John Jones1
M, #407931
Last Edited=23 Nov 2009
Children of John Jones and Cary Webster
Citations
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
Hanson Jones1
M, #407932
Last Edited=23 Nov 2009
Citations
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
Cary Maria Jones1,2
F, #407933
Last Edited=23 Nov 2009
Citations
- [S4139] Unknown author, Jacksons Papers (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date).
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
Thomas Lyte1
M, #407934
Last Edited=28 Nov 2009
Child of Thomas Lyte and Joan FitzJames
Citations
- [S3722] Anonymous, "re: Heywood Family," e-mail message to Darryl Roger LUNDY (101053), 17 April 2009. Hereinafter cited as "re: Heywood Family."
Sir John Tyndall1,2
M, #407935, b. 1486, d. 1 October 1539
Last Edited=25 Mar 2015
Sir John Tyndall was born in 1486 at Hockwold, Norfolk, EnglandG.2 He died on 1 October 1539.3,2
SIR JOHN TYNDALL KT., the only son of Sir 'William by Mary Mondeford, was ten years old when his father died, and was then already contracted to marry one of the daughters of Humphrey Coningsby, Serjeant-at-Law (afterwards a Knight and a Judge of the King's Bench), to whom his wardship and marriage had been sold by his father. He married accordingly Amphillis Coningsby, who died before him on 18th Jan. 1532-3, leaving nine children. A gray marble slab in the chancel of Hockwold Church bears the effigies in brass of a lady and nine children, with this inscription: (1 2)
Qui~quis ens qin transieris sta. perlege, plora,
Sum quod ens, fuciainque quod es, pro me piecor ora
Obitus Amfelicie Tendall decimo octavo die Mensis Januar. A I). Mcccco XXXij'
Sir John Tyndall was one of the Knights of the Bath created on 31st May 1533 at the coronation of Queen Anne Boleyn, (30) and married secondly in 1534 Lady Winifred Fermor, the widow of Sir Henry Fermor Kt., of' East Barsham in Norfolk. Their marriage settlement is (latedi 14th Dec. 26 lien. VIII. (1534), whereby Sir John charged the manor of Scales hail in Hockwold with the payment. of 421. per annum by way of jointure to Dame Winifred) She was the (laughter of Thomas Cawse, an Alderman of Norwich, and M as thrice married, for her first husband was Henry- Dynne Esq. of Heydon in Norfolk. She had no issue by her third husband, whom she outlived.
Sir John Tyndall died on 1st Oct. 1539 at the age of 53, seised of the following manors and estates, which were valued at 223l 10s. per annum beyond all reprises (32)
Nofolk The manor of Hickling, value per annum
The manor and advowson of Pudding-Norton
The manor of Redenhall in Harlston.
The manors of Ilsington and Clenchwarton with the advowson of Clench
warton.
Cambridgeshire The manor of Haslingfield
Northants The manor of He1pston~
Norfolk Lands called Bainys'
Lands lying in Colston.
The manor. of Mondeford, Scale, and Stewkeys, with East Lexham and
the advowson of Hockwold.2
SIR JOHN TYNDALL KT., the only son of Sir 'William by Mary Mondeford, was ten years old when his father died, and was then already contracted to marry one of the daughters of Humphrey Coningsby, Serjeant-at-Law (afterwards a Knight and a Judge of the King's Bench), to whom his wardship and marriage had been sold by his father. He married accordingly Amphillis Coningsby, who died before him on 18th Jan. 1532-3, leaving nine children. A gray marble slab in the chancel of Hockwold Church bears the effigies in brass of a lady and nine children, with this inscription: (1 2)
Qui~quis ens qin transieris sta. perlege, plora,
Sum quod ens, fuciainque quod es, pro me piecor ora
Obitus Amfelicie Tendall decimo octavo die Mensis Januar. A I). Mcccco XXXij'
Sir John Tyndall was one of the Knights of the Bath created on 31st May 1533 at the coronation of Queen Anne Boleyn, (30) and married secondly in 1534 Lady Winifred Fermor, the widow of Sir Henry Fermor Kt., of' East Barsham in Norfolk. Their marriage settlement is (latedi 14th Dec. 26 lien. VIII. (1534), whereby Sir John charged the manor of Scales hail in Hockwold with the payment. of 421. per annum by way of jointure to Dame Winifred) She was the (laughter of Thomas Cawse, an Alderman of Norwich, and M as thrice married, for her first husband was Henry- Dynne Esq. of Heydon in Norfolk. She had no issue by her third husband, whom she outlived.
