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John Chichester (died 1569)

Sir John Chichester (1519/20-1569) of Raleigh in the parish of Pilton, near Barnstaple in North Devon, was a leading member of the Devonshire gentry, a naval captain, and ardent Protestant who served as Sheriff of Devon in 1550-1551, and as Knight of the Shire for Devon in 1547, April 1554, and 1563, and as Member of Parliament for Barnstaple in 1559, over which borough his lordship of the manor of Raleigh, Pilton had considerable influence.

Arms of Sir John Chichester shown within a strapwork surround from his monument in Pilton Church: Chequy or and gules, a chief vair

Origins edit

 
Small monumental brass (c. one ft high) in St Brannock's Church, Braunton, Devon, of Lady Elizabeth Bourchier (died 1548), daughter of John Bourchier, 1st Earl of Bath & wife of Edward Chichester (died 1522) of Raleigh, Pilton. She kneels at prayer before a prie dieu on which is an open book. Gothic text inscription under: "Here lyethe Lady Elyzabethe Bowcer daughter of John Erle of Bathe & sumtyme wyffe to Edwarde Chechester Esquyer the whyche Elyzabethe decessyd the XXXIIIth day of August in the yere of O_r Lorde God M Vc (i.e. 5*c) XLVIII apon whose soule God have m(er)cy". The brass is a palimpsest, engraved on the reverse is the face of a knight, with helmet unfinished, apparently containing an artistic error which led to its abandonment & reuse
 
Heraldic escutcheon on the monument to Sir John Chichester (died 1569) of Raleigh in Pilton Church, Devon. Showing arms of Chichester impaling Bourchier (Argent, a cross engrailed gules between four water bougets sable, here restored incorrectly as gules), representing the marriage of his parents

The Chichester family had been seated at the manor of Raleigh since the mid-14th. century. He was the son of Edward Chichester (died 27 July 1526) of Great Torrington, who predeceased his own father, also Sir John (1474-1537), by his wife Lady Elizabeth Bourchier (died 1548), whose small monumental brass exists in St Brannock's Church, Braunton, a daughter of John Bourchier, 1st Earl of Bath (1470–1539) whose seat was at Tawstock Court, 3 miles south of Raleigh. In the 16th and 17th centuries these two houses, Raleigh and the new Tawstock Court built in 1574, were probably the largest in North Devon.[1] He succeeded his grandfather in 1536.[2]

Career edit

As a young man he served in the Royal Navy, and in 1544 he was with King Henry VIII in France at the Siege of Boulogne. In 1545 he was captain of the ship Struce of Dansick under the command of Sir George Carew, a fellow Devonian. He was in London on the outbreak of the Western Rebellion in 1549, and set off back to Devon to fight for the royalist forces under the command of John Russell, 1st Baron Russell, who was probably responsible for recommending him to the king for Sheriff of Devon in 1550-1. As an expression of royal gratitude, Russell awarded Chichester jointly with Sir Arthur Champernon, the metal clappers which had been removed by royal command from Devon churchbells to prevent their being rung out by the rebels as calls to arms.

Following the death of King Henry VIII in 1547 he became an ardent supporter of the Duke of Somerset, the uncle of Henry's infant son King Edward VI, as Lord Protector. When Somerset was overthrown in 1551, Chichester was one of those temporarily imprisoned with him in the Tower of London.

When King Edward VI died in 1553, Chichester refused to support the Duke of Northumberland, Somerset's successor as Edward's chief minister, particularly not Northumberland's efforts to have his daughter-in-law Lady Jane Grey proclaimed Queen. He joined his cousin John Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Bath in being amongst the first to defy Northumberland by proclaiming Queen Mary as monarch. The queen rewarded Chichester with a knighthood, which he received three days before the opening of the first parliament of her reign in 1553.

In 1555 he accompanied Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford on an embassy to the Imperial court at Brussels, and went on with him as far as Venice. Chichester was arrested in 1556 for his involvement in the Dudley conspiracy against Queen Mary and was again imprisoned in the Tower of London. He was soon released although remained under various restrictive controls.

