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Henry FitzRoy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset

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(Redirected from Henry Fitzroy, 1st Duke of Richmond) Illegitimate son of Henry VIII of England For other people named Henry FitzRoy, see Henry FitzRoy (disambiguation).

His GraceThe Duke of Richmond and Somerset
Portrait miniature by Lucas Horenbout, between 1533 and 1534
Lord High Admiral of England
In office
1525–1536
MonarchHenry VIII
Preceded byThe Duke of Norfolk
Succeeded byThe Earl of Southampton
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
In office
1529–1534
Preceded byThe Earl of Ossory
Succeeded byWilliam Skeffington
Personal details
Bornc. 15 June 1519
Blackmore, Essex
Died23 July 1536(1536-07-23) (aged 17)
St. James's Palace, London
Resting placeFirst at Thetford Priory, then at the Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham
SpouseLady Mary Howard
Parent(s)Henry VIII of England
Elizabeth Blount
Arms of Sir Henry Fitzroy, KG, at the time of his installation as a knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter

Henry FitzRoy, Duke of Richmond and Somerset (c. 15 June 1519 – 23 July 1536) was the son of Henry VIII of England and his mistress Elizabeth Blount, and the only child born out of wedlock whom Henry acknowledged. He was the younger half-brother of Mary I, as well as the older half-brother of Elizabeth I and Edward VI. Through his mother, he was the elder half-brother of Elizabeth, George, and Robert Tailboys. His surname means "son of the king" in Norman French.

Birth

Henry FitzRoy was born in June 1519. His mother was Elizabeth Blount, Catherine of Aragon's lady-in-waiting, and his father was Henry VIII. FitzRoy was conceived when Queen Catherine was approaching her last confinement with another of Henry's children, a stillborn daughter born in November 1518. To avoid scandal, Blount was taken from Henry's court to the Augustinian priory of St Lawrence at Blackmore near Ingatestone, in Essex.

FitzRoy's birthdate is often given as 15 June 1519, but the exact date is not known. His birth may have been earlier than predicted. Cardinal Thomas Wolsey was out of London from 9 to 18 June when he reappeared back at court in Windsor. The following day he was expected at Hampton Court, but he did not reappear at a council meeting at Westminster until 29 June. The policy of discretion worked, as the baby boy's arrival caused no great stir, and diplomatic dispatches record nothing of Henry VIII's illegitimate son.

Christening

The christening of the newborn Henry FitzRoy was not recorded even though Cardinal Thomas Wolsey was his godfather and known to have been present at the event. This puts the date of the christening possibly before 29 June when he reappeared at court. The identity of the other godfather is unknown. Although Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk took a great interest in Henry FitzRoy when he was older, in 1519 he was still the heir to the Dukedom of Norfolk, and styled the Earl of Surrey. If Henry had chosen the House of Howard, he would probably have chosen the elder Thomas Howard, who at the time was the 2nd Duke of Norfolk. Another suggestion for the second godfather could be Henry VIII himself, although it was not normal practice for a parent to stand as godparent to his own child: Henry had taken the role of godfather at the christening of his own nephew, Lord Henry Brandon (who was also the son of Henry's closest friend) in March 1516, and his daughter Princess Mary stood godmother to her half-brother Prince Edward in 1537.

Acknowledgement

The infant boy was given the surname FitzRoy to make sure that all knew he was son of the King. Henry VIII openly acknowledged the boy, perhaps because he felt that his lack of a male heir was a slur upon his manhood. At one point he proudly exhibited his newborn son to the court.

Nursery

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The boy's upbringing until the moment when he entered Bridewell Palace in June 1525 (six years following his birth) remains shrouded in confusion. Although the boy was illegitimate, this did not mean that young Henry lived remotely from and had no contact with his father. On the contrary, it has been suggested by his biographer, Beverly Murphy, that a letter from a royal nurse implies that FitzRoy had also been part of the royal nursery, and he was often at court after 1530.

In the 16th century, royal and noble households were in a state of constant movement and transition, so it is unlikely that FitzRoy grew up in any one house. He was probably transferred from household to household around London like his royal siblings: Mary, Elizabeth, and Edward. In 1519, the only surviving legitimate child of the King was the three-year-old Princess Mary. In that year her household was reorganised, suggesting that Henry made some provisions for his only son. Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury replaced Lady Margaret Bryan as Mistress of Mary's household. At the same time at least two of Mary's carers appear to have left her service.

It is not impossible that Princess Mary's household could have been reorganised some time before her former servants found posts with Henry FitzRoy.

In addition, the correspondence of the child's first known tutor makes it clear that FitzRoy also received some rudimentary education prior to his elevation to the peerage in 1525. John Palsgrave grumbled loudly that Henry had been taught to recite his prayers in a "barbarous" Latin accent and dismissed the man who had instructed him as "no clerk". Although he was more well known from 1525 and onwards, there is some evidence that he was already in receipt of royal favour even before his ennoblement; this comes from a surviving list of "Wardrobe stuff appointed for my lord Henry". The "Lord Henry" in question is not identified but given that the subject was not considered to require a title and that the list has survived with further documents relating to the household established for Henry FitzRoy after his ennoblement, it would seem reasonable to assume that it is Henry FitzRoy. The familiar way in which he is described as "My Lord Henry" is also interesting and suggests that, amongst the officers close to the King, at least, his existence was hardly a secret. Alternatively, he may have been raised in the north with his mother and her husband Gilbert Tailboys, 1st Baron Tailboys of Kyme, and their children.

