p.1. Francis, Esq. geb. c. 1534, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland, oorl. 25/03/1583 x 24/01/1558, Hatfield, Yorkshire,
met Mary SWIFT (Swyft), geb. 1538, Rotterdam, Yorkshire, oorl. 1581, begr. Tankersley,
d.v. Robert Swyft van Rotherham en Broomhall en Eleanor Wickersley xx 1582 met
Francis BURDET, geb. 1560, d.v. Thomas Burdet van Burthwaite en Isabella
Wentworth. (Francis Burdet hertrou met
Francis Foljambe, of Aldwark, Esq na haar man se dood en weer daarna met Thomas
Savile Esqrs.)
Francis was die seun van Thomas Wortley en Margaret Saville.
Francis was die seun van Thomas Wortley en Margaret Saville.
(Foster, Joseph: Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire, Vol. 2, West Riding. London. 1874)
Een koning en twee koninginne regeer in Francis
Wortley se leeftyd, nl. Koning Edward VI (1547-1553), Koningin Mary I (1553-1558) en Koningin
Elizabeth I (1558-1603). Koning
Edward VI was slegs 9 jaar oud toe hy koning geword het en as gevolg daarvan
was hy bygestaan deur twee adviseurs.
Die eerste was sy oom, die Duke of
Somerset, wat Lord Protector
geraak het, vir die eerste twee en ‘n halwe jaar. Somerset is deur die Duke of Nothumberland vervang.
Beide van hulle wou groot veranderinge aanbring t.o.v. Engeland se
godsdiens. Wette wat bepaal het dat
kerke en dienste meer eenvoudig moes wees, is gemaak. The
common person could now understand what was being said as services - now called
Holy Communion - were in English. Priesters
hoef nie meer helder kleurige klere wat met die Katolieke kerk verband hou te
dra nie en onder Edward se regering is hulle toegelaat om te trou. Die koning was steeds die hoof van die
kerk. In Duitsland en Switserland het
godsdienstige groepe ook weggebreek in protes teen die rykdom en korrupsie van
die Katolieke kerk. Hulle het bekend
geraak as Protestante en Engeland het ‘n Protestantse land geword met die Church of England. Edward was nooit ‘n gesonde seun nie en sy
gesondheid het in 1553 ingegee. (The history learning site)
Mary I was koningin vanaf 1553 tot 1558. Met
haar kroning was sy baie gewild onder die mense van Engeland. Hierdie gewildheid het egter afgeneem a.g.v.
haar godsdienstige oortuigings en haar huwelik.
Mary het die godsdienstige veranderinge wat Edward aangebring het,
heeltemal terugverander. Sy was streng
Rooms Katoliek opgevoed en was met afgryse gevul deur haar halfbroer se
veranderinge. Die groot meerderheid van
die mense in Engeland het hierdie veranderinge reeds aanvaar.
(The history learning site – Mary
I) Koningin Elizabeth (1558-1603) was ‘n baie intelligente persoon. Sy kon Latyn, Frans en Duits praat. Queen
Elizabeth I had required everyone to follow the Church of England and it became
illegal for anyone to attend Catholic mass. Over the years, the laws against those
determined to support the old Catholic religion became more severe. Anyone not attending a regular Anglican
service was termed a recusant and subject to heavy fines and possible
imprisonment. (http://www.towneley.org.uk/downloads/TTv4_web.pdf)
As koningin van Engeland, het sy die land tot die
hoogtepunt van sy mag gelei. Haar regeringstyd word vir baie redes onthou, maar
twee van die hoofredes was 1) die inhegtenisneming (1568) en terregstelling
(1587) van Mary, Queen of Scots, (haar mededinger). Mary Queen of Scots se aankoms in Engeland
het 'n politieke krisis veroorsaak, en 'n rebellie van die feodale adel van die
Noorde het gevolg in 1569. 2) die Spaanse Armada van 1588. (The history
learning site –Elizabeth I) Wortley, William, Yeoman of the Queen's
Countinghouse. ('Index: U-Z', in
Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House, Volume 4, 1590-1594, ed. R A
Roberts (London, 1892), pp. 710-717)
The family of Swyft,
or Swift, was of long consideration in Yorkshire. Robert Swift, Esq., “the rich mercer of
Rotheram: (son of Robert Swyft, by Agnes, his wife, dau of Martin Ann of
Frickley), m. Anne, dau of William Taylor, of Sheffield and had with two daus.
