Cicely Sackville [Baker], 1st Countess of Dorset was the daughter of Sir John Baker and Elizabeth Baker [Dinley]. hamchurch.org/index_new.html St Michaels Parish Church], Withyham, Sussex He was born 1536 at Buckhurst, Withyham, Sussex; Baron of Buckhurst 8th Jun 1567; Knighted 8th Jun 1567; died 19th Apr 1608 at London; buried after 19th Apr 1608 at St Michaels Parish Church, Withyham, Sussex; created as the 1st Earl of Dorset 13th Mar 1603/4. ls Parish Church, Withyham, Sussex s born c 1575 ''''''F, b. circa 1535, d. 1 October 1615aker was born circa 1535 at of Sissinghurst, Kent, England.1 She married Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset, son of Sir Richard Sackville, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Winifred Bruges, in 1555.1 Cecily Baker died on 1 October 1615 at of Withyam, Sussex, England; Buried at the Buckhurst Chapel at Withyam; age 80.1 Her estate was probated in February 1616.1st Earl of Dorset b. bt 1527 - 1536, d. 19 Apr 1608of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. IV, p. 423-424. the United Kingdom, by George Edward Cokayne, Vol. IX, p. 100.r of Thomas Dineley and Unknown. Sir Richard Sackville and Wynifred Bridges. (Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset was born in 1536 and died on 19 Apr 1608 68.)le 2nd Earl of Dorset+ ial interests.h his own son, an incident inn 1563 that Ascham introduced into his pedagogic work The Scholemaster (1570) as prompting the book.[1] He matriculated from Hart Hall, Oxford, 17 December 1576, and graduated B.A. and M.A. on 3 June 1579; it appears from his father's will that he was also at New College.se of Commons in 1585 as member for Sussex, aged 23, by his father's influence.[2] In 1588 he sat for Lewes, but represented the county again in 1592–3, 1597–8, 1601, and 1604–8. He was a prominent member of the Commons, serving as a chairman of several committees. At the same time he engaged in trading ventures, and held a patent for the supply of ordnance.Dorset on the death of his father on 19 April 1608. He inherited from his father manors in Sussex, Essex, Kent, and Middlesex, the principal seats being Knole and Buckhurst. Dorset survived his father less than a year, dying on 27 February 1609 at Dorset House, Fleet Street, London. He was buried in the Sackville Chapel at Withyham, Sussex, and left money for the building and endowment of Sackville College. ..... and the Mission of Literature, 1561-1595 (2004), p. 204.y. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Cicely Baker |
Added via a Smart Match
MyHeritage family tree
Family site: Hislop Web Site
Family tree: 633005471-1