(Redirected from Viscount Lovell)'Francis Lovell, Viscount Lovell' (
1454 -
1487(?)), a supporter of
Richard III and son of
John, 8th Baron Lovell, probably knew Richard from a young age and was to be a life-long friend and supporter of the future king.
He was the son of
John, 8th Baron Lovell and Joane Beaumont, daughter of
John Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont. From his father he also inherited the titles of Baron Lovell and
Baron Holland.
Lovell succeeded to his father's titles and estates at the age of nine years old. He became a ward of
Edward IV of England, who gave him into the charge of the
Earl of Warwick, in whose household Richard also spent some time. In was there that the two young men first formed their close association.
[1]
In 1466 he married Anne Fitzhugh, daughter of Henry, Lord Fitzhugh and niece of his guardian the Earl of Warwick. She was thus a first cousin of
Anne Neville, the future
Queen consort of Richard III.
Upon the death of his paternal grandmother in 1473 he inherited a large estate, including the lands of the baronies of
Deincourt,
Grey of Rotherfield, and
Fitzalan of Bedal. He was now one of the wealthiest barons in England not holding an earldom or dukedom.
[1]
He served as a young man under Richard in the expedition to
Scotland in
1480, and was knighted by Richard for it, the same year. After the death of Edward IV on
9 April 1483 he became one of his patron’s strongest supporters. He had been created a
viscount on
4 January 1483, and while still
Lord Protector Richard made him Chief Butler.
As soon as Richard became king (
26 June,
1483), Lovell was promoted to the office of
Lord Chamberlain, and was made a
Knight of the Garter, and given
Wallingford Castle in 1485. Lovell helped in the suppression of
Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham’s rebellion (1483), and as one of Richard’s most trusted ministers was gibbeted in Collingbourne’s couplet with
William Catesby and
Richard Ratcliffe:
:The catte, the ratte and Lovell our dogge
:Rulyth all England under a hogge.
(The 'dogge' here refers to a Lovell family
heraldic symbol. Richard's symbol was a boar.)
Lovell had command of the fleet which was to have stopped
Henry Tudor’s landing in
1485, but failed, and then fought for Richard at the
Battle of Bosworth Field (
22 August 1485) and after the battle fled to sanctuary at
Colchester. From there he escaped the following year to organise a dangerous revolt in
Yorkshire. When that failed he fled to
Margaret of York in
Flanders.
As a chief leader of the
Yorkist party, Lovell took a prominent part in
Lambert Simnel’s enterprise. With
John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln, he accompanied the pretender to
Ireland and fought for him at the
Battle of Stoke Field on
16 June 1487. He was seen escaping from the battle, but was never afterwards heard of;
Francis Bacon relates that according to one report he lived long after in a cave or vault (''History of Henry VII'', p. 37, ed.
Joseph Rawson Lumby). More than 200 years later, in
1708, the skeleton of a man was found in a secret chamber in the family mansion at
Minster Lovell in
Oxfordshire. It is supposed that Francis Lovell had hidden himself there and died of starvation.
Collingbourne’s couplet is preserved by
Robert Fabyan, ''Chronicle'', p. 672. For the discovery at Minster Lovell see ''
Notes and Queries'', 2nd series i. and 5th series x.
Notes
1. Ross, p. 49
2. Ross, p. 49
References
★
★
Francis Lovell, Viscount Lovell (1454-1487?), , W.A.J., Archbold, Dictionary of National Biography, 1893
★
Richard III, , Charles, Ross, , 1981,