After the death of Queen Mary and the accession of Queen Elizabeth I in 1558, Chichester returned to active local and national political activity until his death in 1569. In April 1558 he was commissioned to command the Militia of the Hundreds of North Devonshire.[3] In 1566 he assigned to the Mayor, Corporation and Burgesses of Barnstaple all his rights and interests in the Manor of Barnstaple.[4]

Marriage and children edit

 
Arms of Courtenay of Powderham: Or, three torteaux a label azure

He married Gertrude Courtenay, a daughter of Sir William III Courtenay (1477–1535) "The Great",[5] of Powderham, Devon, MP for Devon in 1529, thrice Sheriff of Devon, in 1522, 1525-6, 1533-4, an Esquire of the Body to King Henry VIII, whom he accompanied to the Field of the Cloth of Gold.[6] He was 6th in descent from Hugh Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon (died 1377), and his own grandson William Courtenay (1527–1557) of Powderham became himself de jure 2nd Earl of Devon under the 1553 creation of that title. The arms of Courtenay quartered with Redvers appear amongst the many heraldic escutcheons shown on Chichester's monument in Pilton Church. He had by her seven sons and nine daughters,[7] who married into many of the leading gentry families of Devonshire, two of them marrying children of first cousins of Lady Jane Grey (1536/1537-1554), The Queen of Nine Days.[8] The marriages of his children are represented heraldically on a panel on his monument in Pilton Church.

Heraldic Panel edit

 
Heraldic panel on monument to Sir John Chichester (died 1569) in Pilton Church, showing his children and their marriage alliances

A heraldic panel from high up on the right side of the monument to Sir John Chichester (died 1569) in Pilton Church shows his children and their marriage alliances. The first (leftmost, top row) representing the marriage of his eldest son and heir, shows Chichester impaling the Danish battle-axes of Denys of Holcombe Burnell. The remaining shields are all those of his daughters, with the arms of Chichester being impaled by the arms of the husband of each: l to r:

row 1
Denys , Fortescue , Basset 
row 2
Bluett  , Dillon , Hatch of Aller  (Gules, two demi-lions passant guardant or[9])
row 3
Pollard , Trevelyan of Nettlecombe  (Gules, the base barry wavy argent and azure, a demi-horse issuant of the second maned and hoofed or), (blank)

Sons edit

 
Monument in Eggesford Church of Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester of Carickfergus (1568–1648) and his wife Anne Copleston (1588–1616)

He had the following 7 sons:[10]

Daughters edit

 
 
Hugh Fortescue (1544–1600) and his wife Elizabeth Chichester (died 1630), daughter of Sir John Chichester (died 1569), top row of 1638 Fortescue mural monument in Weare Giffard Church. On the side of the prie-dieu is an escutcheon showing the arms of Fortescue (Azure, a bend engrailled argent cotised or) impaling Chichester
 
 
 
Small chest tomb (foreground) in Atherington Church, Devon, of Sir Arthur Basset (1541–1586) of Umberleigh and his wife Eleanor Chichester, daughter of Sir John Chichester (died 1569) of Raleigh. Slate slab on top shows arms of Basset, Barry wavy of six or and gules, impaling Chichester
 
Mary Chichester (died 1613), wife of Richard Bluett Esq. (died 1614) of Holcombe Rogus. Detail from her effigy on the couple's monument in All Saints Church, Holcombe Rogus
 
Far right: 16th century escutcheon showing the quartered arms of Sir John Chichester (quarterly of 4: Chichester, Raleigh, Beaumont quartering Willington, Wise), impaling Courtenay quartering Redvers. Chimney-piece in Simonsbath House,[16] having been moved there in the early 20th century by the Fortescue family from their seat at Weare Giffard Hall.[17] Hugh Fortescue (1544–1600) of Weare Giffard married Elizabeth Chichester (died 1630), a daughter of Sir John Chichester by his wife Gertrude Courtenay

Death and burial edit

 
Monument to Sir John Chichester (died 1569), Raleigh Chapel in Church of St Mary the Virgin, Pilton, Devon
 
Latin inscription on Monument to Sir John Chichester (died 1569), Raleigh Chapel in Church of St Mary the Virgin, Pilton, Devon

Sir John Chichester died on 30 November 1569, and was buried in Pilton Church, in the parish of which, near Barnstaple in Devon, was situated his manor of Raleigh.

