holders of manorial rights traced their ancestry to a Norman origin One or two had been knighted in the wars of France but their names had never emerged from the herald s visitation rolls into historical celebrity They increased their boundaries by fortunate alliances with heiresses and the head of the family married into a collateral branch of the lordly line of Beauchamp After that event two instances are quoted of Seymours serving as high sheriff of Wilts Through Margaret Wentworth the mother of Jane Seymour a descent from the blood royal of England was claimed from an intermarriage with a Wentworth and a supposed daughter of Hotspur and lady Elizabeth Mortimer grand daughter to Lionel duke of Clarence Few persons dared dispute a pedigree with Henry VIII and Cranmer granted a dispensation for nearness of kin between Henry VIII and Jane Seymour rather a work of supererogation since the parties could not be related within the forbidden degree Although the royal kindred appears somewhat doubtful yet it is undeniable that the sovereign of England gained by this alliance one brother in law who bore the name of Smith and another whose grandfather was a blacksmith at Putney 1 Sir John Seymour editDuring the next three or four generations the wealth and importance of the Seymours in the western counties increased until in the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII Sir John Seymour of Wolf Hall became a personage of note in public affairs He took an active part in suppressing the Cornish Rebellion of 1497 and afterwards attended Henry at the Field of the Cloth of Gold and on the occasion of the emperor Charles V s visit to England in 1522 The eldest of his ten children was Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset the famous Protector in the reign of Edward VI his third son was Thomas Seymour Baron Seymour of Sudeley and his eldest daughter Jane was third wife of King Henry VIII and mother of Edward VI The Protector was married twice and probably owing to the adultery of his first wife whom he repudiated about 1535 his titles and estates were entailed first on the issue of his second marriage with Anne daughter of Sir Edward Stanhope The Protector s eldest surviving son by his first marriage Sir Edward Seymour died 1593 knight of Berry Pomeroy Devon was father of Sir Edward Seymour died 1613 who was created a baronet in 1611 and the baronetcy then descended for six generations from father to son all of whom were named Edward until in 1750 on the failure of heirs of the Protector by his second marriage Sir Edward Seymour 6th baronet of Berry Pomeroy succeeded to the dukedom of Somerset The 3rd baronet in whose time the family seat at Berry Pomeroy was plundered and burnt by the Roundheads had a younger brother Henry 1612 1686 who was a close personal attendant of Prince Charles during the Civil War and bore the prince s last message to his father Charles I before the latter s execution Henry Seymour continued his service to Charles II in exile and at the Restoration he received several valuable offices from the king In 1669 he bought the estate of Langley in Buckinghamshire where he lived till his death in 1686 In 1681 his son Henry at the age of seven years was created a baronet Family tree edit Henry VII of England John SeymourMary Tudor Queen of FranceMargaret Tudor Queen of Scotland Catherine ParrHenry VIII of EnglandJane SeymourThomas Seymour 1st Baron Seymour of SudeleyEdward Seymour 1st Duke of SomersetFrances Grey Duchess of Suffolk Edward VI of EnglandEdward Seymour 1st Earl of HertfordLady Catherine GreyLady Jane Grey Dukes of SomersetMany GenerationsMany Generations Elizabeth Queen of the United KingdomGeorge VI of the United Kingdom Elizabeth II of the United KingdomSir Edward Seymour 4th Baronet editSir Edward Seymour 4th Baronet 1633 1708 speaker of the House of Commons was elected member of parliament for Gloucester in 1661 and his influence at Court together with his natural abilities procured for him a position of weight in the House of Commons He was appointed to the lucrative post of treasurer of the navy and in 1667 he moved the impeachment of Lord Clarendon which he carried to the House of Lords In 1672 he was elected speaker an office which he filled with distinction until 1679 when having been unanimously re elected to the chair the king refused to confirm the choice of the Commons On the accession of James II Seymour courageously opposed the arbitrary measures of the Crown and at the revolution he adhered to the Prince of Orange In 1691 he became a lord of the treasury but losing his place three years Later he took an active part in the Tory opposition to William s Whig ministers and in later years he was not less hostile to those of Queen Anne but owing to the ascendancy of Marlborough he lost all influence for some time before his death which took place in 1708 Seymour was not less arrogant than his relative the proud Duke of Somerset but he was described by Burnet as the ablest man of his party the first speaker of the House of Commons that was not bred to the law a graceful man bold and quick and of high