Anne was born in 1470, the youngest daughter of Sir Humphrey Bourchier and Elizabeth Tilney. Anne’s paternal grandparents were Sir John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners and Lady Margery Berners. Sir John Bourchier was knighted and the title of Baron Berners was created, which passed directly to Anne’s brother John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners due to her father’s death.[2] Anne’s maternal grandparents were Sir Frederick Tilney and Elizabeth Cheney, Lady Say. Elizabeth Cheney was the great-grandmother of Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, and Catherine Howard and married twice, first Sir Frederick Tilney and after his death Sir John Say.[3]
Anne's elder sister, Margaret would later serve as Lady Governess to the children of King Henry VIII of England. In August 1485, her stepfather was wounded in the Battle of Bosworth; the same battle where the family's friend and patron King Richard III was slain. The Earl of Surrey was taken prisoner, and upon his release, the Howards would become loyal servants of the new king Henry Tudor.
Marriage and issue
In about 1492, she married Sir Thomas Fiennes, 8th Baron Dacre (1472–1534), son of Sir John Fiennes and Alice FitzHugh.[4] She was styled as Baroness Dacre upon her marriage. She was also known as Lady Dacre of the South. Sir Thomas and Anne made their principal home at the Fiennes family seat, Herstmonceux Castle in Sussex, and together they had three children:
Sir Thomas Fiennes (died 26 October 1528), married in 1514, Jane Sutton, daughter of Edward Sutton, 2nd Lord Dudley, and Cicely Willoughby, by whom he had one son and heir Thomas Fiennes, 9th Baron Dacre, who was executed for murder in 1541.
Anne was a member of the household of Queen Catherine of Aragon as one of her Ladies of the Bedchamber.
John Skelton
Sometime after her marriage, John Skelton, Poet Laureate of England commemorated Anne, her mother, and her two half-sisters, Elizabeth and Muriel in his poem Garlande of Laurrell, which is about an event that had occurred when he was a guest in the Howard residence of Sheriff Hutton Castle. Anne's mother, along with her three daughters and gentlewomen of her household, had placed a garland of laurel, worked in silks, gold, and pearls, upon Skelton's head as a sign of homage to the poet. The stanza which is addressed to Anne reads: "To my Lady Anne Dakers of the sowth".[5] Her name also appears in several of Skelton's other poems.[6]