Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, of Leighton Bromswall, MP

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Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, MP

Birthdate:
Death: May 10, 1572 (65-74)
Leighton Bromswold, Cambridgeshire, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, of Kettleby and Maud Tyrwhitt
Husband of Bridget Tyrwhitt and Elizabeth Tyrwhitt
Father of Catherine Darcy; Tyrwhitt and Tyrwhitt
Brother of Sir William Tyrwhitt, Kt.; Anne Bolles; Elizabeth Monson; Philip Tyrwhitt, MP; Katherine Thimbleby and 3 others
Half brother of Sir William Tyrwhitt, Kt.

Managed by: Jason Scott Wills
Last Updated:

About Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, of Leighton Bromswall, MP

concerns

Do not confuse this Robert with his nephew Sir Robert Tyrwhitt of Kettleby, who was a contemporary and also married an Elizabeth Oxenbridge.

brief biography

Robert Tyrwhitt (by 1504 - 10 May 1572), was an English courtier and politician.

He was the second son of Sir Robert Tyrwhitt and brought up at court, becoming an Esquire of the Body. He acquired substantial landholdings and was knighted in 1543. In 1544, when Master of the Horse for Queen Catherine, he served on a military campaign in France, responsible for the transport of ordnance.

He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Lincolnshire in 1545 and for Huntingdonshire in April 1554 and 1559.

He was appointed High Sheriff of Lincolnshire for 1540–41 and High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire for 1557–58. In 1548 he bought the manor of Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire, which he made his home. He was also given custody of a house at Mortlake, Surrey, where he and his wife, a courtier herself, later took up residence.

He died at Leighton Bromswold on 10 May 1572. He had married twice: firstly Bridget, the daughter and heiress of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone Castle, Kent and widow of Sir Richard Wingfield of Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire and Sir Nicholas Harvey of Ickworth, Suffolk and secondly Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge of Brede, Sussex.[1]

____________________

  • Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, & Huntingdonshire, Chamberlain of Berwick-upon-Tweed1,2,3,4,5,6
  • M, #144438, b. before 1504
  • Father Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, Vice-Admiral of England1,2,7,4,6 b. c 1482, d. 4 Jul 1548
  • Mother Maud Tailboys1,2,7,4,6
  • Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, & Huntingdonshire, Chamberlain of Berwick-upon-Tweed was born before 1504 at of Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire, England.1,2,4,5 He married Bridget Wiltshire, daughter of Sir John Wiltshire, Comptroller of Calais and Margaret, after 25 August 1532; No issue.1,2,3,4,5,6 Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, & Huntingdonshire, Chamberlain of Berwick-upon-Tweed married Elizabeth Oxenbridge, daughter of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge, Sheriff of Surrey & Sussex and Anne Fiennes, between April 1538 and 4 August 1539; They had 1 daughter (Katherine, wife of Sir Henry Darcy).1,2,3,4,5,6 Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, Sheriff of Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, & Huntingdonshire, Chamberlain of Berwick-upon-Tweed left a will in February 1572.1,2,4,5 He was buried in June 1572 at Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire, England.1,2,4,5 His estate was probated on 23 June 1572.1,2,4,5
  • Family Elizabeth Oxenbridge b. c 1515
  • Citations
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 558-559.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 82-83.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 244.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. III, p. 515-516.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 19-21.
  • [S4] Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, p. 224.
  • [S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. IV, p. 243-244.
  • From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p4810.htm#... _________________
  • Sir Robert Tyrwhitt1
  • M, #228569
  • Last Edited=15 Apr 2007
  • Sir Robert Tyrwhitt lived at Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire, England.1
  • Child of Sir Robert Tyrwhitt
    • Katherine Tyrwhitt1 d. 1567
  • Citations
  • [S6] G.E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume III, page 309. Hereinafter cited as The Complete Peerage.
  • From: http://www.thepeerage.com/p22857.htm#i228569 ___________________
  • Robert TYRWHYTT of Leighton Bromswold (Sir)
  • Born: ABT 1500, Kettelby, Lincolnshire, England
  • Died: 10 May 1572, Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire, England
  • Notes: See his Biography. http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/RobertTyrwhittofLeighton.htm
  • Father: Robert TYRWHITT of Kettelby (Sir Knight)
  • Mother: Maud TALBOYS
  • Married 1: Bridget WILTSHIRE (dau. and heiress of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone Castle and Isabella Clothall) (w.1 of Sir Richard Wingfield of Kimbolton - w.2 of Sir Nicholas Harvey of Ickworth)
  • ¿Married 2: Elizabeth BOROUGH?
  • Married 3: Elizabeth OXENBRIDGE (b. 1519 - d. Apr 1578) (dau. of Goddard Oxenbridge and Anne Fiennes) 4 Aug 1539
  • Children:
    • 1. Catherine TYRWHITT
    • 2. Son TYRWHITT
    • 3. Son TYRWHITT
  • From: http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/TYRWHITT.htm#Robert TYRWHYTT of Leighton Bromswold (Sir) ______________

https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/t...

