William III Courtenay (1477–1535)

Arms of Courtenay of Powderham: Or, three torteaux a label azure

Sir William III Courtenay (1477/1485  1535) "The Great",[1] of Powderham in Devon, was a leading member of the Devon gentry and a courtier of King Henry VIII having been from September 1512 one of the king's Esquires of the Body. He served as Sheriff of Devon thrice, Feb.-Nov. 1522, 1525/6 and 1533/4. He was elected Knight of the Shire for Devon in 1529.

Origins

He was the eldest son and heir of Sir William II Courtenay (1451-1512) of Powderham by his wife Cecily Cheyne, daughter of Sir John Cheyne of Pinhoe. The family of Courtenay "of Powderham", always known thus until 1556 to distinguish it from the senior line of Courtenay of Tiverton Castle, Earls of Devon, was one of the most influential and best connected in Devon from the 15th century onwards. The cadet line of "Courtenay of Powderham" was descended from Sir Philip Courtenay (1340-1406), a younger son of Hugh Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon (1303-1377), of Tiverton Castle, but eventually itself in 1831 was officially recognised by the House of Lords as having become in 1556 de jure holder of the Earldom of Devon inherited after the decease of a distant cousin, Edward Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon (1527–1556), the last male of the senior line of Courtenay of Tiverton.[2]

Career

William entered his inheritance on 24 November 1512, receiving possession of the family's principal seat, the manor of Powderham, on 11 September. He had lived as a younger man, following his first marriage, in East Coker, Somerset. As a boy he was bound over with another minor ward, Richard Cornwall, to his own recognizance to remain within two miles of the walls of the City of London. The bond was cancelled by April 1512. In 1513 he was appointed Keeper of the royal forest of Petherton Park in Somerset, being summoned to attend upon the King at Easter.

Courtenay was an Esquire of the Body participating in Henry VIII's military campaign of 1514 to Gascony, and again in 1523. He was appointed a Commissioner for the collection of the Tax Subsidy in 1512, 1514, and 1515. Sir William was one of the many knights in the king's retinue at the Field of the Cloth of Gold, and also accompanied the king at his meeting with Emperor Charles V at Gravelines. He was probably knighted before these two latter events, the exact date remaining unknown, being in March 1520.[3]

Sir William was regularly appointed a Commissioner for Devon and Cornwall from 1527.[4] He was a Commissioner of the Peace in April 1529, on the fall of Wolsey. Sir William signed a plea for his nephew's debts at Powerham in a letter to Cromwell dated 3 May 1532 - an obligation that made him Cromwell's servant. On 22 May 1533 he wrote Cromwell pleading injury and illness on the occasion of Queen Anne Boleyn's coronation. He recorded falling twice from his horse when riding a long way from home on the Devon estates. He also wrote to request Cromwell organize a visit from the King to his manor at Petherton in 1533.[5] Later Courtenay sent a servant to Cromwell, Richard Southwill, to be found a wife, for a six-month fee in lieu of debts. Sir William was continually in debt at Powderham. Cromwell, forever scheming at court, held one of Courtenay's cousins to ransom, demanding resolution of payments.

Courtenay also communicated the activity of suspicious clerics refusing to abandon their abbeys. John Pruste the former abbot of Hartland, pleaded Cromwell "as a good master", but that had not prevented Sir Thomas Arundell's ad quondam servants taking off the livestock. The last abbot, Sir Thomas Pope was accused of looting the silver plate that belonged to the Bishop of Exeter.[6] Nonetheless this did not prevent Courtenay being accused of taking the abbey's account and record books.[7] He was an instrument of the dissolution of the monasteries used by Thomas Cromwell to carry through the transfer of assets and wealth to the Treasury in the westcountry. It is probable that he proposed a marriage alliance with a daughter-in-law of Richard Cromwell. Authority on three separate elections, as Sheriff of Devon made warranted arrests and execution of duty convenient for the Crown.

Courtenay was appointed commissioner in charge of demolishing all the fish weirs in Devon, following the legislation of 1535 which ordered the "putting down" of all weirs in the country. This role involved him in performing a role unpopular with his fellow Devon gentry whose weirs were major assets in providing salmon. One of his last actions before his death, recorded in the Lisle Papers is to have received a visit at Powderham on 11 November 1535 from Lady Lisle's land-agent begging him to spare her weir at Umberleigh. Courtenay replied that he dare not as he had received "privy letters" from the king which determined him to report when next at court that all the weirs in Devon were down, and that not even for an inducement of 1,000 marks would he contemplate leaving Umberleigh weir standing for one week longer "for fear of the king's displeasure".[8]

Marriages & Progeny

Courtenay married twice:

Death and burial

He died at Powderham between 23 and 24 November 1535. His heir was his grandson Sir William IV Courtenay (1527–1557) of Powderham, de jure Earl of Devon (recognised retrospectively in 1831 by the House of Lords), son of his eldest son George Courtenay who had predeceased him in 1533.

Sources

References

  1. Epithet "The Great", see Debrett's Peerage, 1968, Earl of Devon, predecessors, p.354; Vivian, 1895, p.246
  2. List of descent based on French, Powderham Castle guidebook, op.cit., pp.6-7
  3. Library Papers, Henry VIII, i, g, 257(87).
  4. Rychard Pollard, was a servant to Courtenay. Letters and Papers: Foreign and Domestic of Henry VIII, vol.6, 1533 (publ 1882), 653-80.
  5. Letter from Sir William Courtenay, knt to Thomas Cromwell, 20 April 1535 (publ 1882, Camden Society)
  6. on 6 October 1534
  7. Byrne, Muriel St. Clare, (ed.) The Lisle Letters, 6 vols, University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London, 1981, vol.2, pp.622-624
  8. Vivian, 1895, p.247
  9. Pevsner, Nikolaus & Cherry, Bridget, The Buildings of England: Devon, London, 2004, p.263
  10. tudorplace.com
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