- Thomas Tresham II
Sir Thomas Tresham (died
September 11 1605), was a Catholic politician at the end of theTudor dynasty and the start of theStuart dynasty inEngland .Inheriting large estates at the age of 15 from his grandfather, he had the most privileged of starts to adult life. In addition to this he was widely regarded as a clever and well educated man, moving in the highest social circles.
He was acquainted with William Cecil who was
Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth and SirChristopher Hatton , theLord Chancellor .In 1566, he married into the
Throckmorton family, a wealthy Catholic family fromCoughton Court inWarwickshire . Thomas Tresham was knighted at the Queen's Progress atKenilworth in 1575.Sir Thomas enjoyed a lavish lifestyle, frequently entertaining vast numbers of friends and acquaintances. But it was his Catholic religion that burdened him most frequently with debt. At a time when Queen Elizabeth was anxious about the Catholic threat posed by Spain and by her cousin
Mary Queen of Scots , nonconformists were targets for persecution. As a result between 1581 and 1605, Tresham paid penalties totalling just under £8,000. These heavy financial demands created spiralling debts, with borrowing as his only resource. Tresham's credit never fully recovered.For a landowner who sought personally to direct all matters of estate management, his effective status as a hostage, seized by the government whenever the machinations of Catholics abroad sought to menace the safety of the realm was a severe imposition.
He has left two notable buildings in Northamptonshire:
*Rushton Triangular Lodge , a folly
* and the unfinishedLyveden New Bield as well as the Market house in Rothwell which he started in 1577 and was not completed for some three centuries.
Sir Thomas was still a considerable landowner, but he left £11,000 of debt. His elder son, Francis, inherited the estate as well as the debt, and then became embroiled in the
Gunpowder Plot later that year along with his cousinsRobert Catesby andThomas Wintour . Imprisoned for his actions, Francis met an early death in December, 1605.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.