(the elder, Ann, wife of Lionel Reresby, Esq of Thriberg and the younger,
Margaret of Richard, son and heir apparent of Sir Thomas Waterton, Knt. Of
Walton) two sons,
viz.1.,William and 2. Robert, of Rotheram, who m. Ellinor, dau and sole heir of
Nicholas Wickersley, co. York. (William Swift, Clergyman. His ancestors and some of his descendants and
connections by Vance E. Swift. 1980) Robert Swift, the son, was heir to his
father, and after him Steward to the Earl of Shrewsbury. He considerably increased his large patrimony
by trafficking in abbey lands after the dissolution, as well as by his marriage
with Ellen, daughter and heir to Nicholas Wickersley, of Wickersley in
Yorkshire. (Lodge, Edmund ed.: Illustrations of British history, biography, and manners in the
reigns of Henry III, Edward VI, Mary,
Elizabeth and James I Vol I London MDCCXCI. P.192)
Robert Swyft
of Broom hall died before his father and left only female issue. The eldest daughter named Frances, married
Sir Francis Leake of Sutton in the county of Derby knight, progenitor of the
Leakes earls of Scarsdale. Mary the
second daughter was married at Hatfield on the 24th of January 1558 to Francis
Wortley of Wortley, esquire; and Ann the
youngest married Richard Jessop son of William Jessop of Rotherham,
gentleman. (Hunter, Joseph: The History and Topography of the Parish of
Sheffield : with Historical and Descriptive Notices of the Parishes of
Ecclesfield, Hansworth, Treeton and Whiston, and of the Chapelry of Bradfield.
London. 1819) These
coheiresses carried considerable estates into the families of their respective
husbands. (Illustrations of British
history, biography, and manners in the reigns of Henry III, Edward VI, Mary, Elizabeth and
James I Vol I London MDCCXCIedited by Edmund Lodge. P. 192) On the
partition of the estates of Robert Swyft among these his three daughters and
co-heirs, by deed bearing date the 22d of September 1561, to Leake were
assigned the manors of Wadsley, Worrall, and Wickersley; to Wortley, Beighton, Birley, and
Hackenthorp, with the parsonage of Beighton and its appurtenances; and to Jessop, the estate at Broom hall and
another at North Lees in the parish of Hathersage in the county of Derby. (Hunter, Joseph: The History and Topography of the Parish of
Sheffield : with Historical and Descriptive Notices of the Parishes of
Ecclesfield, Hansworth, Treeton and Whiston, and of the Chapelry of Bradfield.
London. 1819) Swift slagspreuk = Festina Lente. ). Or, a chev. vair betw. three bucks in full
course ppr. Crest — A sinister arm embowed rested vert, cuffed ar. holding in
the hand a sheaf of five arrows or, feathered ppr. barbed az. (Burke, Bernard, Sir: The General Armory of England, Scotland,
Ireland and Wales; comprising a registry of armorial bearings from the earliest
to the present time. 1884, London).
(The Visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564 made by William
Flower, Esquire, edited by Charles Best Norcliffe, M.A. of Langton, London
1881.)
The
first we find of this family, is John Burdet,
of Hasilthorpe in Lincolnshire, who married Anne, daughter of Thomas Topley, of
Somerby, in the same county, by whom he had two sons; John, (who left only one daughter and heir,
married to John Pulleyn) and Richard, heir – male to his brother, who had
issue, Robert, who by the daughter of John Bradburne, had issue, Aymer Burdet,
of Denby, near Elmley in Yorkshire, who married Anne, daughter of Sir Robert
Nevile, of Leversedge, Knt. And had issue, Nicholas, who married Elizabeth,
daughter of Richard Wentworth, of Breton, Esq. and had issue, Richard, who took
to wife Elizabeth daughter of John Rockley, of Rockley, and had issue, Aymer,
Thomas, Ralph, Philip; Alice married to
Woodrove; Grace to George Farley; Isabel, to Eland; Dorothy to Birkhead and Elizabeth to Clayton
of Clayton. Aymer Burdet married Maud,
daughter of Thomas Savile of New-hall, and had issue, Henry, Richard, Henry,
and John. Henry Burdet, son and heir,
married Elizabeh, daughter of Henry Jackson of London by whom he had Richard,
Ralph, Henry and John and three daughters.
