Biography of Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford 1479-1559

A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 3: Parishes: Chenies. On Sir John Cheyne's (age 78) death without issue in 146833 his widow Agnes married Edmund Molyneux, who was sheriff of the county in 147534 and presented to the church in 147935. He died in 148436, and Agnes survived him ten years. By her will 20 November 1494 her first husband's great-great-nephew John Cheyne of Chesham Bois (q.v.) obtained Drayton Beauchamp, Grove and Cogenhoe Manors, but Chenies [Map] passed to Agnes Cheyne's niece Anne (age 35) wife of David Philip37. Anne (age 35) and David Philip, who was sheriff in 149838, had some difficulty in inducing the trustees to hand over the manor39, but were in possession in 1500, when Chenies was settled on Anne and her issue40. She died seised of it in 1510, when it passed to her granddaughter Anne wife of [her future husband] John Broughton and daughter and heir of [her father] Guy Sapcote (age 19), son of Anne Philip (age 35) by a former husband (age 39)41.

Note 33. Chan. Inq. p.m. 8 Edw. IV, no. 51.

Note 34. P.R.O. List of Sheriffs, 2.

Note 35. Lipscomb, Bucks. iii, 252.

Note 36. Brass in church.

Note 37. Add. MS. 5840, fol. 39.

Note 38. P.R.O. List of Sheriffs, 2.

Note 39. Early Chan. Proc. bdle. 218, no. 30.

Note 40. De Banco R. Hil. 15 Hen. VII, m. 297; Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), xxv, 162.

Note 41. Chan. Inq. p.m. (Ser. 2), xxv, 162.

In 1479 [her father] Guy Sapcote of Thornhaugh, Bedfordshire (age 30) died.

Around 1479 Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford was born to Guy Sapcote of Thornhaugh, Bedfordshire (age 30). Sources describe her birth date is described as circa 1489 but since her father died in 1479 we have adjusted her birth to his death.

In 1510 John Broughton of Toddington, Bedfordshire and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 31) were married.

A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 3: Parishes: Chenies. [her husband] John Broughton died in 151842, and by 1523 Anne (age 39) was the wife of [her future husband] Richard Jermingham43. He died before 1526, in which year Anne (age 39) married [her future husband] John Lord Russell (age 33)44, the favourite of Henry VIII (age 26), who stayed at Chenies [Map] in 153445. Lord Russell was made lord high admiral in 154046, and in 1541 the privy council met at Chenies47. In 1550 Russell was created Earl of Bedford, and on his death in 1555 he was buried in the mausoleum in Chenies Church built by his widow Anne48, and in which all the succeeding Earls and Dukes of Bedford lie buried.

Note 42. Ibid. xxxiii, 108.

Note 43. Feet of F. Div. Co. East. 15 Hen. VIII; Bucks. East. 15 Hen. VIII.

Note 44. Dict. Nat. Biog.; Feet of F. Bucks Trin. and Mich. 20 Hen. VIII.

Note 45. L. and P. Hen. VIII, vii, 965.

Note 46. Ibid. xvi, 1339; Dict. Nat. Biog.

Note 47. L. and P. Hen. VIII, xvi, 1287.

Note 48. G.E.C. Complete Peerage.

Before 1523 Richard Jerningham and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 43) were married.

In Feb or Mar 1525 [her husband] Richard Jerningham died.

Around Apr 1526 John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 41) and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 47) were married.

Around 1527 [her son] Francis Russell 2nd Earl Bedford was born to [her husband] John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 42) and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 48).

Before 18 Jun 1531 [her son-in-law] William Howard 1st Baron Howard (age 21) and [her daughter] Katherine Broughton were married. She the daughter of John Broughton of Toddington, Bedfordshire and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 52). He the son of Thomas Howard 2nd Duke of Norfolk and Agnes Tilney Duchess Norfolk (age 54).

On 13 Apr 1535 [her daughter] Katherine Broughton died.

On 09 Mar 1539 [her husband] John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 54) was created 1st Baron Russell of Cheneys.

