Blennerhassett Family Tree
Genealogy One-Name Study
Introduction      INSCRIPTIONS at Frenze, Co.Norfolk
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Inscriptions at the Church of
St.Andrew the Apostle, Frenze
near Diss, Co.Norfolk
 
 Church of England - Diocese of Norwich
 
 
 
 
 
 
The small but atmospheric 14th century Church of St. Andrew in the village of Frenze (formerly Frense or Frens, pronounced "Fi-renze") lies directly opposite Frenze Hall, formerly the seat of the Blennerhassett family in Norfolk. The church contains several fine 15th and 16th century monumental brasses, many of these Blennerhassetts or close connections.
 
Francis Blomefield in his "Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk" (completed c1736, published 1739, 2nd edition 1805-9) attributed the survival until his time of so many early brasses thus: "The meanness of the fabrick hath preserved the inscriptions from being reaved, for it looks like a barn, at a distance" [BLOMEFIELD, 2nd edition, vol.1 1805, p.142].
 
The parish of Frenze is now part of the combined benefice of Thelveton and Frenze, the building maintained by the Churches Conservation Trust.
 
"What a special place..." - Simon Knott
 
Read Church Guide Booklets of varying dates
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 





 
 
 








RECTORS
of
FRENZE


Date
Rector
Patron

Date
Rector
Patron
1294
John de Petestre
Patron

1673
Thomas Wales, B.A.
Thomas* Fincham of Outwell Ely (He had Thelton)
1325
John Newhouse de Snapes
Cicily Countess of Suffolk

1702
Thomas Palgrave
Diamond Nixon
1349
Walter Malvesyn
Sir John Lowdham, Kt

1725
William Baker
(United to Wacton Parva)
Robert Kemp, Bart.
1381
William Payok
Thomas de Lowdham, Kt

1734
John James
Sir Robert Kemp, Bart.
1382
John Baxter
            "

1767
Charles Browne

1393
Peter Rous
John de Lowdham

1774
Simon Adams

1394
Henry Brakkele
            "

1789
Samuel Tayleure

1397
Sir John de Scoles
            "

1824
Robert Rose

1401
Michael Crowe
            "

1840
Robert Wegg, M.A.
(Curate of Rushall)
Sheldrake Smith
1404
Sir Thomas Warner
Gilbert de Debenham

1877
John Rule Tucker
(also Rector of Thelverton)
Francis Taylor
1408
Robert Pope
John Lowdham

1904
M.E.W.Johnson, AKCI
(also Rector of Thelverton)
Sir Ed. Mann, Bart.
1416
Thomas Bukke
            "

1924
Ralph A. Unthank, M.A.
The Lord Chancellor
1416
John Greeve
            "

1953
Arthur William Holton
(also Rector of Thelverton)
Sir John Mann Bart.
1417
Reger de Knyveton
John Hevenyngham, Kt

1956
William P.J. Fair 
(also Rector of Thelverton)
The Lord Chancellor
1419
John Rawe
John Lowdham

1960
Priest in Charge

1423
Simon Warner
            "


Mansel Reginald Peacock, M.A.

1428
John Bubwith
John Hagh


(also of Thelverton
and Rector of Dickleburgh)

1479
Henry [blank]


1966
Joseph William Edmonds.
Trinity College Cambridge
1484
Robert Stukely



(1969. Combined Benefice,
Dickleburgh with Thelveton and Frenze)


Blank in records
(Reformation Period)





1597
Edmund Stanhaw
Queen Elizabeth
(Guardian to Blenerhasset)




1598
John Smith M.A.
(United to Scole)
Samuel Blenerhasset




1593
John Smith
Licensed by Bishop of Norwich




1618
Thomas Hall
S[amuel] Blenerhasset of Loudham




1642
John Gibbs
Richard Nixon




1651
Toby Dobbin





* Most of this list has clearly been taken from [BLOMEFIELD 2nd ed. vol.1 1805, p.147] but there Blomefield names him John Fincham, not Thomas Fincham





RALPH "Rafe" BLENNERHASSETT, Esquire d.1475
 
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of Ralph Blennerhassett, Esquire (d.17-Nov-1475) in the chancel of the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk, where by his will he requested to be interred. His brass depicts him wearing armour of the early 15th century.
Also shown here is a drawing of the brass made by Rev. Thomas Kerrich (1748-1828), librarian for the University of Cambridge. The drawing is now at the British library [BL Add. Ms. 6728 f.217].
 