Elevation

By 1525, the House of Tudor had been on the throne for 40 years. However, cracks were beginning to appear. By the sixteenth year of his reign, 34-year-old Henry still lacked a male heir with his 40-year-old wife Catherine of Aragon. Their only surviving child and heiress was Princess Mary, who at the time was a girl of nine. Henry, though, had another child, an illegitimate one, a sturdy six-year-old son. Although Henry may have had other illegitimate children, Henry FitzRoy was the only one the King acknowledged. Henry VIII was also the only surviving son of Henry VII. Henry had no surviving younger brother nor any close male relations from his father's family who could be called up to share the burden of government in the King's name. As Henry and Catherine's marriage remained without a son, the king's only living son became more attractive for onlookers to observe. The King's chief minister at the time was Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, and since Henry FitzRoy's birth, he had taken an interest in his monarch's only son. In a letter dated June 1525, the Cardinal refers to the King's son: "Your entirely beloved sonne, the Lord Henry FitzRoy".

In 1525, FitzRoy was given his own residence in London, which he was granted by his father: Durham House on the Strand. Since his birth FitzRoy had remained in the background, although the boy had been brought up in remarkable style and comfort, almost as if he were a prince of the blood and not an acknowledged royal bastard. Such discretion over his son may not have been to the King's taste, and he may have felt his manhood and virility should be publicly demonstrated. He fully made up for his son's quiet birth and equally quiet christening when on 18 June 1525 the six-year-old boy was brought to Bridewell Palace on the western edge of the city of London where honours were showered upon him. That morning of the 18th, the six-year-old Lord Henry FitzRoy travelled by barge from Wolsey's mansion of Durham Place, near Charing Cross, down the River Thames. He came in the company of a host of knights, squires, and other gentlemen. At 9am his barge pulled up at the Watergate and his party made their way through the palace to the king's lodgings on the south side of the second floor. The rooms were richly decorated, with various members of the court and the nobility coming to see FitzRoy's elevation. Among them were numerous bishops, as well as Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, and the King's brother-in-law, Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk. During the first ceremony, when he was created Earl of Nottingham, FitzRoy was attended by Henry Percy, 5th Earl of Northumberland, who carried the sword of state, along with John de Vere, 14th Earl of Oxford, and William FitzAlan, 18th Earl of Arundel. Six-year-old Henry knelt before his father as Sir Thomas More read out the patents of nobility. It was the first time since the 12th century that an illegitimate son had been raised to the peerage, when Henry II, King of England had created his son William Earl of Salisbury. However, the ceremony was not yet complete. The onlookers watched as the young Lord Nottingham re-emerged into the chamber. The Earl of Northumberland carried the robes; behind him came Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset, carrying the sword; the Earl of Arundel, carrying the cap of estate with a circlet; and the Earl of Oxford with a rod of gold. Once again young Henry FitzRoy knelt before his father, and as the patent was read he was invested with the trappings of a duke. This time when he rose to his feet he was Duke of Richmond and Somerset.

To be a duke was a significant honour. It was the highest rank of the peerage, and the title, originally devised by Edward III, King of England for his son Edward, Prince of Wales as the Duke of Cornwall, retained its royal aura. The former Henry FitzRoy was subsequently referred to in all formal correspondence as the "right high and noble Prince Henry, Duke of Richmond and Somerset". As if to compound this sense of royal dignity and endow the child with as much respectability as possible, Henry VIII had granted his son the unprecedented honour of a double dukedom. While he is mostly known as Richmond, some pains were taken to see that he bore both titles in equal weight. The bulk of Richmond's new lands came from Margaret Beaufort's estate. These were lands which were the rightful inheritance of King Henry VII when he was Earl of Richmond and the lands which had belonged to John Beaufort, Duke of Somerset, the father of Margaret Beaufort. The use of the Duchy of Somerset must have struck a chord among the courtiers, as it was well known that the Beauforts' eldest child was John Somerset, a royal bastard who had been legitimised following his parents' adultery and then marriage. A part of the Beaufort connection to the Somerset duchy, the title of Duke of Richmond was important as the earldom of Richmond had been held by his grandfather King Henry VII and by his great-grandfather Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond. The earldom of Nottingham had been held by Richmond's great uncle Prince Richard of Shrewsbury, Duke of York, the second son of Edward IV. Seeing Henry's obvious pride and affection for his son, many of those who witnessed Richmond's elevation must have wondered if this was what the King had in mind. To support his new status, Henry granted his young son an annuity of £4,845. Following the ceremony, there were "great feasts and disguising". Henry wished to celebrate his six-year-old son with customary extravagance. It is unknown if Elizabeth Blount was present, but it is certain that the new duke's stepfather Gilbert Tailboys, 1st Baron Tailboys of Kyme was present and must have given her an eyewitness account.

It was a proud day for Henry, and for his former mistress Elizabeth; however, the ceremony did nothing to spare the Queen's feelings. She knew she had failed to give England a prince and was anxious about her own daughter's prospects. In a private letter, the Venetian ambassador wrote: "It seems that the Queen resents the earldom and dukedom conferred on the King’s natural son and remains dissatisfied. At the instigation it is said of her three Spanish ladies her chief counsellors, so that the King has dismissed them from court, a strong measure but the Queen was obliged to submit and have patience".