Before 1548 [her son] Francis Russell 2nd Earl Bedford (age 21) and [her daughter-in-law] Margaret St John Countess Bedford (age 14) were married. He the son of John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 62) and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 68).

On 19 Jan 1550 [her husband] John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 65) was created 1st Earl Bedford. Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 71) by marriage Countess Bedford.

In 1551 Magdalen Dacre Viscountess Montague (age 12) served as a gentlewoman to Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 72).

Henry Machyn's Diary. 10 Feb 1553. The x day of January [Note. Probably February] rod my lade Mare('s) (age 36) grasse from Saynt [John's] and thrugh Flettstrett unto the kyng at Westmynster, with a grett nombur of lords and knyghtes, and alle the [great] women lades, the duches of Suffoke (age 35) and Northumberland (age 44), my lade marqwes of Northamptun (age 26), and lade marqwes of Wynchester, and the contes of Bedfford (age 74), and the contes of Shrowsbere (age 53), and the contes of Arundelle, my lade Clynton (age 26), my lade Browne (age 24) and Browne [sic in manuscript], and many mo lades and gentyllwomen; and at the oter gatt ther mett her my lord of Suffoke (age 36) and my lord of Northumberland (age 49), my lord of Wynchester (age 70), my [her husband] lord of Bedfford (age 68), and therle of Shrusbery (age 53), the therle of Arundell (age 40), my lord Chamburlayn, my lord Admerolle, and a gret nomber of knyghtes and gentyllmen, and so up unto the chambur of pressens, and ther the Kynges (age 15) grace mett her and salutyd her.... owyn a-pon payne of presunmentt and a grett [penalty, as ye] shalle fynd in the actes in secund yere of kyng ... the perlementt tyme of the sayd yere, and nott to be ... plasse as taverns, alle-howses, ines, or wher ... for cummers and gestes, and has commandyd unto alle shreyffes and baylles, constabulls, justes of pesse, or any .. thay shall se truthe (and) justys as thay shalle [inform the] kyng and ys consell, and bryng them to pressun of ... sun or poyssuns as be the offenders ther off for ... her of odur.

On 14 Mar 1555 [her husband] John Russell 1st Earl Bedford (age 70) died. His son [her son] Francis Russell 2nd Earl Bedford (age 28) succeeded 2nd Earl Bedford, 2nd Baron Russell of Cheneys. [her daughter-in-law] Margaret St John Countess Bedford (age 22) by marriage Countess Bedford.

Henry Machyn's Diary. 21 Mar 1556. The xxj day of Marche was bered at [Chenies, in] Bukynghamshyre my old contes of Bedford (age 77) .... of armes and a grett baner of armes and a v [banner-] rolles of her progene and vii dosen of skochyons .... vj of sarsenett, and iiij dosen of grett stayffe torchys.

Note. P. 191. Funeral of the old countess of Bedford. Anne, sole daughter and heiress of sir Guy Sapcote, of Thornhaugh, co. Bedford, married first to sir John Broughton, of Toddington, co. Bedford; secondly, about 1518, to sir Richard Jerningham, who was one of the governors of Tournay, and afterwards employed in an embassy to Spain, who died in 1524; and, thirdly, in the spring of 1526, to sir John Russell, afterwards earl of Bedford (see note, p. 343). By her will, dated 19 Aug. 1557, she committed her burial to the discretion of the marquess of Winchester lord treasurer, the abbat of Westminster, and the lord St. John. See further in Wiffen's Memoirs of the House of Russell, i. 391.

On 14 Mar 1559 Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford (age 80) died.

A History of the County of Buckingham: Volume 3: Parishes: Chenies. CHENIES

Isenhamstede (xii cent.); Iselhamstede Cheynes (xiii-xix cent.); Eastnamsted Cheynes (xvi-xix cent.); Chenies (xx cent.).

The parish of Chenies was originally known as Isenhampstead, but from the 13th century onwards1 was spoken of as Isenhampstead Chenies from its connexion with the Cheyne family, who resided here for nearly 300 years. During the 19th century the old name was gradually dropped, and to-day the parish is universally known as Chenies.