  • TYRWHITT, Sir Robert I (by 1504-72), of Mortlake, Surr. and Leighton Bromswold, Hunts.
  • b. by 1504, 2nd s. of Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, and bro. of Philip. m. (1) Bridget, da. and h. of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone Castle, Kent, wid. of Sir Richard Wingfield of Kimbolton, Hunts. and (Sir) Nicholas Harvey (d.1532) of Ickworth, Suff.; (2) by 1540, Elizabeth, da. of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge of Brede, Suss. at least 1da. d.v.p. Kntd. 1543.1
  • Offices Held
  • Esquire of the body by 1525; chamberlain, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumb. 13 Sept. 1525; j.p. Hunts. 1536, 1544, 1554-d., Lincs. (Lindsey) 1538, Northants. 1554, Beds. 1558/59-d.; keeper, manor of Dytton, Bucks. 1536; sheriff, Lincs. 1540-1, Cambs. and Hunts. 1557-8; master of the hunt, Mortlake, Surr. 1540; gent. the privy chamber by 1540; commr. ordnance 1541, 1553, benevolence, Surr. 1544/45, relief, Hunts., Northants. 1550, goods of churches and fraternities, Hunts. 1553, subsidy, Hunts. 1563, eccles. causes, dioceses of Lincoln and Peterborough 1571; servant, household of Queen Catherine Parr July 1543-8, master of the horse by 1544, steward by 1547; constable, Kimbolton castle, Hunts. 1544; steward, duchy of Lancaster, Higham Ferrers, Northants. by 1546; steward, unknown property for Thomas Seymour, Baron Seymour of Sudeley by 1548; jt. (with Thomas Audley II) ld. lt. Hunts. in 1551; numerous other minor offices.2
  • Of old Lincolnshire stock, Robert Tyrwhitt inherited a tradition of service to the crown: his grandfather had been a knight of the body and his father, who received his knighthood at Tournai, was an outstanding figure in his shire. Through his mother Tyrwhitt could claim to be linked by marriage with Henry VIII’s mistress Elizabeth Blount and their son the Duke of Richmond.3
  • Tyrwhitt was brought up at court. An esquire of the body by 1525, he was an early and large recipient of monastic lands, especially in his own shire: between 1536 and 1547 he acquired some two dozen grants and leases from the augmentations. His first acquisition had been the dissolved monastery of Stainfield in Lincolnshire, which was suppressed on the orders of the King despite a recent decision in favour of its exemption. It was such episodes which provoked the Lincolnshire rebellion. Tyrwhitt’s father was one of the subsidy commissioners first attacked by the rebels, and as soon as news reached the court he himself was despatched with orders for John Hussey, Lord Hussey. His part in the suppression of the rebellion and of the Pilgrimage of Grace is scarcely to be disentangled from that of his many namesakes. The dissolution of Stainfield was promptly carried through, and after leasing them in 1537 Tyrwhitt was granted the house, site and 662 acres of land in fee in the following year.4
  • By 1540 Tyrwhitt’s advance at court saw him promoted to be a gentleman of the privy chamber and acting vice-chamberlain on the King’s side. He survived a rebuke by the Privy Council in September 1540 for being one of those guilty of causing a disturbance in the presence chamber, and he was given custody of several royal properties previously under Cromwell’s charge. Among them was the house at Mortlake, Surrey, where he and his wife, a gentlewoman of the Queen’s privy chamber, were later to reside. His position was greatly strengthened when his cousin by marriage became Henry VIII’s last Queen: it was about this time that he was knighted and by 1544 he was Catherine’s master of the horse. In that year he had charge of the transportation of ordnance for the campaign in France, where he served with Sir Edward Baynton who remembered him with a legacy. Tyrwhitt was himself an executor of the will which John Hasilwood made early in the same year.5
  • Tyrwhitt was elected first knight for Lincolnshire to the Parliament of 1545, being styled ‘junior’ on the return to distinguish him from his father who was to die in 1548. His father had probably preceded him in the House, being one of three Lincolnshiremen suggested in 1532 or 1533 to fill two vacancies there and one of the two apparently preferred by Cromwell. It was, however, in Huntingdonshire that Tyrwhitt was to settle. In 1548 he bought Leighton Bromswold, a prebendal manor of Lincoln cathedral, with 2,400 acres of land, pasture and marsh, and thereafter he added further property in Huntingdonshire while disposing of much of his monastic land in Lincolnshire and elsewhere; thus in 1550 he sold part of the Thornton college property to his nephew, Sir Robert Tyrwhitt II, and five years later bought over 5,000 acres at Woodwalton, Huntingdonshire. When in 1553 he was sued by some of his tenants for enclosing he agreed to their demand, saying that ‘as he was a true Christian man and knight’, he would ‘help to pluck up [the hedges] with his own hands’. He was also the defendant in property disputes before the Star Chamber and the court of the duchy of Lancaster.6
