Grant of arms by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, to Edward Sebright of Blakeshall in Wolverley, Worcestershire, gentleman [manuscript] 1 April 1580
1580
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Details
Title
Grant of arms by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, to Edward Sebright of Blakeshall in Wolverley, Worcestershire, gentleman [manuscript] 1 April 1580
Created/published
Essex, England, 1 April 1580.
Description
1 item ; 70 x 50 cm
Associated name
Note
This is a PRELIMINARY RECORD. It may contain incorrect information. Please email catalog@folger.edu for assistance.
Genre/form
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England -- Essex, -- publication place.
Item Details
Call number
272916 MS
Folger-specific note
From dealer's description: "4. COOKE, Robert. [Grant of arms by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, to Edward Sebright of Blakeshall in Wolverley, Worcestershire, gentleman. Recites: the descent of Edward Sebright of Blakeshall in Wolverley, Worcestershire, from Peter Sebright of Sebrights Hall in Great Baddow, Essex, is proved from charters and other evidence, including “five very fair and ancient deeds and charters” shown to Cooke by Edward’s son William Sebright, esquire, town clerk of London, as follows: 1. a deed of 1294, exemplified as above; 2. a deed granted at Great Baddow, 29 April 1308; 3. a deed granted at Great Baddow, 1 October 1318; 4. a deed granted at Great Baddow, 7 November 1351; 5. counterpart conveyance of the property in the deed of 1294 by Edward Sebright’s grandfather John Sebright of Blakeshall to Robert Arthure of Steeple in Essex, 26 October 1490; that the family remained at Sebrights Hall until 2 December 1525, when on the death of John Sebright the estate descended to his daughter Alice, as is shown by the eschaetor’s inquest on his death; the family bore “this most fair and ancient coat [of arms]: the field silver three cinquefoils sable pierced of the field”; from the old records of his office Cooke finds that in the reign of Henry II, William Sebright of Sebrights Hall married Elizabeth, only daughter of Henry de Asshe, knight, who bore arms “the field gold a saltire gules, a fess sable.” Cooke confirms these arms, quartered; and since Edward Sebright “knoweth not of any crest, cognisance or badge properly belonging to neither of his said several coats (as to the greater part of the most ancientest arms there are none at all, nor any were usually borne in this realm before the wars which happened between England and France in the reign of that victorious prince king Edward the third)” Cooke augments the arms with a crest “upon the helm on a wreath of silver and sable a tiger seant silver crowned and flashed gold mantled gules double silver.”] 1 April 1580. Grant of arms, ink, handcolour & gilt on single sheet of parchment (approx. 70 x 50cm) in English, blue & red ropework to upper & right margins, achievement of arms, initial “T” in gilt, signed & sealed “Robert Cooke, alias Clarencieulx Roy Darmes”, perfect yellow wax seal in turned, lidded wooden skippet, with the arms of Clarenceux ([Argent], a cross [gules], and on a chief [gules] a lion passant guardant crowned with an open crown [or], augmented by a fleur de lis), flanked by cross-crosslets and surmounted by a cinquefoil (both from the arms of Robert Cooke): “* S’ : OFFICII : CLARENCIEVLX : REGIS : ARMORVM : ETC : AVSTRAL’”, some negligible wear to extremities, light dustmarking along old folds, very good. [TOGETHER WITH] [COOKE, Robert.] Exemplification, by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms, of a charter granted by Peter Sebright of Sebrights Hall in Great Baddow, Essex, sealed with a seal of arms, 29 June 1294. Recites: the delivery by Benjamin Gonston of Sebrights Hall, esquire, at the request of William Sebright, son of Edward Sebright, gentleman, of “sundry very notable, old and ancient deeds and charters ... two of which are in the old Saxon tongue” and of five others in the hands of Edward Sebright; Robert Cooke has agreed to exemplify under the seal of his office one of the charters, sealed with a seal of arms, “to remain with [William Sebright] and his posterity for ever, for that the same is a manifest proof and trial of the lawful and lineal descent of him the said William and of all others of the surname of the Sebrights of Blakesall to be descended out of the said ancient house of the Sebrights of Sebrights Hall”; Cooke considers himself bound “to help to further and advance to the uttermost of my skill and power the true and just proofs of the pedigrees and descents of all noblemen and gentlemen lawfully proving themselves, either by ancient evidences, matters of record or old monuments, to be lineally and truly descended from noble or worshipful parentage, as to deface, frustrate and utterly discredit for ever the vain and untrue suggestions and allegations of such as shall falsely and unjustly affirm or imagine themselves to be come of noble or gentle blood, whereas in truth they are not.” Settlement, 29 June 1294: Peter Sebright to Ralph Naylinghurst, chaplain, John de Bosco and William Stretche, to hold to the use of Peter’s son Mabel Sebright and his wife Katherine, only daughter and heir of Ralph Cowper of Blakeshall in Wolverley [Worcestershire], and their heirs in tail, reversion to Peter’s right heirs: 1. A messuage and land called Brokes Place in the vill of Great Baddow, to hold by a quitrent of 4d for all services except the service due to John de Bosco. 2. A piece of his wood within the manor of Kidderminster in the fee of John de Bosco, which Manser de Bisset, great-grandfather of Peter’s father Sir Walter Sebright, gave in fee to Peter’s grandfather Stephen, and which Ralph Cowper of Blakeshall hold of Peter for life. Witnesses: Edward de Badewe, his son William de Badewe, Giles son of Peter Sebright. 24 April 1580. Exemplification, ink on single sheet of parchment (approx. 75 x 48cm) in English & Latin, strapwork initials “W” & “S” with penwork incorporating a human head & peacock, signed by William Dethick as Garter Principal King of Arms, signed & sealed “Robert Cooke, alias Clarencieulx Roy Darmes, perfect yellow wax seal in a turned, lidded, wooden skippet, with the arms of Clarenceux, light dustmarking along old folds, very good. This fine Elizabethan grant of arms was issued 1 April 1580 by the herald Robert Cooke (d.1593) in his capacity as Clarenceux King of Arms to Edward Sebright of Blakeshall in Wolverley, Worcestershire. Unusually it is accompanied by a related document issued by Cooke 24 April 1580 as proof of the Sebright lineage, exemplifying a thirteenth century settlement, one of “sundry very notable, old and ancient deeds and charters ... two of which are in the old Saxon tongue” that had been produced by the Sebright family. Both documents are in an excellent state of preservation, with intact wax seals housed in contemporary, turned wooden, lidded skippets. Elizabethan grants of arms are now seldom seen in commerce, and the interest here is augmented further by the supporting exemplification. For a correspondence concerning these documents between William Holman, historian of Essex, and Sir Thomas Saunders Sebright of Beechwood in Hertfordshire, 21 March and 8 October 1723, see: Essex Record Office, D/Y 1/1/172/1-2." Ordered from Samuel Gedge, D9719, 2023-03-24, Early Medley Books, Prints & Manuscripts British & continental To 1750, item #4.
Folger accession
272916