Charles Arundell

Sir Charles Arundell (died 9 December 1587), was an English gentleman, lord of the manor of South Petherton, Somerset, notable as an early Roman Catholic recusant and later as a leader of the English exiles in France. He has been suggested as the author of Leicester's Commonwealth, an anonymous work which attacked Queen Elizabeth's favourite, the Earl of Leicester.

Early life and background

Arundell was the son of Sir Thomas Arundell (who was attainted and executed in 1552) and of Margaret Howard (died 1571), a sister of Queen Catherine Howard. His maternal grandparents were Lord Edmund Howard (died 1539), the third son of Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk, and Joyce Culpeper (c. 1480–1531).[1] His great aunt Elizabeth, Countess of Wiltshire, was the mother of Anne Boleyn, who was thus the first cousin of Arundell's mother as well as being the mother of Queen Elizabeth I,[2] and his ancestors on his mother's side included the Varangian chieftain Rurik (ca. 830–879), founder of the Rurikid dynasty which went on to rule Muscovy and several other states.[3]

Little is known of Arundell's early life. He had an older brother, Matthew, and two sisters, Dorothy and Jane. In 1554, two years after their father's execution, the Arundell brothers were restored in blood and the elder eventually succeeded in regaining most of their father's estates in Dorset and Wiltshire, including Wardour Castle.[4]

Life

Matthew Arundell, as head of the family, regained most of Sir Thomas Arundell's lost estates, while to Charles Arundell came the manor of South Petherton in Somerset.[5]

Unlike his brother, Arundell was openly a recusant. With their cousin Lord Henry Howard (later created Earl of Northampton), he was briefly imprisoned in the Tower of London at Christmas 1580, after both had been denounced by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, as traitors and spies of Philip II of Spain. Both were ostensibly friends of the Queen and slowly succeeded in clearing themselves of the charges of treason.[5] Oxford was a distant kinsman of the Arundells, and Charles Arundell's introduction of Oxford to a seminary priest, Richard Stephens, may have led to Oxford's conversion to Rome.[6]

Following his release, Arundell spent several months under house arrest. Neither he nor Howard ever returned to court favour,[5] and after the Throckmorton Plot of 1583 in support of Mary, Queen of Scots, Arundell fled to Paris with Thomas, Lord Paget, the elder brother of the conspirator Charles Paget.[7]

In August 1584 there appeared in England Leicester's Commonwealth, a brilliant and anonymous tract of Roman Catholic propaganda which attacked the Queen's favourite, the Earl of Leicester, and the political and religious policy of the English government, in particular the Puritan sympathies of Leicester, who was portrayed as an amoral opportunist.[8] At that time Arundell was seen as a leader of the English Roman Catholic exiles.[9] As early as 1947 Arundell was described as "the now generally admitted author of that Elizabethan masterpiece",[5] and in his critical edition of Leicester's Commonwealth (1985), Dwight C. Peck argued that Arundell was probably the anonymous author.[10] Recently historians have inclined to the view that several English Catholic exiles based in France may have worked on the text, including Charles Arundell, his associate Charles Paget, and Paget's brother, Thomas, Lord Paget.[11]

Arundell was reported to have pawned his valuables to raise money for an armed landing in England to be led by the Earl of Westmorland in support of Mary, Queen of Scots. In Paris he worked with the Archbishop of Glasgow, Mary's trusted representative in France.[12][13] Arundell was a cousin of the wife of Sir Edward Stafford (1552–1605), the English ambassador in Paris,[7] and had a role in putting Stafford into secret contact with Bernardino de Mendoza (c. 1540–1604), the ambassador in Paris of Philip of Spain. Early in 1587, Arundell acted secretly as a mediator between them to offer Stafford's services to Philip as a spy, when Arundell received two thousand crowns to pass on to Stafford.[14]

Arundell died in Paris in 1587in the year of the Singeing the King of Spain's Beard, during the Anglo-Spanish War which had begun in 1585perhaps having been poisoned.[15] It is sometimes claimed that his knighthood was bestowed on him by Philip of Spain, but he died in possession of the manor of South Petherton, which was inherited by his brother, Sir Matthew, and in the inquisition post mortem taken on 12 March 1588 he is named as "Sir Charles Arundell of London, Knt."[5]

Notes

  1. Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd ed., vol. I, p. 44
  2. George Edward Cokayne & Vicary Gibbs, The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, vol. I (London: St Catherine Press, 1910), p. 263
  3. Descendants of Rurik, Prince of Novgorod, 23rd generation, accessed 21 November 2012
  4. 'Wardour Castle', in John Preston Neale & Thomas Moule, Jones' views of the seats, mansions, castles, etc. of noblemen (Jones and Co., 1829)
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Charles Wisner Barrell, 'Queen Elizabeth's master showman shakes a spear in her defense', in The Shakespeare Fellowship Quarterly, Spring 1947
  6. Daphne Pearson, Edward De Vere (1550-1604): the crisis and consequences of wardship (London:Ashgate, 2005), p. 103
  7. 1 2 Simon Adams and Alan Bryson, revised by Mitchell Leimon, 'Walsingham, Sir Francis (c.1532–1590), principal secretary', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2007)
  8. Alan Haynes, The White Bear: The Elizabethan Earl of Leicester (Peter Owen, ISBN 0-7206-0672-1), p. 151
  9. H. R. Woudhuysen, 'Sidney, Sir Philip (1554–1586), author and courtier', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2007)
  10. Dwight C. Peck, ed., Leicester's Commonwealth: The Copy of a Letter Written by a Master of Art of Cambridge (1584) and Related Documents (Athens, Ohio, & London: 1985), pp. vi–xii
  11. Victor Houliston, Catholic Resistance in Elizabethan England, Ashgate Publishing (2007), p. 13; Michael C. Questier, Catholicism and Community in Early Modern England, Cambridge University Press (2006), p. 89
  12. Duncan James Salkeld, Shakespeare among the Courtesans (2012), p. 121
  13. Dennis Flynn, John Donne and the Ancient Catholic Nobility (Indiana University Press, 1995) p. 136
  14. James McDermott, 'Stafford, Sir Edward (1552–1605), diplomat', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2007)
  15. The Shakespeare Fellowship Quarterly, Volume 7 (Shakespeare Fellowship American Branch, 1946), p. 14

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