Richard Carmarden

Last updated

Richard Carmarden
Bornc.1536
Died1603
Buried Chislehurst, Kent
Spouse(s)Alice More
Mary Alington
IssueRichard Carmarden
Nathaniel Carmarden
Mary Carmarden
FatherThomas Carmarden
MotherDorothy Alexander

Richard Carmarden (died 1603) was an English merchant, member of the Merchant Taylors Company, and Surveyor of the Customs for London. He paid for the printing of the Bible in English in Rouen in 1566, and in 1570 wrote A Caveat for the Quene.

Contents

Family

Richard Carmarden was the son of Thomas Carmarden and Dorothy Alexander, the daughter of Paul Alexander. [1]

Career

Carmarden is first heard of in 1566 when he funded the printing of an edition of the Great Bible in English at Rouen. [2] [3] At an unknown date he became a member of the Company of Merchant Taylors. [4] In 1570 he wrote A Caveat for the Quene. [5] [6]

In 1590, when the administration of the customs was reorganized after Thomas Smythe failed to negotiate a renewal of his patent to farm the customs, the London merchant Sir Thomas Middleton was appointed Receiver General of Customs Revenues, while the London alderman Henry Billingsley was made chief Customer of the Port of London. [7] The 'next most important officer' in London was Carmarden, who was appointed Surveyor of Customs. According to Newton, 'in order that he might hold a position of greater independence, Carmarden received out of the Receipt of the Exchequer £200 a year out of his whole salary of £256 13s 4d, the remainder, the traditional stipend of the surveyor, being defalked on the customs accounts'. [8]

As Surveyor of Customs one of his tasks was to search for foreign books being imported into the realm. In a letter written to Lord Burghley in 1597 Carmarden refers to the 'commandment unto me given charge and daily to all her Majesty's waiters to look narrowly after all books that come into this port from foreign parts'. [4] Carmarden also on one occasion is recorded as having imported forty reams of printed books himself. [4]

During Thomas Smythe's tenure as Customer, Carmarden had been frequently employed by Lord Burghley on special Exchequer commissions. [8] His relationship with the Lord Treasurer continued to be a close one after he was appointed Surveyor of Customs; during the 1590s he was in frequent correspondence with both Lord Burghley and with his son, Sir Robert Cecil. [9] On at least one occasion Carmarden's advice was even sought by the Queen herself, to whom he recommended the best means of making sale of the large amount of pepper which had formed part of the rich cargo of the carrack Madre de Dios, [10] captured off the Azores on 3 August 1592. [11]

In 1595 Carmarden was embroiled in a controversy with the London mercer William Leveson. Carmarden's officers had confiscated certain packs belonging to Leveson, whereupon Leveson and others beat Carmarden's officers and uttered 'wild words' against the Queen's authority. Upon Carmarden's complaint, Leveson was imprisoned, but released after begging pardon and paying costs. [12]

Church of St Nicholas, Chislehurst, where Richard Carmarden was buried St. Nicholas' Church, Chiselhurst - geograph.org.uk - 81517.jpg
Church of St Nicholas, Chislehurst, where Richard Carmarden was buried

Carmarden's exercise of his office as Surveyor of the Customs was criticized by others besides Leveson; a contemporary manuscript is described as 'A Brief, listing a series of complaints against Richard Carmarden of London, Surveyor of the Customs to Queen Elizabeth, and the damage caused by his misbehavior to shipping, trade, and receipt of customs'. [13]

On 1 August 1596 Richard Carmarden, described as 'Robert Cecil's man', consulted the astrologer and herbalist Simon Foreman. [14]

Carmarden died in 1603 and was buried in the Church of St Nicholas at Chislehurst, Kent, where there is a memorial to him stating that he was aged sixty-seven at his death. In the same church are memorials to his first wife, Alice More, who died in 1586 at the age of forty-two, and to Carmarden's son-in-law, Thomas Wigg (d.1602), who married Carmarden's daughter, Mary. [15]

Marriages and issue

Carmarden married firstly Alice More, the daughter and coheir of William More of Odiham, Surrey, by whom he had two sons, Richard Carmarden and Nathaniel Carmarden, and a daughter, Mary Carmarden, who married Thomas Wigg (d.1602). [16] Carmarden's son Richard entered Gray's Inn on 4 March 1599, [17] and succeeded his father as Surveyor of the Customs. [1]