Sir John Tyndall died on 1st Oct. 1539 at the age of 53, seised of the following manors and estates, which were valued at 223l 10s. per annum beyond all reprises (32)
Nofolk The manor of Hickling, value per annum
The manor and advowson of Pudding-Norton
The manor of Redenhall in Harlston.
The manors of Ilsington and Clenchwarton with the advowson of Clench
warton.
Cambridgeshire The manor of Haslingfield
Northants The manor of He1pston~
Norfolk Lands called Bainys'
Lands lying in Colston.
The manor. of Mondeford, Scale, and Stewkeys, with East Lexham and
the advowson of Hockwold.2
Children of Sir John Tyndall and Amphelice Coningsby
- Thomas Tyndal the elder+2 b. 1505, d. c Dec 1583
- William Tindall+2 b. 1507
- Thomas Tyndal the younger2 b. 1509
- Ursula Tindall+2 b. 1510
- Humphrey Tindall2 b. 1511, d. b 14 Sep 1540
- Anne Tindall+2 b. 1513
- Mary Tindall2 b. 1515
- Dorothy Tindall+2 b. 1518
- Beatrix Tindall+2 b. 1519
Citations
- [S4248] Unknown compiler, online unknown url, Tyndale (unknown location).
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date), 257.
Thomas Solley1,2
M, #407936
Last Edited=25 Nov 2009
Citations
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date), page 260.
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
William Tyndal1,2
M, #407937, b. before 1540, d. October 1591
Last Edited=25 Mar 2015
William Tyndal was born before 1540.2 He was the son of Thomas Tyndal the elder and Anne Paston.2 He married Anne Jermyn in November 1556.1,2 He died in October 1591 at Boston, Lincolnshire, EnglandG.3,2
He matriculated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, in 1548.2 His father had special leave from the Crown to convey to him by deed, dated 15th Nov. 3 & 4 Philip and Mary, the manor of Ilsington with lands extending into Wigenhale and Tylney). This must have been an absolute gift, for William Tyndall obtained license on 18th Sept. 1565 to alienate all these lands to Francis Southwell. It would appear, however, that lie did not by this sale forfeit his father's favour and confidence, for about 1570, Sir Thomas Tyndall, being then sixty-five years of age, conveyed the whole of his estates in Norfolk and the adjoining counties to his sons William and John, subject to his life interest therein. Sir Thomas died at the end of 1583, and his heir proceeded immediately to sell the whole of his inheritance. Accordingly by deed dated 20th Jan. 1383-4, and made between William Tyndall Esq. of Hockwold (son and heir apparent of Sir Thomas Tyndall Kt deceased) and John Tyndall Esq. of Lincoln's Inn, one of the younger sons of the said Sir Thomas Tyndall of the one part, and Sir William Paston Kt. of Paston, Norfolk, and Clement Paston Esq. of Oxnard, Norfolk, of the other part, the said William and John Tyndall sold to the said Sir William and Clement Paston, their heirs and assigns, all those manors and lands situate in the parishes of Hockwold, Wilton, Feltwell, Brandon, and Weting in Norfolk, and in Brandon and Lakenheath in Suffolk and in Cambridgeshire and in the Isle of Ely, which had lately belonged to Sir Thomas Tyndall Kt. deceased, and which had for thirteen years and which had been in the possession of the said William and John Tyndall. Thus passed away from the Tyndalls every acre of their ancient inheritance.
A certain air of romance is thrown round the unthrift and extravagance of the last Tyndall of Hockwold, by the tradition that lie was dazzled by the offer of the Crown of Bohemia. He was descended through the marriage of his ancestor with Alana Fellbrigge from the ancient monarchs of that kingdom, whose last male heir died in 1526, and was succeeded by his brother-in-law Ferdinand of Austria. The new dynasty soon became embroiled with their subjects on the score of religion, for the doctrines of the Reformers were eagerly accepted in Bohemia, and the encroachments of the Protestants on the rights and privileges of tile Church were with difficulty kept in check by the Catholic Emperors. They demanded an absolute equality with the Catholics, and were powerful enough to extort from the policy of Ferdinand and his successor the free exercise of their religion. But the Emperor Rudolph II. had been educated by the Jesuits, and could not endure to see the decrees of the Council of Treat daily violated by the toleration of heresy. In 1578 lie issued an imperial edict prohibiting Protestant worship within his dominions under the penalties of treason. The Brethren of the Bohemian Confession and called to the Diet, and the Estates of Bohemia solemnly protested against the revocation of liberties which they had long enjoyed ; but Rudolph was inexorable, and from this time Bohemia remained for generations in a state of chronic insurrection. Rudolph bad no children, and the election of a King of the Romans was expected with intense anxiety by both Catholics and Protestants.