Richard, eldest son and heir married Mary, daughter of Godfrey Bosvile
of Gunthwaite, Esq, by whom he had, 1. George, ancestor to the Burdets of
Denbigh; 2. Thomas, ancestor to the branch we are
treating of; 3. Bosvile and 4. Robert;
and three daughters, Dorothy, married to Thomas Wheatley; Mary to Edward Green and Jane, to Nevile. Thomas Burdet, Esq, second son, married
Isabella, daughter of Thomas Wentworth, of Breton in Yorkshire, Esq, by whom he
had issue, Francis, his only son and four daughters: Frances married first to Francis Wortley,
secondly to Francis Foljambe and thirdly to Thomas Savile, Esqrs. Mary, married to Aldburgh; Beatrice to Thomas Barnby of Barnby,
Esq; Joan, married first Nicholas Savile,
Esq and afterwards, Thomas Barnby, a younger brother of the family of Barnby
hall. Arms. Paly of six, Argent, and
Sable; on a Bend, Gules, three Martlets, Or.
Crest, On a Tower, Argent, a Martlet, with Wings displayed, Or. (The
Baronetage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of all
the English Baronets, Volume 2 By Thomas Wotton, Richard A. Johnson, Edward
Kimber. London MDCCLXXI P.327- 328)
(Best, Charles ed.: The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564 made by William Flower, esquire. Norcliffe, m.a. of Langton. London. 1881)
(Best, Charles ed.: The visitation of Yorkshire in the years 1563 and 1564 made by William Flower, esquire. Norcliffe, m.a. of Langton. London. 1881)
Sir Thomas Henneage. Wardship of Frances Worteley. Wardship = the right to the custody of an
infant heir of a feudal tenant and of the heir's property. ('Henry
VIII: January 1546, 26-31', in Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry
VIII, Volume 21 Part 1, January-August 1546, ed. James Gairdner and R H Brodie
(London, 1908), pp. 52-78)
Francis Wortley trou in 1558 met sy eerste vrou Mary Swyft wat vir hom 'n
baie groot familie in die lewe gebring het en vir wie hy goeie voorsiening gemaak
het.
Mary Swift= Lady Diana's 14-Great Aunt. (Jamie Allen's Family Tree & Ancient
Genealogical Allegations. Version 55)
1561. Derbyshire.
The parochial chapelry of Dore is
situated about four miles from Dronfield, and about nine from
Chesterfield. The family of Kelke
possessed it as early as the reign of Henry VI.
Christopher Kelke sold it to Robert Swift, Esq of Rotherham. Francis Wortley, Esq and Mary his wife, the
heiress of Swift, sold it in 1564 to Sir Francis Leake of Sutton in whose
family it continued many years. (Lysons,
Daniel & Lysons, Samuel: Magna
Britannia, a concise topographical account of the several counties of Great
Britain. Derbyshire. London. 1817. P134)
1563/64. Die Visitation of Yorkshire kan amper 'n Visitation of the Province of York genoem word, aangesien dit
families van Northumberland, Durham, Cumberland, Westmerland en Lancashire
insluit , — most of whom were
intermarried with Yorkshire families, if they held no land within the County, —
besides one or two from Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, and Norfolk. Including
these strangers, there are just 111 Pedigiees that do not occur in the
Visitations of Glover and St. George, the total number being upwards of 270.