  • Tyrwhitt and his wife remained in attendance on Catherine Parr after the death of Henry VIII and so became involved with her new husband Thomas Seymour. Lady Tyrwhitt witnessed Seymour’s neglect of Catherine during the last year of her life, and after her death told the story to the Privy Council. Thus in January 1549 the Council, alarmed at Seymour’s wooing of Princess Elizabeth, sent the Tyrwhitts to Hatfield as overseers to the princess in place of Catherine Astley and Thomas Parry, who were suspected of promoting Seymour’s cause. At the Council’s direction Tyrwhitt questioned the princess about Seymour while Lady Tyrwhitt plied her with ‘good advices ... especially in such matters as [the Council] appointed’. Although the Tyrwhitts treated her gently Elizabeth never forgave them their part in the affair. Lady Tyrwhitt was a devout woman of Puritan tendencies who may have been unwelcome to the young princess on several grounds. Her husband once told Thomas Seymour that she was ‘not sane [sound] in divinity, but she was half a Scripture woman’. She was the author of Morning and Euening praiers with diuers Psalmes Himnes and Meditations (1574).7
  • Shortly after the interlude at Hatfield House, Tyrwhitt was appointed joint lord lieutenant of Huntingdonshire. He may have been elected senior knight for Huntingdonshire in the Parliament of March 1553. The original return is torn and the name of the senior knight lost, but the circumstances point to his election. Since 1544 he had controlled the wardship of Kimbolton, the traditional stronghold of electoral power in the county, and after his purchase of Leighton Bromswold in 1548 he was a leading landowner; he was one of the lords lieutenant and there was no one of his stature to oppose him; and lastly, his co-lieutenant Audley took the junior seat and his client Simon Throckmorton heads the list of electors on the indenture.8
  • It is not known what part Tyrwhitt played in the succession crisis of July 1553, but at the end of that year he and Audley took the field against the rebels in Kent, presumably in their capacity as lieutenants, although only Audley, a soldier by profession, was given a reward. Tyrwhitt sat in only one of Mary’s Parliaments, that of April 1554. He may have thought it prudent not to court embarrassment. When in Easter term 1555 his brother Philip Tyrwhitt was informed against in the King’s bench for having left Parliament without leave, Tyrwhitt stood surety for him. In the following year Tyrwhitt’s lease of Mortlake was revoked by the crown and the house was handed over to Cardinal Pole. The shrievalty which he began in November 1557 could have been intended both to discipline him and perhaps to make it difficult for him to sit in the Parliament which was summoned immediately afterwards.9
  • The accession of Elizabeth did not herald Tyrwhitt’s return to favour by reason of the Queen’s grudge against him. After sitting in her first Parliament he led a retired life at Leighton Bromswold, where he died on 10 May 1572.10
  • Ref Volumes: 1509-1558
  • Author: T. M. Hofmann
  • Notes
  • 1. Date of birth estimated from first reference. Lincs. Peds. (Harl. Soc. lii), 1019-20; LP Hen. VIII, xv.
  • 2. LP Hen. VIII, iv, v, x, xii, xiii, xvi, xviii-xxi; CPR, 1550-3, p. 394; 1553, pp. 186, 354, 356, 414; 1553-4, p. 20; 1560-3, pp. 433-4, 437-8; 1560-3, pp. 18, 22, 24, 40, 41; 1569-72, pp. 222, 277-8; APC, iii. 259; iv. 49, 277; vii. 248; Stowe 571, f. 60; Somerville, Duchy, i. 590; E101/426/2, f. 6; 163/12/17, nos. 38, 51, 54; HMC Hatfield, i. 443; VCH Northants. iii. 69.
  • 3. HP, ed. Wedgwood, 1439-1509 (Biogs.), 891; LP Hen. VIII, ii, iv, x.
  • 4. LP Hen. VIII, xi, xiii-xx; HMC Bath, iv. 3; CPR, 1547-8, p. 172; DKR, x(2), 292-3; M. H. and R. Dodds, Pilgrimage of Grace, i. 109-10.
  • 5. LP Hen. VIII, xii-xvi, xviii-xxi; R. P. Tyrwhitt, Fam. Tyrwhitt, 17, 106; VCH Northants. iii. 69; APC, i. 169; PCC 6, 28 Pynnyng.