From this drawing Rev. Kerrich made an engraving, closely following his original but with the inscription positioned differently. A print from the engraving is reproduced in "The Blennerhassetts of Kesh" by John B. Cunningham, published in the "Cloher Record", vol.16, No.3, 1999, the paper on pp.112-126, the print on p.120 [CUNNINGHAM].
 
"Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection" has a detailed description and a rubbing of this brass.
 
The portrait brass was stolen, broken into three pieces by the thieves it is said to have been recovered from a curio shop at Munich, Germany and acquired by one of Blennerhassett family. This may have been Sir Rowland Blennerhassett, Bart. (b.1839 d.1909), as Munich was the family home of wife, Charlotte Lady Blennerhassett, and they visited often. The brass was restored to the church of St.Andrew at Frenze a few years ago <when?> by a descendant of the finder <who?>.  The marks where the brass was broken into three remain clearly visible.
 
NOTE: Another brass at Frenze, of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett d.1831, was also stolen, at a different date, but not recovered. There is a replica in the church.





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[folio] 217

Ralph Blenerhasset Esqr ob. 10th of Novemb. 1475.     Frens Church
                                                                                       Norfolk
 
 
image copyright © The British Library Board 1994
[BL Add. Ms. 6728 f.217] 
NOTE: Rev. Kerrich's transcription (above) of the
inscription has the date ximo (10th) November 1475





 

 

 



Inscription: 
 
Hic iacet Venerabilis vir Radulphus Blen'haysett
Armiger qui obijt xvijo die mensis novembris
Ao dn'i Mo CCCCo Lxxvo cui' ai'e ppiciet' des amen
 
 
 
 On this inscription the precise day in November 1475 is difficult to read.
[HAMLINE] transcribes it as xvijo (17th), as shown below, which I believe to be correct.
[BLOMEFIELD] & [L'ESTRANGE] have xiiiio (14th) and [KERRICH] has ximo (10th).
 
 
Inscription expanded: 
Hic iacet venerabilis vir Ralulphus Blen[er]haysett
Armiger qui obijt xvijo die mensis novembris
A[nn]o d[omi]ni M[illesim]o CCCCo lxxvo cui[us] a[n]i[m]e p[ro]piciet[ur] de[u]s amen 
 
 
Latin translated: 
Here lies the venerable man Ralph Blennerhassett,
Esquire, who died the 17th day of the month of November
in the Year of our Lord 1475, on whose soul may God have mercy, Amen. 


 
Portrait: (this is a description from the Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection)
This brass of early Norwich workmanship depicts Ralph Blenerhaysett, Esquire, full face, in armour, his feet resting on a grinning lion couchant on a grassy plot. Cleanshaven, Blenerhaysett is shown bareheaded, his hair cropped short to above the ears in the pudding-basin cut, a somewhat disgusted expression on his face. Around Ralph's neck and below the fauld of overlapping lames to which pointed tasses have been attached, the mail that is visible has been stitched to an arming doublet worn beneath the armour. Over his shoulders, he has pauldrons that rise to a point, the left one with added overlapping plates to protect more of the upper arm, which is covered by the usual rerebraces. Vambraces protect the forearms, couters the elbows, and mitten gauntlets the tops of the hands, leaving the fingers still free to move. Articulated cuisses cover the thighs, greaves the lower parts of the legs, simple poleyns the knees, and jointed and pointed sabatons with rowel spurs attached to the instep, the feet. At the right hip, Blenerhaysett carries the misericorde or dagger to dispatch wounded enemies, and at the left hip and hanging perpendicularly is a slender sword.
 