birth Sir Edward Seymour was twice married By his first wife he had two sons Edward 5th baronet whose son Edward became the 8th duke of Somerset and William who became a lieutenant general by his second wife a daughter of Alexander Popham of Littlecote House he had six sons the eldest of whom Popham on succeeding to the estates of his mother s cousin Edward Earl of Conway assumed the name of Conway in addition to that of Seymour Popham was killed in a duel with Colonel Kirk in 1669 and his estates devolved on his next brother Francis who likewise assumed the name of Conway and having been created Baron Conway in 1703 was the father of Francis Seymour Conway 1719 1794 created Marquess of Hertford in 1793 and of field marshal Henry Seymour Conway Edward Seymour 1st Earl of Hertford editThe eldest son of the Protector s second marriage Edward Seymour 1537 1621 was relieved by act of parliament in the reign of Queen Mary from the attainder passed on his father in 1551 and was created Baron Beauchamp and earl of Hertford in 1559 In 1560 he secretly married Lady Catherine Grey second daughter of Henry Grey 1st Duke of Suffolk and sister of Lady Jane Grey claimant of the crown as great granddaughter of Henry VII on whose death Catherine stood next in succession to the throne after Queen Elizabeth under the will of Henry VIII On this account both parties to the marriage incurred the displeasure of Queen Elizabeth they were imprisoned in the Tower of London and the fact of their marriage together with the legitimacy of their two sons was denied The eldest of these sons was Edward Seymour 1561 1612 styled Lord Beauchamp notwithstanding the question as to his legitimacy who in 1608 obtained a patent declaring that after his father s death he should become earl of Hertford He however died before his father leaving three sons one of whom William became 2nd duke of Somerset and another Francis was created Baron Seymour of Trowbridge in 1641 The latter had at first taken an active part in the opposition in the House of Commons to the government of Charles I having been elected member for Wiltshire in 1620 He represented the same constituency in both the Short and the Long Parliaments and he refused to pay ship money in 1639 When however the popular party proceeded to more extreme measures Francis Seymour refused his support and was rewarded by being raised to the peerage he voted in the House of Lords against the attainder of Strafford and in 1642 he joined Charles at York and fought on the royalist side throughout the Great Rebellion He died in 1664 His grandson Francis 3rd baron succeeded to the dukedom of Somerset in 1675 and on the death of his nephew Algernon 7th duke of Somerset in 1750 the male line of the Protector by his second marriage became extinct and the dukedom reverted to the elder line the 6th baronet of Berry Pomeroy becoming 8th duke of Somerset Henry Seymour editHenry Seymour 1729 1805 a son of the 8th duke of Somerset s brother Francis was elected to the House of Commons in 1763 in 1778 he went to France and fixing his residence at Prunay near Versailles he became the lover of Madame du Barry many of whose letters to him are preserved in Paris He was twice married and in addition to children by both wives he left an illegitimate daughter Henriette Felicity who married Sir James Doughty Tichborne by whom she was the mother of Roger Tichborne impersonated in 1871 by the famous impostor Arthur Orton Lord Hugh Seymour editLord Hugh Seymour 1759 1801 a younger son of Francis Seymour Conway marquess of Hertford was a distinguished naval officer who saw much active service especially under Lord Howe in whose famous action on 1 June 1794 he took a conspicuous part His son Sir George Francis Seymour 1787 1870 admiral of the fleet began his naval career by serving under Nelson in 1818 he became Sergeant at arms in the House of Lords a post which he retained till 1841 when he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral and appointed a lord of the admiralty his eldest son Francis George Hugh Seymour 1812 1884 succeeded his cousin Richard Seymour Conway as 5th marquess of Hertford in 1870 Lord Hugh Seymour s younger son Sir Horace Beauchamp Seymour was the father of Frederick Beauchamp Paget Seymour Baron Alcester Sir Michael Seymour editA younger branch of the great house of Seymour is said to have settled in Ireland in the reign of Elizabeth from which Sir Michael Seymour 1st Baronet 1768 1834 claimed descent Sir Michael like so many of his name was an officer in the navy in which he rendered much distinguished service in the last decade of the 18th century He lost an arm in Howe s action on 1 June 1794 and between 1796 and 1810 as commander of the Spitfire and afterwards of the Amethyst he captured a great number of prizes from the French in the English Channel In 1809 he was created a baronet see Culme Seymour baronets Seymour became a rear admiral in 1832 and died two years later while in chief command on the South American station His son Sir Michael Seymour 1802 1887 entered the navy in 1813 and attained the rank of rear admiral in 1854 in which