Ancestral Trails 2016 » Ralph EGERTON (1458-????)

Personal data Ralph EGERTON 

  • He was born in the year 1458 in Egerton, Malpas, Cheshire.
  • He died on March 4, 1527/28 in Bunbury, Cheshire, he was 69 years old.
  • He is buried March 1528 in St Boniface, Bunbury, Cheshire.
  • A child of Philip EGERTON and Margery MAINWARING

Household of Ralph EGERTON

He had a relationship with Margaret BASSETT.


Child(ren):

  1. Richard EGERTON  ± 1510-1579 


Notes about Ralph EGERTON

Sir Ralph Egerton (also Raufe or Rafe; before 1476-1528) - standard bearer to Henry VIII, who awarded him the nearby manor of Ridley - commissioned a chantry chapel to be added to St Boniface's Church in Bunbury. The chantry (known as the Ridley Chapel) was begun by 1527, but remained incomplete at Egerton's death in 1528, and was finished under the provisions of his will. The Chantry House was built at the same time to house two chantry priests, who were "to pray for his Soul, his Father and Mother's Soul, with all other Souls of his kin, and all Christian Souls forever." According to Egerton's will, the Chantry House was to be constructed with stone and roofed in Welsh slate, and was to have two rooms, a parlour and a buttery-kitchen. The chantry was endowed with mills at Nantwich and a salt house. After Edward VI dissolved the chantries in 1547, the Chantry House was granted by the crown to Thomas Bromley of Nantwich in 1549. The chantry's value at the time of its dissolution was estimated to be £12 2 shillings.
SOURCE: Wikipedia

The church of St. Boniface at Bunbury Church ranks with that of St. Oswald at Malpas in its beauty and range of interesting historical features. In the church you can obtain a small pamphlet from which the details below have been abstracted. The church of St. Boniface has its own website which includes a ground plan of the church and small photographs.

The Ralph Egerton chantry chapel, known also as the Ridley Chapel, was constructed in 1527. It has notable carved doors. The manor of Ridley, previously belonging to Sir William Stanley, was granted by Henry VIII, as a reward for taking the French standard at Tournay, to Sir Ralph Egerton of Egerton. Ralph was the second son of Philip Egerton. Sir Ralph received his knighthood from Henry in 1513 for his conduct at the battle of the Spurs, and the seiges of Tourenne and Tournay. The following January he was made Standard Bearer of England for life with a salary of £100 per annum. He was made Marshall for his bravery at the battle of Flodden.

Sir Raufe Egerton, yet another distinguished soldier, and standard-bearer to Henry VIII, was knighted by the king for bravery in the French Wars. He was also presented with the manor of Ridley - centred on a tiny hamlet two miles south of Bunbury.

In order to perpetuate his line under the patronage of God, Sir Raufe decided to build a chantry chapel at Bunbury. It employed two chantry priests to pray for his soul, and the souls of his family. Sir Raufe also provided a chantry house, roofed in Welsh slate, for the priests to live in. The house still stands today, just to the south of the church.

Look at the wooden double doors with their intricately carved trellis work. Linenfold panelling, resembling draped cloth, survives on the lower half. On the reverse are carved the monograms of Sir Raufe and his wife Mary. What a labour of love these doors are.

The stone screen of the arcade, inside the chapel, retains much of its 16th-century painted decorations. They are some of the earliest Renaissance wall-paintings in the north of England.

Until the 17th century, Sir Raufe's marble chest-tomb with his name and arms upon it stood in the centre of the chapel. It was probably destroyed during the Civil War. Under the carpet a sandstone frame marks its original position. True to character, Sir Raufe also left full instructions for the stained glass, ornaments and statues. Two pedestals, still on either side of the altar, once held "two tabernacle gilt canopies for images". The two stained-glass roundels in one of the south windows are cadency marks - heraldic symbols that show the seniority of the bearer within the family.

The chapel was never finished It was still incomplete when Sir Raufe died in 1527, and only extensive instructions in his will allowed work to continue. But seven years after his death, Henry VIII became Supreme Head of the Church of England and dissolved the monasteries. Later, came the dissolution of parish church colleges and chantries, and the chapel fell into decay. As late as 1873, it "had become so dilapidated as to be perfectly unbearable, there being a hole in the roof producing intolerable draughts". Some repairs were made then, but it was not until 1894 that it was fully restored with a new roof and external parapet. That so much has survived is surprising.
SOURCE: Wikipedia

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Ralph EGERTON

John EGERTON
1404-1459

Ralph EGERTON
1458-????


Margaret BASSETT
± 1487-????

Richard EGERTON
± 1510-1579

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When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I55725.php : accessed June 22, 2024), "Ralph EGERTON (1458-????)".