Carmarden married secondly Mary Alington. [1]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Howard & Chester 1880 , p. 136.
  2. Clarke 1819 , p. 114; Barnard & McKenzie 2002 , p. 150; Davis 2013 , p. 126.
  3. Book of Kings, King of Books: Early Printed Bibles from the Carothers Collection. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 Barnard & McKenzie 2002 , p. 150.
  5. Nef, John U. (1933). "Richard Carmarden's "A Caveat for the Quene" (1570)". Journal of Political Economy. 41 (1): 33–41. doi:10.1086/254427. JSTOR   1822872.
  6. The original was formerly in the collection of Hiram Halle.
  7. Newton 1918 , p. 140.
  8. 1 2 Newton 1918 , p. 141.
  9. Historical Manuscripts Commission 1899 , p. 578.
  10. 'Cecil Papers: March 1593', Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House, Volume 4: 1590-1594 (1892), pp. 290-299. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  11. Latham & Youings 1999 , p. 78.
  12. Hotson 1937 , pp. 162–3; Honigmann 1998 , p. 88.
  13. A Guide to the Atcheson L. Hench Autograph Collection, University of Virginia. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  14. The Casebooks Project; A digital edition of Simon Forman’s & Richard Napier’s medical records 1596–1634. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  15. Hasted 1797 , p. 17.
  16. Howard & Chester 1880 , p. 136; Hasted 1797 , p. 17.
  17. Foster 1880 , p. 96.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paymaster General</span> UK government ministerial position

His Majesty's Paymaster General or HM Paymaster General is a ministerial position in the Cabinet Office of the United Kingdom. The position is currently held by Nick Thomas-Symonds of the Labour Party.

The Treasurer of the Household is a member of the Royal Household of the Sovereign of the United Kingdom. The position is usually held by one of the government deputy Chief Whips in the House of Commons. The current holder of the office is Mark Tami MP.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche</span> English diplomat (1556–1625)

Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche was an English diplomat. He is remembered chiefly for his lone vote against the condemnation of Mary, Queen of Scots, and for organising the stag hunt where his guest, the Archbishop of Canterbury, accidentally killed a man.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham</span> English peer and MP for Hythe and Rochester

Sir William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham, KG, lord of the Manor of Cobham, Kent, was Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, and a member of parliament for Hythe. Although he was viewed by some as a religious radical during the Somerset Protectorate, he entertained Queen Elizabeth I of England at Cobham Hall in 1559, signalling his acceptance of the moderate regime.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Surveyor-General of the Ordnance</span>

The Surveyor-General of the Ordnance was a subordinate of the Master-General of the Ordnance and a member of the Board of Ordnance, a British government body, from its constitution in 1597. Appointments to the post were made by the crown under Letters Patent. His duties were to examine the ordnance received to see that it was of good quality. He also came to be responsible for the mapping of fortifications and eventually of all Great Britain, through the Ordnance Survey, and it is this role that is generally associated with surveyor-generalship.

Sir Henry Billingsley was an English scholar and translator, merchant, chief Customs officer for the Port of London in the high age of late Elizabethan piracy, and moneylender, several times Master of the Haberdashers' Company, an alderman, Sheriff and Lord Mayor of London, and twice Member of Parliament for the City. His 1570 translation of Euclid's Geometry, the first from Greek into English, with a lengthy opening essay by Dr John Dee, was a classic of its time and a landmark in mathematical publishing. It appeared only two years after his translation, from the Latin, of the compendious and seminal Commentary, by the leading Reformation theologian Pietro Martire Vermigli, on the Epistle of St Paul to the Romans, which had been dedicated by its author to the Reformation scholar Sir Anthony Cooke. Both of these important publications were printed by John Daye. Billingsley was for long associated with St Thomas's Hospital in London and was a prominent, worthy and wealthy London citizen, reflecting the examples of his stepfathers Sir Martin Bowes and Thomas Seckford. He was listed in 1617 as a deceased member of the Elizabethan Society of Antiquaries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Theobalds House</span> Stately home in Hertfordshire, England

Theobalds House in the parish of Cheshunt in the English county of Hertfordshire, north of London, was a significant stately home and (later) royal palace of the 16th and early 17th centuries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Neville (died 1615)</span> English courtier, politician and diplomat

Sir Henry Neville was an English courtier, politician and diplomat, noted for his role as ambassador to France and his unsuccessful attempts to negotiate between James I of England and the Houses of Parliament. In 2005, Neville was put forward as a candidate for the authorship of Shakespeare's works.