Arms: each corner of the slab is displayed a brass shield bearing arms:
1. Blennerhassett, with an annulet for difference, quartering Orton
2. Blennerhassett & Orton quarterly; impaling Lowdham
3. Blennerhassett & Orton quarterly; impaling Lowdham
4. Lowdham - now missing (lower left corner, was present in 1845 [Collectanea 265, L'ESTRANGE 1872-3] )
 





JOAN BLENNERHASSETT d.1501
widow of RALPH "Rafe" BLENNERHASSETT, Esquire d.1475
 
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of Joan Blennerhassett, nee Lowdham (d.20-Jun-1501)
in the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk.
 
[BLOMEFIELD vol.1 1805, p.142] found the brass already missing c1736,
but he reports the inscription as was recorded earlier by Anstis [ANSTIS Mss. G.6. f.39] :
 




 
 
 






 
Here lyeth Mrs. Joane Blenerhasset,
the Wife of Ralph Bleverhasset, Esq.
the Daughter and Heir of John Lowdham,
who died the 20th Day of June 1501.
NOTE: Bleverhasset here is certainly a wrongly transcribed Blenerhasset






JOHN BLENNERHASSETT, Esquire (I) d.1510
 
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of John Blennerhassett (d.27-Nov-1510), son of Ralph Blennerhassett (d.1475), on the floor of the chancel in the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk. Each corner of the slab displayed a brass shield bearing arms, those at upper and lower right corners are missing.
 
also a drawing of 1815 by John Sell Cotman, published in his “Sepulchral Brasses of Norfolk & Suffolk”, 2 vols, 1839
[COTMAN vol.1, pl.50]
 
"Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection" has a detailed description and a rubbing of this brass.
 


click on image to enlarge
 
click on image to enlarge
50
 
A Brass in Frense Church Norfolk
Drawn Etched & Published by J.S.Cotman, Yarm[outh] 1815.



 
 
click on image to enlarge
 
 

 

 



Inscription:

 
Hic iacet Ven'abilis vir Joh'es Blen'
hayset Armig', qi obij vicesimo vijo die
Me's nove'b' Ao D'i Mo Vco Xo cuis ai'e ppicietr de'
 



Inscription expanded:
Hic jacet ven[er]abilis vir Joh[ann]es Blen[er]
hayset, Armig[er] q[u]i obij[t] vicesimo vijo die
me[nsi]s nove[m]b[ris] A[nn]o D[omin]i M[illesim]o Vco xo cui[u]s a[n]i[m]e p[ro]piciet[u]r de[us]
 
Latin translated:
Here lies the venerable man John Blener
hassett Esquire, who died the 27th day
of the month of November in the Year of our Lord 1510, on whose soul may God have mercy.


Portrait: (a description from the Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection )
Another example of a Norwich workshop, this brass presents John Blenerhayset in armour that is more decorative and imaginative than realistic. He is depicted full face, clean-shaven, hair falling to the neck and with prominent eyes and lips. From the appearance of the mail at his neck and below the fauld at the thighs, it would seen that Blenerhayset is either wearing a mail hauberk or has mail stitched to an arming doublet worn beneath the plate armour covering the torso. The breastplate seems composed of several scalloped placates and the fauld of several scalloped lames to which some scalloped tasses have been attached (but how is unclear). The pauldrons covering the shoulders and coming to a V-shaped point in front seem to be of a piece—completely unrealistic. Rerebraces cover the upper arms; vambraces, the forearms; and, decorativecouters with rosettes, the elbows. The leg harness is typical—cuisses over the thighs, greaves covering the shins, and large scalloped poleyns, the knees. On feet splayed far apart are jointed and somewhat blunted sabatons. Finally, a sword hangs perpendicularly in front, supported by a loosely buckled belt that seems fixed in some way at the hips.

Arms: at each corner of the slab is displayed a brass shield bearing arms:
1. Blennerhassett, with an annulet for difference, quartering Orton
2. Blennerhassett & Orton quarterly; impaling Lowdham
3. Blennerhassett & Orton quarterly; impaling Lowdham
4. Lowdham - now missing (lower left corner, was present in 1845 [Collectanea 265, L'ESTRANGE 1872-3] )





JOHN BLENNERHASSETT, Esquire (II) d.1514
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of John Blennerhassett (d.27-Mar-1514)
in the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk.
 