The Electors were divided in religion, and three out of the seven had long been avowed adherents of the Reformed Faith. But in November 1582, Gebhard Truchsess, the Archbishop Elector of Cologne, astounded the world by renouncing the Catholic Faith and by marrying the beautiful Chanoine Agnes de Mansfeldt. He insisted on retaining his archbishopric as a secular Electorate, but his conversion was immediately followed by the anathema of the Pope and the ban of the Empire. The crisis was of the highest importance, for if Gebhard were allowed to retain his electoral vote the Protestant Electors would be in the majority, and the imperial crown of the Holy Roman Empire would be lost to Catholicism. His deprivation therefore became a trial of strength between the Protestant Princes and the Catholic Powers, and both parties strained every nerve to increase their influence.
The Estates of Bohemia had always maintained that the rights of the house of Austria were solely derived from election, and they seized this opportunity to throw off their allegiance. They declare(l the throne of Bohemia to be vacant, and sought for a Protestant candidate, round whom they could rally with some show of hereditary right. Their eyes were naturally turned towards England, for Queen Elizabeth was regarded as the bulwark of the Protestant cause and the determined foe of the house of Austria. There was a current rumour that some years back diplomatists had conversed with a Protestant knight in the English Court, who traced his descent from the ancient kings of Bohemia, and it was resolved to send a deputation to offer him the throne. The deputies carried with them, amongst other presents, a bed of state, with curtains richly embroidered with the insignia of Bohemian royalty; and when they found that Sir Thomas Tyndahe was an old man of eighty, who had long relinquished the management of his estates, they presented these royal ornaments with the offer of the crown to his son William, who was in the prime of life. But William Tyndall had no qualifications for time throne except his age and his pedigree, and when it was ascertained that no help was to be expected from the English Government, the Quixotic project of electing an Englishman without rank, resources, or talents was silently abandoned.
This does not sound a very probable story, although I have narrated the tradition in its most plausible form; and it is a suspicious circumstance that our authorities widely differ, as to which of the Tyndalls it was, to whom the crown was offered, for it is variously attributed to the great-grandfather, the father, and even the younger brother of William Tyndall. Sir Henry Spelman, the Norfolk antiquary (1562-1641), relates in the description of Feibrigge in his Icenia, the descent of Sir William Tyndall 1(3. from Margaret of Bohemia; and then goes on to say, that he was knighted at the creation of Arthur Prince of Wales (29th Nov. 1489), 'et jure Margaret Proavite sute Uturedem Regni Bohemitn den unciatum. Sic Heraldorum nostrorum Fasti; sic me puero fama celeln'is.'
On the other hand, a geographical quarto, published in London in 1630, under the title of Relations of the most famous Kingdomes and commonwealths thorowout the World, contains this passage at p. 276:
The kingdom of Bohemia is merely elective, although by force and faction now almost made hereditary to the house of Austria, which it seems it was not, when as within these two Ages that State made choice of one Mr. Tyndall, an English gentleman, father to Mr. Doctor Tyndall, Master of Queen's College in Cambridge, sending over their Ambassadors to him and hr them their presents, which story is famously known at Cambridge.'
Fuller, however, in his History of Cambridge, gives a different version of the story current in the University, for be says
·Dr. Humphrey Tyndall, Dean of Ely, of whom there passeth an improbable tradition. That in the reign of Queen Elizabeth he was proffered by a Protestant Party in Bohemia to be made King thereof Which he refused, alleging That lie had rather be Queen Elizabeth's subject than a forain Prince. However, because no smoak without some fire or heat at least, there is something in it, more than appears to every eye.'