Monument in Pilton Church edit

A highly ornate monument exists against the east wall of the Raleigh Chapel in the Church of St Mary the Virgin in Pilton. It is decorated profusely with strapwork, but includes no effigy. On a tablet placed in its centre is inscribed the following Latin text:

O.nus Johannes Chichester Eques obiit 30th (sic) [28] Novembris 1569. Gertrudis (Courtenay) uxor eius obiit 30th (sic) Aprilis 1566. Ambo in spem Resurrectionis hic quiescunt. Ad lectorem:
Vana salus hominis tumideque simillima bulle,
Quam cito bulla cadit tam cito vita perit,
Dum vivis tu vive [29] deo nam vivere mundo,
Mortis opus vita est vivere vera deo,
Celica [30] terrenis prepone eterna caducis,
Perpetuum nihil est quod crevis hora rapit,
Sit tua firma fides pretioso in sanguine Christi,
Non aliunde tibi certa petenda salus,
Pectore non ficto si spem tibi junxeris istam,
Perpetuo dabitur non peritura quies.

Which may be translated literally as:

"John Chichester, knight, died the 30th of November 1569. Gertrude Courtenay his wife died the 30th of April 1566. Both rest here in hope of the Resurrection. To the reader:
The health of man is most like an empty and swollen bubble,
As quickly as the bubble falls so quickly perishes life,
Whilst you are alive live you in God! for to live in the world,
Life is the work of death to live in God is true life,
Place eternal heavenly things before perishable earthly ones,
Nothing is forever, what you grow the hour snatches away,
Let your faith be strong in the precious blood of Christ,
It is not fitting for you to seek sure health elsewhere,
Not with a brave look if you shall join to yourself that hope,
Rest not about to perish shall be given in perpetuity".

Sources edit

  • Hawkyard, A.D.K., Biography of Sir John Chichester, published in History of parliament: House of Commons 1509-1558, Bindoff, S.T. (Ed.), London, 1982
  • Chichester, Sir Alexander Bruce Palmer, Bart., History of the Family of Chichester from AD 1086 to 1870, published 1870, quoted in leaflet in Pilton Church. The author was Sir Alexander Palmer Bruce Chichester, 2nd Baronet (1842–1881), of the Chichester baronets, 1840 creation of Arlington Court.
  • Col Henry Walrond, Historical Records of the 1st Devon Militia (4th Battalion The Devonshire Regiment), With a Notice of the 2nd and North Devon Militia Regiments, London: Longmans, 1897/Andesite Press, 2015, ISBN 978-1-37617881-4.