[BLOMEFIELD vol.1 1805, p.142] found the brass already missing c1736,
but he reports the inscription as was recorded earlier by Anstis [ANSTIS Mss. G.6. f.39]:
 





 
Here lyeth the venerable Gentleman John Blaverhasset, Esq; who
died the 27th of March, in the Year of our Lord, 1514.
NOTE: Blaverhasset is a common mis-reading of the name Blenerhasset in an inscription
 



NOTE: Some, but by no means all, of the [ANSTIS] Mss. are in the British Library, but [BL] uses a different numbering system from Mr Anstis and so far I have failed to locate these Frenze references at the [BL] or elsewhere.




JOHANNA BRAHAM d.1519
 
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of Johanna Braham (d.18-11-1519), mother of xxx Blennerhassett (d.xxx),
on the floor of the nave in the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk.
 
"Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection" has a detailed description and a rubbing of this brass.


click on image to enlarge
 






 
 
 





Inscription expanded:
Hic iacet tumulata d'na Johanna Braham vidua ac deo dicata
olim uxor Joh'ns Braham Armiger que obijt xviijo die Nove'bris
Ao d'ni millimo CCCCCo xixo cuius aie ppicietur deus Amen
Latin translated:
Here lies buried Dame Joan Braham, widow and dedicated to God,
formerly wife of John Braham, Esquire, who died the 18th day of November
in the year of our Lord 1519, on whose soul may God have mercy, Amen
 
Portrait: (a description from the Hamline University brass rubbing Collection )
The full-face effigy of Dame Joan Braham is depicted as a vowess, that is, a widow who has vowed never to remarry. She wears a wimple around her head, the plaited barbe or chin cloth over the chin and neck, and a long veil covering her shoulders like a cape. Over a long dress, confined by a strap-like belt with a long tagged end, she has on a mantle with a slide holding together the tasseled ends that reach almost to the ground. As is usual, her hands are raised in prayer.
 
Arms: below the portrait are three brass shields bearing arms:
1. xxx
2. xxx
3. xxx
 





1520





JANE BLENNERHASSETT (nee TYNDALL) d.1521
2nd wife of JOHN BLENNERHASSETT d.1510
 
Monumental portrait brass on the tomb of Jane Tyndall Blennerhassett (d.6-Oct-1521),
in the nave of the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk.
 
also a drawing of 1815 by John Sell Cotman, pubished in his “Sepulchral Brasses of Norfolk & Suffolk”, 2 vols, 1839
[COTMAN vol.1, appendix pl.5, notes on p.60]
 
"Hamline University Brass Rubbling Collection" has a detailed description and a rubbing of this brass.



click on image to enlarge
 
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Frense Church Norfolk
1815. Drawn Etched & Published by J.S.Cotman, Yarm[outh]
 







 
pray for the soule of Jane Blen'haysett wedow late wyf
onto John Blen'haysett esquyer whiche Jane departed oute
of this psent lyf ye vj day of October the yere of our lord
god M' Vc xxj on whose soule J'hu have mercy Amen






Inscription expanded:
pray for the soule of Jane Blen[er]haysett wedow late wyf[e]
onto John Blen[er]haysett esquyer whiche Jane departed oute
of this p[re]sent lyf[e] the vj[th] day of October the yere of our lord
god M[illesimo] Vc xxj on whose soule J[e]hu have mercy Amen
Pray for the soul of Jane Blennerhassett, widow, late wife
of John Blennerhassett Esquire, which Jane departed out
of this present life the 6th day of October the year of our Lord
God 1521, on whose soul Jesus have mercy, Amen.
 
Portrait: (a description from the Hamline University Brass Rubbing Collection )
This full face effigy of Jane Blennerhassett portrays her in ordinary dress and wearing the pedimental headress, its plain lappets falling in front, a veil attached to the top of the headdress falling behind the shoulder. She wears a floor-length gown with turned back fur cuffs. An ornamental girdle is fastened at the waist by a round clasp in front from which falls a linked chain with either a tassel or a metal tag end.
 