  • 6. C219/18C/58v; LP Hen. VIII, vii. 56 citing SP1/82, ff. 59-62; Cal. Feet of Fines, Hunts. ed. Turner, 138, 144, 146; CPR, 1549-51, p. 232; VCH Hunts. iii. 89; St.Ch. 4/2/13; Ducatus Lanc. ii(3), 316.
  • 7. Coll. State Pprs. ed. Haynes, 70-108.
  • 8. LP Hen. VIII, xix; APC, iii. 14; iv. 49, 277; CPR, 1550-3, p. 77; C219/20/59.
  • 9. Chron. Q. Jane and Q. Mary (Cam. Soc. xlviii), 187; KB27/1177; CPR, 1557-8, pp. 69-70.
  • 10. Tyrwhitt, 22; Pevsner, Beds., Hunts. Hunts, and Peterborough, 283
  • From: http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1509-1558/member/ty... ________________
  • ELIZABETH OXENBRIDGE (c.1519-April 1578)
  • Elizabeth Oxenbridge was the daughter of Goddard Oxenbridge (1465-February 10, 1531) of Brede and his second wife, Anne Fiennes (1490-May 24, 1531). She was at court in the household of Queen Jane Seymour in 1537 and after the queen's death resided with Mary Arundell, countess of Sussex. She played an active role in attempting to place one of her sisters, Mary Oxenbridge, in the Calais household of Honor Grenville, viscountess Lisle. Mary thwarted the plan by eloping with a gentleman from Kent. Elizabeth was married to Sir Robert Tyrwhitt (c.1504-1572) of Leighton Bromswold, Huntingdonshire by August 4, 1539, when she and several other gentlewomen wrote a letter to King Henry from Portsmouth, where they had gone to view the royal fleet. She signed it "Elizabeth Tyrwhyt." When Catherine Howard became queen, Elizabeth was a gentlewoman of the privy chamber and during Anne Parr Herbert’s absence from court to have a child, temporarily took over her duties as keeper of the queen’s jewels. She was also a lady of the privy chamber to Kathryn Parr and shared the queen’s views on religion. It is probably at this time that her book of prayers was written. Her husband was Kathryn's master of horse. Both she and her husband remained with the queen dowager after Henry VIII’s death and Elizabeth, in testimony before the Privy Council, gave an eyewitness account of the queen dowager’s death on September 5, 1548. Elizabeth’s dislike of Kathryn Parr’s new husband, Lord Admiral Thomas Seymour, comes through clearly in this report. A short time later, Sir Robert and Lady Tyrwhitt were put in charge of Princess Elizabeth at Hatfield, following the removal of the princess’s longtime governess, Kat Astley, on suspicion of plotting to marry her young charge to the widowed Lord Admiral. Upon Lady Tyrwhitt's arrival, the princess locked herself in her room and declared that she did not need a governess. Sir Robert was of the opinion that she needed two and Lady Tyrwhitt stayed on even after Kat Astley’s return to the household. When the princess was in the Tower, Lady Tyrwhitt sent her a copy of the book of prayers later printed as Lady Elizabeth Tyrwhitt’s Morning and Evening Prayers (1574). In 1577, the Puritan printer John Field dedicated his translation of Jean de L'Espine's Excellent treatise of Christian righteousness to Lady Tyrwhitt. Although Sir Robert continued as master of horse under Mary Tudor, Elizabeth seems to have stayed at home. She bore at least three children, two who died young and a daughter, Katherine (1541-1567). Sir Robert's will in 1572 left the bulk of his estate to his "deare and wellbeloved wife." Some genealogies give her a second husband, Roger Fynes. Elizabeth died in her home in St. John's Lane, Clerkenwell. Biography: Susan M. Felch, ed., Elizabeth Tyrwhit's Morning and Evening Prayers (2008); Oxford DNB entry under "Tyrwhit [n%C3%A9e Oxenbridge], Elizabeth." Portrait: marble effigy in St. Mary's parish church, Leighton Bromswold.
  • From: http://www.kateemersonhistoricals.com/TudorWomenO.htm _____________________

References

  1. Notices and remains of the family of Tyrwhitt [signed R.P.T.]. Corrected and ... By Robert Philip Tyrwhitt (1858). Page 16-17 < GoogleBooks >
  2. The English Baronetage: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets, Now Existing: Their Descents, Marriages, and Issues; Memorable Actions, Both in War, and Peace; Religious and Charitable Donations; Deaths, Places of Burial and Monumental Iiscriptions [sic], Volume 1 (Google eBook) Arthur Collins. Tho. Wotton, 1741 - Nobility. Page 179. "Tyrwhitt, of Stainfield"
  3. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~hwbradley/aqwg862.htm#59905C
  4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Tyrwhitt_(courtier)
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