Also at Richmond's elevation was Henry Courtenay, 1st Marquess of Exeter, his father's cousin through Catherine of York, the younger sister of Elizabeth of York. He was raised from being merely the Earl of Devon to be the Marquess of Exeter. Sir Thomas Manners, a great nephew of Edward IV through his sister Anne of York was made the earl of Rutland. Henry Clifford was made the new Earl of Cumberland and would cement his ties to the House of Tudor by marrying his son and heir, Lord Henry Clifford, to Richmond's cousin, lady Eleanor Brandon, the King's niece. Richmond's ceremony was by far the most spectacular but it was also a public relations display, since the last member of the Yorkist faction, Richard de la Pole, lost his life in February of that same year fighting for the French at the Battle of Pavia. The young Henry Brandon became the new Earl of Lincoln, a title which had once belonged to the de la Pole family.

Crown Offices

Arrangements for Henry's care were initially entrusted to Thomas Wolsey and plans for his elevation were already in progress by April 1525. On 7 June that year, he was elected knight of the Garter and was installed on the 25th. On 18 June, he was made Earl of Nottingham and on the same day he received the honour of a double dukedom; those being Richmond and Somerset. As such, he was endowed with lands whose revenues amounted to £4845 in the first year. In that same year, Richmond, as he came to be known, was granted several other appointments, including Lord High Admiral of England, Lord President of the Council of the North, and Warden of the Marches towards Scotland and Governor of Carlisle, the effect of which was to place the government of the north of England in his hands. He held the offices in name only, the power was actually in the hands of a council dominated by Thomas Magnus, Archdeacon of the East Riding.

From then onwards, the Duke was raised like a prince, at Sheriff Hutton Castle in Yorkshire. His father had a particular fondness for him and took great interest in his upbringing. Sir Thomas Tempest was comptroller of his household. In February 1527, Thomas Magnus told the young Duke that King James V of Scotland, FitzRoy's first cousin, had asked for hunting dogs. FitzRoy sent his cousin 20 hunting hounds and a huntsman.

Kingdom of Ireland

On 22 June 1529, Richmond was made Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, and there was a plan to crown him king of that country, though the King's counsellors feared that making a separate Kingdom of Ireland whose ruler was not that of England would create another threat similar to the Kingdom of Scotland. After Richmond's death, the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 established a personal union between the English and Irish crowns, providing that whoever was King of England was to be King of Ireland as well. King Henry VIII of England was proclaimed its first holder.

Living in France

In October 1532, Henry VIII travelled to Calais for a meeting with Francis I of France and took Richmond with him. As part of the negotiations, Richmond joined the French court and lived with the Dauphin Francis and his younger brother, the future King Henry II of France, until August 1533, when he was recalled to England.

Marriage

Sketch of the Duchess of Richmond by Hans Holbein the Younger

When Henry VIII began the process of having his marriage to Catherine of Aragon annulled, it was suggested that Richmond marry his own half-sister Mary in order to strengthen Richmond's claim to the throne. Anxious to prevent the annulment and Henry's possible break with the Roman Catholic Church, the Pope was even prepared to grant a special dispensation for their marriage.

At age 14, on 28 November 1533 the Duke instead married Lady Mary Howard, the only daughter of Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk. He was on excellent terms with his brother-in-law, the poet Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey. The marriage was never consummated.

Possible heir to the throne

At the time of Richmond's death, an Act was going through Parliament which disinherited Henry's daughter Elizabeth as his heir and permitted the King to designate his successor, whether legitimate or not. There is no evidence that Henry intended to proclaim Richmond his heir, but the Act would have permitted him to do so if he wished. The Imperial ambassador Eustace Chapuys wrote to Emperor Charles V on 8 July 1536 that Henry VIII had made a statute allowing him to nominate a successor, but thought the Duke of Richmond would not succeed to the throne by it, as he was consumptive and now diagnosed incurable.

Death

FitzRoy's promising career came to an abrupt end in July 1536. According to the chronicler Charles Wriothesley, he became sickly some time before he died, although his biographer Beverley A. Murphy cites his documented public appearances and activities in April and May of that year, without exciting comment on his health. He was reported ill with "consumption" (usually identified as tuberculosis, but possibly another serious lung complaint) in early July, and died at St. James's Palace on 23 July 1536.

Tomb of Henry FitzRoy, Duke of Richmond and his wife Mary. St Michael the Archangel's Church, Framlingham, Suffolk
Noah's Ark on the Flood, one of the scenes from the Old Testament in the tomb of the Duke of Richmond
Coat of arms of the Duke of Richmond, quartered with the Howard family arms (from his marriage to Lady Mary, daughter of the 3rd Duke of Norfolk) on his tomb in Framlingham Church.

FitzRoy's father-in-law gave orders that the body be wrapped in lead and then taken in a closed cart for secret interment. However, his servants put the body in a straw-filled wagon. The only mourners were two attendants who followed at a distance. FitzRoy was first instance buried at Thetford Priory, the burial place and mausoleum of members of the Howard family.

In February 1540, when Thetford Priory was about to be closed, Howard petitioned the King not to close the Priory Church on the grounds that both his first wife Anne of York, FitzRoy's great-aunt, as well as FitzRoy himself were buried there. The request had no effect; at the same time however, the King ordered that the current dissolution of the monasteries be briefly suspended, so that everyone who wished had time to rebury the remains of their relations. Howard moved his son-in-law's grave to the Church of St Michael the Archangel, Framlingham.