References edit

  1. ^ Reed, p.31, based on the hearth-tax return of 1664. The Earl of Bath also had a grand town-house just outside the South Gate of Barnstaple. (Lamplugh, Barnstaple: Town on the Taw, 2002, p.42)
  2. ^ Hawkyard
  3. ^ Walrond, pp. 6–9.
  4. ^ "Barnstaple Borough" – via National Archive of the UK.
  5. ^ Visitation of Devon, 1895 ed., p.246
  6. ^ "COURTENAY, Sir William I (by 1485-1535), of East Coker, Som. and Ilton and Powderham, Devon. - History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
  7. ^ Listed e.g. by Westcote, Thomas, A View of Devon
  8. ^ See Vivian, 1895, pp.102, 173-4. Sir John Chichester (died 1586) and Mary Chichester (died 1613), who both married children of first cousins of Lady Jane Grey (1536/1537-1554), The Queen of Nine Days, both descended from William Blount, 4th Baron Mountjoy (c. 1478 – 1534), KG and his wife Dorothy Grey, daughter of Thomas Grey, 7th Baron Ferrers of Groby, 1st Earl of Huntingdon, 1st Marquess of Dorset (1455–1501), KG (grandfather of Lady Jane Grey)
  9. ^ Pole, Sir William (died 1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.485
  10. ^ Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, pp.173-4
  11. ^ Vivian, p.174, pedigree of Chichester
  12. ^ Vivian, p.174, pedigree of Chichester of Raleigh
  13. ^ Vivian, p.280, pedigree of Denys
  14. ^ Vivian, p. 102, pedigree of Bonville
  15. ^ Vivian, p.174; thepeerage.com
  16. ^ a b See image:File:SimonsbathHouseHeraldicChimneypiece.jpg
  17. ^ a b A framed handwritten explanatory note written early 20th.c. by a member of the Fortescue family, displayed in Soimonsbath House, identifies the arms
  18. ^ Vivian, p.354
  19. ^ History of Parliament Biography of Sir Arthur Basset
  20. ^ Vivian, 1895, p.93, pedigree of Bluett
  21. ^ Vivian, 1895, p.102, pedigree of Bonville
  22. ^ Vivian, Heralds' Visitation of Devon, 1620, p.285
  23. ^ Vivian, Heralds' Visitation of Devon, 1620, p.598
  24. ^ Vivian, p.621, pedigree of Prideaux
  25. ^ Vivian, p.173, where her husband is erroneously called William Fortescue; p.361, footnote
  26. ^ Vivian, p.359
  27. ^ "Person Page". thepeerage.com.
  28. ^ In Latin this should be 30mo., abbreviated from tricensimo", "on the 30th."
  29. ^ Dum vivis, homo, vive, nam post mortem nihil est, ("Live while you have the chance to live because after death there is nothing"), a Latin epitaph from a grave on the Appian Way in Rome, the last part omitted for a Christian context
  30. ^ Celica a contraction of the adjective caeles-itis, "heavenly", thus caelitia ("heavenly things"), from caelum, "the heavens"