Arms: below the portrait are three brass shields bearing arms:
1. Blennerhassett (charged with an annulet, for difference) quartering Lowdham
2. Blennerhassett (charged with an annulet, for difference) impaling Tindall, quartering Fecklin
3. Tindall quartering Orton and Scales
 





Sir THOMAS BLENNERHASSETT, Knight died 27-Jun-1531

Monumental portrait brass from the tomb of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, Knight (d.27-Jun-1531), set into a slab in the nave of the church of St Andrew the Apostle, Frenze, Co.Norfolk. The portrait brass and four brass shields of arms were stolen from the church after 1816 but the brass inscription "footplate" survives. The present portrait brass is a modern reproduction, sadly this was based not on Cotman's accurate drawing of 1816 but on another less accurate drawing (which drawing is this?). The four brass shields of arms are still missing.
 
On the right is the 1816 drawing by John Sell Cotman, published in his “Sepulchral Brasses of Norfolk & Suffolk”,
2 vols, 1839 [COTMAN vol.1, frontpiece pl.63, notes on p.35]
 
Genealogical Research in England, East Anglian Blennerhassets”,
by G. Andrews Moriarty, published in [NEHGR vol.98 No.3 July 1944, p.273]
 


click on image to enlarge
 
click on image to enlarge
 
Sir Thomas Blenerhasset, Frense Ch. Norf'k
Drawn Etched & Published by J.S.Cotman, Yar[mouth] 1816.



click on image to enlarge




 
Here lieth Sir Thom's Blen'haysette, knyght
which decssyd the xxvijt day of June the yere of or
lord m vc xxxi i the xxiij yere of the reigne of or Sove-
reigne lord kyng he'ry the viiit whois soule god pard
 



 
Inscription expanded:
Here lieth Sir Thom[a]s Blen[er]haysette, knyght
which dec[ea]ssyd the 27t[h] day of June the yere of o[u]r
lord m[illesimo] 500 31 i[n] the 23[rd] yere of the reigne of o[u]r sove-
raygne Lord Kyng He[n]ry the 8t[h] whois soule god pard[on]
 
Here lies Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, Knight,
who deceased the 27th day of June the year of our
Lord 1531 in the 23rd year of the reign of our sove-
reign Lord King Henry the eighth, whose soul God pardon.
 
NOTE: [BLOMEFIELD, 2nd edition, vol.1 1805] has visited Frenze church and seen this inscription. In vol.1 p.141 he correctly cites the date of death as as 27-June-1531 but he also, in vol.1 p.142, gives the date of death incorrectly as 17-June-1531 and also as 33 Henry VIII (1541). These two error dates have been repeated by other historians and are the cause of much confusion among people who have not sought out the original brass... 
 
 
Portrait:
Sir Thomas Blennerhassett is depicted in his armour, wearing a tabard or surcoat of arms, his gauntlets on the ground:
Blennerhassett (charged with an annulet, a mark of cadency, for difference) quartered with Lowdham, Orton and Kelvedon (Keldon). His head rests on a helm bearing the Blennerhassett crest, a wolf passant (sometimes described as a fox).
 
 
Arms: each corner of the slab was once displayed a brass shield bearing arms: 
 
 
1. 1st & 4th Blennerhassett, 2nd & 3rd Orton
(for his grandfather Ralph Blennerhassett, who descended from Orton)
 
impaling quarterly: 1st & 4th Lowdham, 2nd & 3rd Kelvedon
(for his grandmother Joan Lowdham who descended from Kelvedon)
  
 
 
2. 1st & 4th Blennerhassett, 2nd & 3rd Lowdham
(for his father John Blennerhassett whose mother was Joan Lowdham)
 
impaling Heigham (for his mother Jane Heigham)
  
 
 
3. 1st Blennerhassett, 2nd Lowdham, 3rd Orton, 4th Kelvedon
(for himself, Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, descended from Lowdham, Orton & Kelvedon)
 
impaling Braham, with a crescent for difference (for his 2nd wife Margaret Braham)
  
 
4. Quarterly: 1st Blennerhassett, 2nd Lowdham, 3rd Orton, 4th Kelvedon
(for himself, Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, descended from Lowdham, Orton & Kelvedon)
 
impaling Le Strange two lions passant (for his 1st wife Jane Le Strange)
arms of Le Strange (L'Estrange, L'Strange) of Hunstanton/Hunston Hall, Co.Norfolk
 
NOTE: A similar brass shield of arms is believed to have been one of four (all now lost) on the tomb of their son, George Blennerhassett, interred in St.Mary's Church, Kenninghall, Norfolk.