FitzRoy's tomb has a mix of royal and religious iconography, with his personal coat of arms surrounded by the collar of the Order of the Garter and the Order's motto "Honi soit qui mal y pense", and the coats of arms of the Howard family (by his marriage to Mary Howard), and friezes showing scenes from the Biblical Old Testament (mainly from the Book of Genesis and part of the Book of Exodus). On the north side are the birth of Eve; God giving the Garden of Eden into the charge of Adam and Eve; the Temptation, and the Expulsion from Paradise. On the west are the nursing of Cain and Abel, and Adam digging to return to Eden; Cain and Abel making their sacrifices (offerings) to God, and Cain killing Abel. On the south side are Noah's Ark in the Flood; the drunkenness of Noah; the Prophet Abraham and the Angels, and Lot escaping from Sodom and Gomorrah. On the east are Abraham and his son Isaac as well as Moses and the Law tables, and the Israelites sacrificing to the Golden Calf.

One of the scenes carved on the tomb is the outline of a small door which was the private entrance of noblemen from the Castle.

His father outlived him by just over a decade, and was succeeded by his legitimate son, Edward VI, born shortly after FitzRoy's death. It is said that Henry FitzRoy might have been made king had Henry VIII died without a legitimate son:

Well was it for them that Henry Fitzroy his natural son was dead, otherwise (some suspect) had he survived King Edward the Sixth, we might presently have heard of a King Henry the Ninth, so great was his father's affection and so unlimited his power to prefer him.

— Thomas Fuller

On her death in December 1557, his wife, Mary Howard, was buried along with FitzRoy.