john, chichester, died, 1569, john, chichester, 1519, 1569, raleigh, parish, pilton, near, barnstaple, north, devon, leading, member, devonshire, gentry, naval, captain, ardent, protestant, served, sheriff, devon, 1550, 1551, knight, shire, devon, 1547, april,. Sir John Chichester 1519 20 1569 of Raleigh in the parish of Pilton near Barnstaple in North Devon was a leading member of the Devonshire gentry a naval captain and ardent Protestant who served as Sheriff of Devon in 1550 1551 and as Knight of the Shire for Devon in 1547 April 1554 and 1563 and as Member of Parliament for Barnstaple in 1559 over which borough his lordship of the manor of Raleigh Pilton had considerable influence Arms of Sir John Chichester shown within a strapwork surround from his monument in Pilton Church Chequy or and gules a chief vair Contents 1 Origins 2 Career 3 Marriage and children 3 1 Heraldic Panel 3 2 Sons 3 3 Daughters 4 Death and burial 4 1 Monument in Pilton Church 5 Sources 6 ReferencesOrigins edit nbsp Small monumental brass c one ft high in St Brannock s Church Braunton Devon of Lady Elizabeth Bourchier died 1548 daughter of John Bourchier 1st Earl of Bath amp wife of Edward Chichester died 1522 of Raleigh Pilton She kneels at prayer before a prie dieu on which is an open book Gothic text inscription under Here lyethe Lady Elyzabethe Bowcer daughter of John Erle of Bathe amp sumtyme wyffe to Edwarde Chechester Esquyer the whyche Elyzabethe decessyd the XXXIIIth day of August in the yere of O r Lorde God M Vc i e 5 c XLVIII apon whose soule God have m er cy The brass is a palimpsest engraved on the reverse is the face of a knight with helmet unfinished apparently containing an artistic error which led to its abandonment amp reuse nbsp Heraldic escutcheon on the monument to Sir John Chichester died 1569 of Raleigh in Pilton Church Devon Showing arms of Chichester impaling Bourchier Argent a cross engrailed gules between four water bougets sable here restored incorrectly as gules representing the marriage of his parents The Chichester family had been seated at the manor of Raleigh since the mid 14th century He was the son of Edward Chichester died 27 July 1526 of Great Torrington who predeceased his own father also Sir John 1474 1537 by his wife Lady Elizabeth Bourchier died 1548 whose small monumental brass exists in St Brannock s Church Braunton a daughter of John Bourchier 1st Earl of Bath 1470 1539 whose seat was at Tawstock Court 3 miles south of Raleigh In the 16th and 17th centuries these two houses Raleigh and the new Tawstock Court built in 1574 were probably the largest in North Devon 1 He succeeded his grandfather in 1536 2 Career editAs a young man he served in the Royal Navy and in 1544 he was with King Henry VIII in France at the Siege of Boulogne In 1545 he was captain of the ship Struce of Dansick under the command of Sir George Carew a fellow Devonian He was in London on the outbreak of the Western Rebellion in 1549 and set off back to Devon to fight for the royalist forces under the command of John Russell 1st Baron Russell who was probably responsible for recommending him to the king for Sheriff of Devon in 1550 1 As an expression of royal gratitude Russell awarded Chichester jointly with Sir Arthur Champernon the metal clappers which had been removed by royal command from Devon churchbells to prevent their being rung out by the rebels as calls to arms Following the death of King Henry VIII in 1547 he became an ardent supporter of the Duke of Somerset the uncle of Henry s infant son King Edward VI as Lord Protector When Somerset was overthrown in 1551 Chichester was one of those temporarily imprisoned with him in the Tower of London When King Edward VI died in 1553 Chichester refused to support the Duke of Northumberland Somerset s successor as Edward s chief minister particularly not Northumberland s efforts to have his daughter in law Lady Jane Grey proclaimed Queen He joined his cousin John Bourchier 2nd Earl of Bath in being amongst the first to defy Northumberland by proclaiming Queen Mary as monarch The queen rewarded Chichester with a knighthood which he received three days before the opening of the first parliament of her reign in 1553 In 1555 he accompanied Francis Russell 2nd Earl of Bedford on an embassy to the Imperial court at Brussels and went on with him as far as Venice Chichester was arrested in 1556 for his involvement in the Dudley