Robert Jones (died 1574) was an English diplomat, from April 1558 a Clerk of the Privy Seal, [1] and keeper of the council chamber. [2]
Jones worked with John Somers and Henry Middlemore for Nicholas Throckmorton, the ambassador in France in 1559. [3] Jones wrote friendly joking letters to Richard Oseley or Ouseley at the English court, mentioning his colleague Somers as a fellow player of the cithern, and listing their mutual friends including Gregory Railton and William Honnyng. [4] Jones mentions in his letters reading the romance Amadis and works by Clément Marot. [5] Sir Henry Paget wrote that Jones ought to defer his book buying until he came to Orléans, where the bookseller's daughter was the "fairest maid without comparison in Orléans or Paris". [6]
While Francis II of France was hunting at houses and estates belonging to the Duke of Guise in September 1559, Throckmorton, Somers, and Henry Killigrew toured Lorraine, visiting Metz and Nancy. Jones was left at Bar-le-Duc. [7] Despite the tone of his correspondence, the historian Nicola Sutherland notes that Throckmorton's assistants in France, as Protestants and lacking ambassadorial status, were "disliked, distrusted, and isolated". Their situation deteriorated as English intervention in Scotland became more likely, and their role in subversion in France can be doubted. [8]
Throckmorton sent Somers and Jones to talk to Jane Dormer and the Count of Feria as they were travelling to the Château d'Amboise in France in April 1560. They met Mary, Queen of Scots, and Francis II of France. Susan Clarencieux spoke to Throckmorton at Amboise, saying they were loyal subjects of Elizabeth I but were travelling to Spain for their religious conscience. [9]
Like Somers and Railton, Jones was a cryptographer, with a reputation for breaking codes used in diplomatic correspondence between France and Scotland. [10] Jones came to England as Throckmorton's messenger to Elizabeth I at Greenwich in November 1560. [11] At this time there were discussions that Elizabeth I might marry James Hamilton, 3rd Earl of Arran and it was also rumoured she might marry a favourite, Robert Dudley. Dudley confronted Jones, asking if Mary, Queen of Scots and Queen of France, had relayed a rumour that Elizabeth would marry him, her horse-keeper. Jones thought that Dudley could only have heard this from Elizabeth herself. [12]
After Jones had an audience with Elizabeth in November 1560, William Cecil complained to Throckmorton that his report contained "matter of such weight" that it was "unmeet" or unsuitable for a "woman's knowledge". Cecil objected to detail concerning the Council of Trent, apparently feeling that foreign policy ought not to be founded on unmediated intelligence. [13]
In London, Somers and Jones met Carlo Ubertino Solaro, Count of Moretta, the ambassador from Savoy in November 1561. [14]
Jones had a brother, John Jones, who was a merchant tailor in Fleet Street, [15] and a cousin, also John Jones, a tailor in the parish of St Ethelburga's Bishopsgate. He married Margaret Waad or Wade, a daughter of Armagil Waad, who served as Clerk of the Privy Council for Edward VI. When they were betrothed in January 1561, Jones wrote to Throckmorton that she was a skilled player on the virginals, and commented "blessed is the wooing that is not long a doing". [16]
In 1570, Robert Jones was an overseer of Armagil Wade's will and received a bequest of 20 nobles "for his pains". [17]
James Hamilton, 3rd Earl of Arran (1537–1609) was a Scottish nobleman and soldier who opposed the French-dominated regency during the Scottish Reformation. He was the eldest son of James Hamilton, Duke of Châtellerault, sometime regent of Scotland. He was of royal descent, and at times was third or fourth in succession to the Scottish crown; several royal marriages were proposed for him, but he eventually never married. He went to France with Mary, Queen of Scots, where he commanded the Scots Guards. After returning to Scotland, he became a leader of the Protestant party against Mary and her French supporters. However, he went insane in 1562 and was confined for the rest of his life.
Sir Nicholas Throckmorton was an English diplomat and politician, who was an ambassador to France and later Scotland, and played a key role in the relationship between Elizabeth I of England and Mary, Queen of Scots.