Family tree

Family tree of the
Dukes of: Beaufort, Dorset, Lancaster, and Somerset,
Marquesses of: Dorset, Hertford, Somerset and Worcester, and
Earls of: Dorset, Hertford, Lancaster, Leicester, Middlesex, Somerset, Worcester, and Yarmouth (3rd creation)
Earl of Dorset (possible 1st creation), 1070
Saint Osmund
d. 1099
Bishop of Salisbury and possible Earl of Dorset
Roger de Beaumont
c. 1015–1094
Earl of Dorset (1st creation) discontinued, 1099
Earl of Leicester (1st creation), 1107
King Henry I
c. 1068–1135
King Stephen
1092/1096–1154
Robert de Beaumont
c. 1040/1050–1118
1st Earl of Leicester
Henry de Beaumont
d. 1119
1st Earl of Warwick
Earl of Worcester (1st creation), 1138
Robert FitzRoy
c. 1090–1147
1st Earl of Gloucester
Matilda
(d. bef. 1141)
Waleran de Beaumont
1104–1166
Earl of Worcester
Robert de Beaumont
1104–1168
2nd Earl of Leicester
Hugh de Beaumont
b. 1106
1st Earl of Bedford
Earldom of Worcester (1st creation) extinct, 1166
William FitzRobert
1116–1183
2nd Earl of Gloucester
Hawise de BeaumontRobert de Beaumont
d. 1190
3rd Earl of Leicester
Robert de Beaumont
d. 1204
4th Earl of Leicester
Amice
Countess of Rochefort
King John
1166–1216
Isabella
1173/1174–1217
Countess of Gloucester
Simon de Montfort
c. 1175–1218
5th Earl of Leicester
King Henry III
1207–1272
Eleanor of EnglandSimon de Montfort
c. 1208–1265
6th Earl of Leicester
Earldom of Leicester (1st creation) forfeited, 1265
Earl of Leicester (2nd creation), 1267
Earl of Lancaster, 1276
King Edward I
1239–1307
Edmund Crouchback
1245–1296
1st Earl of Leicester, 1st Earl of Lancaster
Earldom of Leicester (1st creation) restored, 1324
Earldom of Lancaster restored, 1327
King Edward II
1284–1327
Thomas of Lancaster
1278–1322
2nd Earl of Leicester, 2nd Earl of Lancaster
Henry of Lancaster
1281–1345
3rd Earl of Leicester, 3rd Earl of Lancaster
Earldom of Leicester (1st creation) forfeited, 1322
Earldom of Lancaster forfeited, 1322
Duke of Lancaster, 1351
King Edward III
1312–1377
Henry of Grosmont
c. 1310–1361
Duke of Lancaster, 4th Earl of Lancaster, 4th Earl of Leicester
Joan of Lancaster
c. 1312–1349
John (II) de Mowbray
1310–1361
3rd Baron Mowbray
Eleanor of Lancaster
1318–1372
Mary of Lancaster
c. 1320–1362
Earl of Worcester (2nd creation), 1397
John of Gaunt
1340–1399
Duke of Lancaster, 5th Earl of Lancaster, (6th) Earl of Leicester jure uxoris
Blanche of Lancaster
1342–1368
Maud of Lancaster
1340–1362
a.k.a. Matilda, Countess of Hainault
William
1330–1389
Duke of Bavaria and Count of Holland,
(5th) Earl of Leicester jure uxoris
Richard Fitzalan
1346–1397
Earl of Arundel
Thomas Percy
1343–1403
Earl of Worcester
Earldom of Worcester (2nd creation) extinct, 1403
Roger La Warr
1326–1370
Eleanor Mowbray
Earl of Somerset (1st creation), 1397
Marquess of Somerset and Marquess of Dorset (1st creation), 1397
Earl of Dorset (2nd creation), 1411
Henry Bolingbroke
1367–1413
Duke of Lancaster, (7th) Earl of Leicester
King Henry IV
John Beaufort
c. 1373–1410
Marquess of Somerset, Marquess of Dorset, 1st Earl of Somerset
Thomas Beaufort
c. 1377–1426
Duke of Exeter, Earl of Dorset
Joan Beaufort
c. 1379–1440
Joan La WarrThomas West
1365–1405
1st Baron West
Joan de Beauchamp
1375–1435
Earldom of Leicester (2nd creation) and Dukedom of Lancaster merged into the Crown, 1399Marquessate of Somerset and Marquessate of Dorset (1st creation) revoked, 1399Earldom of Dorset (2nd creation) extinct, 1426
Duke of Lancaster, 1399Earl of Worcester (3rd creation), 1421
Henry of Monmouth
1386–1422
Duke of Lancaster
King Henry V
Reginald West
1395–1450
6th Baron De La Warr and 3rd Baron West
Richard Beauchamp
(1394–c. 1422)
Earl of Worcester
Dukedom of Lancaster merged into the Crown, 1413Earldom of Worcester (2nd creation) extinct, 1422
Duke of Somerset (1st creation), 1443Earl of Dorset (3rd creation), 1442
Marquess of Dorset (2nd creation), 1443
Duke of Somerset (2nd creation), 1448
Henry Beaufort
1401–1418
2nd Earl of Somerset
John Beaufort
1404–1444
1st Duke of Somerset, 3rd Earl of Somerset
Edmund Beaufort
1406–1455
2nd Duke of Somerset, 1st Marquess of Dorset, 4th Earl of Somerset, Earl of Dorset
Richard Neville
1400–1460
Earl of Salisbury
Richard West
1430–1476
7th Baron De La Warr and 4th Baron West
Edward Neville
d. 1476
de facto 3rd (de jure 1st) Baron Bergavenny
Elizabeth Beauchamp
1415–1448
Dukedom of Somerset (1st creation) extinct, 1444
Claimed titles here are disputedEarl of Worcester (4th creation), 1449
Margaret Beaufort
1443–1509
Elizabeth Woodville
c. 1437–1492
Henry Beaufort
1436–1464
3rd Duke of Somerset, 2nd Marquess of Dorset, 5th Earl of Dorset
Edmund Beaufort
c. 1438–1471
4th Duke of Somerset, 3rd Marquess of Dorset, 6th Earl of Dorset
Cecily Neville
c. 1425–1450
John Tiptoft
1427–1470
1st Earl of Worcester
Dukedom of Somerset (2nd creation), Marquessate of Dorset (2nd creation), and Earldom of Dorset attained, 1461, but possibly restored (disputed), 1463Dukedom of Somerset (2nd creation), Marquessate of Dorset (2nd creation), and Earldom of Dorset extinct, 1471Earldom of Worcester (4th creation) attainted, 1470
Thomas West
c. 1457–1525
8th Baron De La Warr and 5th Baron West
Marquess of Dorset (3rd creation), 1475Earl of Worcester (5th creation), 1514Earl of Worcester (4th creation) restored, 1471
Margery Wentworth
c. 1478–1550
King Henry VII
1457–1509
Elizabeth of York
1466–1503
Thomas Grey
1451–1501
1st Marquess of Dorset
Charles Somerset
c. 1460–1526
1st Earl of Worcester
Elizabeth Somerset
c. 1476–1507
3rd Baroness Herbert suo jure
Edward Tiptoft
c. 1469–1485
2nd Earl of Worcester
Eleanor West
b. 1481
Edward Guildford
c. 1474–1534
Earldom of Worcester (4th creation) extinct, 1485
Viscount Beauchamp "of Hache" (1st creation), 1536
Earl of Hertford (2nd creation), 1537
Duke of Somerset (4th creation), 1547
Duke of Somerset (3rd creation), 1499
Edward Seymour
c. 1500–1552
1st Duke of Somerset, 1st Earl of Hertford and Viscount Beauchamp