Cecil House refers to two historical mansions on the Strand, London, in the vicinity of the Savoy. The first was a 16th-century house on the north side, where the Strand Palace Hotel now stands. The second was built in the early 17th century on the south side nearly opposite, where Shell Mex House stands today.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Smythe (customer)</span> Member of the Parliament of England

Thomas Smythe or Smith of London, Ashford and Westenhanger, Kent was the collector of customs duties in London during the Tudor period, and a member of parliament for five English constituencies. His son and namesake, Sir Thomas Smythe, was the first governor of the East India Company, treasurer of the Virginia Company, and an active supporter of the Virginia colony.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Walter Cope</span> English noble (c. 1553–1614)

Sir Walter Cope of Cope Castle in the parish of Kensington, Middlesex, England, was Master of the Court of Wards, Chamberlain of the Exchequer, public Registrar-General of Commerce and a Member of Parliament for Westminster.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mildred Cooke</span> English noblewoman and translator

Mildred Cecil, Baroness Burghley was an English noblewoman and translator. She was the wife of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, the most trusted adviser of Elizabeth I, and the mother of Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, adviser to James I.

Robert Poley, or Pooley was an English double agent, government messenger and agent provocateur employed by members of the Privy Council during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I; he was described as "the very genius of the Elizabethan underworld". Poley is particularly noted for his central role in uncovering the so-called Babington plot to assassinate the Queen in 1586, and for being a witness of, and even a possible party to, the reported killing in self-defence by Ingram Frizer of the famous poet/dramatist Christopher Marlowe in May 1593.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Leveson (admiral)</span> English naval officer, politician, and landowner

Sir Richard Leveson was an important Elizabethan Navy officer, politician and landowner. His origins were in the landed gentry of Shropshire and Staffordshire. A client and son-in-law of Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, he became Vice-Admiral under him. He served twice as MP for Shropshire in the English parliament. He was ruined by the burden of debt built up by his father.

Sir Walter Leveson was an Elizabethan Member of Parliament and a Shropshire and Staffordshire landowner who was ruined by involvement in piracy and mental illness.

Sir John Leveson was an English politician. He was instrumental in putting down the Essex rebellion of 8 February 1601.

Joan Leche, benefactress, was the wife successively of Thomas Bodley, and of Thomas Bradbury, Lord Mayor of London in 1509. She founded a chantry in London, and a grammar school in Saffron Walden, Essex. Her great-grandson, Sir John Leveson (1555–1615), was instrumental in putting down the Essex rebellion of 8 February 1601, and her great-grandson William Leveson acted as trustee for the original shareholders of the Globe Theatre.

William Leveson was a member of the Worshipful Company of Mercers and of the Company of Merchant Adventurers. Together with Thomas Savage, he was one of the trustees used by the original shareholders of the Globe Theatre in the allocation of their shares in 1599. Later, Leveson was involved in the suppression of the Essex rebellion on 8 February 1601. In 1613 he was sued by the Virginia Company.

Thomas Savage of Rufford, Lancashire, was a member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths and one of the ten seacoal-meters in London. Together with William Leveson, he was one of two trustees used by the original shareholders of the Globe Theatre in the allocation of their shares in 1599. He was an associate of the actor and editor of the First Folio, John Heminges, and of John Jackson, both of whom were Shakespeare's trustees in the purchase of the Blackfriars Gatehouse. Savage amassed a considerable fortune, at the time of his death owning five houses in London and an inn called the George.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manor of Scadbury</span> Historic manor in Bromley, London, UK

Scadbury is a historic manor in the parish of Chislehurst in the London Borough of Bromley, England. Much of the estate is preserved today as Scadbury Park, a 300-acre (120 ha) Local Nature Reserve and a Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation. The manorial chapel, known as the Scadbury Chapel, survives in the church of St Nicholas at Chislehurst, and served as a burial place for owners of the estate, including members of the Walsingham family.

References