fbpx
Wikipedia

Theodosia Harington

Theodosia Harington, Lady Dudley (died 1649) was an English aristocrat who was abandoned by her husband, but maintained connections at court through her extensive family networks.

Theodosia Harington
Lady Dudley
Died1649
Spouse(s)Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley
IssueFerdinando Sutton
Mary Sutton, Countess of Home
Anne Sutton
Margaret Sutton
Theodosia Sutton
FatherJames Harington

Early life Edit

 
Harington Dudley family connections

She was the eighth daughter of Sir James Harington of Exton, Rutland, a lawyer and long-serving MP, and Lucy Sidney of Penshurst.[1] The Haringtons were the most important landowners in Rutland and her eldest brother, John, was created Baron Harington of Exton in 1603.

Harington had several sisters who married and increased their social network. According to the inscription on her father's tomb at Exton, Rutland, Harington was the eighth and youngest daughter.

Lady Dudley and Princess Elizabeth Edit

 
Theodosia Harington, Lady Dudley, became a member of Princess Elizabeth's household at Coombe Abbey

In 1581 she married Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley (1567-1643). She was afterwards usually known as "Lady Dudley" or "Theodosia Dudley". The family surname "Sutton" was only rarely used. They had five children.

She attended the funeral of Mary, Queen of Scots at Peterborough in 1587.

Lady Anne Clifford said Harington and her mother Margaret Clifford, Countess of Cumberland had been friends.[2]

Her husband abandoned her for Elizabeth Tomlinson. According to a bill produced in the Star Chamber by his rival in Staffordshire, Gilbert Lyttelton,[3] in 1592 he had "left that virtuous lady his wife in London without sustenance, and took to his home a lewd and infamous woman, a base collier's daughter".[4] In 1597 her son Ferdinando and daughter Anne were lodged in Clerkenwell as wards of her sister Elizabeth Harington and uncle Edward Montagu of Boughton.[5]

On 23 February 1600 Louis Verreycken an envoy from the Spanish Netherlands was received by Elizabeth I of England. Several great ladies of the court waited in the presence chamber, dressed all in white. These included her sisters Lady Hastings and Mabel, Lady Noel, with a "Lady Dudley" who was either herself or her mother-in-law Mary, Lady Dudley.[6]

In 1600 Sir William Cornwallis younger published his Essayes with a dedicatory letter by Henry Olney to three of the Harington sisters; "the Lady Sara Hastings, the Lady Theodosia Dudley, the Lady Mary Wingfield", and their friend and cousin Lady Mary Dyer (d. 1601), the wife of Sir Richard Dyer of Great Staughton.[7] Robert Cawdrey dedicated his dictionary, the Table Alphabeticall (London, 1604) to five daughters of Lucy Sidney, Lady Harington; Sarah, Lady Hastings, Theodosia, Lady Dudley, Elizabeth, Lady Montagu, Frances, Lady Leigh, and Mary, Lady Wingfield.[8]

After the Union of the Crowns in 1603, Theodosia Harington's family connections, particularly to her niece the courtier Lucy Russell, Countess of Bedford, secured positions for her daughter Anne (Dudley) Sutton, usually known as "Mistress Dudley", and her niece Elizabeth Dudley as ladies in waiting to Princess Elizabeth, and probably the marriage of her eldest daughter Mary to the Scottish Earl of Home in 1605.[9] Theodosia Harington seems to have been an important member of Princess Elizabeth's household and before their marriage in London, Frederick V of the Palatinate gave her a valuable gift of silver plate.[10]

Anne Dudley featured in Henry Peacham's emblem book Minerva Britanna, compared to the chaste Diana with an Italian anagram of her name, "e l'nuda Diana".[11] Anne with seven other ladies put their names in hat to award kisses to winners at a tournament for Prince Henry in April 1612.[12]