Jane Seymour
c. 1508–1537
King Henry VIII
1491–1547
Thomas Grey
1477–1530
2nd Marquess of Dorset
Henry Somerset
c. 1495–1548
2nd Earl of Worcester, 4th Baron Herbert
John Dudley
1504–1553
Duke of Northumberland
Jane Guildford
c. 1508/1509–1555
Mary Tudor
1496–1533
Queen of France
Duchess of Suffolk
Prince Edmund
1499–1500
1st Duke of Somerset
Dukedom of Somerset (4th creation), Earldom of Hertford (2nd creation), and Viscountcy Beauchamp (1st creation) forfeit, 1552Dukedom of Somerset (3rd creation) extinct, 1500
Duke of Richmond and Somerset, 1525
King Edward VI
1537–1553
Henry Fitzroy
1519–1536
1st Duke of Richmond and Somerset
Henry Grey
1517–1554
Duke of Suffolk
3rd Marquess of Dorset
Lady Frances Brandon
1517–1559
Duchess of Suffolk
Dukedom of Richmond and Somerset extinct, 1536Marquessate of Dorset (3rd creation) attainted and honours forfeit, 1554
Earl of Hertford (3rd creation) reverted, 1559Earl of Leicester (3rd creation), 1564Baron Buckhurst of Buckhurst in the County of Sussex (1st creation), 1567
Earl of Dorset (4th creation), 1604
Edward Seymour
c. 1528–1593
Edward Seymour
1539–1621
1st Earl of Hertford
Katherine Grey
1540–1568
William Somerset
c. 1526–1589
3rd Earl of Worcester, 5th Baron Herbert
John Dudley
c. 1527–1554
Earl of Warwick
Robert Dudley
1532–1588
1st Earl of Leicester
Mary Dudley
d. 1586
m. Henry Sidney
Lord Guildford Dudley
c. 1535–1554
Lady Jane Grey
1537–1554
Disputed Queen of England
Thomas Sackville
1536–1608
1st Earl of Dorset, 1st Baron Buckhurst
Earldom of Hertford (3rd creation) forfeit, 1552Earldom of Leicester (3rd creation) extinct, 1588
Earl of Leicester (4th creation), 1618
Edward Seymour
c. 1563–1613
1st Baronet
Edward Seymour
1561–1612
Viscount Beauchamp
Edward Somerset
1553–1628
4th Earl of Worcester, 6th Baron Herbert
Philip Sidney
1554–1586
Mary Sidney
1561–1621
Robert Sidney
1563–1626
1st Earl of Leicester
Robert Sackville
1561–1609
2nd Earl of Dorset, 2nd Baron Buckhurst
Marquess of Hertford (1st creation), 1641
Duke of Somerset (4th creation restored), 1660
Baron Seymour of Trowbridge, 1641Viscount Rochester, 1611
Earl of Somerset (3rd creation), 1613
Marquess of Worcester, 1642Viscount Somerset of Cashel, 1626
Edward Seymour
c. 1580–1659
2nd Baronet
William Seymour
1588–1660
3rd Duke of Somerset, 1st Marquess of Hertford, 2nd Earl of Hertford
Francis Seymour
c. 1590–1664
1st Lord Seymour of Trowbridge
Robert Carr
c. 1587–1645
Earl of Somerset
Henry Somerset
1577–1646
1st Marquess of Worcester, 5th Earl of Worcester, 7th Baron Herbert
Thomas Somerset
1579–1651
Viscount Somerset
Robert Sidney
1595–1677
2nd Earl of Leicester
Richard Sackville
1589–1624
3rd Earl of Dorset, 3rd Baron Buckhurst
Edward Sackville
1591–1652
4th Earl of Dorset, 4th Baron Buckhurst
Earldom of Somerset (3rd creation) and Viscountcy Rochester extinct, 1645Viscountcy Somerset extinct, 1651
Edward Seymour
1610–1688
3rd Baronet
Henry Seymour
c. 1626–1654
Lord Beauchamp
Charles Seymour
c. 1621–1665
2nd Lord Seymour of Trowbridge
Edward Somerset
1601–1667
2nd Marquess of Worcester, 6th Earl of Worcester, 8th Baron Herbert
Philip Sidney
1619–1698
3rd Earl of Leicester
Algernon Sidney
1623–1683
Lady Lucy Sidney
1630–1685
Henry Sidney
1641–1704
Earl of Romney
Richard Sackville
1522–1677
5th Earl of Dorset, 5th Baron Buckhurst
Duke of Beaufort, 1682Baron Cranfield, of Cranfield in the County of Middlesex, 1674
Earl of Middlesex (2nd creation), 1675
Edward Seymour
1633–1708
4th Baronet
William Seymour
1650–1671
3rd Duke of Somerset, 2nd Marquess of Hertford, 3rd Earl of Hertford
John Seymour
c. 1646–1675
4th Duke of Somerset, 3rd Marquess of Hertford, 4th Earl of Hertford
Francis Seymour
1658–1678
5th Duke of Somerset, 3rd Lord Seymour of Trowbridge
Charles Seymour
1662–1748
6th Duke of Somerset
Henry Somerset
1629–1700
1st Duke of Beaufort, 3rd Marquess of Worcester, 7th Earl of Worcester, 9th Baron Herbert
Robert Sidney
1649–1702
4th Earl of Leicester
Thomas Pelham
1653–1712
Charles Sackville
1522–1677
6th Earl of Dorset, 1st Earl of Middlesex, 6th Baron Buckhurst, 1st Baron Cranfield
Marquessate of Hertford (1st creation) extinct, 1675
Baron Conway of Ragley in the County of Warwick, 1703
Baron Conway of Killultagh in the County of Antrim, 1712
Duke of Dorset, 1720
Edward Seymour
1663–1740
5th Baronet
Francis Seymour-Conway
1679–1732
1st Baron Conway
Edward Coke
d. 1707
Algernon Seymour
1684–1750
7th Duke of Somerset, Earl of Northumberland
Charles Somerset
1660–1698
styled Marquess of Worcester
Philip Sidney
1676–1705
5th Earl of Leicester
John Sidney
1680–1737
6th Earl of Leicester
Jocelyn Sidney
1682–1743
7th Earl of Leicester
Elizabeth Pelham
1681–1711
Lionel Sackville
1688–1765
1st Duke of Dorset, 7th Earl of Dorset, 2nd Earl of Middlesex, 7th Baron Buckhurst, 2nd Baron Cranfield
Earldom of Leicester (4th creation) extinct, 1743
Baron Lovel, of Minster Lovel in the County of Oxford, 1728
Earl of Leicester (5th creation) and Viscount Coke of Holkham in the County of Norfolk, 1744
Edward Seymour
1695–1757
6th Baronet
8th Duke of Somerset
Anne CokeThomas Coke
1697–1759
Earl of Leicester, Viscount Coke
Henry Somerset
1684–1714
2nd Duke of Beaufort, 4th Marquess of Worcester, 8th Earl of Worcester, 10th Baron Herbert
Charles Townshend
1700–1764
3rd Viscount Townshend
Earl of Hertford (4th creation) and Viscount Beauchamp (2nd creation), 1850
Marquess of Hertford (2nd creation) and Earl of Yarmouth (3rd creation), 1793
Earldom of Leicester (5th creation) extinct, 1759Viscount Sackville and Baron Bolebrooke in the County of Sussex, 1782
Edward Seymour
1717–1792
9th Duke of Somerset
Webb Seymour
1718–1793
10th Duke of Somerset
Francis Seymour
1726–1799
Francis Seymour-Conway
1718–1794
1st Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
2nd Baron Conway
Wenman (Roberts) Coke
c. 1717–1776
Henry Somerset-Scudamore
1707–1745
