William Brewer, 1st Baron Brewer

Arms of Brewer: Gules, two bends wavy or[1]

William Brewer, 1st Baron Brewer (alias Briwere, Brigwer, etc.) (died 1226) of Tor Brewer[2] in Devon, was a prominent administrator and judge in England during the reigns of kings Richard I, his brother King John, and John's son Henry III. He was a major landholder and the founder of several religious institutions. In 1204, he acquired the feudal barony of Horsley in Derbyshire.[3]

Biography

Brewer's ancestry is unclear, but he was probably the son of Henry Brewer and the grandson of William Brewer, Royal Forester of Bere, Hampshire, who founded the nunnery of Polsloe in Exeter. William Brewer, Bishop of Exeter, was one of his nephews.

He began his career as Forester of Bere, which appears to have been a hereditary title, and by 1179 had been appointed Sheriff of Devon.[4] Under King Richard I (1189–1199) he was one of the justiciars appointed to administer the kingdom while the king was on the Third Crusade. He was present at Worms, Germany, in 1193 to aid in the negotiations for the ransom of King Richard. In about 1193 he began his career as a Baron of the Exchequer, an office that he exercised until the reign of King Henry III (1216–1273).[5]

Under King John (1199–1216) Brewer was one of the most active figures in government, in terms of the number of royal charters he witnessed,[6] together with Henry Marshal, Bishop of Exeter and Geoffrey FitzPeter, 1st Earl of Essex. During this period he was appointed Sheriff of Berkshire, Sheriff of Cornwall, Sheriff of Devon, Sheriff of Hampshire, Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire, Sheriff of Oxfordshire, Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset and Sheriff of Sussex and Sheriff of Wiltshire. He was often unpopular with the inhabitants of his counties, and the men of Cornwall, Somerset, and Dorset paid money to the king for his removal.[7]

He founded and endowed three monasteries: Torre Abbey, which was sited within his manor of Tor Brewer in Devon, in 1196; Mottisfont Abbey in Hampshire in 1201; and Dunkeswell Abbey in Devon in 1201.[8]

In 1224, he retired from the world to live as a Cistercian monk at Dunkeswell Abbey, where he died in 1226 and was buried with his wife before the high altar.[9]

Marriage and children

Brewer married Beatrice de Vaux (died before 1220), (Latinised to de Vallibus, "from the valleys") who had been the mistress of Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall (died 1175) and mother of Henry FitzCount (died 1221). Their children included:

Landholdings

Brewer was adept at acquiring lands, and obtained a substantial feudal barony from relatively humble beginnings. By 1219 he was assessed for scutage on over sixty knight's fees scattered over several shires.[15]

According to Risdon, the lands of William Brewer in Devon formed a feudal barony,[16] but this does not appear on the list of baronies given by Pole (died 1635),[17] nor is it recognised by Sanders (1960).[18] Risdon stated that Brewer held close to thirty knight's fees (usually synonymous with manors) in Devon, and that his barony ("honour") was "incorporated to the crown" together with the Dukedom of Lancaster, by King Henry IV.[16] His Devonshire landholdings included:

William Brewer was portrayed as one of King John's enforcers in the television series Robin of Sherwood (Episode: The Time Of The Wolf, written by Richard Carpenter, 1985), played by John Harding. He also appeared as a minor character in Richard Kluger's 1992 novel The Sheriff of Nottingham, and he is mentioned in Wilson Harp's 2013 novel The Ghost of Sherwood as the High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and the Royal Forests, but the acting sheriff in his name in the story is a fictional brother named Robert Brewer.

Notes

  1. Pole, pp.447, 473, "bends undé"
  2. Pole, pp.447, 473
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Sanders, p.123
  4. Dugdale, The Baronage of England, p. 700
  5. Turner, Men Raised From the Dust, pp. 73–4
  6. Turner, Men Raised From the Dust, p. 75
  7. Turner, Men Raised From the Dust, pp. 76–7
  8. Turner, Men Raised From the Dust, pp. 87–88
  9. Seymour, Torre Abbey, pp. 49–50
  10. Watkin, 'A Great Devonian: William Brewer', p. 82
  11. 1 2 3 Risdon, p.245
  12. Sanders, p.148
  13. Hunt, who calls him apparently erroneously "Henry Percy"
  14. Pole, p.272
  15. Turner, Men Raised From the Dust, p. 80
  16. 1 2 Risdon, p.361
  17. Pole, pp.1–31
  18. Sanders
  19. Risdon, p.146
  20. Pole, p.359
  21. Risdon, p.233 "William de Feritate" (Latinized form
  22. Pole, p.315
  23. Risdon, p.178
  24. Pole, p.365; Risdon, p.247
  25. Risdon, p.247
  26. Pole, p.269

References

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