Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands » Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London (1485-1540)

Personal data Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London 

Sources 1, 2

Household of Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London

(1) He is married to Nn Nn.

They got married


Child(ren):

  1. Elizabeth Kitson  ± 1511-???? 


(2) He is married to Margaret Donnington.

They got married about 1535.Sources 2, 3


Child(ren):

  1. Katherine Kytson  1521-< 1586 
  2. Dorothy Kitson  ± 1538-1577
  3. Anne Kitson  ± 1535-????
  4. Frances Kitson  ± 1527-± 1586 
  5. Thomas Kitson  1540-1602 


Notes about Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Kitson

Mother unknown

==========

[Curt Hofemann]

KYTSON, Sir THMAS (1485-1540), sheriff of London, son of Robert Kytson of Warton in Lancashire, was born in 1485. ; He came to London in his youth, and was apprenticed to Richard Glasyer, mercer, and on the expiration of his indentures was admitted a freeman of the Mercers' Company in 1607.  He twice served the office of warden of the company, in 1526 and 1534, and held the, office of master in 1535.  In 1521 Kytson purchased of the Duke of Buckingham the manor of Hengrave, Suffolk, and the manor of Colston Basset in Nottinghamshire for -2,340_l_., the, estates being valued at 115_l_. yearly.  On the attainder and execution of the Duke of Buckingham in the following year, Kytson was for a time deprived of the estates, but they were ultimately restored to him, and were confirmed to him by an act of parliament of 1524, which describes him as a 'citizen and mercer of London, otherwise called Kytson the merchant.'
At Hengrave he obtained a license from Henry VIII to build an embattled manor-house on a magnificent scale.  The building was begun in 1525, and finished in 1538.  An elaborate inventory of the furniture and goods at Hengrave, taken in 1603 (Gage, _History of Hengrave, pp. 21-37), illustrates its great extent and elegance, and the vast wealth of its owner.  In the valuation of the lands and goods of the inhabitants of London, taken in 1522, Kytson was assessed in goods at a thousand marks (altered to four thousand marks), and in lands at six hundred marks (_State Papers_, Hen. VIII, iii. pt. ii. p. 1052).  In the following year he appears indebted to the crown for 600_l_., and at the time, his financial dealings with the crown were on a large scale (_ib._ p. 1530, vol. iv. pt. iii. p. 277 1, vol. ix. p. 567, iii.)  His mercantile transactions were very extensive.  He was a member of the Merchant Adventurers' Company, and traded at the cloth fairs or staples held by that company at Antwerp, Middelburg, and other places in Flanders.  Like many other wealthy London merchants, he appears to have had a house and staff of 'servants' at Antwerp (_ib._ vii. 166).
Kytson served the office of sheriff of London in 1533, and on 30 May in that year was knighted, an honour which was not conferred upon his co-sheriff, William Forman (_ib._ vi. 279).  In May 1534 he was associated with Roland Lee, bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, in receiving oaths of fealty from priests and monks (_ib._ vii. 283). Kytson was assessed for the subsidy of 1535 at four thousand marks (_ib._ viii. 184).
Subsequently he purchased several other manors in Suffolk of the crown of the yearly value of 202_l_. 4s. 7d., for which he paid 3,710_l_. 1s. 8d.  From an inventory of his effects taken after his death, it appears that his warehouses in London were stored with cloth of gold, satins, tapestry, velvets, furs, fustians, bags of pepper, cloves, madder, &c., to the value of 1,181_l_ .15s. 1d., and the ready money and debts (good, doubtful, and desperate) amounted to a very considerable sum.  He had a dwelling-house in Milk Street (with a chapel attached), the 'implements' in which were valued at 154_l_. 8s. 3 ½d.; a garden in Coleman Street, and a house and chapel at Stoke Newington.  Besides Hengrave, he had houses at Westley and Risby in Suffolk, and at Torbrian in Devonshire.
Kytson died 11 Sept. 1540, and was buried with much state in Hengrave Church (cf. Gage, pp. 112-15).  In the north-east angle of the chapel is a well-executed tomb to the memory of Margaret, countess of Bath (his widow), and her three husbands.  A recumbent figure of Kytson in armour is placed on the step in front of the tomb, the frieze of which contains an inscription to his memory.  On 22 Sept. 1540 allegations were taken to prove his nuncupative will, by which he left his manors of Hengrave and Feltons and all his other property to his wife, Dame Margaret.  The will is dated 11 Sept. (P. C. U. Spert, 30).
Kytson was twice married.  By his first wife, whose name is not known, he had Elizabeth, wife of Edmund Crofts of Westowe in Suffolk.  By his second wife, Margaret, only child of John Donnington of Stoke Newington in Middlesex and Elizabeth Pye, he bad a posthumous son, afterwards Sir Thomas Kytson, and four daughters: (1) Katherine, married to Sir John Spencer of Wormleighton, Warwickshire; (2) Dorothy, married to Sir Thomas Packington of Westwood, Worcestershire; (3) Frances, wife of John, lord Fitzwarren, eldest son of John Bourchier, earl of Bath; and (4) Anne, wife of Sir William Spring of Pakenham, Suffolk.
Dame Margaret (d. 1561) was married secondly to Sir Richard Long, and afterwards to the Earl of Bath.
A portrait of Kytson by Holbein is at Hengrave, and was engraved by Sievier for Gage's 'History of Hengrave' (p. 106).
[Records of the Corporation of London and of the Mercers' Company.] C W-H.*
[Ref: DNB, Editor, Sidney Lee, MacMillan Co, London & Smith, Elder & Co., NY, 1908, vol. xi, p. 364]

