Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton

The Earl of Southampton

Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, miniature by Hans Holbein the Younger
Spouse(s) Jane Cheney

Issue

William Wriothesley
Anthony Wriothesley
Henry Wriothesley, 2nd Earl of Southampton
Elizabeth Wriothesley
Mary Wriothesley
Katherine Wriothesley
Anne Wriothesley
Mabel Wriothesley
Noble family Wriothesley
Father William Wriothesley, otherwise Wrythe
Mother Agnes Drayton
Born (1505-12-21)21 December 1505
London
Died 30 July 1550(1550-07-30) (aged 44)
Lincoln Place, London
Arms of Wriothesley: Azure, a cross or between four hawks close argent
Quartered arms of Sir Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, KG

Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, KG (pronunciation 'Risley': /ˈrzli/ (archaic),[1] /ˈrɒtsli/ [1] and /ˈrəθsli/[2] have been suggested) (21 December 1505 30 July 1550) was an English peer, secretary of state, Lord Chancellor and Lord High Admiral. A naturally skilled but unscrupulous and devious politician who changed with the times, Wriothesley served as a loyal instrument of King Henry VIII in the latter's break with Roman Catholic church. Richly rewarded with royal gains from the Dissolution of the Monasteries, he nevertheless prosecuted Calvinists and other dissident Protestants when political winds changed.

Early life

Thomas Wriothesley, born in London 21 December 1505, was the son of York Herald William Wriothesley, whose ancestors had spelled the family surname "Wryth", and Agnes Drayton, daughter and heiress of James Drayton of London. Thomas had two sisters, Elizabeth, born in 1507, and Anne, born in 1508, and a brother, Edward, born in 1509. Thomas's father and uncle were the first members of his family to use the "Wriothesley" spelling of the family surname.[3]

Wriothesley received his early education at St Paul's School, London. In 1522 he was admitted to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he was taught law by Stephen Gardiner; although Wriothesley did not take a degree, he and Gardiner remained lifelong friends. In 1524, at the age of nineteen, he entered a career at court came to the attention of Thomas Cromwell. Before 4 May 1530 he was appointed joint Clerk of the Signet under Stephen Gardiner, secretary to King Henry VIII, a post he held for a decade while continuing in Cromwell's service.[4] One historian has described the young lawyers as "able, entreprising, tenacious and ruthless, yet unsufferably overconfident and egotistic."[5]

A useful courtier

A member of the royal secretariat, Wriothesley and William Brereton were charged with helping secure a divorce from the Pope for Anne Boleyn to assume her royal position; they were sent out to get members of the nobility to sign written statements indicating assent to the divorce.[6] Wriothesley was at Windsor with the Court when the series of protests known as the Pilgrimage of Grace broke out in reaction to the new rule. The Clerk of the Signet admired the King but probably learnt lessons of cruelty from the treatment of Robert Aske in 1536. "It was upon such men that the King relied at times of crisis". Wriothesley's services were richly rewarded at the dissolution of the monasteries. He was granted extensive lands between Southampton and Winchester, once belonging to the abbey ruins of Beaulieu and Titchfield. Even from the retrospective of the excesses of the 1530s, Wriothesley was still apt to exaggerate his fidelity to his "benign and pleasant" King, of whom he knew only in the febrile atmosphere of the Court.[7]

Until May, 1539, he was Henry VIII's ambassador in Brussels.[8] In late 1539, Anne of Cleves was due to come from the German princeling to England, and Wriothesley was to form the naval escort. On 27 December the Princess arrived at Deal in Kent, from whence she was shown to Dover Castle; on New Years Day the party reached Rochester Castle. Wriothesley continued to support Norfolk's catholic party, but only when it suited him at court as the parties emerged between the reformists and conservatives. In the absence of a predominant figure the Council became more conciliar towards the end of the reign. Having been sent on diplomatic errands abroad, in 1540 Sir Thomas Wriothesley was made one of the king's principal secretaries (a position he held jointly with Sir Ralph Sadler), acting as Secretary to the Privy Council. Dividing the duties, Sadler's was personal secretary to the King, whereas Wriothesley's responsibilities were purely political. Wriothesley was rewarded with the dissolved abbey of Titchfield for good service to the king. He rapidly converted it into a country house and ancestral seat. Wriothesley's noble parentage and strong personality enabled him to dominate the commoner Sadler. Knighted in 1540, Wriothesley made friends with Sir Anthony Browne of the refounded Gentleman Pensioners, who acted as an armed bodyguard of the King pursuant to the Greenwich Ordinances.[9] The expansion of the Pensioners from 50 to 350 members was an expansion that signalled the resurgence of the conservative noble faction at court during the 1540s.

Queen Catherine Howard's conviction of and execution for adultery signaled that the political pendulum was swinging away from Norfolk once more. On 13 November 1542, Secretary Wriothesley was sent to announce the bad news to members of the Queen's Household at Hampton Court; all her chamber were dismissed and sent home. In 1542 it was said that Wriothesley governed almost everything in England.[10] He sought to bring about an alliance between England and Spain in 1543. Wriothesley was one of the Council led by Roman Catholic Bishop Gardiner, who ordered the imprisonment of Thomas, Earl of Surrey for being drunk and disorderly. He supported Gardiner's crackdown against Lutheran opinions threatening the lives of reformers Miles Coverdale and Hugh Latimer, presaging the reign of 'Bloody' Mary. All Protestants were rooted out of the royal household, with those of the new extreme Puritan sect Calvinism being treated with especial prejudice. The Council even intimidated Archbishop Cranmer, who was protected by the King himself. Sir Ralph Sadler was ousted at the principal secretary to the King to be replaced by the more judicious and discreet William Paget.[11] But the rise of the conservatives meant Wriothesley had eventually to go, in January 1644 in favour of the openly catholic Sir William Petre. Fortunately for Cranmer and others, the King was not prepared to turn the clock back to the 1530s, and Catherine Parr, with her experience in two previous marriages, impressed Wriothesley by offering Henry stability in his old age. Furthermore, as Governess to Princess Elizabeth, bringing the children to court at Christmas 1543, Parr showed off what Wriothesley had accurately predicted to be Elizabeth's promise as a future leader.

