George Kirke (died 1675) was a Scottish-born courtier and Member of Parliament for Clitheroe.
He was a son of George Kirke, a servant of James VI of Scotland. George Kirke senior was keeper of the chamber door to Prince Charles in Scotland at Dunfermline Palace and was given a pension for his long service, with other servants of the Prince in March 1605.[1]
Career
George Kirke, younger, was a page to Prince Henry. He became a Groom of the Chamber to Prince Charles in 1613.[2] Kirke went to Spain in 1623 during Prince Charles' Spanish Match.[3] The goldsmith George Heriot, who died in 1623, bequeathed to him either a diamond or piece of gold or silver plate worth £50.[4]
He continued as a groom of the bedchamber to King Charles and gentleman of the robes.[5] His accounts detail purchases of fabric and tailoring for the king.[6] He provided costume for the masque Coelium Britannicum in February 1634, and bought diamonds and pearls for robes worn on St George's day 1639.[7]
A royal gift of lands at Gillingham, Dorset, at first held jointly with a courtier colleague James Fullerton, proved troublesome when tenants protested at their enclosures and improvements.[8]
In 1662, he was made keeper of Whitehall Palace.[9] He went to Spain with Prince Charles during the Spanish match of 1623.[10] King James wrote that "Kirke and Gabriel" would bring additional jewels to Charles and Buckingham including Georges and garters, insignia of the royal order.[11]
The court jeweller George Heriot bequeathed him a piece of silver plate or a diamond worth 50 marks Sterling.[12]
He has been suggested as the author "G. K." of a poem addressed to Venetia Stanley, the wife of Kenelm Digby, "A Breef and Mysticall description of the Fayre and Statelye Venetia".[13]
His, or his father's, eligibility as a Scot to sit as a Member of Parliament for Clitheroe in 1626 was challenged. George Kirke, gentleman of the robes, was naturalized as a denizen of England.[14]
Anne Kirke drowned at London Bridge on 6 July 1641. This tragedy was the subject of several poems including; Robert Heath's Epicedium on the Beautiful Lady Mrs A. K. unfortunately drowned by chance in the Thames in passing the Bridge, Henry King'sAn Elegy upon Mrs. Kirk unfortunately drowned in Thames, her niece Anne Killigrew'sOn my Aunt Mrs A. K. drown'd under London-bridge in the Queen's Bardge Anno 1641, and elegies by Henry Glapthorne and Constantijn Huygens.[17]
Their children included:
Charles Kirke, who claimed the keepership of Nonsuch Palace in 1650
Lucy Hamilton Sandys (Lucie Saunders), (d. 1687), who was a witness to Nell Gwyn's will.[18]
In 1646 he married Mary Townshend, daughter of Aurelian Townshend. King Charles is said to have given hin a lace collar, a hanfkerchief, and a night cap as a wedding present.[19] Their children included:[20]
^Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), p. 190.
^Roy Strong, 'Charles I's clothes for the years 1633 to 1635', Costume, 14:1 (1980), pp. 73-89: Karen Hearn, Van Dyck & Britain (London, 2009), pp. 30-1.
^James Orchard Halliwell, Letters of the Kings of England, vol. 2 (London, 1846), p. 167.
^William Steven, Memoir of George Heriot (Edinburgh, 1845), p. 50.
^Henry Bright, Poems from Sir Kenelm Digby's Papers (London, 1877), pp. 14-5.
^Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), p. 190.
^Sarah Poynting, 'Henrietta Maria's Notorious Whores', Clare McManus, Women and Culture at the Courts of the Stuart Queens (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003), p. 163.
^Karen Hearn, Van Dyck & Britain (London, 2009), p. 113.
^Matthew Spring, 'A goose amongst swans', Jan W.J. Burgers, Tim Crawford, Matthew Spring, The Lute in the Netherlands (Newcastle, 2016), p. 133.
^Joseph Lemuel Chester, 'The Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of the Abbey of Westminster', Publications of the Harleian Society, vol. 10 (London, 1876), pp. 135, 218.
^Maria Hayward, Stuart Style (Yale, 2020), p. 100.
^John Harold Wilson, Court Satires of the Restoration (Ohio U. P., 1976), p. 258-9.