Ancestral Trails 2016 » Thomas TRESHAM (1543-1605)

Données personnelles Thomas TRESHAM 


Famille de Thomas TRESHAM

Il est marié avec Muriel THROCKMORTON.

Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1568 à Rushton Hall, Rushton, Northamptonshire, il avait 24 ans.


Enfant(s):

  1. Frances TRESHAM  1569-????
  2. Elizabeth TRESHAM  1573-1647 
  3. Mary TRESHAM  1587-1664 
  4. Katherine TRESHAM  1570-???? 
  5. Francis TRESHAM  1568-1605

  • Le couple a des ancêtres communs.

  • Notes par Thomas TRESHAM

    Sir Thomas Tresham (1543 - 11 September 1605) was a prominent recusant Catholic landowner in Elizabethan Northamptonshire. He died two years after the accession of James VI and I.

    Tresham was brought up in the Throckmorton household. He inherited large estates at the age of 15, from his grandfather and namesake Thomas Tresham I, establishing him as a member of the Catholic elite. He was widely regarded as clever and well-educated, a correspondent of William Cecil, the Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth, and Sir Christopher Hatton, the Lord Chancellor.

    Well-read, Tresham dedicated much of his life to collecting books. He was much disliked, however, for an enclosure policy towards common land: he was referred to as the most odious man in Britain, after executing 50 people for rioting and levelling hedges in the Midland Revolt.

    Tresham was picked as sheriff for Northamptonshire in 1573 and was knighted at the Queen's Royal Progress at Kenilworth in 1575. He frequently entertained large numbers of friends and acquaintances but also pursued an aggressively conservative estate policy. His recusancy, Jesuit connections and arguments for the state's lack of jurisdiction in matters of conscience made him the subject of official attention, and he was imprisoned several times and fined heavily. At a time when Queen Elizabeth was anxious about the Catholic threat posed by Spain and by her cousin Mary, Queen of Scots, Catholics were made targets for persecution by their spiritual loyalty to another temporal power (the Pope, and by extension, the Catholic King of Spain). Between 1581 and 1605, Tresham paid penalties totalling just under £8,000. (equivalent to £1,610,000 in 2015). These heavy financial demands were, in reality, overshadowed by the expense of his building projects and his insistence on making advantageous marriages for his six daughters, bringing with them sizeable dowries (£12,200). His credit was thus impaired, and the ill-advised involvement of his son, Francis, in the Earl of Essex's rebellion, cost him over £3,000. As a Catholic who had Jesuit links, and who argued for an individual's right to act according to his conscience unmolested, he was tarred with the brush of disloyalty, a mark he fiercely rejected. Ultimately, his son Lewis successfully ate through what little family money was left.

    He left three notable buildings in Northamptonshire, the extraordinary Rushton Triangular Lodge and the unfinished Lyveden New Bield, both of which embody the strength of his faith. The Triangular Lodge bears witness to Tresham's fidelity to the doctrine of the Trinity. There was also a more personal connection: above the door we find the inscription 'Tres testimonium dant' ('the three bear witness', or, perhaps, 'Tres bears witness'). 'Tres' may be a moment of self-reference; it was his wife's pet name for him. Tresham himself was the architect of these designs, and the extant family papers in the British Library reveal some of his plans. His sense of civic responsibility in local society, occasioned by his gentility and the expectations of his rank and family practice, led him to begin building the Market House at Rothwell in 1577, thought to be a sessions house and decorated with the arms of other local families. Sir Thomas was a considerable landowner at his death in 1605, but his estate had £11,000 of debt (equivalent to £2,210,000 in 2015).

    Marriage and children
    In 1566, he married Muriel, a daughter of Sir Robert Throckmorton and Elizabeth Hussey. The Throckmorton family was a wealthy Catholic family from Coughton Court in Warwickshire and Tresham had been Sir Robert's ward.

    Thomas and Muriel had eleven children, including;

    Francis (d. December 1605)
    Mary (d. 13 October 1664); married Thomas Brudenell, 1st Earl of Cardigan
    Elizabeth; married William Parker, 4th Baron Monteagle
    Frances; married Edward Stourton, 10th Baron Stourton
    Catherine; married Sir John Webbe, 2nd Baron of Odstock

    His elder son, Francis, inherited the titles, estate, and debt, and became embroiled in the Gunpowder Plot later that year along with his cousins Robert Catesby and Thomas Wintour. Imprisoned for his actions, Francis met an early death in December 1605, avoiding certain execution. Nevertheless, he was decapitated after his death and his head displayed as that of a notorious traitor. His role in the Plot has been the subject of debate by historians and it has been largely accepted that he was the author of the famous 'Mounteagle Letter'. However widely agreed his authorship of the letter to his relative, it remains conjectural.
    SOURCE: Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Tresham_(died_1605)

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Thomas TRESHAM

Mary PARR
1503-????
John TRESHAM
1522-1548

Thomas TRESHAM
1543-1605

1568
Mary TRESHAM
1587-1664

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Événements historiques

  • En l'an 1605: Source: Wikipedia
    • 10 février » découverte de l'île d'Anaa par Pedro Fernandes de Queirós.
    • 26 juillet » malgré le roi Henri IV, les protestants français se réunissent en assemblée à Châtellerault.
    • 27 juillet » fondation de Port-Royal en Acadie, colonie française en Amérique du Nord. Les Français sont les premiers européens à s'implanter dans ce qui est aujourd'hui devenu le Canada, ouvrant ainsi la voie à la création d'un Empire colonial français.
    • 27 septembre » victoire de la république des Deux Nations sur Charles IX de Suède à la bataille de Kircholm.
    • 5 novembre » à Londres, la Conspiration des poudres, par laquelle l'officier catholique Guy Fawkes projetait de faire sauter le Parlement d'Angleterre et de tuer le roi protestant Jacques I, est découverte et se solde par un échec.


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille TRESHAM

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La publication Ancestral Trails 2016 a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I55323.php : consultée 15 mai 2024), "Thomas TRESHAM (1543-1605)".