A confident counsellor

Wriothesley disliked the arrogant, swaggering Earl of Hertford; they had long been enemies.[12] Wriothesley and Secretary Paget tried to effect a necessary reconciliation, that prompted the former to step down.[13] Hertford was sent north to fight the Scots, when on 22 April 1544, Lord Audley died, leaving Wriothesley to be appointed Lord Chancellor the next month, at a time when Gardiner's power was waning. Ever the unscrupulous schemer, Wriothesley was purposely chosen to keep both papists and reformists at bay. The King relied heavily on his aristocratic friends Suffolk and Wriothesley to secure a balance of power in the Privy Chamber. So the King prepared an invasion of France, much to the nobility's approval.[14] Wriothesley was created Baron Wriothesley of Titchfield in 1544. But as Lord Chancellor he became notorious for torturing Anne Askew, a self-confessed protestant, personally operating the wheel on the rack.[15] The Catholic faction was determined to root out heresy, suspecting Queen Catherine's influence over the royal children. When Gardiner tried to arrest Surrey's friends with Wriothesley's support, the earl was severely reprimanded by the King. On 6 July 1546 the King moved to Greenwich Palace, with the conservatives holding a Secretaryship, Chancellor, and leading privy councillors, they tried to make further arrests. Wriothesley secured the royal warrant for Catherine's arrest but then lost it, only to be despatched by the King as "Arrant knave! Beast! Fool!", a humiliation especially damaging given that his faction was already in decline. By September 1546 they were outnumbered by the reformists; his hatred for Hertford had deepened. Privy Council meetings broke out into fisticuffs. The Lord Chancellor conducted French Lord Admiral Claud d'Annebaut to Hampton Court for a 'Catholic' royal audience. He accompanied a royal progress, and hunting at Windsor, when Wriothesley had lost control of Privy Chamber. Speechless and overcome with grief Lord Chancellor Wriothesley could do nothing to prevent Hertford from taking control in defiance of the late King's will.[16]

Under Edward VI

He was one of the executors of Henry's will, and in accordance with the dead King's wishes he was created Earl of Southampton on 16 February 1547 and was a member of the Regency Council that would rule collectively during King Edward VI's minority.[17] He was one of the few members of the council to oppose the rise of the king's maternal uncle, Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, to the position of Lord Protector.[18] Wriothesley objected to Somerset’s assumption of monarchical power over the Council. In March 1547, he then found himself abruptly dismissed from the chancellorship on charges of selling off some of his offices to delegates. Also he lost his seat on the Privy Council.[19]

Later he was readmitted to the Council, and he took a leading part in bringing about the fall of the Duke of Somerset, but he had not regained his former position when he died. His successor in the earldom was his son, Henry.

Marriage and issue

Southampton married Jane Cheney (d. 15 September 1574), the daughter and heiress of William Cheney of Chesham Bois, Buckinghamshire, by Emma Walwyn, daughter of Thomas Walwyn, by whom he had three sons and five daughters:[20]

In fiction

Southampton is a character in Hilary Mantel's novels on Thomas Cromwell, Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies (nicknamed Call-Me Risley for the pronunciation of the family name); he is played by Joel MacCormack in the books' adaptation for television, six-part series Wolf Hall. He is also a character in Margaret George's novel The Autobiography of Henry VIII and C.J. Sansom's novel Lamentation. In the British-Canadian BBC mini-series The Tudors he is played by Frank McCusker, actor from Northern Ireland.

Notes

    Footnotes

    1. 1 2 Montague-Smith 1977, p. 410
    2. Wells 2008
    3. Cokayne 1953, p. 122; Graves 2004.
    4. Graves 2004; Elton 1953, pp. 308ff..
    5. Weir, p.399
    6. Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII; Weir (2001), p.311
    7. Letters and Papers of Henry VIII; Domestic State Papers: Spanish; Weir (2001), p.415
    8. Thomas Wriothesley
    9. Weir (2001), Henry VIII, p.422
    10. Edward Hall, The Triumphant Reign; Weir (2001), p.455
    11. Weir (2001), p.464
    12. Weir (2001), p.479
    13. Letters and Papers of the Reign of King Henry VII; Weir, p.479
    14. Weir (2001), p.479-80
    15. Alison Weir (1992). The Six Wives of Henry VIII. Pimlico Books.
    16. Tytler, P. (1839), England under the Reigns of Edward VI and Mary, 2 vols, London; Weir (2001), p.503
    17. Starkey 2002, pp. 138–39; Alford 2002, p. 69
    18. Elton 1977, p. 333
    19. Loades 2004, pp. 33–34; Elton 1977, p. 333
    20. Cokayne 1953, pp. 125–66; Stopes 1922, pp. 486–7; Akrigg 1968, pp. 4, 6; Elzinga 2004; Goulding 1920, p. 23; Baker 2004.
    21. Cooper 1858, p. 469.
    22. Dugdale reverses the order of her marriages.

    Bibliography

    External links

    Political offices
    Preceded by
    The Lord Audley of Walden
    Lord Chancellor
    1544–1547
    Succeeded by
    The Lord St John
    (Keeper of the Great Seal)
    Peerage of England
    New creation Earl of Southampton
    15471550
    Succeeded by
    Henry Wriothesley
    Baron Wriothesley
    15441550
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