year he served under Sir Charles Napier in the Baltic Sea during the war with Russia In 1856 he was in command of the China station and conducted the operations arising out of the affair of the lorcha Arrow he destroyed the Qing Chinese fleet in June 1857 took Canton in December and in 1858 he captured the forts on the Pei Ho Hai River compelling the Chinese government to consent to the Treaty of Tientsin In 1864 he was promoted to the rank of admiral Admiral Sir Edward Hobart Seymour was the nephew of Sir Michael Seymour 1802 1887 Descent of the estate editEsturmy edit nbsp Arms of Esturmy Wilhelmina Duchess of Cleveland 1819 1901 in her 1889 work The Battle Abbey Roll with some Account of the Norman Lineages wrote about the Esturmy family which held the estates of Tottenham Wulfhall and the Savernake Forest 2 Sir William Esturmy c 1356 1427 3 was a Speaker of the House of Commons a Knight of the Shire and an hereditary Warden of the royal forest of Savernake Forest He was the son of Geoffrey Sturmy died 1381 and nephew and heir of Sir Henry Sturmy of Wolfhall He inherited in 1381 and was knighted by October 1388 He held the post of hereditary warden of Savernake Forest from 1381 to 1417 and from 1420 until his death in 1427 He served as knight of the shire for Hampshire in 1384 and again in 1390 and also eight times for Wiltshire and twice for Devon between then and 1422 He was elected Speaker of the House of Commons in 1404 He was appointed High Sheriff of Wiltshire for 1418 He held a number of public posts and served several times as an ambassador abroad He married Joan Crawthorne the widow of Sir John Beaumont of Shirwell and Saunton in North Devon by whom he had no male progeny only two daughters and co heiresses including Maud Esturmy wife of Roger II Seymour c 1367 70 1420 4 feudal barony of Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset by whom she had a son John Seymour died 1464 He died at Wolfhall in 1427 Seymour edit nbsp Arms of Seymour The Seymour family anciently de St Maur is earliest recorded seated at Penhow Castle in Glamorgan in the 12th century The parish church of Penhow is dedicated to St Maur Roger Seymour c 1367 70 1420 who married Maud Esturmy alias Esturmi etc a daughter and co heiress of Sir William Esturmy died 1427 of Wolfhall in Wiltshire Speaker of the House of Commons and hereditary Warden of Savernake Forest in Wiltshire Following his wife s inheritance he moved his principal seat from Undy to Wolfhall His son and heir was Sir John Seymour c 1395 1402 1464 of Wulfhall in Savernake Forest and of Hatch Beauchamp He served as Member of Parliament in 1422 and Knight of the Shire for Wiltshire in 1435 1439 and 1445 5 He was also High Sheriff of Wiltshire in 1431 1432 6 He was succeeded by John Seymour died 1491 his grandson and heir and then Sir John Seymour 1474 1536 the eldest son knighted in 1497 after the Battle of Deptford Bridge the father of Queen Jane Seymour 1508 1537 John s eldest son and heir was Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset c 1500 1552 uncle of King Edward VI and Lord Protector of England In 1536 he was created Viscount Beauchamp of Hache 7 and in 1537 was created Earl of Hertford In 1531 he had served as Sheriff of Somerset and during this time he probably resided at Hache Court 8 Thomas Gerard in his Description of Somerset 1633 wrote as follows 9 The mansion house in which theis nobleman lived which I went to see is soe ruined that were it not called Hach Court you would not believe that it were any of the remaynes of a Barons house yet I sawe in the Hall Beauchampes Armes and in a little Chappell on the top of the house Seymer s Winges Or in a red shield and going a little further to the church to see some monuments I find not one the church having bin new built long since the Beauchamps time dd The Duke was executed in 1552 for felony on the order of his nephew King Edward VI and was attainted by Parliament shortly thereafter when all his titles were forfeited It was probably Edward Seymour 1st Earl of Hertford 1539 1621 son and heir of the 1st Duke of nearby Wulfhall who in about 1575 built the first Tottenham House then known as Totnam Lodge and enclosed its surrounding land to form a deer park 10 The Seymours were hereditary Wardens of Savernake Forest which office together with most of their Wiltshire estates had been inherited by marriage to the daughter and heiress of Sir William Esturmy died 1427 of Wulfhall They were also hereditary Wardens of the royal forest of Savernake citation needed The house was still known as the Lodge in 1623 in which year the parish register of Great Bedwyn records the baptism of the 1st Earl s great granddaughter Frances Seymour which was performed at the Lodge in the Great Parke by Henrie Taylor Vicar of Great Bedwin 11 William Seymour 2nd Duke of Somerset 1587 1660 grandson inherited the estates on the death of his grandfather the 1st Earl his father having predeceased the latter His grandson William Seymour 3rd Duke of Somerset 1652 1671 inherited at the age of 8 and died aged 19 when his heir became his uncle John Seymour 4th Duke of