3rd Duke of Beaufort, 5th Marquess of Worcester, 9th Earl of Worcester, 11th Baron Herbert
Charles Noel Somerset
1709–1756
4th Duke of Beaufort, 6th Marquess of Worcester, 10th Earl of Worcester, 12th Baron Herbert
George Townshend
1724–1807
1st Marquess Townshend
Charles Sackville
1711–1769
2nd Duke of Dorset, 8th Earl of Dorset, 3rd Earl of Middlesex, 8th Baron Buckhurst, 3rd Baron Cranfield
John Sackville
1713–1765
George Germain
1716–1785
1st Viscount Sackville, 1st Baron Bolebrooke
Earl of Leicester (7th creation), 1837Baron Botetourt abeyance terminated, 1803Earl of Leicester (6th creation), 1784
Francis Compton Seymour
d. 1822
Francis Ingram-Seymour-Conway
1743–1822
2nd Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
3rd Baron Conway
Hugh Seymour
1759–1801
Thomas William Coke
1754–1842
1st Earl of Leicester, 1st Viscount Coke
Henry Somerset
1744–1803
5th Duke of Beaufort, 7th Marquess of Worcester, 11th Earl of Worcester, 13th Baron Herbert, 5th Baron Botetourt
George Townshend
1753–1811
2nd Marquess Townshend, 1st Earl of Leicester
John Frederick Sackville
1745–1799
3rd Duke of Dorset, 9th Earl of Dorset, 4th Earl of Middlesex, 9th Baron Buckhurst, 4th Baron Cranfield
Baron Raglan, 1852
Edward Adolphus St Maur
1775–1855
11th Duke of Somerset
Francis Charles Seymour-Conway
1777–1842
3rd Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
4th Baron Conway
George Seymour
1787–1870
Henry Charles Somerset
1766–1835
6th Duke of Beaufort, 8th Marquess of Worcester, 12th Earl of Worcester, 14th Baron Herbert, 6th Baron Botetourt
FitzRoy James Henry Somerset
1788–1855
1st Baron Raglan
George Townshend
1778–1855
3rd Marquess Townshend, 2nd Earl of Leicester
George John Frederick Sackville
1793–1815
4th Duke of Dorset, 10th Earl of Dorset, 5th Earl of Middlesex, 10th Baron Buckhurst, 5th Baron Cranfield
John Frederick Sackville
1767–1843
5th Duke of Dorset, 11th Earl of Dorset, 6th Earl of Middlesex, 2nd Viscount Sackville, 11th Baron Buckhurst, 6th Baron Cranfield, 2nd Baron Bolebrooke
Earldom of Leicester (6th creation) extinct, 1855Dukedom of Dorset, Earldoms of Dorset (4th creation) and Middlesex (2nd creation), Viscountcy of Sackville, Baronies of Buckhurst (1st creation), Cranfield, and Bolebrooke extinct, 1843
Francis Edward Seymour
1788–1866
Richard Seymour-Conway
1800–1870
4th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
5th Baron Conway
Francis George Hugh Seymour
1812–1884
5th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
6th Baron Conway
Henry Somerset
1792–1853
7th Duke of Beaufort, 9th Marquess of Worcester, 13th Earl of Worcester, 15th Baron Herbert, 8th Baron Botetourt
Earl St. Maur, 1863
Edward Adolphus St Maur
1804–1885
12th Duke of Somerset
Archibald Henry Algernon St Maur
1810–1891
13th Duke of Somerset
Algernon Percy Banks St Maur
1813–1894
14th Duke of Somerset
Francis Payne Seymour
1815–1870
Thomas William Coke
1822–1909
2nd Earl of Leicester, 2nd Viscount Coke
Henry Charles FitzRoy Somerset
1824–1899
8th Duke of Beaufort, 10th Marquess of Worcester, 14th Earl of Worcester, 16th Baron Herbert, 8th Baron Botetourt
Richard Henry FitzRoy Somerset
1817–1884
2nd Baron Raglan
Earldom St. Maur extinct, 1885
Edward Adolphus Ferdinand St. Maur
1835–1869
Algernon St Maur
1846–1923
15th Duke of Somerset
Edward Hamilton Seymour
1860–1931
16th Duke of Somerset
Hugh de Grey Seymour
1843–1912
6th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
7th Baron Conway
Thomas William Coke
1848–1941
3rd Earl of Leicester, 3rd Viscount Coke
Henry Adelbert Wellington FitzRoy Somerset
1847–1924
9th Duke of Beaufort, 11th Marquess of Worcester, 15th Earl of Worcester, 17th Baron Herbert, 9th Baron Botetourt
Henry Richard Charles Somerset
1849–1932
George FitzRoy Henry Somerset
1857–1921
3rd Baron Raglan
Evelyn Francis Edward Seymour
1882–1954
17th Duke of Somerset
George Francis Alexander Seymour
1871–1940
7th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
8th Baron Conway
Henry Charles Seymour
1878–1939
Thomas William Coke
1880–1949
4th Earl of Leicester, 4th Viscount Coke
Arthur George Coke
1882–1915
Henry Charles Somers Augustus Somerset
1874–1945
FitzRoy Richard Somerset
1885–1964
4th Baron Raglan
Percy Hamilton Seymour
1910–1984
18th Duke of Somerset
Thomas William Edward Coke
1908–1976
5th Earl of Leicester, 5th Viscount Coke
Anthony Louis Lovel Coke
1909–1994
6th Earl of Leicester, 6th Viscount Coke
Henry Hugh Arthur FitzRoy Somerset
1900–1984
10th Duke of Beaufort, 12th Marquess of Worcester, 16th Earl of Worcester, 18th Baron Herbert, 10th Baron Botetourt
Henry Robert Somers FitzRoy de Vere Somerset
1898–1965
Barony Botetourt abeyant, 1984
Hugh Edward Conway Seymour
1930–1997
8th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
9th Baron Conway
Edward Douglas Coke
1936–2015
7th Earl of Leicester, 7th Viscount Coke
David Robert Somerset
1928–2017
11th Duke of Beaufort, 13th Marquess of Worcester, 17th Earl of Worcester
FitzRoy John Somerset
1927–2010
5th Baron Raglan
Geoffrey Somerset
b. 1932
6th Baron Raglan
John Michael Edward Seymour
b. 1952
19th Duke of Somerset
Henry (Harry) Jocelyn Seymour
b. 1958
9th Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth, and Viscount Beauchamp,
10th Baron Conway
Thomas Edward Coke
b. 1965
8th Earl of Leicester, 8th Viscount Coke
Henry John FitzRoy Somerset
b. 1952
12th Duke of Beaufort, 14th Marquess of Worcester, 18th Earl of Worcester
Arthur Geoffrey Somerset
1960–2012
Sebastian Edward Seymour
b. 1982
styled Lord Seymour
William Francis Seymour
b. 1993
styled Earl of Yarmouth
Edward Horatio Coke
b. 2003
styled Viscount Coke
Henry Robert FitzRoy Somerset
b. 1989
styled Marquess of Worcester
Inigo Arthur Fitzroy Somerset
b. 2004
Heir apparent to the Dukedom of SomersetHeir apparent to the Marquessage of HertfordHeir apparent to the Earldom of LeicesterHeir apparent to the Dukedom of BeaufortHeir apparent to the Raglan Barony