conspiracy against Queen Mary and was again imprisoned in the Tower of London He was soon released although remained under various restrictive controls After the death of Queen Mary and the accession of Queen Elizabeth I in 1558 Chichester returned to active local and national political activity until his death in 1569 In April 1558 he was commissioned to command the Militia of the Hundreds of North Devonshire 3 In 1566 he assigned to the Mayor Corporation and Burgesses of Barnstaple all his rights and interests in the Manor of Barnstaple 4 Marriage and children edit nbsp Arms of Courtenay of Powderham Or three torteaux a label azure He married Gertrude Courtenay a daughter of Sir William III Courtenay 1477 1535 The Great 5 of Powderham Devon MP for Devon in 1529 thrice Sheriff of Devon in 1522 1525 6 1533 4 an Esquire of the Body to King Henry VIII whom he accompanied to the Field of the Cloth of Gold 6 He was 6th in descent from Hugh Courtenay 2nd Earl of Devon died 1377 and his own grandson William Courtenay 1527 1557 of Powderham became himself de jure 2nd Earl of Devon under the 1553 creation of that title The arms of Courtenay quartered with Redvers appear amongst the many heraldic escutcheons shown on Chichester s monument in Pilton Church He had by her seven sons and nine daughters 7 who married into many of the leading gentry families of Devonshire two of them marrying children of first cousins of Lady Jane Grey 1536 1537 1554 The Queen of Nine Days 8 The marriages of his children are represented heraldically on a panel on his monument in Pilton Church Heraldic Panel edit nbsp Heraldic panel on monument to Sir John Chichester died 1569 in Pilton Church showing his children and their marriage alliances A heraldic panel from high up on the right side of the monument to Sir John Chichester died 1569 in Pilton Church shows his children and their marriage alliances The first leftmost top row representing the marriage of his eldest son and heir shows Chichester impaling the Danish battle axes of Denys of Holcombe Burnell The remaining shields are all those of his daughters with the arms of Chichester being impaled by the arms of the husband of each l to r row 1 Denys nbsp Fortescue nbsp Basset nbsp row 2 Bluett nbsp Dillon nbsp Hatch of Aller nbsp Gules two demi lions passant guardant or 9 row 3 Pollard nbsp Trevelyan of Nettlecombe nbsp Gules the base barry wavy argent and azure a demi horse issuant of the second maned and hoofed or blank Sons edit nbsp Monument in Eggesford Church of Edward Chichester 1st Viscount Chichester of Carickfergus 1568 1648 and his wife Anne Copleston 1588 1616 He had the following 7 sons 10 Sir John Chichester senior died 31 March 1586 eldest son and heir 11 of Raleigh who married Ann Dennis the eldest daughter of Sir Robert Dennis died 1592 of Holcombe Burnell 12 in Devon by his wife Mary Blount who was one of the two daughters and co heiresses of William Blount 4th Baron Mountjoy c 1478 1534 KG 13 and a first cousin of Queen Lady Jane Grey 14 Arthur Chichester 1st Baron Chichester of Belfast 1563 1624 5 2nd son who succeeded his brother Sir John as Governor of Carrickfergus Edward Chichester 1st Viscount Chichester 1568 1648 3rd son of Eggesford Devon whose recumbent effigy survives in Eggesford Church Charles Chichester 4th son died childless Sir John Chichester junior 5th son He was Governor of Carrickfergus County Antrim Ireland and was captured and beheaded by Randal MacSorley Macdonnell 15 He died childless Sir Thomas Chichester 6th son Adrian Chichester 7th son died childless Daughters edit nbsp nbsp Hugh Fortescue 1544 1600 and his wife Elizabeth Chichester died 1630 daughter of Sir John Chichester died 1569 top row of 1638 Fortescue mural monument in Weare Giffard Church On the side of the prie dieu is an escutcheon showing the arms of Fortescue Azure a bend engrailled argent cotised or impaling Chichester nbsp nbsp nbsp Small chest tomb foreground in Atherington Church Devon of Sir Arthur Basset 1541 1586 of Umberleigh and his wife Eleanor Chichester daughter of Sir John Chichester died 1569 of Raleigh Slate slab on top shows arms of Basset Barry wavy of six or and gules impaling Chichester nbsp Mary Chichester died 1613 wife of Richard Bluett Esq died 1614 of Holcombe Rogus Detail from her effigy on the couple s monument in All Saints Church Holcombe Rogus nbsp Far right 16th century escutcheon showing the quartered