Difference between revisions of "Thomas Jermyn 1573-1644/5"

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====Biographical Note====
 
====Biographical Note====
Of [[location::Rushbrooke Hall, Suffolk]]; [[occupation::courtier]] and [[occupation::soldier]].  
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Of [[Location::Rushbrooke, Suffolk]], the eldest son of the puritan Sir Robert Jermyn (1538/9-1614) of Rushbrooke Hall. Educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge 1585. Not to be confused with his cousin, Thomas Jermyn (d.1617) of Depden. A soldier, he was a military follower of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex. He travelled on Essex’s Cadiz expedition in 1596, to Ireland and the Azores in 1597, but avoided involvement in Essex’s rebellion in 1601. MP for Andover 1604, Suffolk 1614, Bury St Edmonds 1621-28. At court, he became vice-chamberlain to Queen Henrietta Maria in 1628. He first married Catherine, daughter of Henry Killigrew, and had five children with her; after her death he married Mary (d.1679), daughter of Edmund Barber and widow of Thomas Newtom, and had a further two children with her.  
  
 
====Books====
 
====Books====

Revision as of 03:17, 6 April 2020

Sir Thomas JERMYN 1573-1644/5

Biographical Note

Of Rushbrooke, Suffolk, the eldest son of the puritan Sir Robert Jermyn (1538/9-1614) of Rushbrooke Hall. Educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge 1585. Not to be confused with his cousin, Thomas Jermyn (d.1617) of Depden. A soldier, he was a military follower of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex. He travelled on Essex’s Cadiz expedition in 1596, to Ireland and the Azores in 1597, but avoided involvement in Essex’s rebellion in 1601. MP for Andover 1604, Suffolk 1614, Bury St Edmonds 1621-28. At court, he became vice-chamberlain to Queen Henrietta Maria in 1628. He first married Catherine, daughter of Henry Killigrew, and had five children with her; after her death he married Mary (d.1679), daughter of Edmund Barber and widow of Thomas Newtom, and had a further two children with her.

Books

An armorial stamp used by him is also found on a number of books given by his father, Sir Robert Jermyn (1538/9-1614) to Bury St Edmunds church library in 1595.

Sources