Lord John Grey (Tudor nobleman)

Lord John Grey (1523/24 – 19 November 1564) was an English nobleman and courtier of the Tudor period, who after 1559 was seated at Pirgo Place in Essex.[1]

Arms of Grey: Barry of six Argent and Azure in chief three Torteaux

Lord John was at one stage sentenced to death for his involvement in Wyatt's Rebellion against Queen Mary I, but was later released from attainder. Grey was restored to his original position by Queen Mary's successor Queen Elizabeth I, who also granted him Pirgo Place in Essex as well as making him Guardian of Lady Katherine Grey, his niece, and sister of the late Lady Jane Grey, in 1563. However, Lord John was again imprisoned shortly before his death, after publishing a book asserting Katherine Grey to be the legitimate heir to the English throne.

Origins

He was the youngest surviving son of Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset by his second wife Margaret Wotton, widow of William Medley, and daughter of Sir Robert Wotton, of Boughton Malherbe, Kent.[2] He thus bore the courtesy title of "Lord", appropriate for a younger son of a marquess. His elder brothers, Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, 3rd Marquess of Dorset and Lord Thomas Grey, were executed for treason on Tower Hill in 1554.

Marriage and children

He married Mary Browne, a daughter of Sir Anthony Browne, KG, by his first wife Alice Gage.[3] By his wife he had three sons and four daughters including:

Royal service

Grey was appointed Lord Deputy of Newhaven (now Le Havre) in France[4] in charge of the English fortress then being strengthened and given extra storage facilities. Lord John then received grants from Edward VI of the rectory of Kirby Bellars and other estates such as Bardon Park in Leicestershire, and in his ancestral home county of Derbyshire as well as in Nottinghamshire, affirmed by Queen Mary.

Wyatt's Rebellion

Lord John Grey and his brothers became involved in Wyatt's Rebellion which proposed to replace Catholic Queen Mary with her Protestant half-sister Elizabeth for which he was condemned to death. His brothers, Henry Grey, 3rd Marquess of Dorset (later Duke of Suffolk) and Lord Thomas Grey, were both executed but with the backing of his Catholic brother-in-law, the Viscount Montagu, Lord John Grey was released though still under attainder, and lived in obscurity until the death of Queen Mary. Grey became his father the 2nd Marquess's sole surviving son and heir but was deprived of the family marquessate, forfeited in 1554, thus being unable to sit in Parliament.

Lady Jane Grey, his niece, had already been sentenced to death for treason before Wyatt's Rebellion and was executed the month after the rebellion.

Queen Elizabeth's accession

Pirgo Place, Essex
An iron gatepost surviving from the former Tudor royal palace

Lord John was summoned to court as head of the Grey family, attended Queen Elizabeth's first progress into London and gave her a costly gift on the first New Year's Day of her reign. A few months later he complained of poverty to Lord Burghley, her prime minister, and the Queen granted him the royal manor of Pirgo, Essex and its mansion, as well as lands in Somerset. He was "restored in blood", released from the Act of Attainder and appointed one of the four Protestant noblemen to supervise alterations to the Book of Common Prayer.

Lady Katherine Grey

Lord John's niece, Katherine, Lady Jane Grey's younger sister and heiress presumptive under the Will of Henry VIII, had married secretly Edward Seymour, 1st Earl of Hertford in 1560 without royal assent. The marriage was quickly discovered and Lady Katherine Grey was confined to The Tower. Released under house arrest in 1563 for the safety of her health during an outbreak of plague she was moved to Pirgo Place under the care of Lord John Grey. However, after a book circulated claiming Lady Katherine to be the rightful heir to the English throne and not Mary, Queen of Scots, Queen Elizabeth removed Katherine from Lord John's charge and took him briefly into custody.

Death and burial

Lord John Grey died a short time later at Pirgo on 19 November 1564 and was buried in the estate's domestic chapel, which was demolished between about 1771 and 1778. His now losty monument there was described in Collins' Peerage of England, published 1812, as follows:

... a tomb in the chapel of the mansion house at Pirgo in Essex; on which was a knight kneeling with four sons, his lady kneeling with four daughters, and many coats and quarterings; and bearing on the verge this inscription: "Here under lyeth buried the lorde John . . . Grey, Knyght (fourth son of) the lorde Thomas Grey mar . . . . . ques Dorcet, who dyed the xix daye of November 1564; and dame Mary his wyfe, daughter of Sir Anthony Browne, Knyght of the Garter, m(aster)r of the horse, and con'seler to Kynge Henry ye VIII. Dame Mary dyed . . . .".
gollark: It seems like both are maybe valid?
gollark: This may take anywhere from 2μs to 10^37 teraseconds.
gollark: Fiiiiiine, I'll go actually check the recognized definition.
gollark: Having a humanlike mind behind it is totally a human trait.
gollark: Like saying that lightning is caused by thunder gods and not ??? cloud things, for example.

See also

Notes

  1. Lodge's Peerage (1842)
  2. Richard Davey. The sisters of Lady Jane Grey and their wicked grandfather, E.P. Dutton and co., 1912. pg 199–200. Google eBook
  3. Douglas Richardson. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Genealogical Publishing Com, 30 July 2005. pg 392. Google eBook
  4. www.british-history.ac.uk

References

  • Burke's Peerage & Baronetage
  • Lehmberg, Stamford. "Grey, Lord John (d. 1564)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11548. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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