Later life Edit

In 1626 Harington sold a large diamond to Charles I of England for £1,700.[13] In 1628 her friend William Mason of Westminster left her a legacy of £600, "as a pledge of my unfeigned heart, to her unstained honour, wishing every penny of it were a thousand pound". Acknowledging her marital difficulties, Mason asked his executrix, Harington's sister Sarah, Lady Hastings (by now Lady Edmondes), to ensure that she, not Lord Dudley, received the money. Mason left legacies to Theodosia's daughters, and to other members of the Harington/Sidney family, including Anne Dyer, Lady Carr Cromwell and Theodosia, Lady Bodenham. He owned portrait miniatures of Theodosia Harington, Lady Hastings, and Lady Chesterfield, in gold cases enamelled with green.[14]

More books were dedicated to her and her sisters, including John Brinsley's The Fourth Part of the True Watch (London, 1624). She was the patron of a Mr Richard Sherwood, who wrote a short treatise about marriage for her.[15] Patrick Hannay dedicated his A Happy Husband, or Directions for a Maide to choose her Mate, as also a Wives behaviour towards her Husband after Marriage (Edinburgh, 1619) to her granddaughter, Margaret Home, later Countess of Moray.

In February 1639 Lord Arundel of Wardour noted she was living at court, and the Earl of Arundel owed her £3,000. In October 1648 she was in London as a guest of her granddaughter Anne Maitland, Countess of Lauderdale.[16]

She died at Norwich, the home of her daughter Margaret Hobart, in 1649 or 1650, and was buried at St Margaret's, Westminster on 12 January 1650.[17]

Lady Dudley's will Edit

She made her will on 11 September 1649.[18] She had lent £5 to the Scots Army and £150 to Parliament. She left a farm at Playsted Marshall and land at Hemlinton near Norwich to her Hobart grandsons. She left a piece of silver plate to her "noble freinde and loveinge neice the Countisse of Livenstayne". This was her niece Elizabeth Dudley, daughter of John Dudley, Countess of Löwenstein, and a lady in waiting to Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, known as the "Wise Widow", or "Dutch Bess Dudly" or "Dulcinea".[19] Further documents and charters relating to Theodosia Dudley's property are held by the National Library of Scotland in the Tweeddale papers.

A portrait of "Theodosia lady Duddeley", attributed to Cornelius Johnson was formerly at Castle Donington.[20]

Family Edit

Theodosia, Lady Dudley had a son and four daughters:

References Edit

  1. ^ History of Parliament Online: 1558–1603 Members – HARINGTON, James I (Author: Roger Virgoe)
  2. ^ Jessica L. Malay, Anne Clifford's Autobiographical Writing, 1590-1676 (Manchester, 2018), p. 86.
  3. ^ S. M. Thorpe, 'LYTTELTON, Gilbert (c.1540-99)', The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981.
  4. ^ Henry Sydney Grazebrook, 'An Account of the Barons of Dudley', Collections for a History of Staffordshire, vol. 9 (1880), pp. 111-2.
  5. ^ Acts of the Privy Council, vol. 27, pp. 325-8: ‘DUDLEY, alias SUTTON, Edward (1567-1643), of Dudley Castle, Staffs.’ The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981.
  6. ^ Michael Brennan, Noel Kinnamon, Margaret Hannay, The Letters of Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sidney (Philadelphia, 2013), p. 429, 594.
  7. ^ William Cornwallis, Essayes (Edmund Mattes, London, 1600).
  8. ^ Rebecca Shapiro, Fixing Babel: An Historical Anthology of Applied English Lexicography (Lewisburg, 2017), pp. 8, 10.
  9. ^ Marilyn M. Brown & Michael Pearce, 'The Gardens of Moray House, Edinburgh', Garden History 47:2 (2019), p. 5.
  10. ^ Nadine Akkerman, Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Hearts (Oxford, 2022), p. 72.
  11. ^ Henry Peacham, Minerva Britanna (London, 1612), p. 175.
  12. ^ HMC Downshire, vol. 3 (London, 1938) p. 276.
  13. ^ Frederick Devon, Pell Records: Issues of the Exchequer (London, 1836), pp. 348-9, 356.
  14. ^ 'Will of William Mason, Gentleman of Westminster, Middlesex', (8 October 1628) 2 February 1630, TNA PROB 11/157/110.
  15. ^ Albert Peel & Leland Carlson, Elizabethan Non-Conformist Texts: Cartwrightiana vol. 1 (London, 1951), p. 180, citing Rylands Library, MS 524 R.68539.
  16. ^ Henry Sydney Grazebrook, 'An Account of the Barons of Dudley', Collections for a History of Staffordshire, vol. 9 (London, 1880), p. 112.
  17. ^ G. A. The Parliamentary Survey of Dean and Chapter Properties in and Around Norwich in 1649, (Norfolk Record Society, 1985), p. 115.
  18. ^ Visitation of Norfolk, vol. 2 (Norwich, 1895), p. 142.
  19. ^ Nadine Akkerman, The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia, vol. 2 (Oxford, 2011), pp. 799, 1119; vol. 1 (Oxford, 2015), pp. 159-60: Lisa Jardine, Temptation in the Archives, (UCL: London, 2015), pp. 12-14: 'Will of The Honorable Lady Theodosia Dudley of Norwich, Norfolk', TNA PROB 11/215/234.
  20. ^ John Nichols, The history and antiquities of the County of Leicester, p. 779.
  21. ^ HMC Downshire, vol. 5 (London, 1988), p. 172 no. 360.
  22. ^ HMC Downshire, vol. 5 (London, 1988), p. 379 nos. 784, 786, 787.
  23. ^ Visitation of Norfolk, vol. 2 (Norwich, 1895), p. 75: An incorrect genealogy was suggested in Henry Sydney Grazebrook, 'An Account of the Barons of Dudley', Collections for a History of Staffordshire, vol. 9 (1880), p. 113
  24. ^ The History and Antiquities of the County of Norfolk: Blofield, Brothercross, and Clacklose (Norwich, 1781), p. 36.
  25. ^ Frederick Prickett, History and Antiquities of Highgate (London, 1842), pp. 163-5.