Jane Le Strange (L'Estrange, L'Strange), first wife of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, Knight
 
Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, Knight, of Frenze, Norfolk (b.c1461 d.27-Jun-1531) was Minister (Seneschal, Steward, Principal Household Officer) for the 2nd and 3rd Duke of Norfolk. He married est.c1495, as his first wife Jane Le Strange, probably of the family of Le Strange of Hunstanton (Hunston) Hall, Co.Norfolk (arms "two lions passant"), not Jane Sutton of the family of Sutton, Barons Dudley (arms "a lion rampant") as many sources state.
 
In 1492 Thomas' wife Jane is described as cousin-german to Lady Surrey [SRO HD 1538/297/21 24-Jan-1492]. The term cousin-german derives from cousin-germain, of which the modern definition is 1st cousin but in the 15th century meant simply "closely akin".
 
NOTE: Lady Surrey at that date was Elizabeth Tilney (d.4-Apr-1497) who married 2ndly to Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Surrey (from 1483) and 2nd Duke of Norfolk (from 1514), the employer of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett. Elizabeth was daughter of Sir Frederick Tylney & Elizabeth Cheney, granddaughter of Sir Philip Tilney (b.bef.1437 d.c1453) & Elizabeth Thorp (d.10-Nov-1435, dau. of Edmund Thorp).
 
Who is Jane Le Strange, where does she fit into the Le Strange of Hunstanton Hall family tree?
How is she relate to Elizabeth Howard, nee Tilney, Duchess of Norfolk?
 
NOTE: The Le Strange connection is supported to some extent by [BLOMEFIELD vol. 1 KENNINGHALL pp.223-224] who correctly gives George Blennerhassett two marriages but incorrectly names his 2nd wife Margaret Jernegan as the 1st wife, and an otherwise unknown <???> Le Strange (L'Estrange, L'Strange) as a 2nd wife.
 
[BIFR 1976 p.133] has read [BLOMEFIELD] and lists all three, making <???> L'Strange the third wife(!). This cannot be, as George Blennerhassett's real 2nd wife Margaret Jernegan outlived him and remarried.
 
George Blennerhassett's portrait "a large brass effigies and four shields" in St.Mary's Ch., Kenninghall were already lost by [BLOMEFIELD's] time, leaving only the indented stone (still there); [BLOMEFIELD's] source was [ANSTIS E.26, f.29], who had seen the portrait brass "with his arms quartered" decorating George's tomb; It appears one of the shields of arms seen by [ANSTIS] had carried Blennerhassett arms impaled with Le Strange "two lions passant" and [BLOMEFIELD], on reading [ANSTIS], took the Le Strange arms to indicate a wife of George Blennerhassett instead of his mother.
 
NOTE: In ["Extarneus" vol.II "Le Strange of Anglia and Eire" by John R. Mayer, 2nd Ed. 2002] is found "The Le Strange of Hunstanton family maintains intimate connections with certain affines, such as Hastings, Calthorpe and Spelman".
Jane Blennerhassett, sister of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, m. Sir Philip Calthorpe, Knt of Calthorp, Norfolk; also Margaret Blennerhassett, daughter of Sir Thomas Blennerhassett, m.1st Sir John Spelman of Narborough, Norfolk. These show the Blennerhassetts had similar family connections to Le Strange.
 
NOTE: [BLOMEFIELD vol.1 KILVERSTONE p.542] states, about a later Le Strange, "...Sir Nicholas L'Strange was Kat. Chamberlain of the Duke's household...", which shows Le Strange connections with the Duke of Norfolk.
 