* Charles Welch, F.S.A., author of this article.

...

[Jim Weber.ged]

Castles of Great Britain
Hengrave Hall, Bury St. Edmunds, England

In 1520 Thomas Kytson became the new owner of Hengrave.  He was an enterprising merchant, who belonged to the Company of Merchant Adventurers and traded extensively in Flanders, mainly through the agency of his nephew, Thomas Washington, the son of Thomas Kytson's sister Margaret, from whom George Washington descended.  Thomas Kytson, who was knighted in 1533, was the builder of the present Hall and was Sheriff of London.

By his second wife, Margaret Donnington, he had four daughters and a posthumous son, the second Sir Thomas Kytson...

[Castles of Great Britain, website, on Hengrave Hall, Bury St. Edmunds, England]

...x

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Timeline Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Thomas Kitson

Robert Kitson
1454-1548

Thomas Kitson
1485-1540

(1) 
Elizabeth Kitson
± 1511-????
(2) ± 1535
Katherine Kytson
1521-< 1586
Dorothy Kitson
± 1538-1577
Anne Kitson
± 1535-????
Frances Kitson
± 1527-± 1586
Thomas Kitson
1540-1602

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Sources

  1. "Thomas A. Stobie, rootsweb, 2009.," supplied by Stobie, july 2014., Thomas A. Stobie, compiled by Thomas A. Stobie SFO [(E-ADDRESS) FOR PRIVATE USE\,]
  2. Lundy, Darryl. the peerage.com Website. URL: http://thepeerage.com . 128 Heke Street, Wellington, New Zealand. darry,(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX), thepeerage.com Website
  3. Ferguson, June, Rootsweb GEDCOM. (fergy@nemaine.com or ferg(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)), June Ferguson's Rootsweb GEDCOM

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Historical events

  • Graaf Karel II (Oostenrijks Huis) was from 1515 till 1555 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Graafschap Holland)
  • In the year 1540: Source: Wikipedia
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    • July 28 » Thomas Cromwell is executed at the order of Henry VIII of England on charges of treason. Henry marries his fifth wife, Catherine Howard, on the same day.
    • August 15 » Arequipa, Peru is founded.
    • October 18 » Spanish conquistador Hernando de Soto's forces destroy the fortified town of Mabila in present-day Alabama, killing Tuskaloosa.


Same birth/death day

Source: Wikipedia


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Richard Remmé, "Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-richard-remme/I80336.php : accessed May 16, 2024), "Sir Thomas Kitson Alderman of London (1485-1540)".