theodosia, harington, lady, dudley, died, 1649, english, aristocrat, abandoned, husband, maintained, connections, court, through, extensive, family, networks, lady, dudleydied1649spouse, edward, sutton, baron, dudleyissueferdinando, suttonmary, sutton, countes. Theodosia Harington Lady Dudley died 1649 was an English aristocrat who was abandoned by her husband but maintained connections at court through her extensive family networks Theodosia HaringtonLady DudleyDied1649Spouse s Edward Sutton 5th Baron DudleyIssueFerdinando SuttonMary Sutton Countess of HomeAnne SuttonMargaret SuttonTheodosia SuttonFatherJames Harington Contents 1 Early life 2 Lady Dudley and Princess Elizabeth 3 Later life 4 Lady Dudley s will 5 Family 6 ReferencesEarly life Edit nbsp Harington Dudley family connectionsShe was the eighth daughter of Sir James Harington of Exton Rutland a lawyer and long serving MP and Lucy Sidney of Penshurst 1 The Haringtons were the most important landowners in Rutland and her eldest brother John was created Baron Harington of Exton in 1603 Harington had several sisters who married and increased their social network According to the inscription on her father s tomb at Exton Rutland Harington was the eighth and youngest daughter Lady Dudley and Princess Elizabeth Edit nbsp Theodosia Harington Lady Dudley became a member of Princess Elizabeth s household at Coombe AbbeyIn 1581 she married Edward Sutton 5th Baron Dudley 1567 1643 She was afterwards usually known as Lady Dudley or Theodosia Dudley The family surname Sutton was only rarely used They had five children She attended the funeral of Mary Queen of Scots at Peterborough in 1587 Lady Anne Clifford said Harington and her mother Margaret Clifford Countess of Cumberland had been friends 2 Her husband abandoned her for Elizabeth Tomlinson According to a bill produced in the Star Chamber by his rival in Staffordshire Gilbert Lyttelton 3 in 1592 he had left that virtuous lady his wife in London without sustenance and took to his home a lewd and infamous woman a base collier s daughter 4 In 1597 her son Ferdinando and daughter Anne were lodged in Clerkenwell as wards of her sister Elizabeth Harington and uncle Edward Montagu of Boughton 5 On 23 February 1600 Louis Verreycken an envoy from the Spanish Netherlands was received by Elizabeth I of England Several great ladies of the court waited in the presence chamber dressed all in white These included her sisters Lady Hastings and Mabel Lady Noel with a Lady Dudley who was either herself or her mother in law Mary Lady Dudley 6 In 1600 Sir William Cornwallis younger published his Essayes with a dedicatory letter by Henry Olney to three of the Harington sisters the Lady Sara Hastings the Lady Theodosia Dudley the Lady Mary Wingfield and their friend and cousin Lady Mary Dyer d 1601 the wife of Sir Richard Dyer of Great Staughton 7 Robert Cawdrey dedicated his dictionary the Table Alphabeticall London 1604 to five daughters of Lucy Sidney Lady Harington Sarah Lady Hastings Theodosia Lady Dudley Elizabeth Lady Montagu Frances Lady Leigh and Mary Lady Wingfield 8 After the Union of the Crowns in 1603 Theodosia Harington s family connections particularly to her niece the courtier Lucy Russell Countess of Bedford secured positions for her daughter Anne Dudley Sutton usually known as Mistress Dudley and her niece Elizabeth Dudley as ladies in waiting to Princess Elizabeth and probably the marriage of her eldest daughter Mary to the Scottish Earl of Home in 1605 9 Theodosia Harington seems to have been an important member of Princess Elizabeth s household and before their marriage in London Frederick V of the Palatinate gave her a valuable gift of silver plate 10 Anne Dudley featured in Henry Peacham s emblem book Minerva Britanna compared to the chaste Diana with an Italian anagram of her name e l nuda Diana 11 Anne with seven other ladies put their names in hat to award kisses to winners at a tournament for Prince Henry in April 1612 12 Later life EditIn 1626 Harington sold a large diamond to Charles I of England for 1 700 13 In 1628 her friend William Mason of Westminster left her a legacy of 600 as a pledge of my unfeigned heart to her unstained honour wishing every penny of it were a thousand pound Acknowledging her marital difficulties Mason asked his executrix Harington s sister Sarah Lady Hastings by now Lady Edmondes to ensure that she not Lord Dudley received the money Mason left legacies to Theodosia s daughters and to other members of the Harington Sidney family including Anne Dyer Lady Carr Cromwell and Theodosia Lady Bodenham He owned portrait miniatures of Theodosia Harington Lady Hastings and Lady Chesterfield in gold cases enamelled with green 14 More books were dedicated to her and her sisters including John Brinsley s The Fourth Part of the True Watch London 1624 She was the patron of a Mr Richard Sherwood who wrote a short treatise about marriage for her 15 Patrick Hannay dedicated his A Happy Husband or Directions for a Maide to choose her Mate as also a Wives behaviour towards her Husband after