References

  1. "Fitzroy". Dictionary of American Family Names. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  2. Hutchinson, Robert, House of Treason: Rise and Fall of a Tudor Dynasty (London, 2009), pg. 58.
  3. Hutchinson, Robert (2012). "Dramatis Personae". Young Henry: The Rise of Henry VIII. Macmillan. p. 262. ISBN 978-1250012746. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  4. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son (Stroud, 2004) pg. 25.
  5. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son (Stroud, 2004) pg. 25.
  6. Lipscomb, Suzannah, 1536: The year that changed Henry VIII (London, 2009) pg. 90.
  7. Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: Mistress to Henry VIII (Stroud, 2011) pg. 137.
  8. "FitzRoy" means "Son of the king" or "Son of a king" in Anglo-Norman (cf. article Fitz)
  9. Weir, Alison, Henry VIII: king and court (London, 2002) pg. 220.
  10. Mattingly, Garrett, Catherine of Aragon, pg. 145.
  11. Lipscomb, Suzannah, 1536: The Year That Changed Henry VIII, p. 91.
  12. Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: Mistress to Henry VIII, p. 121.
  13. Norton, Elizabeth, Bessie Blount: Mistress to Henry VIII, p. 181.
  14. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 34.
  15. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 35.
  16. Jones, Philippa, The other Tudors, pg. 80.
  17. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 39.
  18. Hutchinson, Robert, A Tudor dynasty: The rise and fall of the house of Howard, pg. 59.
  19. Murphy, Beverley, The bastard prince: Henry VIII’s lost son, pg. 45.
  20. Murphy 2001, 64
  21. Murphy, Beverley A. "Fitzroy, Henry, duke of Richmond and Somerset (1519–1536), royal bastard." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 03. Oxford University Press. Date of access 2 Mar. 2023, <https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-9635>
  22. Murphy 2001, 61
  23. State Papers Henry VIII, vol. 4 part 4 (London, 1836), pp. 464–5 Magnus to Wolsey 14 February 1527, p. 529.
  24. Scarisbrick, J.J. English Monarchs: Henry VIII. University of California Press.
  25. Weir, Alison (2000). The Six Wives of Henry VIII. Grove Press. ISBN 0-8021-3683-4.
  26. Lacey, Robert (1974). The life and times of Henry VIII. Praeger.
  27. Tjernagel, Neelak Serawlook (1965). Henry VIII and the Lutherans: a study in Anglo-Lutheran relations from 1521 to 1547. Concordia Pub. House.
  28. Elton, Geoffrey Rudolph (1991). England under the Tudors, Volume 4. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-06533-X.
  29. Nicola Clark, Gender, Family, and Politics: The Howard Women, 1485–1558, (Oxford University Press, 2018), 112.
  30. Nicola Clark, Gender, Family, and Politics: The Howard Women, 1485–1558, (Oxford University Press, 2018), 145.
  31. Murphy,172–174
  32. Gairdner, James, ed., Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII, vol. 11 (1911), no. 40 & preface
  33. Murphy, 174
  34. Everett Green 1852, pp. 11–12.
  35. Weir 2011, p. 139.
  36. Panton 2011, p. 51.
  37. "Houses of Cluniac monks: The priory of St Mary, Thetford.", A History of the County of Norfolk Volume 2. (William Page, ed.) London: Victoria County History, 1906. 363–369. British History Online. 2 September 2022
  38. "Historical Tombs".
  39. "Historical Tombs".
  40. Thomas Fuller, The Church History of Britain, III, 232, cited in Murphy, 243.

Notes

  1. i.e. Mary and Elizabeth, Henry VIII's daughters.

Works cited

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