But while these Northern gentlemen (who probably were spending the winter in
York, either for gaiety, medical advice, or to prosecute some suit before the Lord
President and the Council of the North) eagerly embraced the opportunity of
recording their Arms and Pedigree, some of the leading houses in Yorkshire
disregarded the Herald's summons. It is singular that Hotham of Scorborough, Portington of Portington, Thwenge of
Helmsley, Waterton of Walton, Wombwell of Wombwell, and Wortley of Wortley
should not appear in these pages. (The visitation of Yorkshire in the years
1563 and 1564 made by William flower esquire edited by Charles best norcliffe,
m.a. of Langton London 1881)
1565. Nottinghamshire. Bolham.
After the dissolution of the monasteries, Henry the eighth, by letters
patent, dated October 28th, 1545, granted this manor to Sir Robert Swyft, Kt.
and his brother William, and their heirs, together with two mills there, (one
of which was designated as a Walk Mill,) and two gardens called the Chappel and
Old Yard, which continued in their family until 1565, when it was conveyed to
Francis Wortley, Esq. (http://www.nottshistory.org.uk/piercy1828/retford15.htm)
1565. Bolum. King Henry the eighth by his letters patents dated 28 Oct. 36 H. 8. (1545)
granted to Robert Swyft, and William Swyft and their heirs, the manor of
Bollome, and two mills in Bollome within the parish of Hayton, one called a
Walk Mill, and two gardens within that parish called the Chappell, and the
Old-yard, and five tofts in East-Retford, &c. all which, and many other
lands and tenements then granted, were late belonging to the priory of
Wirkesop; and from Swyft it was conveyed to Francis Worteley, and Mary his
wife, and the heirs of Mary, 7 Eliz. It
was lately the inheritance of Francis Worteley, knight and baronet. (British history online. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/thoroton-notts/vol3/pp280-281)
Dinnington is 'n dorp
in Suid-Yorkshire. Dit is deel van die Metropolitan Borough van Rotherham. As 'n grensdorp, is dit byna ewe ver van
Sheffield en Rotherham geleë, en ongeveer 5 myl (8 km) vanaf Worksop. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinnington)
Yorkshire Fines – 1565
Francis Wortley,esq.
|
John Wortley, gent., and Ann his wife
|
Messuage and a cottage with lands in Dynnyngton.
|
(Collins, Francis, ed.:
'Yorkshire Fines: 1565', in Feet of Fines of the Tudor Period [Yorks]:
Part 1, 1486-1571, (Leeds, 1887), pp. 302-316 )
The De Hunshelf Family was the local lords of
the manor from at least the late thirteenth century. How long the De Hunshelfs continued there is
not known, but their name eventually disappeared in South Yorkshire and by
Elizabethan times the manor belonged to the Wortleys of Wortley Hall across the
River Don. The manor and township of
Hunshelf covered 2,465 acres of farm land, commons and wastes that sloped down Black
Moor and Green Moor to the River Don in the north and east and descended the
steep Hunshelf Bank to the Little Don in the south. (Hey, David: A History of Penistone and District)
Yorkshire Fines – 1569
Francis Wortley, esq.
|
John Byron, esq., and Alice his wife
|
Manor of Hunshelff and 6 messuages, 6 cottages, and a watermill with
lands in Hunshelff, Peynyston, Silkeston, Byrcheworthe, Thurguland, and
Snodell, and free fishing in the waters in the same.
|
(Collins, Francis, ed.: 'Yorkshire Fines: 1569', in Feet of Fines of
the Tudor Period [Yorks]: Part 1, 1486-1571,
(Leeds, 1887), pp. 364-368)
In 1570 het Gregory Fienes, tenth Lord Dacre, die manor of Beighton aan Francis Wortley verkoop, (The old halls, manors and families of Derbyshire) Beighton, a village, township, constablery and parish, pleasantly seated about half a mile west of the river Rother, on the border of the Scarsdale hundred, joining Yorkshire, 16 miles N.E. from Chesterfield and in the deanery of Chesterfield. This parish includes the villages of Berley, Hackenthorpe and Southwell. In 1570 Gregory lord Dacre sold the manor to Francis Wortley, esq The ancient tower church is dedicated to St. Mary. In 1544 Henry VIII granted the rectory and advowson to Robert and William Swift, one of the daughters of Robert Swift brought this estate to her husband, Francis Wortley esq and it has since passed with the manor. (The History of the County of Derby, Part 2 By Stephen Glover) King Henry VIII. granted the rectory and advowson (of the parish church) in 1544 to Robert and William Swift. One of the coheiresses of Robert Swift brought this estate to her husband Francis Wortley, Esq. and it has since passed with the manor, Earl Manvers being now impropriator and patron.
