Margery Wentworth

(Redirected from Margaret Wentworth)

Margery Wentworth, also known as Margaret Wentworth, and as both Lady Seymour[1] and Dame Margery Seymour[2] (c. 1478[3] – 18 October 1550[4]), was the wife of Sir John Seymour and the mother of Queen Jane Seymour, the third wife of King Henry VIII of England. She was the grandmother of King Edward VI of England.

Margery Seymour
Bornc. 1478
Died18 October 1550(1550-10-18) (aged 71–72)
NationalityEnglish
TitleLady Seymour
Spouse
(m. 1494; died 1536)
Children
Parent(s)Sir Henry Wentworth
Anne Say

Family

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Margery was born in about 1478, the daughter of Sir Henry Wentworth and Anne Say, daughter of Sir John Say and Elizabeth Cheney.[3][5]

Margery's half-first cousins, courtiers Elizabeth and Edmund Howard, were parents to an earlier and later royal wife than her daughter: Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard, respectively.[6][7]

Elizabeth Cheney's first husband was Frederick Tilney, father of Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey.[5] This made Anne Say, although not of peerage-level nobility herself, the half-sister of a countess.[8] Wentworth was also a descendant of King Edward III; this remote royal ancestry is partly why Henry VIII found Jane Seymour (her daughter) marriageable.[9]

Margery's father, Henry Wentworth, rose to be a critical component of Yorkshire and Suffolk politics: in 1489, during the Yorkshire uprising against Henry VII who had married the female main claimant heir of the former Plantagenet dynasty in order to bolster his own shaky claim to the throne, he left his home and was named the steward of Knaresborough, earning him the privilege to keep the peace in the name of the first Earl of Surrey. After this, he was awarded the title of the Sheriff of Yorkshire.[8]

Early life

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She was given a place in the household of her aunt, the Countess of Surrey, where she met the poet John Skelton, whose muse she became.[5] She was considered a great beauty by Skelton and others. In poetry dedicated to her he praised her demeanor. Skelton's poem, Garland of Laurel, in which ten women in addition to the countess weave a crown of laurel for Skelton himself, portrays Margery as a shy, kind girl, and compares her to primrose and columbine. The other nine women from the poem are: Elizabeth Howard, Muriel Howard, Lady Anne Dacre of the South, Margaret Tynley, Jane Blenner-Haiset, Isabel Pennell, Margaret Hussey, Gertrude Statham and Isabel Knyght.[8]

Marriage and children

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On 22 October 1494 Margery married Sir John Seymour (1476–1536)[10] of Wulfhall, Savernake Forest, Wiltshire.[11] On the same day, her father Henry remarried Lady Elizabeth Scrope.[8]

Margery and her husband had ten children together:[11][12]

It is presumed that Margery and John had a good relationship in their marriage.[11] After her husband's death, instead of remarrying, she took a larger role in her children's education while running Wulfhall. Notably, her eldest daughter, Jane, was not schooled in a formal setting; Margery instead had her disciplined in more traditional roles that she deemed suitable.[29]

Her son Edward, a soldier and royal servant, would become the Duke of Somerset and Lord Protector. He was the eldest surviving child of the Seymours.[15]

Death

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She died of natural causes on 18 October 1550 in the presence of her family.[4][30]

References

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  1. ^ Davey 1909, p. 77: "... and their mother, Lady Seymour, by birth a Wentworth, ..."
  2. ^ "Will of Dame Margery Seymour, Widow – The National Archives, Kew". GOV.UK. Retrieved 15 August 2018. Will of Dame Margery Seymour, Widow...11 December 1550
  3. ^ a b c d Pollard 1897, pp. 299–310.
  4. ^ a b Seymour 1972, p. 340.
  5. ^ a b c Norton 2009, p. 9.
  6. ^ Norton 2009, p. 8–9.
  7. ^ Hart 2010, p. 142.
  8. ^ a b c d Tucker 1969, pp. 333–345.
  9. ^ Norton 2009, p. 8.
  10. ^ Aubrey & Jackson 1862, pp. 375–376: "This Knight departed this Lyfe at LX years of age, the XXI day of December, Anno 1536 ..."
  11. ^ a b c d Norton 2009, p. 11.
  12. ^ Seymour 1972, p. 26.
  13. ^ a b c Norton 2009, p. 13.
  14. ^ a b Aubrey & Jackson 1862, p. 377.
  15. ^ a b Beer 2009.
  16. ^ Pole, Mayer & Walters 2008, p. 481.
  17. ^ Hawkyard 1982b.
  18. ^ Hawkyard 1982c.
  19. ^ Seymour 1972, p. 65.
  20. ^ a b c Burke 1836, p. 201.
  21. ^ a b Seymour 1972, p. 35.
  22. ^ Wagner & Schmid 2012, p. 1000.
  23. ^ a b Strong 1967, pp. 278–281: "The portrait should by rights depict a lady of the Cromwell family aged 21 c.1535–40..."
  24. ^ College of Arms 2012, p. 63.
  25. ^ Richardson 2011a, pp. 111–112.
  26. ^ Machyn 1848, p. 24, 326.
  27. ^ Shingle Hall is also listed as Shingey, Shingley and Shinglehall in various sources.
  28. ^ Richardson 2011b, p. 82.
  29. ^ Norton 2009, pp. 12–13.
  30. ^ Dasent 1891, p. 142.

References

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