Somerset 1629 1675 However the heir to his estates in Hampshire namely Netley Abbey where the 1st Earl had died and Hound clarification needed was his sister Elizabeth Seymour wife of Thomas Bruce 2nd earl of Ailesbury which were soon sold in 1676 to the Marquess of Worcester citation needed John Seymour 4th Duke of Somerset 1629 1675 uncle inherited the estate in 1671 on the death of the 3rd Duke and in 1672 he rebuilt Totnam Lodge and redesigned the deer park which at that date included long tree lined walks and a deer chase 12 He died in 1675 aged 46 only three years after having started the rebuilding Being childless and faced with the dukedom passing by law to his first cousin once removed and heir male the 5th Duke who was seated at Marlborough Castle in Wiltshire he bequeathed the unentailed Seymour estates to his niece Elizabeth Seymour citation needed the wife of Thomas Bruce 2nd Earl of Ailesbury 1656 1741 and thus the Seymour estates passed to the Bruce family Bruce edit nbsp Arms of Bruce Elizabeth Seymour s son and heir was Charles Bruce 3rd Earl of Ailesbury died 1747 of Houghton House in the parish of Maulden in Bedfordshire who in 1721 rebuilt Totnam Lodge to the design of his brother in law the pioneering Palladian architect Lord Burlington Henry Flitcroft was the executant architect 13 The 3rd Earl added wings to Burlington s block in the 1730s and also built in 1743 a Banqueting House in the park to the design of Burlington demolished in 1824 14 In 1746 one year before the death of the 3rd Earl who had no son it was apparent that on his death the Earldom of Ailesbury would become extinct and his other Earldom of Elgin would pass to a distant cousin and heir male The former Seymour estates however he was free to dispose of as he pleased He persuaded the king to create him Baron Bruce of Tottenham with special remainder to his younger nephew Hon Thomas Brudenell 1739 1814 4th son of George Brudenell 3rd Earl of Cardigan 1685 1732 by his wife Elizabeth Bruce to whom he also bequeathed his estates with the proviso that he should adopt the additional surname of Bruce thus having created a new noble family bearing doubly the Bruce name to continue the custodianship of the Seymour lands Brudenell edit nbsp Arms of Brudenell On the 3rd Earl s death in 1747 his 8 year old nephew Thomas Brudenell duly became Thomas Brudenell Bruce 2nd Baron Bruce of Tottenham having inherited the barony the estates and the Wardenship of Savernake Forest In 1776 King George III created him Earl of Ailesbury In 1814 he was succeeded by his son Charles Brudenell Bruce 2nd Earl of Ailesbury 1773 1856 Charles Brudenell Bruce 2nd Earl of Ailesbury 1773 1856 in 1818 added stables to the design of Thomas Cundy II In 1821 he was granted three further titles Viscount Savernake Earl Bruce and Marquess of Ailesbury In 1823 26 he enlarged and re modelled the house again to designs of Thomas Cundy 15 George Brudenell Bruce succeeded to his father s titles in 1856 A large church for the estate St Katherine s was built 0 6 miles 1 km north of the house in 1861 by T H Wyatt for the marchioness Mary Caroline nee Herbert 16 References edit Strickland Agnes 1843 Jane Seymour in Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest New York Miller Powlett Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina 1899 The Battle Abbey Roll With Some Account of the Norman Lineages J Murray p 15 Retrieved 29 November 2015 esturny Easton Royal History Archived 2011 10 04 at the Wayback Machine Loades David 15 June 2015 1 The Origins The Seymours of Wolf Hall A Tudor Family Story ISBN 9781445635163 J S Roskell The Commons in the Parliament of 1422 Manchester University Press p 126 see footnotes Mervyn Archdall The Peerage of Ireland p 16 Debrett s Peerage 1968 p 1036 Cookson Quoted in Cookson Historic England TOTTENHAM HOUSE AND SAVERNAKE FOREST Burbage 1000472 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 April 2015 Collectanea Topographica Et Genealogica Volume 5 edited by Frederic Madden Bulkeley Bandinel John Gough Nichols p 31 1 Marquess of Ailesbury 1962 quoted in Rudolf Wittkower in Architectural Journal 102 1945 noted in Howard Colvin A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 1840 3rd ed 1995 s v Boyle Richard Earl of Burlington Colvin Boyle Howard Colvin A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 1600 1840 3rd ed 1995 s v Cundy Thomas Wyatville Sir Jeffry Historic England Church of St Katherine Great Bedwyn 1183857 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 November 2015 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Seymour family Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 753 755 Further reading editSeymour William 1972 Ordeal by Ambition An English Family in the Shadow of the Tudors New York St Martin s Strickland Agnes and Antonia Fraser 2011 Agnes Strickland s Lives of the Queens of England New York Continuum International Publishing Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Seymour amp oldid 1220751176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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