(Lysons, Daniel & Lysons, Samuel: 'Parishes: Barlborough - Bolsover', in Magna Britannia: Volume 5, Derbyshire (London, 1817), pp. 43-56)
(https://archive.org/stream/oldhallsmanorsa00tillgoog#page/n274/mode/2up/search/wortley)
Beighton, in 1855 . (http://www.treetonweb.co.uk/parish/beighton.htm)
Darton, is 'n gemeente in die wapentake of Staincross in die West Riding, Yorkshire, 7 myl SW van Wakefield, en 3½ N.W. van Barnsley. Dit is geleë op die Dearne en Dove kanaal, en sluit die townships van Fexborough en Barugh in. Barugh, (or Bargh), lê 2 myl NW van Barnsley. Die bevolking is hoofsaaklik werksaam in die linnebedryf. Dit sluit ook die dorpe Mapplewell, Darton, en Staincross in. In die dorp Mapplewell was die inwoners hoofsaaklik werksaam in die weefbedryf, en in die vervaardiging van spykers en vitriol en naby Darton is groot steenkoolmyne en steengroewe.
'Yorkshire Fines: 1571'
Richard Marsh
|
Francis Wortley, esq.
|
Messuage and 2 cottages with lands in Bargh and Darton.
|
(Collins, Grancis, ed.: Feet of Fines of the Tudor Period [Yorks]:
Part 2, 1571-83, (Leeds, 1888), pp. 1-13)
Peter Bramhall, son of said John Bramhall. Wife Aune. Children,
Nicholas, Agnes and Anne, executors. One Nicholas Bramhall of Dopecloughe, co.
Derby, jointly seised with testator in some of his lands. Hill- house to
younger son Laurence Bramhall for 21 years. RC Methley of Ossett. John Storre
(? Stone) of (Sheplee Shepley), W Shirte of Cawthorne, and John Hanson, junior,
to be enfeoffed of house in Silkestone, now in tenure of William Bramball and W
Chetom, bought of Francis Wortley, Esq.
Lands of Sir William Stanley, Kt., Lord Mountegle. Lands in Skelton, late of
Pontefract Monastery, to sons Nicholas and Francis Bramhall, with remainder
over to Raufe Bramhall and his heirs male, to John Bramhall, Laurence Bramhall
and their heirs male." Proved 1587. The Feet of Fines, published in the
Record Series, give further information about the purchase and sale of some of
these lands. In 1572-3, 15 Eliz., William Bramball was the plaintiff, (buyer) and Francis Wortley was the deforciant, (existing owner) in
the sale of a messuage with lands in Silkstone. (https://huddersfield.exposed/api/content/books/ocr/17990/)
In die geval waar die meeste grond in 'n bepaalde dorp of streek in
besit van een familie was, was die dorp dikwels in sy grootte beperk. Hierdie
dorpe word soms na verwys as close
villages in teenstelling met open villages, waar die grond in die
hande van verskillende mense was. Wentworth,
Wortley en Hooton Pagnell is goeie voorbeelde van closed villages. Al die
grond in die dorp van Wortley was in besit van die Wortleys. Dit het beteken
dat buitestanders nie in die dorp kon bou sonder hulle toestemming nie. Dit het die groei van die Wortley dorp geweldig
beperk. (Newton, Richard:
Wortley through the ages. The History of
the Long Term Development of the Landscape Surrounding Wortley Hall from the
End of the Ice Age to the Modern Period.) Die hoeveelheid persone in die dorp Wortley
in 1379 was 116 en in 1672 was dit 409. (Ashurst,
Denis: Worsbrough: Change and Continuity in the Society, Economy
and Buildings of a South Yorkshire township 1600-1851. Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of
Philosophy. Sheffield. 1995.