Fuller is no mean authority for the Cambridge tradition of his day, for he was nephew to Dr. John Davenant who witnessed Dr. Tyndall's Will, and succeeded him in the Mastership of Queen's. His concluding sentence probably expresses the true state of the case, for there is contemporary evidence that some kind of offer of the crown was made to one of the Tyndalls, although it was probably of a less formal character than the tradition suggests. This evidence agrees with chronology in clearly indicating William Tyndall as the person selected for the throne, and it is remarkably supported by the passage in his Will, whereby lie specifically bequeaths to his brother, Sir ,John Tyndall, 'my bed caller the bed of Bohemia with all the furniture thereto belonging, and with the curtaynes also, as ye now standeth furnished.2'
He matriculated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, in 1548.2 His father had special leave from the Crown to convey to him by deed, dated 15th Nov. 3 & 4 Philip and Mary, the manor of Ilsington with lands extending into Wigenhale and Tylney). This must have been an absolute gift, for William Tyndall obtained license on 18th Sept. 1565 to alienate all these lands to Francis Southwell. It would appear, however, that lie did not by this sale forfeit his father's favour and confidence, for about 1570, Sir Thomas Tyndall, being then sixty-five years of age, conveyed the whole of his estates in Norfolk and the adjoining counties to his sons William and John, subject to his life interest therein. Sir Thomas died at the end of 1583, and his heir proceeded immediately to sell the whole of his inheritance. Accordingly by deed dated 20th Jan. 1383-4, and made between William Tyndall Esq. of Hockwold (son and heir apparent of Sir Thomas Tyndall Kt deceased) and John Tyndall Esq. of Lincoln's Inn, one of the younger sons of the said Sir Thomas Tyndall of the one part, and Sir William Paston Kt. of Paston, Norfolk, and Clement Paston Esq. of Oxnard, Norfolk, of the other part, the said William and John Tyndall sold to the said Sir William and Clement Paston, their heirs and assigns, all those manors and lands situate in the parishes of Hockwold, Wilton, Feltwell, Brandon, and Weting in Norfolk, and in Brandon and Lakenheath in Suffolk and in Cambridgeshire and in the Isle of Ely, which had lately belonged to Sir Thomas Tyndall Kt. deceased, and which had for thirteen years and which had been in the possession of the said William and John Tyndall. Thus passed away from the Tyndalls every acre of their ancient inheritance.
A certain air of romance is thrown round the unthrift and extravagance of the last Tyndall of Hockwold, by the tradition that lie was dazzled by the offer of the Crown of Bohemia. He was descended through the marriage of his ancestor with Alana Fellbrigge from the ancient monarchs of that kingdom, whose last male heir died in 1526, and was succeeded by his brother-in-law Ferdinand of Austria. The new dynasty soon became embroiled with their subjects on the score of religion, for the doctrines of the Reformers were eagerly accepted in Bohemia, and the encroachments of the Protestants on the rights and privileges of tile Church were with difficulty kept in check by the Catholic Emperors. They demanded an absolute equality with the Catholics, and were powerful enough to extort from the policy of Ferdinand and his successor the free exercise of their religion. But the Emperor Rudolph II. had been educated by the Jesuits, and could not endure to see the decrees of the Council of Treat daily violated by the toleration of heresy. In 1578 lie issued an imperial edict prohibiting Protestant worship within his dominions under the penalties of treason. The Brethren of the Bohemian Confession and called to the Diet, and the Estates of Bohemia solemnly protested against the revocation of liberties which they had long enjoyed ; but Rudolph was inexorable, and from this time Bohemia remained for generations in a state of chronic insurrection. Rudolph bad no children, and the election of a King of the Romans was expected with intense anxiety by both Catholics and Protestants.
The Electors were divided in religion, and three out of the seven had long been avowed adherents of the Reformed Faith. But in November 1582, Gebhard Truchsess, the Archbishop Elector of Cologne, astounded the world by renouncing the Catholic Faith and by marrying the beautiful Chanoine Agnes de Mansfeldt. He insisted on retaining his archbishopric as a secular Electorate, but his conversion was immediately followed by the anathema of the Pope and the ban of the Empire. The crisis was of the highest importance, for if Gebhard were allowed to retain his electoral vote the Protestant Electors would be in the majority, and the imperial crown of the Holy Roman Empire would be lost to Catholicism. His deprivation therefore became a trial of strength between the Protestant Princes and the Catholic Powers, and both parties strained every nerve to increase their influence.
The Estates of Bohemia had always maintained that the rights of the house of Austria were solely derived from election, and they seized this opportunity to throw off their allegiance. They declare(l the throne of Bohemia to be vacant, and sought for a Protestant candidate, round whom they could rally with some show of hereditary right. Their eyes were naturally turned towards England, for Queen Elizabeth was regarded as the bulwark of the Protestant cause and the determined foe of the house of Austria. There was a current rumour that some years back diplomatists had conversed with a Protestant knight in the English Court, who traced his descent from the ancient kings of Bohemia, and it was resolved to send a deputation to offer him the throne. The deputies carried with them, amongst other presents, a bed of state, with curtains richly embroidered with the insignia of Bohemian royalty; and when they found that Sir Thomas Tyndahe was an old man of eighty, who had long relinquished the management of his estates, they presented these royal ornaments with the offer of the crown to his son William, who was in the prime of life. But William Tyndall had no qualifications for time throne except his age and his pedigree, and when it was ascertained that no help was to be expected from the English Government, the Quixotic project of electing an Englishman without rank, resources, or talents was silently abandoned.