 
Sources describing this brass shield of arms:
 
1805 - [BLOMEFIELD vol.1 1805 Frense p.143] correctly describes the shield as "Hasset, and the three quartered as in the last (i.e. Lowdon, Orton, and Kelvedon), impaling two lions passant" but does not mention the name Sutton.
 
1816 - [COTMAN - “Sepulchral Brasses of Norfolk & Suffolk” by John Sell Cotman, 1839 (vol.1 Norfolk, vol.2 Suffolk) vol.1, frontpiece pl.63, illustration dated 1816] correctly illustrates "two lions passant", the illustration shown here, and does not mention the name Sutton <double-check this>.
 
c1840 - [DAVY - Ms. notes on the Blennerhassett family by Suffolk antiquarian David Elisha Davy c1840, 37 pages] in the Davy Collection at [BL Add. Ms.19118 f.353]. He has Sir Thomas m. "...Jane, daughter of _____ Sutton...".
 
c18?? - [SPURDENS - Ms."Historical Notes by W.T. Spurdens, NRO Ms.4576 p.241 p.139A, "Diss", "Family Tree of Blennerhassett Family" p.252]. He has Sir Thomas married to his "...1st wife Jane, daughter of Sutton...".
The notes of [DAVY] and [SPURDENS] are so similar, one must have been copied from the other.
 
1857 - [L'ESTRANGE - "The Eastern Counties Collectanea: Notes and Queries on Subjects Relating to the Counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and Cambridge" edited by John L'Estrange, Norwich 1872-3, pp.265-7] correctly describes the shield he saw in 1857 as "Blennerhasset, Lowdham, Orton, and Keldon, quarterly; impaling two lions passant".
 
1919 - [BOK - "The Blennerhassetts of Kerry: Earlier English Stock” by S.M.] in [KAM - “Kerry Archaeological Magazine”, vol.5 No.21 July 1919 p.38].
This states Sir Thomas "...married 1stly Jane, daughter of Sutton..."
This article is a summary of [DAVY] therefore unsurprising that he repeats [DAVY] here.
 
1944 - [MORIARTY/1 -“Genealogical Research in England - East Anglian Blennerhassets” by G.Andrews Moriarty pub. in NEHGR vol.98 No.1 Jan.1944, pp.67-73; vol.98 No.3 July 1944, p.277]
states Sir Thomas "...married first Jane Sutton..." and makes it worse by describing the arms as "...2 lions rampant (probably Sutton)..."
 
1976 - [BIFR -"Burke's Irish Family Records" 1976, republished 2007, p.133] describes the first wife of Sir Thomas as "...Jane Sutton (who bore arms similar to those of the Suttons, Barons Dudley - see BURKE'S Dormant and Extinct Peerages)..." but this is not the case, the arms of Sutton, Baron Dudley are "a lion rampant" not "two lions passant" as this Blennerhassett shield.
 
1984 - [VoS - "The Visitation of Suffolk 1561", part II, p.358, as edited by Joan Corder 1984, published by The Harleian Society, New Series, vol.3, 1984] the editor states that Sir Thomas married "1st., Jane, daughter of _____ Sutton" and copying [BIFR 1976 p.133] describes these arms as "similar to those of Sutton Barons Dudley" but without any justification or illustration - she is relying on the earlier sources. NOTE: These two statements are not in the original 1561 text, they were added by the editor in 1984, knowledge obtained from her reading other sources, but her sources for these two items are not specified.
 
 





1551





 
MARY BACON (previously CULPEPPER, nee BLENNERHASSETT) d.1587
 
Monumental portrait brass from the tomb of Mary Blennerhassett Culpepper Bacon (d.17-Sep-1587),
in the nave of the church of St Andrew, Frenze, Co.Norfolk.
 
also a drawing of 1816 by John Sell Cotman, published in his
Sepulchral Brasses of Norfolk & Suffolk”, 2 vols, 1839 [COTMAN vol.1, pl.83]
 


click on image to enlarge
 
click on image to enlarge
 
Arms and Inscription for Mary Bacon, Frenze Ch. Norf'k
Drawn Etched & Published by J.S.Cotman, Yar[mouth] 1816



 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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