P. 22)
Francis was 'n regsgeleerde. Francis, lord of Beighton, was
brought up in learning at the Inns of Court, and was well versed in the laws,
being on the Queen's Majesty's Council of the North parts. (https://archive.org/stream/oldhallsmanorsa00tillgoog#page/n274/mode/2up/search/wortley) Die Council of the North was 'n administratiewe liggaam wat in 1472 deur koning Edward IV gestig is om die regering se beheer te verbeter en ekonomiese welvaart tot voordeel van almal van Noord-Engeland te bevorder. Regdeur die geskiedenis was die Raad gebaseer in Yorkshire: eerste by Sheriff Hutton Castle en Sandal Castle, en daarna by King's Manor, York. Henry VIII het die Raad na die Engelse Hervorming hervestig, toe die noorde met die Rooms-Katolieke geïdentifiseer het. Dit is afgeskaf in die aanloop tot die Engelse Burgeroorlog . (Wikipedia)
In 1577 was Francis Wortley die Sheriff of Derbyshire. Die High
Sheriff is die oudste secular amp
onder die kroon. Die High Sheriff was voorheen die principal law enforcement officer in die
county. From 1068 until 1568 the position existed as
High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and the Royal Forests. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Sheriff_of_Derbyshire)
Gedurende 1579-1583 was Francis Wortley Custos Rotulorum van West Riding.
The Custos rotulorum is the keeper
of an English, Welsh and Northern Irish county's records and, by virtue of that
office, the highest civil officer in the county. (Wikipedia) In
England and Wales the principal Justice of the Peace of a county, who has
nominal custody of the records of the commission of the peace. The function is
usually fulfilled by the Lord Lieutenant. (Oxford dictionaries)
Wales in die Metropolitan Borough
van Rotherham.
Yorkshire Fines: 1579
Francis Leeke,
kt,
|
Francis Wortley, esq., and Mary wife
|
Pasture lands in Wales.
|
(Collins, Francis, ed.: Feet of Fines of the Tudor Period [Yorks]:
Part 2, 1571-83, ed. Francis Collins (Leeds, 1888), pp. 124-146)
1 August 1580.
Henry [Hastings, third Earl of]
Huntingdon to the Earl of Shrewsbury, from Topcliffe, promising to carry out
Shrewsbury's instructions for the raising of the musters in Hallamshire and to
ask the custos rotulorum of the West Riding of Yorkshire, Mr. Francis Wortley,
to report on the raising of the musters there. 1p. Damaged MS. Clerk's hand,
subscribed and signed. Endorsed. (http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/278c1683-f95b-4cc6-9c3a-06ceb927d722)
1580 - 22 Q Elizabeth. Francis was in commission of Oyer and Terminer.
By the commission of oyer and terminer the
commissioners (in practice the judges of assize, though other persons were
named with them in the commission) were commanded to make diligent inquiry into
all treasons, felonies and misdemeanours whatever committed in the counties
specified in the commission, and to hear and determine the same according to
law. The inquiry was by means of the grand jury; after the grand jury had found
the bills of indictment submitted to it, the commissioners proceeded to hear
and determine by means of the petit jury. The words oyer and terminer were also
used to denote the court which had jurisdiction to try offences within the
limits to which the commission of oyer and terminer extended. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyer_and_terminer)
Richard Jessop, of
Broom Hall in Sheffield, Anne Swift se
man, was op 26 November 1580 in Sheffield begrawe. His will
was dated 8th October,1580, and proved 22 April, 1581, by Francis Wortley, his
executor.
'Yorkshire Fines: 1581'
Francis Wortley,
esq., and Robert Kees
|
Thomas Savile, gent., and Mary his wife
|
The moiety of 6 messuages and a cottage with lands in Wathe, Swynton,
Haughe, Rawmershe, and Bramptonals. Brampton Byerlawe.
|
(Collins, Francis, ed.: Feet of Fines of the Tudor Period [Yorks]:
Part 2, 1571-83, (Leeds, 1888), pp.
160-175)
Na Mary Swift se dood in 1581, hertrou Francis Wortley in 1582 met
Francis Burdet die dogter van Thomas Burdet van Burthwaite en Isabella
Wentworth.
(Heath, Chris: Denby & District – from pre-history to the present, Wharncliffe, 2001. P. 63)
(Heath, Chris: Denby & District – from pre-history to the present, Wharncliffe, 2001. P. 63)
Kexborough,
a village and a township in Darton parish, W. R. Yorkshire. The village stands,
4 miles NW of Barnsley. The township
contains also the hamlets of Haigh and Swithin. The manor belongs to W. B.