arms of Sir John Chichester quarterly of 4 Chichester Raleigh Beaumont quartering Willington Wise impaling Courtenay quartering Redvers Chimney piece in Simonsbath House 16 having been moved there in the early 20th century by the Fortescue family from their seat at Weare Giffard Hall 17 Hugh Fortescue 1544 1600 of Weare Giffard married Elizabeth Chichester died 1630 a daughter of Sir John Chichester by his wife Gertrude Courtenay Elizabeth Chichester died 1630 married Hugh Fortescue 1544 1600 Sheriff of Devon in 1583 18 eldest son of Richard Fortescue c 1517 1570 of Weare Giffard and of Filleigh ancestor of the Earls Fortescue Effigies of the couple facing each other kneeling can be seen on the top tier of the mural monument in Weare Giffard Church erected by their grandson Hugh Fortescue 1592 1661 A 16th century escutcheon showing the quartered arms of her father John Chichester quarterly of 4 Chichester Raleigh Beaumont quartering Willington Wise impaling Courtenay quartering Redvers survives on a chimney piece in Simonsbath House 16 having been moved there in the early 20th century by the Fortescue family from their seat at Weare Giffard Hall 17 Cecilia Chichester married Thomas Hatch Eleanor Chichester died 1585 married Sir Arthur Bassett 1541 1586 MP of Umberleigh and Heanton Punchardon MP for Barnstaple in 1563 and for Devon in 1572 19 He was the son of John Basset son of Sir John Bassett 1462 1529 Sheriff of Devon in 1524 by his wife Frances Plantagenet one of the three daughters and co heiresses of Arthur Plantagenet 1st Viscount Lisle died 1542 an illegitimate son of King Edward IV The couple s chest tomb with arms of Basset impaling Chichester on the slab top exists in Atherington Church in the parish of which is situated the manor of Umberleigh The tomb was moved from the Basset Chapel which formerly existed next to Umberleigh House Mary Chichester died 1613 who married Richard Bluett died 1614 of Holcombe Rogus Devon son of John Bluett of Holcombe Rogus by his wife Dorothy Blount a first cousin of Lady Jane Grey one of the two daughters and co heiresses of William Blount 4th Baron Mountjoy c 1478 1534 KG 20 and his wife Dorothy Grey daughter of Thomas Grey 7th Baron Ferrers of Groby 1st Earl of Huntingdon 1st Marquess of Dorset 1455 1501 KG father of Henry Grey 1st Duke of Suffolk 3rd Marquess of Dorset 1517 1554 KG and grandfather of Lady Jane Grey 21 The couple are represented as effigies on their monument in the Bluett Chapel All Saints Church Holcombe Rogus Grace Chichester married Robert Dillon of Farthington Northamptonshire son and heir of Henry Dillon of Bratton Fleming by his wife Elizabeth Pollard daughter of Sir Hugh Pollard of Kings Nympton 22 Dorothy Chichester married Sir Hugh Pollard of King s Nympton son and heir of Sir Lewis II Pollard of Kings Nympton 23 Urith Chichester married John Trevelyan of Nettlecombe in Somerset Bridget Chichester married as his first wife Sir Edmund Prideaux 1st Baronet died 1628 of Netherton Farway Devon 24 Susannah Chichester who in 1584 25 married as his 2nd wife John Fortescue d 1604 of Buckland Filleigh in Devon 3rd cousin of her sister s husband Hugh Fortescue 1545 1600 of Weare Gifford and Filleigh by whom she had a son Sir Faithful Fortescue 1585 1666 26 27 Faithful Fortescue followed his uncle Arthur Chichester 1st Baron Chichester of Belfast to Ireland where he had a distinguished military career and where he founded his own branch of the Fortescue family who in the 18th century were created Earls of Clermont in the Peerage of Ireland Death and burial edit nbsp Monument to Sir John Chichester died 1569 Raleigh Chapel in Church of St Mary the Virgin Pilton Devon nbsp Latin inscription on Monument to Sir John Chichester died 1569 Raleigh Chapel in Church of St Mary the Virgin Pilton Devon Sir John Chichester died on 30 November 1569 and was buried in Pilton Church in the parish of which near Barnstaple in Devon was situated his manor of Raleigh Monument in Pilton Church edit A highly ornate monument exists against the east wall of the Raleigh Chapel in the Church of St Mary the Virgin in Pilton It is decorated profusely with strapwork but includes no effigy On a tablet placed in its centre is inscribed the following Latin text O nus Johannes Chichester Eques obiit 30th sic 28 Novembris 1569 Gertrudis Courtenay uxor eius obiit 30th sic Aprilis 1566 Ambo in spem Resurrectionis hic quiescunt Ad