Marriage Edinburgh 1619 to her granddaughter Margaret Home later Countess of Moray In February 1639 Lord Arundel of Wardour noted she was living at court and the Earl of Arundel owed her 3 000 In October 1648 she was in London as a guest of her granddaughter Anne Maitland Countess of Lauderdale 16 She died at Norwich the home of her daughter Margaret Hobart in 1649 or 1650 and was buried at St Margaret s Westminster on 12 January 1650 17 Lady Dudley s will EditShe made her will on 11 September 1649 18 She had lent 5 to the Scots Army and 150 to Parliament She left a farm at Playsted Marshall and land at Hemlinton near Norwich to her Hobart grandsons She left a piece of silver plate to her noble freinde and loveinge neice the Countisse of Livenstayne This was her niece Elizabeth Dudley daughter of John Dudley Countess of Lowenstein and a lady in waiting to Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia known as the Wise Widow or Dutch Bess Dudly or Dulcinea 19 Further documents and charters relating to Theodosia Dudley s property are held by the National Library of Scotland in the Tweeddale papers A portrait of Theodosia lady Duddeley attributed to Cornelius Johnson was formerly at Castle Donington 20 Family EditTheodosia Lady Dudley had a son and four daughters Ferdinando Sutton 1588 1621 who married Honora Seymour a daughter of Edward Seymour Viscount Beauchamp Mary Sutton 1586 1645 who married Alexander Home 1st Earl of Home Anne Sutton known as Mistress Dudley died December 1615 Mistress Dudley lady in waiting to Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia who married on 23 March 1615 Hans Meinhard von Schonberg 21 the Palatine Ambassador to England she died of a fever after giving birth to Frederick Schomberg 1st Duke of Schomberg 22 Margaret Sutton 1597 1674 who married Sir Miles Hobart of Fleet Street and Plumstead a son of Henry Hobart of Plumstead and Willoughby Hopton a daughter of Arthur Hopton of Blythburgh and Witham 23 They had sons Miles Tom John and James She was buried at St Margaret s Westminster 24 There were several people called Miles Hobart in this period A letter to Dorothy Hobart from 1626 was discovered at Lauderdale House in Highgate a house that belonged to Theodosia Harington s daughter Mary 25 Theodosia Sutton References Edit History of Parliament Online 1558 1603 Members HARINGTON James I Author Roger Virgoe Jessica L Malay Anne Clifford s Autobiographical Writing 1590 1676 Manchester 2018 p 86 S M Thorpe LYTTELTON Gilbert c 1540 99 The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 ed P W Hasler 1981 Henry Sydney Grazebrook An Account of the Barons of Dudley Collections for a History of Staffordshire vol 9 1880 pp 111 2 Acts of the Privy Council vol 27 pp 325 8 DUDLEY alias SUTTON Edward 1567 1643 of Dudley Castle Staffs The History of Parliament the House of Commons 1558 1603 ed P W Hasler 1981 Michael Brennan Noel Kinnamon Margaret Hannay The Letters of Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sidney Philadelphia 2013 p 429 594 William Cornwallis Essayes Edmund Mattes London 1600 Rebecca Shapiro Fixing Babel An Historical Anthology of Applied English Lexicography Lewisburg 2017 pp 8 10 Marilyn M Brown amp Michael Pearce The Gardens of Moray House Edinburgh Garden History 47 2 2019 p 5 Nadine Akkerman Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Hearts Oxford 2022 p 72 Henry Peacham Minerva Britanna London 1612 p 175 HMC Downshire vol 3 London 1938 p 276 Frederick Devon Pell Records Issues of the Exchequer London 1836 pp 348 9 356 Will of William Mason Gentleman of Westminster Middlesex 8 October 1628 2 February 1630 TNA PROB 11 157 110 Albert Peel amp Leland Carlson Elizabethan Non Conformist Texts Cartwrightiana vol 1 London 1951 p 180 citing Rylands Library MS 524 R 68539 Henry Sydney Grazebrook An Account of the Barons of Dudley Collections for a History of Staffordshire vol 9 London 1880 p 112 G A The Parliamentary Survey of Dean and Chapter Properties in and Around Norwich in 1649 Norfolk Record Society 1985 p 115 Visitation of Norfolk vol 2 Norwich 1895 p 142 Nadine Akkerman The Correspondence of Elizabeth Stuart Queen of Bohemia vol 2 Oxford 2011 pp 799 1119 vol 1 Oxford 2015 pp 159 60 Lisa Jardine Temptation in the Archives UCL London 2015 pp 12 14 Will of The Honorable Lady Theodosia Dudley of Norwich Norfolk TNA PROB 11 215 234 John Nichols The history and antiquities of the County of Leicester p 779 HMC Downshire vol 5 London 1988 p 172 no 360 HMC Downshire vol 5 London 1988 p 379 nos 784 786 787 Visitation of Norfolk vol 2 Norwich 1895 p 75 An incorrect genealogy was suggested in Henry Sydney Grazebrook An Account of the Barons of Dudley Collections for a History of Staffordshire vol 9 1880 p 113 The History and Antiquities of the County of Norfolk Blofield Brothercross and Clacklose Norwich 1781 p 36 Frederick Prickett History and Antiquities of Highgate London 1842 pp 163 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theodosia Harington amp oldid 1158020927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.