Beaumont, Esq. Birthwaite Hall, a handsome Gothic mansion, was the residence of
the ancestors of Sir Francis Burdett. (http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/13178)
Frances= Lady Diana's First Cousin 12 x removed. (Jamie Allen's Family Tree & Ancient
Genealogical Allegations Version 55)
'Yorkshire Fines: 1582'
Francis Wortley,
esq.
|
Thomas Savile, gent.
|
Manor of Kexbrowghe and 6 messuages, 6 cottages, and a watermill with
lands in Kexbrowghe, Darton, and Haigh.
|
George Woodroffe,
esq., and John Savile, esq.
|
FrancisWortley, esq.
|
Manors of Wortley, Newhall, Midgeley, Holland Swayne, Carleton,
and Swynton, and 1000 messuages, 300 cottages, and 6 mills with lands in the
same and in Overshitlington, Middleshitlington, Adwicke upon Dearne,
Barnebroughe, Barnolthorpe, Harlington, Cadeby, Canonthorpe, Thurnsco,
Ruston, and Monkbretton
|
(Collins, Francis, ed.: Feet of Fines of the Tudor Period [Yorks]:
Part 2, 1571-83, (Leeds, 1888), pp.
175-192)
20 Oct. 1582. Royal licence to
alienate (vervreem)
1. Francis Wortley, esq.
2. George Woodroffe.
3. John Savile, esq.
1582. Francis Wortley may alienate to
George Woodroffe, manors of Carleton and Swynton with premises there and in
Adwicke upon Derne, Barnebrughe, Barnotthorpe, Cadeby, Canonthorpe, Thursco,
Ruston and Monke Bretton.
(Stanhope, M.: Barnburh, Cadeby, High
Melton, and Wildethorp: a brief history.
Source: Notts Archives DD/FJ/1/278/4) Canonthorpe - one of the 'lost hamlets' of
Yorkshire where there was a cell or chapel, belonging to Nostell Priory. (http://www.treetonweb.co.uk/history/canonthorpe.htm)
1582. Francis Wortley, was ‘n
merkwaardige man. Dit was aan hom wat
die
Earl of Shrewsbury die gevangene Mary of Scots toevertrou het, when in Sheffield Castle, and he wanted to
get to London. The Earl speaks of him as a "as being one of the councell at York a gentlyman,
bothe wise and of very good credytt in the country; " this was to
Walsingham, while to Burleigh he speaks of him as " of greate lyving and
accounte." (Full text of the old halls, manors and families of Derbyshire) Shrewsbury during this period was making
earnest solicitation for some reward from Elizabeth for his constant service in
thes arduous employment. But when he
found that nothing was to be obtained either by letters or the mediation of
friends, he determined to vary the object of his request, and to ask leave to
wait in person on his sovereign. He had
now been ten years absent from the court.
There were demurs to his reasonable request, but at lenth the queen’s
leave was obtained; and for the custody of the queen of Schots Mr. Wortley of
Wortley was selected, who had married one of the daughters of the old servant
of the Shrewsbury family, Robert Swyft of Broomhall. (Hunter, Joseph: The History and Topography of the Parish of
Sheffield : with Historical and Descriptive Notices of the Parishes of
Ecclesfield, Hansworth, Treeton and Whiston, and of the Chapelry of Bradfield. London.
1819)
The Earl of Shrewsbury to Lord
Burghley, Lord Treasurer, from Sheffield, 23 August 1582, earnestly requesting
that he may see the Queen within the next three weeks, 'lest I be staid by my
enemy' [the gout]. Mr. [Francis] Wortley could be left in charge of Mary, Queen
of Scots. 1p. Endorsed. Address in Burghley's clerk's hand.
