The Bourchier and Bowker Pages

Discovering the ancestry of the South African Bowkers, and the English Bourchiers

Henry Bourchier

Male Aft 1543 - 1598  (< 53 years)


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  • Name Henry Bourchier 
    Birth Aft 1543 
    Gender Male 
    Death 1598 
    Person ID I1424  Bourchiers
    Last Modified 1 Apr 2020 

    Father Hunt of Huntley 
    Mother Anne Bourchier, Viscountess Bourchier, 7th Baroness Bourchier,   b. 1517   d. 28 Jan 1571, Benington, Hertfordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 54 years) 
    Family ID F614  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Ann Scott 
    Family ID F615  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 1 Apr 2020 

  • Notes 
    • http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1558-1603/member/bourcher-henry-1598
      Constituency
      Dates
      STAFFORD
      1589
      STAFFORD
      1593
      STAFFORD
      1597
      Family and Education

      illegit. s. of Anne, suo jure Baroness Bourchier (d.1571). educ. I. Temple 1574, called 1584. m. Anne Scott, ?s.p.
      Offices Held

      Bencher, I. Temple 1596, Lent reader 1598.

      Member, Antiq. Soc. c.1591.1
      Biography

      Bourchier was possibly one of the children of Lady Bourchier bastardized by her husband, Lord Parr, in 1543 when he divorced her for having them by a man called Hunt or Huntley. More probably he was born after the divorce. His mother’s barony passed to her cousin, Walter Devereux, subsequently 1st Earl of Essex, after whose death, both during the next earl’s minority and later, money was paid from the Devereux estate to Bourchier and his sister. Bourchier looked to the young 2nd Earl for protection as well as support, and was, for example, once suitor to him on behalf of his two grocer brothers-in-law, Nicholas and Richard Scott, who were in trouble for infringing a starch monopoly. No doubt it was Essex who brought him into Parliament. When on 31 Dec. 1592 Essex sent to his Staffordshire agents his list of nominations for the forthcoming general election, ‘my kinsman, Henry Bourchier’ was one of his two nominees for Stafford. Bourchier played no known part in the proceedings of the Parliament of 1589, but was active in 1593 and 1597. He reported the bill for Stonehouse town on 28 Mar. 1593, and on 4 Apr. was appointed to the committee for the bill to reduce disloyal subjects to their true obedience. In 1597 he was appointed to a committee concerned with an earlier statute against the abduction of women (7 Nov.), and to committees on armour and weapons (8 Nov.), monopolies (10 Nov.), the continuance of statutes (11 Nov.) and a private bill for the lands of Sir John Spencer (25 Nov.). He spoke in the debate (12 Nov.) on the disputed Ludlow election, siding with the electors against the sheriff. He spoke again, on 21 Nov., drawing the attention of the Commons to the practice of revealing the proceedings of the House to outsiders, and on 25 Nov. reported the bill for Sir John Spencer’s lands ‘to the good satisfaction of the House’. On 2 Dec. he reported a bill about the exportation of sheepskins and on 9 Dec. a bill against patentees.2

      On 26 Aug. 1598, a few months after he had attained the summit of his legal career, Bourchier made his will, appointing his wife Anne sole executrix, and leaving her most of his property. The Earl of Essex was to have ‘all my books of histories, of Latin, French, Italian and Spanish, and such other of antiquities as he shall please to accept of’. The will was proved 18 Sept. 1598.3
      Ref Volumes: 1558-1603