Sir Richard Lee (1513–1575) was a military engineer in the service of Henry VIII of England, Edward VI and Elizabeth I. He was a commander of Henry VIII and appointed surveyor of the King's works. Lee was member of parliament for Hertfordshire in 1545. He was the first English engineer to be knighted.
Berwick Pursuivant of Arms in Ordinary was an English office of arms created around 1460 for service on the Scottish Marches based at Berwick-upon-Tweed. In the 16th century there was also a Herald or Pursuivant based at Carlisle on the west border.
The Treaty of Berwick was negotiated on 27 February 1560 at Berwick-upon-Tweed. It was an agreement made by the representative of Queen Elizabeth I of England, the Duke of Norfolk, and the group of Scottish nobles known as the Scottish Lords of the Congregation. The purpose was to agree the terms under which an English fleet and army would come to Scotland to expel the French troops who were defending the Regency of Mary of Guise. The Lords were trying both to expel the French and to effect the Scottish Reformation, and this led to rioting and armed conflict.
Armagil Waad was a chief clerk of the Privy Council, servant of government and an English parliamentarian.
Sir Henry Killigrew was a diplomat and an ambassador for the Kingdom of England in the sixteenth century. He was several times employed by Elizabeth I in Scottish affairs and served as one of the English appointees to the Council of State of the Netherlands in the United Provinces in 1586 and 1587–1589. He served as a Member of Parliament for Newport & Launceston in 1553, for Saltash in 1563, and for Truro in 1571–2.
Susan White, known as Susan Clarencius, was a favourite lady in waiting and longtime friend of Queen Mary I of England.
The siege of Leith ended a twelve-year encampment of French troops at Leith, the port near Edinburgh, Scotland. French troops arrived in Scotland by invitation in 1548. In 1560 the French soldiers opposed Scottish supporters of religious reformation, and an English army arrived to besiege the French garrison at Leith. The town was not taken by force and the French troops finally left peacefully under the terms of a treaty signed by Scotland, England and France.
Gilles de Noailles, abbé de l'Isle (1524–1600) was French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1575 to 1579. He was the brother of his predecessor as ambassador, François de Noailles, and was succeeded by Jacques de Germigny. He was sent to the Ottoman Empire by Henry III of France.
Michel de Sèvre or de Seurre was a member of the Knights Hospitaller, a French courtier and diplomat, and Grand Master of the Order of Saint Lazarus from 1564 to 1578 and from 1586 to 1593.
Sir Andrew Corbet was an English Protestant politician of the mid-Tudor and early Elizabethan periods: a member of the powerful Council in the Marches of Wales for a quarter of a century. Drawn from the landed gentry of Shropshire and Buckinghamshire, he was twice a member of the Parliament of England for Shropshire.
Costume and gold and silver plate belonging to Elizabeth I were recorded in several inventories, and other documents including rolls of New Year's Day gifts. Arthur Jefferies Collins published the Jewels and Plate of Queen Elizabeth I: The Inventory of 1574 from manuscripts in 1955. The published inventory describes jewels and silver-plate belonging to Elizabeth with detailed references to other source material. Two inventories of Elizabeth's costume and some of her jewellery were published by Janet Arnold in Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlocke'd.
Margaret Harington an English woman in 16th-century Spain.
Henry Middlemore was an English courtier and diplomat.
Bartolomew de Villemore was a French courtier and administrator to Mary of Guise, the mother of Mary, Queen of Scots.
Peter Meutas or Mewtas, or Mewtis, or Meautis, or Meautys was an English courtier and soldier.
Carlo Ubertino Solaro, Count of Moretta was a diplomat from Piedmont serving Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy. He is sometimes known as the Monsieur de Morette, Obertino Solaro, or Robertino.
John Somers or Somer or Sommers was an English diplomat, courtier, and cryptographer. He served as joint keeper of Mary, Queen of Scots, at Tutbury Castle with Ralph Sadler. Somers is said to have been Sadler's son-in-law.
Gregory Railton or Raylton was an English administrator and Clerk of the Signet. As a Protestant, Railton went into exile during the reign of Mary I of England.