Nicholas Wadham (died 1542)

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Arms of Wadham: Gules, a chevron between three roses argent

Sir Nicholas I Wadham (by 1472–1542), of Merryfield in the parish of Ilton in Somerset and Edge in the parish of Branscombe, Devon, was MP for Somerset in 1529.[1] He was Sheriff of Devon in 1501–02 and 1514–15, Sheriff of Somerset and Sheriff of Dorset in 1498–99 and 1534–35, and Sheriff of Wiltshire in 1516–17. He was Captain of the Isle of Wight[2] 1509–1520[1] with residence at Carisbrooke Castle. By 1503 he was appointed an Esquire of the Body to King Henry VII (1485–1509) and was knighted in 1504.[1] He was present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520.[1]

Origins

He was born the eldest son and heir of Sir John Wadham (died 1502) of Merryfield and Edge and Elizabeth Stucley.[3]

Early ancestry

In about 1377 the estate of Edge was acquired by the de Wadham family, which originated at the manor of Wadham in the parish of Knowstone,[4] in North Devon. Wadeham was a manor recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as held in-chief from King William the Conqueror by the Saxon thane Ulf, who had held it since before the Norman Conquest of 1066.[5] Such continuing holdings by Saxons after the Conquest are very rare, and Ulf in 1086 is still described as one of "The King's Thanes", so clearly was serving the new Norman king satisfactorily. Samuel Lysons (1822) suggested that the de Wadham family may have been direct descendants of Ulf.[6] The family acquired the estate of Merryfield in the 15th century on the marriage of Sir John III Wadham to Elizabeth Popham, a daughter and co-heiress of Sir Stephen Popham (c. 1386 – 1444)[7] of Popham, Hampshire, five times MP for Hampshire. The Wadhams held Edge for at least nine generations, and Merryfield for five, until on the death of Nicholas Wadham (1531/2–1609), founder of Wadham College, Oxford, these estates and others passed to his heirs, who included his nephew a member of the Wyndham family of Orchard Wyndham in Somerset.

Marriages & progeny

He married four times:

First wife

Firstly to Joan Hill, the daughter of Robert Hill of Halsway, Somerset. By Joan Hill he had progeny including:

  • John Wadham (died 1578), son and heir, of Edge and Merryfield, father of Nicholas II Wadham (died 1609), co-founder of Wadham College, Oxford, the last in the male line of the Wadhams of Edge and Merryfield.
  • Laurence Wadham, who married Margaret Hody, died without progeny
  • Giles Wadham
  • Andrew Wadham
  • Mary Wadham, wife of Sir Richard Chudleigh.[8]
  • Elizabeth Wadham, wife of Sir Edward Baumfilde (died 1528) of Poltimore, Devon[9]

Second wife

Arms of Seymour: Gules, two wings conjoined in lure or

Secondly to Margaret Seymour, a daughter of John Seymour (died 1491) of Wulfhall, Wiltshire, by his wife Elizabeth Darrell, a daughter of Sir John (or George) Darrell (died c. 1474), of Littlecote, Wiltshire by his wife Margaret Stourton (born c. 1433), a daughter of John Stourton, 1st Baron Stourton by his wife Margery or Marjory Wadham.[10][11] (Sir Nicholas I Wadham's grandmother was Elizabeth Popham, heiress of Merryfield, whose father Sir Stephen Popham (died 1444), MP, was descended from co-heirs of Laurence St Martin (died 1318) of Littlecote and West Dean, Wiltshire;[12] The other co-heir of Laurence St Martin was the Calston family, of whom Sir Thomas Calston (died 1418), MP, gave Littlecote to his daughter Elizabeth Calston on her marriage in 1415 to William Darell, MP[13]). Margaret Seymour was thus the aunt of Queen Jane Seymour.[14] She probably died at Carisbrooke Castle, her husband's seat as Captain of the Isle of Wight. By Nicholas Wadham she had a son Nicholas Wadham, who died an infant and whose chrysom[15] small monumental brass survives in Ilton Church, together with a brass heraldic escutcheon showing the arms of Wadham impaling Seymour (Gules, a pair of wings conjoined in lure or).

Monument to 2nd wife

File:St Mary, Carisbrooke - Monument - geograph.org.uk - 1171896.jpg
Monument to Margaret Seymour, St Mary the Virgin Church, Carisbrooke
File:MargaretSeymourWadham CarisbrookeChurch IsleOfWight.PNG
1888 drawing of monument to Margaret Seymour, St Mary the Virgin Church, Carisbrooke

Margaret Seymour's monument and tomb, dated c. 1520, survives in St Mary the Virgin Church, Carisbrooke,[16] Isle of Wight, and is decorated with an effigy of herself and of six infirm persons, in memory of her having founded a hospital for the infirm. Her monument in Carisbrooke Church was described thus by Rogers (1888):[17]

