Edward Griffin (attorney)
English landowner and lawyer
Edward Griffin
In office 21 May 1552 – 17 November 1558Appointed by Preceded by Henry Bradshaw Succeeded by Gilbert Gerard In office 18 June 1545 – 21 May 1552Appointed by Preceded by Henry Bradshaw Succeeded by John Gosnold
Died 16 December 1569 Resting place All Saints church, Dingley Nationality English Spouses
Elizabeth Palmer
Anne Smith
Elizabeth Chamber
Children with Elizabeth Palmer:
Sir Edward Griffin
Grace Griffin
Jane Griffin
Margaret Griffin
Mary Griffin
with Anne Smith:
with Elizabeth Chamber: Parent(s) Sir Nicholas Griffin Alice Thornborough Residence Dingley Hall Profession Lawyer
Edward Griffin (died 16 December 1569) of Dingley, Northamptonshire was an English landowner and lawyer. He was Solicitor General from 1545 to 1552 and Attorney General from 1552 to 1558.
He was the second son of Sir Nicholas Griffin (1476 – 1509) of Braybrooke , Northamptonshire and his second wife, Alice Thornborough, daughter of John Thornborough of Hampshire . His elder brother was Sir Thomas Griffin (1496 – 1566) of Braybrooke who married Jane Newton, daughter of Richard Newton of Court of Wick, in Yatton , Somerset.
Following a family tradition, he was admitted as a student to Lincoln's Inn and was Autumn Reader in 1537. He was elected one of the Governors of Lincoln's Inn in 1540. He was Solicitor General from 18 June 1545, during the reign of Henry VIII and Edward VI . He was appointed Attorney General on 21 May 1552 and continued in that role under Mary I . A devout Catholic, he was removed from office on the accession of Elizabeth I .
Griffin acquired an existing house, a Preceptory of the Knights Hospitallers , at Dingley, Northamptonshire at the dissolution of the monasteries , and rebuilt it in the 1550s. The porch of Dingley Hall is carved with the date 1558 and the initials of Griffin and his second wife, and other inscriptions.[ 7] Elizabeth I came to Dingley from Collyweston on her progress on 3 August June 1566.[ 9]
Marriages and children
He married three times.
First, in 1535, Elizabeth Palmer, daughter of Robert Palmer of Bowden, Northamptonshire, and Grace Coste, with whom he had a son and four daughters:
Sir Edward Griffin (d. 1620), married Lucy Conyers (d. 1620) at Wakerley in 1569, with whom he had two sons and three daughters:
Grace Griffin married Simon Norwich of Brampton Ash , Northamptonshire.
Jane Griffin (d. 1588) married Henry Keble of Humberston, Leicestershire .
Margaret Griffin married William Plumpton.
Mary Griffin married Edward Conyers, brother of Reginald Conyers of Wakerley, Northamptonshire.
Second: Anne Smith, daughter of John Smith, Baron of the Exchequer , with whom he had a daughter:
Third: Elizabeth Chamber , daughter of Geoffrey Chamber of Stanmore , Middlesex, and widow of Sir Walter Stonor (d. 1551) and Reginald Conyers (d. 1560), with whom he had a son:[ 16]
Sir Rice Griffin of Bickmarsh , who married Margaret Throckmorton (d. 1615), daughter of Thomas Throckmorton of Coughton, Warwickshire :
Edward Griffen (d. 1659) of Bickmarsh, father of Nicholas Griffin (d. 1644), who married Anne Lingen (d. 1660) of Stoke Edith .
Gallery
Death and burial
Edward Griffin died on 16 December 1569 and was buried near the chancel in the parish church at Dingley .[ 20] He was succeeded by his son, Edward, aged 20 years 5 months and 13 days. His widow married, by 28 August 1572, Oliver St John of Bletsoe .
It is not known for whom the Griffin monument (dated c . 1565-70 by Pevsner ) in Braybrooke church was erected in English renaissance style, "but it is a fine example of its kind."[ 21]
References
^ Gotch 1894 , p. 42 and plate 55 .
^ Elizabeth Goldring, Faith Eales, Elizabeth Clarke, Jayne Elisabeth Archer, John Nichols's The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth , 1 (Oxford, 2014), p. 453.
^ John Harwood Hill, History of Market Harborough (Leicester, 1875), pp. 5–6.
^ Yeatman 1896 , pp. 252 –254: Edward Griffin was not knighted. In his will, dated 11 August 1569, he refers to his wife by her superior courtesy title of Lady Stonor .
^ Gotch 1894 , p. 26 and plate 39 .
Sources
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Cokayne, G. E. ; Gibbs, Vicary (1929). H. A. Doubleday; Lord Howard de Walden (eds.). The Complete Peerage, or a History of the House of Lords and all its Members from the Earliest Times . Vol. 7 (2nd ed.). London: St Catherine Press.
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—— (1848). The Judges of England: With Sketches of their Lives, and Miscellaneous Notices Connected with the Courts at Westminster, from the Time of the Conquest . Vol. 5. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. pp. 101, 284, 288, 346, 412. OCLC 894044 .
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Longmate, B.; Collins, Arthur (1784). A Supplement to the Fifth Edition of Collins's Peerage of England : Containing a General Account of the Marriages Births Promotions Deaths &c. Which Have Occurred in Each Family from That Publication in the Year 1779 to the Present Time. Also Genealogical and Historical Accounts of Those Families Which Have Been Advanced to the English Peerage Whether by Descent or Creation Since That Period. with Their Paternal Coats of Arms Crests Supporters and Mottoes Engraved on Thirty-Four Copper Plates. Faithfully Collected from Authentic Pedigrees in Possession of the Families or Registered in the House of Lords; Records Monumental Inscriptions and Other Authorities Which Are Cited . By B. Longmate, Editor of the Fifth Edition of Collins's Peerage. London: Printed for W. Strahan, J.F. and C. Rivington, T. Payne and Son, W. Owen, S. Crowder, T. Longman, C. Rivington, C. Dilly, J. Robson, T. and W. Lowndes, J. Johnson, G. Robinson, T. Cadell, H.L. Gardner, J. Nichols, J. Bew, R. Baldwin, J. Murray, J. Debrets, W. Fox, J. White, T. Beecroft, W. Bent, and M. Folingsby. p. 430. OCLC 642322675 .
Maddison, Arthur Roland, ed. (1903). Lincolnshire Pedigrees . Vol. 2. Publications of the Harleian Society. Vol. 51. London: Harleian Society .
Mayers, Thomas F.; Walters, Courtney B. (2017). "Gryffyn, Griffin, Griffith, Edward" . The Correspondence of Reginald Pole . Vol. 4: A Biographical Companion: The British Isles. St Andrews Studies in Reformation History. Routledge. pp. 234–235. ISBN 9781351963831 .
Metcalfe, Walter C., ed. (1887). The Visitations of Northamptonshire Made in 1564 and 1618-19, with Northamptonshire Pedigrees from Various Harleian MSS . London: Mitchell and Hughes. p. 24. OCLC 807194019 .
Nichols, John (1971) [1st pub:London: John Nichols: 1798]. History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester . Vol. 2, Pt. 2. S.R. Publishers in association with Leicestershire County Council . p. 592.
Pevsner, Nikolaus (2002). Cherry, Bridget (ed.). Northamptonshire (2nd ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press . p. 51. ISBN 9780300096323 . OCLC 1311036478 .
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