Ancestral Trails 2016 » Thomas PARR (1478-1517)

Données personnelles Thomas PARR 


Famille de Thomas PARR

Il est marié avec Maud GREENE.

Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1511 à Kendal, Westmorland, il avait 33 ans.


Enfant(s):

  1. Catherine PARR  1512-1548 
  2. William PARR  1513-1571
  3. Anne PARR  1515-???? 


Notes par Thomas PARR

Sir Thomas Parr (c. 1483 - 11 November 1517) was an English knight, courtier and Lord of the Manor of Kendal in Westmorland (now Cumbria) during the Tudor period. He is best known as the father of Catherine Parr, queen consort of England and the sixth and final wife of King Henry VIII.

Thomas was the son of William Parr, 1st Baron Parr of Kendal and Elizabeth FitzHugh. He descended from King Edward III of England through his mother, Elizabeth.

Thomas' forebears were members of a rough-and-ready northern landed gentry clan, the Parrs of Kendal. They had been, after the crown, the most influential presence in southern Westmoreland since 1381. His mother and grandmother before him were royal ladies-in-waiting, and this enabled Thomas to acquire a polished upbringing at the English court.

According to biographer Susan James, the young Thomas most likely studied under Maurice Westbury of Oxford, learning (among other things) classical Greek and Latin as well as modern languages. Westbury had been installed as a teacher by Lady Margaret Beaufort at her estate of Colyweston. It was at Colyweston that certain gentlemen, including the son of the Earl of Westmoreland, not only received an education but also gained political connections that would prove useful in their future careers. Thomas' father, the first Baron Parr of Kendal, had once been Lady Margaret Beaufort's revisionary heir to her substantial lands in Westmoreland, known as the Richmond fee. Thomas' mother's family by her second marriage to Sir Nicholas Vaux (later 1st Baron Vaux of Harrowden), were also close to Margaret, enjoying a long-term relationship with her.

In adulthood, Thomas found the educative tools that he had acquired as a young man to be of considerable practical use, and he would emphasise this aspect of household management when the time came to educate his own children.

Sir Thomas More's first wife, Jane, was a niece of Parr by marriage, thereby making More an in-law of his. Parr was fond of More - the future but ill-fated Lord Chancellor of the kingdom - and respected his intellect. He was also an advocate of the teachings of his erudite cousin, Sir Cuthbert Tunstall. These teachings embraced the discipline of mathematics, which Thomas' daughter Catherine would put to good use in her later capacity as the lady of a succession of important households.

Under the rule of King Henry VIII, the Parr family flourished. Their influence, income, and titles increased as Thomas' career advanced. He became a Master of the Wards and was appointed Master of the Guards and Comptroller to the King. He was knighted and made High Sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1509, and of Lincolnshire in 1510. His wife, Maud, became a lady-in-waiting to Queen Catherine of Aragon. Shortly before the birth of their first surviving child, Catherine, the couple had bought a house in Blackfriars, London. Sir Thomas was popular with Henry and served at court with Sir Thomas More. Although he was rich in land and money, Sir Thomas never attained the aristocratic title of baron. He did, however, hold messuages, lands, woods, and rents in Parr, Wigan, and Sutton, as well as the manor of Thurnham.

Marriage
Thomas Parr married Maud Green (6 April 1492 - 1 December 1531), daughter of Sir Thomas Green and Joan Fogge in 1508. Before the birth of their most famous offspring, Catherine (also spelled Katherine), Maud gave birth to a son. This occurred not long after Maud and Thomas' marriage. Their happiness at the birth proved short lived as the baby soon died and his name remains unknown. After the birth of their fourth child, Anne, Maud fell pregnant again - in circa 1517, the year of her husband's death. The child, however, either miscarried or was stillborn, or succumbed in very early infancy to an illness. Whatever the cause of the tragic loss, it may have been somewhat of a relief on a practical level as the baby had arrived at a difficult juncture in Maud's life, with her husband dying and she being appointed executrix of his estate.

The surviving children of Sir Thomas and Maud were:

Catherine Parr (1512-5 September 1548); Queen Consort of England and Ireland, who wed:
Sir Edward Burgh, 1529 at Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, England.
John Nevill, 3rd Baron Latimer, 1534 in London, Middlesex, England.
King Henry VIII, 12 July 1543 at Hampton Court Palace in the private oratory of the Queen's Closet.
Sir Thomas Seymour on 4 April 1547. Had issue: Mary Seymour.
William Parr, 1st Marquess of Northampton, 1st Marquess of Northampton (c. 1513-28 October 1571) He married three times, all without issue:
Anne Bourchier, 7th Baroness Bourchier
Elizabeth Brooke
Helena Snakenborg.
Anne Parr, Countess of Pembroke (c. 1515-20 February 1552), married in 1538, William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, by whom she had two sons and a daughter.

Death
Sir Thomas fell seriously ill in November 1517. He had compiled a will which made provision for his wife and children. The two female children were to receive dowries while the bulk of the estate was to be inherited by his only male child, William. Because Sir Thomas died before any of his children were of age, Maud - together with Sir Cuthbert Tunstall, the children's uncle Sir William Parr, and a Dr. Melton - were made executors.

Sir Thomas died in his home at Blackfriars, London, on 11 November 1517. He was interred in St. Anne's Church, Blackfriars, within an elaborate tomb. His widow would be buried beside him in due course.
SOURCE: Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Thomas_Parr

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Thomas PARR

Thomas PARR
1406-1464
Alice TUNSTALL
± 1412-1464
Alice NEVILLE
1430-> 1503
William PARR
1433-????

Thomas PARR
1478-1517

1511

Maud GREENE
1492-1531

William PARR
1513-1571
Anne PARR
1515-????

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Événements historiques

  • En l'an 1517: Source: Wikipedia
    • 5 février » François I se rend au parlement pour y faire approuver le concordat; ce corps, de l'avis des prélats et de l'université, élude l'enregistrement.
    • 9 mai » la reine Claude se recueille en larmes, au pied du tombeau de ses parents Louis XII et Anne de Bretagne, en la basilique de Saint-Denis, au nord de Paris, où elle sera couronnée reine le lendemain 10 mai, en tant qu'épouse de François Ier.
    • 10 mai » couronnement comme reine de Claude de France, à Saint-Denis.
    • 11 mai » Saint-Denis est en liesse, au lendemain du couronnement en sa basilique de la reine Claude (de France).
    • 14 mai » un tournoi entre Bretons & Françoys est organisé à Paris, suite au couronnement de la reine Claude de France, épouse du roi François Ier, dans le cadre des festivités afférentes débutées lors des jours précédents.
    • 19 mai » le roi de France François I et sa Cour vont séjourner au château d'Ecouen (des Montmorency), avant une tournée à Rouen, Gaillon, Paris, Blois...


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille PARR

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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/I69761.php : consultée 12 juin 2024), "Thomas PARR (1478-1517)".