It is a canopied monument, with high tomb, in the north wall of the nave, of large size, and late Perpendicular character, with embattled cornice and string-course of vine tracery, having in the centre an angel holding a shield with the sacred monogram. The canopy is cusped and pierced, groined within, and a large double rose in the centre, the ends buttressed, panelled, and embattled. In the centre of the Purbeck marble table is a lady kneeling on a cushion, with pedimental head-dress, embroidered loose sleeves and cuffs, waist-band with long ends fringed, her hands raised in prayer. But the most interesting feature is the reredos at the back of the tomb under the canopy. On each side of the lady are three panels containing figures in alto-relievo, representing cripples and impotent folk, toward whom tradition assigns her to have been most charitable and beneficent. On her right is a man with his feet turned awry, leaning on a crutch, a woman and a man, apparently an imbecile. On the left, a woman with one hand holding, probably, a medicament, and the other hanging helplessly; and two men, one with his legs twisted, and the other on a crutch, and his legs bandaged. Over the lady is a shield, Wadham quartering Chiselden (sic) (for Margaret Chiseldon of Holcombe Rogus, Devon, Nicholas I Wadham's great-grandmother), Popham, and Reade (of Pole-Antony, Tiverton, an heiress of Popham[18]), impaling Seymour, two wings in lure dependant. The ledger line inscription has disappeared. There are roses in the spandrels; below the table are apparently enriched panels, but they are hidden by the seats".

Monument to infant son

File:NicholasWadham 1508Brass IltonChurch Somerset.JPG
Monumental brass to Nicholas Wadham (1508–1508) infant son of Sir Nicholas I Wadham (died 1542) of Merryfield, by his 2nd wife Margaret Seymour. Ilton Church

A small monumental brass survives in Ilton Church of Nicholas Wadham (1508–1508) infant son of Sir Nicholas I Wadham (died 1542) of Merryfield, Ilton, by his 2nd wife Margaret Seymour. It is now in three parts. Above an infant wrapped in swaddling clothes (thus called a "chrysom brass") is an escutcheon showing the arms of Wadham impaling Seymour (Gules, a pair of wings conjoined in lure or). An inscription on a separate plate of brass reads thus:

"Pray for the soule of Nycholas Wadh(a)m son to Sir Nycholas Wadh(a)m knygtt & capten of the Ile of Wyght whyche dep(ar)ted owte of this worlde the VIII day of December in the yere of our Lorde M VC VIII on whos soule J(es)HU(s) have marci amen".

The lowest inscribed plate relates to Sir Nicholas's 4th wife Jane Lyte (see below).

Third wife

Thirdly to Isabel Baynham, daughter of Thomas Baynham of Clearwell, Gloucestershire and widow of Sir Giles Brydges of Coberley, Gloucestershire.

Fourth wife

Fourthly to Joan Lyte, daughter of Richard Lyte and widow of William Walton, by the latter of whom she had five sons and two daughters. Half of a small monumental brass plate survives in Ilton Church inscribed as follows (the missing half inscribed in stone) (see image above):

"Here lyethe dame Joane Wadame late the wife of Sr Nycholas Wadame knight which dame Jane was doughter to Richard Lyte esquire who dyed the XX day Augustii 1557".[19]

Sources

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Virgoe
  2. Per monumental brass in Ilton Church
  3. Elizabeth was not daughter of Sir Hugh Stucley (1496–1559) as shown by Vivian, Lt.Col. J.L., (Ed.) The Visitations of the County of Devon: Comprising the Heralds' Visitations of 1531, 1564 & 1620, Exeter, 1895, p.721, but of an earlier Hugh, Sheriff of Devon in 1448.
  4. Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.422
  5. Thorn, Caroline & Frank, (eds.) Domesday Book, (Morris, John, gen.ed.) Vol. 9, Devon, Parts 1 & 2, Phillimore Press, Chichester, 1985, part 1, 52,40
  6. Lysons, Magna Britannia, Vol.6, Devon
  7. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/popham-sir-stephen-1386-1444 History of Parliament: Sir Stephen Popham
  8. Vivian, p.189; Descendants given in Pole, Sir William (died 1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.255
  9. Vivian, p.39; Pole, p.231
  10. Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham, Magna Carta ancestry: a study in colonial and medieval families (2005), p. 554
  11. Arthur Collins, Peerage of England: genealogical, biographical, and historical (1812), p. 148
  12. Victoria County History, Vol.4: Hampshire, 1911, pp.519–524, Parishes: West Tytherley with Buckholt, Manors: West Dean
  13. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1386-1421/member/calston-thomas-1361-1418
  14. Letters Archaeological and Historical Relating to the Isle of Wight, The Tomb of Margaret Wadham at Carisbrooke Church, pp.445–7 [1]; Not sister to Jane Seymour as erroneously stated by Worsley in his History of the Isle of Wight & by Sir John Oglander in his history of the Isle of Wight
  15. A baby depicted wrapped in swaddling clothes
  16. See further Slade, John James, A Wiltshirewoman's Tomb in Carisbrooke Church (Margaret Lady Wadham Nee Seymour), 1945
  17. Rogers, pp.162–3; for image see
  18. Rogers, p.156
  19. Augustii, Latin: "of August"