It covers an area of 1,759 acres, of which 1,056 acres are arable land, 474 acres are permanent grass, and the rest is covered by woods and plantations2, while there are 10 acres covered by water. The soil is gravel, flint and chalk and produces crops of wheat and barley.

In the south the land attains a height of 407 ft. above ordnance datum at the small hill on which the church is placed. It falls away to under 300 ft. in the west and to 270 ft. in the extreme south-east near Chorley Wood station, where the Metropolitan railway enters the parish.

The village stands near the northern boundary on the brow of a hill. In the centre is the green with its well, sheltered by rows of tall elms and surrounded by red brick cottages, solid and well built with pointed gables and tall chimneys and good-sized gardens round the cottages. A road leads to the church on the west, behind which is Great Home Farm, while opposite stands the old manorhouse of the Cheynes, which for a long time has been used as a farm. It was rebuilt probably about 1530 by the first Earl of Bedford, who had married Anne Sapcote in 1526. Leland, who visited Chenies a little later, says: 'The olde House of the Cheyneis is so translated by my Lorde Russel that litle or nothing of it yn a maner remaynith untranslated: and a great deale of the House in ben newly set up made of Bricke and Timber: and fair logginges be new erected in the gardein. The House is within diverse Places richely painted with antique Workes of White and Blak. And there be about the House 2 Parkes, as I remember.'3

Only one wing now remains, but it is in a state of good preservation, due to the solid material used and to the good work put into its construction. Its high-gabled roofs with clusters of quaintly twisted and ornamented chimneys form a striking feature, which has been copied in the architecture of the cottages in the village. Some original glass remains, including a shield with arms and quarterings of Russell within a garter with a coronet above, also some old tiles and three fireplaces of Totternhoe stone.

A few yards north of the house is a cellar of two chambers, dating apparently from the 15th century, and probably part of a former house. The walls are of flint and chalk and both chambers have vaulted roofs.

In a field in front of the manor-house stands an oak said to have been planted by Queen Elizabeth on her visit in 1570.

Chenies House, the residence of Miss Russell, stands in pretty grounds north of the church, from whence a fine view can be obtained of the woods at Latimer. From the church a road leads past the Bedford Arms and Baptist chapel, erected in 1779, to the rectoryhouse, half a mile distant from the church. The schools, which were built in 1846, lie a little south of the village. Further south in Green Street, a lane leading to Chorley Wood station, are Little and Great Green Street Farms.

The country around is hilly and richly wooded and watered by the River Chess, which on the north turns the wheel of Chenies Mill and separates the parish from Hertfordshire. The Chess is here famous for its trout, and Mr. Froude has written many pages descriptive of the pleasure of trout-fishing at Chenies4. Woodside House, which lies between the woods and the river, is the residence of Adeline Duchess of Bedford. A road running parallel with the river leads west through park-land bordered by woods to Dell Farm, near which is the site of a fairly large Roman villa5, and from here footpaths lead south to Oldhouse Farm.

Peter Allibond, who translated theological treatises from the French and Latin, was rector of Chenies at his death in 1629 and was buried in the chancel of the church6.

Note 1. Chan. Inq. p.m. Hen. III, file 5, no. 16.

Note 2. Statistics from Bd. of Agric. (1905).

Note 3. Leland, Itin. (ed. 2), i, 115, 116.

Note 4. Froude, Short Studies on Great Subjects (ed. 3), iv, 526-42.

Note 5. V.C.H. Bucks. ii, 8.

Note 6. Dict. Nat. Biog.

[her daughter] Katherine Broughton was born to John Broughton of Toddington, Bedfordshire and Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford.

Royal Descendants of Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford 1479-1559

Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom x 2

Queen Consort Camilla Shand x 1

Diana Spencer Princess Wales x 6

Ancestors of Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford 1479-1559

GrandFather: William Sapcote

Father: Guy Sapcote of Thornhaugh, Bedfordshire

Great x 1 Grandfather: Thomas de Semarc

GrandMother: Anne de Semarc

Great x 2 Grandfather: William Lexham

Great x 1 Grandmother: Alice Laxham

Anne Sapcote Countess Bedford