This does not sound a very probable story, although I have narrated the tradition in its most plausible form; and it is a suspicious circumstance that our authorities widely differ, as to which of the Tyndalls it was, to whom the crown was offered, for it is variously attributed to the great-grandfather, the father, and even the younger brother of William Tyndall. Sir Henry Spelman, the Norfolk antiquary (1562-1641), relates in the description of Feibrigge in his Icenia, the descent of Sir William Tyndall 1(3. from Margaret of Bohemia; and then goes on to say, that he was knighted at the creation of Arthur Prince of Wales (29th Nov. 1489), 'et jure Margaret Proavite sute Uturedem Regni Bohemitn den unciatum. Sic Heraldorum nostrorum Fasti; sic me puero fama celeln'is.'
On the other hand, a geographical quarto, published in London in 1630, under the title of Relations of the most famous Kingdomes and commonwealths thorowout the World, contains this passage at p. 276:
The kingdom of Bohemia is merely elective, although by force and faction now almost made hereditary to the house of Austria, which it seems it was not, when as within these two Ages that State made choice of one Mr. Tyndall, an English gentleman, father to Mr. Doctor Tyndall, Master of Queen's College in Cambridge, sending over their Ambassadors to him and hr them their presents, which story is famously known at Cambridge.'
Fuller, however, in his History of Cambridge, gives a different version of the story current in the University, for be says
·Dr. Humphrey Tyndall, Dean of Ely, of whom there passeth an improbable tradition. That in the reign of Queen Elizabeth he was proffered by a Protestant Party in Bohemia to be made King thereof Which he refused, alleging That lie had rather be Queen Elizabeth's subject than a forain Prince. However, because no smoak without some fire or heat at least, there is something in it, more than appears to every eye.'
Fuller is no mean authority for the Cambridge tradition of his day, for he was nephew to Dr. John Davenant who witnessed Dr. Tyndall's Will, and succeeded him in the Mastership of Queen's. His concluding sentence probably expresses the true state of the case, for there is contemporary evidence that some kind of offer of the crown was made to one of the Tyndalls, although it was probably of a less formal character than the tradition suggests. This evidence agrees with chronology in clearly indicating William Tyndall as the person selected for the throne, and it is remarkably supported by the passage in his Will, whereby lie specifically bequeaths to his brother, Sir ,John Tyndall, 'my bed caller the bed of Bohemia with all the furniture thereto belonging, and with the curtaynes also, as ye now standeth furnished.2'
Citations
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date), 264.
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley, 267.
Anne Beaumeys1,2
F, #407938
Last Edited=23 Nov 2009
Child of Anne Beaumeys and William Tindall
Citations
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date), 258.
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
Thomas Tyndal the elder1,2
M, #407939, b. 1505, d. circa December 1583
Last Edited=23 Nov 2009
Thomas Tyndal the elder was born in 1505 at Hockwold, Norfolk, EnglandG.3,1,4,2 He was the son of Sir John Tyndall and Amphelice Coningsby.2 He married Amy Fermor before May 1544.2 He died circa December 1583.3,1,4,2
Child of Thomas Tyndal the elder and Anne Paston
- William Tyndal2 b. b 1540, d. Oct 1591
Children of Thomas Tyndal the elder and Amy Fermor
- Francis Tyndall2 d. b 2 Mar 1631/32
- Henry Tyndall2 d. 9 Oct 1621
- Thomasine Tyndall2
- Elizabeth Tyndall2
- Susan Tyndall+2
- William Tyndall+2 b. a 1544
- Sir John Tyndall+2 b. a 1545, d. 12 Nov 1616
- Humphrey Tyndall+2 b. 1546, d. 12 Oct 1614
- Ursula Tyndall+2 b. c 1552, d. c Dec 1628
Citations
- [S4248] Unknown compiler, online unknown url, Tyndale (unknown location).
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.
- [S4187] Unknown author, Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley (n.p.: n.pub., unknown publish date), 263.
- [S4251] Brøderbund, online unknown url, Brøderbund (Vol. 1, Ed. 1, Tree #4268), downloaded 5 jan 1997.
William Tindall1
M, #407940
Last Edited=25 Mar 2015
Citations
- [S4132] Robin J Conisbee Wood, online <e-mail address>, Robin J Conisbee Wood (unknown location), downloaded 23 November 2009.