lectorem Vana salus hominis tumideque simillima bulle Quam cito bulla cadit tam cito vita perit Dum vivis tu vive 29 deo nam vivere mundo Mortis opus vita est vivere vera deo Celica 30 terrenis prepone eterna caducis Perpetuum nihil est quod crevis hora rapit Sit tua firma fides pretioso in sanguine Christi Non aliunde tibi certa petenda salus Pectore non ficto si spem tibi junxeris istam Perpetuo dabitur non peritura quies Which may be translated literally as John Chichester knight died the 30th of November 1569 Gertrude Courtenay his wife died the 30th of April 1566 Both rest here in hope of the Resurrection To the reader The health of man is most like an empty and swollen bubble As quickly as the bubble falls so quickly perishes life Whilst you are alive live you in God for to live in the world Life is the work of death to live in God is true life Place eternal heavenly things before perishable earthly ones Nothing is forever what you grow the hour snatches away Let your faith be strong in the precious blood of Christ It is not fitting for you to seek sure health elsewhere Not with a brave look if you shall join to yourself that hope Rest not about to perish shall be given in perpetuity Sources editHawkyard A D K Biography of Sir John Chichester published in History of parliament House of Commons 1509 1558 Bindoff S T Ed London 1982 Chichester Sir Alexander Bruce Palmer Bart History of the Family of Chichester from AD 1086 to 1870 published 1870 quoted in leaflet in Pilton Church The author was Sir Alexander Palmer Bruce Chichester 2nd Baronet 1842 1881 of the Chichester baronets 1840 creation of Arlington Court Col Henry Walrond Historical Records of the 1st Devon Militia 4th Battalion The Devonshire Regiment With a Notice of the 2nd and North Devon Militia Regiments London Longmans 1897 Andesite Press 2015 ISBN 978 1 37617881 4 References edit Reed p 31 based on the hearth tax return of 1664 The Earl of Bath also had a grand town house just outside the South Gate of Barnstaple Lamplugh Barnstaple Town on the Taw 2002 p 42 Hawkyard Walrond pp 6 9 Barnstaple Borough via National Archive of the UK Visitation of Devon 1895 ed p 246 COURTENAY Sir William I by 1485 1535 of East Coker Som and Ilton and Powderham Devon History of Parliament Online www historyofparliamentonline org Listed e g by Westcote Thomas A View of Devon See Vivian 1895 pp 102 173 4 Sir John Chichester died 1586 and Mary Chichester died 1613 who both married children of first cousins of Lady Jane Grey 1536 1537 1554 The Queen of Nine Days both descended from William Blount 4th Baron Mountjoy c 1478 1534 KG and his wife Dorothy Grey daughter of Thomas Grey 7th Baron Ferrers of Groby 1st Earl of Huntingdon 1st Marquess of Dorset 1455 1501 KG grandfather of Lady Jane Grey Pole Sir William died 1635 Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon Sir John William de la Pole ed London 1791 p 485 Vivian Lt Col J L Ed The Visitations of the County of Devon Comprising the Heralds Visitations of 1531 1564 amp 1620 Exeter 1895 pp 173 4 Vivian p 174 pedigree of Chichester Vivian p 174 pedigree of Chichester of Raleigh Vivian p 280 pedigree of Denys Vivian p 102 pedigree of Bonville Vivian p 174 thepeerage com a b See image File SimonsbathHouseHeraldicChimneypiece jpg a b A framed handwritten explanatory note written early 20th c by a member of the Fortescue family displayed in Soimonsbath House identifies the arms Vivian p 354 History of Parliament Biography of Sir Arthur Basset Vivian 1895 p 93 pedigree of Bluett Vivian 1895 p 102 pedigree of Bonville Vivian Heralds Visitation of Devon 1620 p 285 Vivian Heralds Visitation of Devon 1620 p 598 Vivian p 621 pedigree of Prideaux Vivian p 173 where her husband is erroneously called William Fortescue p 361 footnote Vivian p 359 Person Page thepeerage com In Latin this should be 30mo abbreviated from tricensimo on the 30th Dum vivis homo vive nam post mortem nihil est Live while you have the chance to live because after death there is nothing a Latin epitaph from a grave on the Appian Way in Rome the last part omitted for a Christian context Celica a contraction of the adjective caeles itis heavenly thus caelitia heavenly things from caelum the heavens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Chichester died 1569 amp oldid 1224333505, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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