(http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/278c1683-f95b-4cc6-9c3a-06ceb927d722)
Wakefield het vier chantry chapels,
waarvan drie uit die 13de eeu dateer. Hulle is buitekant die Middeleeuse stad,
op die pad wat na Leeds, Dewsbury, York en Doncaster lei, gebou. Die Chantry of St John the Baptist was op
Northgate, die pad na Leeds, Die chapel
of St Mary Magdalene was op Westgate waar dit die Ings Beck oppad na Dewsbury
kruis. St
Swithin Chantry Chapel, op die York pad, was naby Clarke Hall. In die 14de eeu was die Chantry Chapel of St Mary the Virgin gebou op die Middeleeuse brug
oor die Calderrivier op die pad na Doncaster en die Suide. Francis Wortley seems to have obtained a grant of these chantry lands,
for, at his death (25 Elizabeth 1583), the inquisition gives him five
messuages, five tofts, five gardens, three hundred acres of land, one hundred
acres of meadow, and "parcell of the chantry of St. Mary," at
Beighton, held of the Queen.
(Notes of the churches of Derbyshire)
Francis’s will dated 25 March 1583. Fransis Burdet
hertrou in Darton 1 Sept. 1583. met Francis Foljambe, of Aldwark, Esq na haar
man se dood en weer daarna met Thomas Savile Esqrs.
(Lincolnshire pedigrees. https://archive.org/stream/lincolnshirepedi01madd#page/n759/mode/2up. P. 363)
How long the Hunshelfs continued I have not
seen; nor any account of the course of descent which this manor took till it
appears in the inquisition of Francis Wortley, of Wortley, esq. in 1586.
Hunshelf lying immediately adjacent to their chase of Wharncliffe, must have
been a valuable addition to the domains of that family. It has accompanied the
other estates of the family in their descent to the right hon. the lord
Wharncliffe. In 1602 there was an agreement made between Richard Wortley, esq.
and the freeholders of Hunshelf, respecting their commons. This agreement had
been long in force, when Mr. Sydney Wortley, in 1687, sought to dissolve it. (https://huddersfield.exposed/api/content/books/ocr/17984/)
Kinders:
q.1. Nicholas, geb. 24/08/1560. Jonk dood
q.2. Sir Richard, geb. 29/12/1561, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland, oorl. 25/07/1603, London, begr. St. George’s Chapel, Windsor x 01/01/1586 met Elizabeth BOUGHTON, geb. c. 1568, van Cawston, Warwickshire, oorl. 23/10/1643, (countess of Devonshire), d.v. Edward Boughton van Cawston, Warwickshire en Susan Brackett. Elizabeth Boughton xx met William Cavendish 1st Earl of Devonshire, oorl. Okt 1642, s.v. Rt. Hon. Sir William Cavendish and Elizabeth Hardwicke.
q.3. Elizabeth, geb. 22/04/1563 , Wortley, Yorkshire x met Richard GOODHALL van Lincolnshire
q.4. John of Langley in Durham, geb. 01/11/1564 x Bridget LYNSEY, d.v. Edward Lynsey of Selby co Norfolk, wed van Frere of Clare co Suffolk.
q.5. Anne, geb. 22/04/1566, Wortley, Yorkshire. Jonk dood
q.6. Sarah, geb. 21/04/1567, Wortley, Yorkshire. Jonk dood
q.7. William, geb. 23/05/1568, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland x 18/09/1591, North Luffenham, Rutland, met Isabel LAWE, geb. 1570, Rutland.
q.8. Thomas, geb. 31/10/1569, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland
q.9. Frances, geb. c. 1572 (dogter)
q.10. Jane, geb. c. 1574, oorl. c. 1606/7 x met Robert BRANDLING, ged. 23/01/1574-5 van Fellinga, co. Durham, s.v. William Brandling en Anne Helye. Mr.
Brandling espoused secondly, Mary, daughter of Thomas Hilton, esq. Lord of Hilton.
q.11. Mary, geb. c. 1576 x NN WINSTON
2e huwelik: And there was issue from his second wife, who in her widowhood married Francis Foljambe of Aldwark.
q.12. Samuel, geb. 1582, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland of Swinton.
q.12. Samuel, geb. 1582, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland of Swinton.
q.14. George, geb. 1586, Wortley, Yorkshire, Engeland, of Normanton x 12/02/1609 met Mary BUNNY, geb. 18/07/1590, Newland, ged. 28/07/1590, Normanton, d.v. Richard Bunny of Newland en Ann Inckpenne.