- Henry Norris (courtier)
Sir Henry Norris (c. 1482 –
May 17 ,1536 ) was agroom of the stool in the privy chamber of King Henry VIII. While a close servant of the King he also supported the faction in court led by Queen Anne Boleyn, and when Anne fell out of favour he was among those accused of adultery with her. He was found guilty of treason and executed. Most historical authorities argue that the accusations were untrue and part of a plot to get rid of Anne.Family
Many references say that Henry was the second son of Sir Edward Norris of
Yattendon Castle ,Berkshire , by his wife Frideswide, daughter ofJohn Lovel, 8th Lord Lovel . Some of these also say that Edward Norris died in 1487. So the birth date of 1482 for Henry would be consistent with this. However,Eric Ives (2004), says that Henry was younger, born in the 1490s, and says that he was "apparently the second son of Richard Norris" Fact|date=January 2008. Richard was Edward's younger brother, but according to the Heralds' Visitations of Berkshire (1664/6), he was the father of only a single daughter, Anne. This is consistent with the descent of his manor ofGreat Shefford which she inherited around 1522.Whichever version is correct, all sources agree that Henry's grandfather, Sir William Norris, had taken part in the
Battle of Stoke in 1487 at the conclusion of theWars of the Roses .Henry married Mary Fiennes (c.1495-1531), daughter of Thomas Fiennes, Lord Dacre. Their eldest son was
Henry Norris, 1st Baron Norreys ofRycote . Other children were: Edward (1524 -July 16 ,1529 ) and Mary(1526-1570) who married, firstly, Sir George Carew who died in the sinking of theMary Rose in 1545. Secondly, Mary married SirArthur Champernowne .Norreys or Norris?
At [http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/NORREYS.htm TudorPlace] it is noted "The name Norreys has at least 2 potential derivations: one who came from the north or who lived in the north (there was a word "noreis" or "norreis" meaning a northerner), or from one who cared for others (the word "norrice" for nurse). There are also references to Noreis back in the 12th. century and to a Robert le Noris in the 1297 Yorkshire Subsidy Roll."
Life in court
Henry Norris had come to Court during his youth, and became a close friend of King
Henry VIII who appointed him aGentleman of the Bedchamber . He was granted many offices by the King, the first in 1515 being keeper ofFoliejon Park inWinkfield . He was serving in the King's Privy Chamber by 1517. In 1518 he became weigher at the common beam atSouthampton , then the great mart of the Italian merchants. on28 January 1518 /19 he was appointed bailiff ofEwelme . In 1519 he was awarded an annuity of 50 marks (about £33).He was at the
Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. In 1523 he received the keepership ofLangley New Park ,Buckinghamshire , and was made bailiff ofWatlington .He worked his way up and in 1526 took over the post of Groom of the Stole (or stool) and was in charge of the gentlemen of the King's Privy Chamber. According to Ives (2004) in this position he was not only the King's confidant but also perhaps the closest friend the King had.
Norris risked the wrath of Anne Boleyn's faction when, just before the fall of Thomas Wolsey, he offered the Cardinal his own rooms when the Cardinal had deliberately been left without accommodation. He was present when Wolsey resigned the
Great Seal . On24 October 1529 he was the King's only attendant, when Henry went with Anne and her mother to inspect Wolsey's property. He was the bearer of Henry's kind message to Wolsey atPutney about the same time, and it seems he was affected by Wolsey's fallen condition.Also in 1529 he received a grant of £100 a year from the revenues of the
see of Winchester . In 1531 he was made chamberlain of NorthWales . In 1534 he was appointed constable ofBeaumaris Castle . In 1535 he received various manors whichSir Thomas More had held. He was present at the execution of the Charterhouse monks on4 May 1535 , and Henry granted him the important constableship ofWallingford Castle (29 November . 1535).Norris had helped Anne Boleyn while she was gaining her position at Court and became one of her close friends and a leader of the faction that supported her attempts to wield political power. This brought him into conflict with
Thomas Cromwell , a leader in theDissolution of the Monasteries .At the time of his death his gross annual income from royal appointments was about £1000 per annum.
The case, the trial and the execution
"This section mainly follows Ives (2005)."
In the background to the case against Norris were the negotiations which were being carried out with the French ambassador at
Greenwich onApril 18 ,1536 . It was clear to Thomas Cromwell, that Anne Boleyn stood in the way of what he sought to achieve. With the King's approval he started to investigate and to secure evidence for charges of treason to be laid against Anne, Norris, and four other courtiers.Norris was accused of being solicited by Anne at
Westminster onOctober 6 ,1533 , and of adultery onOctober 12 and again atGreenwich in November. The prosecution's choice of these dates appears now particularly improbable and therefore careless. At that time Anne was inGreenwich not Westminster and recovering from the birth of Elizabeth onSeptember 7 and was thus probably still inpurda . As well as specific charges, there was a catch all charge of committing adultery at diverse times and places. Most historians think that all the charges were fabrications.A grand jury was assembled at Westminster Hall on
May 9 and decided there was a case to answer for the offences which had occurred at Whitehall. John Baldwin, a chief justice, presided with six of his judicial colleagues. OnMay 10 , Baldwin with 3 assistants went toDeptford , where aKent jury decided there was a case to answer on the events that had taken place at Greenwich.With the committals in hand, Cromwell proceeded to arrange the trial for the four who were not members of the
nobility , Norris, William Brereton,Mark Smeaton andFrancis Weston , which was held in Westmister hall onMay 12 . The jury was packed with people who had reason to be hostile to Anne Boleyn's cause or had a personal enmity with one of the accused, but also with Anne's own fatherThomas Boleyn , her uncle, the Duke of Norfolk and the man she had wished to marry thirteen years before,Henry Percy, 6th earl of Northumberland . Sir William Paulet, controller of the King's household, was one of the judges. All four pleaded not guilty to all the charges with the exception of Smeaton, who plead guilty to one charge of adultery. The accused had to improvise their defences on the spot, with no help from defence counsels and no advance warning of the evidence. The hostile prosecutors duly secured a guilty verdict. All four were sentenced to be drawn, hanged and quartered. Because all were in service of the court, this sentence was commuted to the less terrifying one of beheading by the executioner's axe.The execution was duly carried out on
May 17 on Tower Hill. Unlike the other accused, who with carefully chosen words indicated their innocence, Norris did not risk reimposition of the harsher method of execution and so said little on the scaffold. However, an indication of his wife's continued trust in her husband is provided by her bequest to her son nine years later: "one bracelet of gold, the which was the last token his father sent me."Bibliography
*Archibold, W.A.J: "Henry Norris" in Dictionary of National Biography, 1894
*Ives, Eric: "The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn", Blackwell Publishing . ISBN-13:978-1-4051-3463-7 Paperback 2005.
*Ives, E: "Norris, Henry", in "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography", OUP. ISBN 0-19-861411-X (2004).
*Trim, D.J.B.: "Norris, John", in "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography", OUP. ISBN 0-19-861411-X (2004).External links
* [http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/hnorreys.html Biography from Dictionary of National Biography (1891), heavily edited by David Nash Ford]
* [http://www.berkshirehistory.com/gentry/database/ David Nash Ford's Royal Berkshire History - Database]
* [http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/NORREYS.htm Norreys family tree on the Tudor Place website]
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