Anthony Cope (author) explained

Sir Anthony Cope (c.1486 – 5 January 1551) of Hanwell, near Banbury, was an English knight, author, principal chamberlain to Queen Catherine Parr, and sheriff of Oxfordshire and Berkshire.

Origins

He was a younger son of William Cope (c.1440–1513), Esquire, Cofferer of the Household to King Henry VII, by his second wife Jane (or Joan) Spencer.

According to most sources, William Cope had two wives:

By his second wife, Jane Spencer, William Cope had three sons:

The monument to William Cope in Banbury church records the death of his widow, Jane, on 12 February 1525.

According to other sources, however, William Cope had three wives. Chambers says he married 'twice if not three times', and that his monument names his second and third wives Agnes and Jane, while a 'troublesome pedigree' from the Visitation of Hampshire shows a first wife, Barbara Quarles, daughter of George Quarles of Ufford, Northamptonshire, as the mother of his son, Stephen Cope. The online Dictionary of National Biography does not name William Cope's first two wives, but states that Anthony Cope was his 'second recorded son... by an unknown second wife', and that Anthony had 'at least one elder half-brother, Stephen, one brother, and four younger stepsisters (one of whom became Stephen's wife) who were the daughters of William Cope's third wife, Johane Spencer'.

Career

Anthony Cope attended Oxford, perhaps Oriel Oxford as Anthony Wood states, but does not appear to have taken a degree. He subsequently travelled to France, Germany and Italy. During his time on the continent he visited several universities, and is said to have written a number of books at that time, which may have included translations from Galen and Hippocrates mentioned by Erasmus in 1516. Wood states that his writing were the subject of an epigram by Johannes Baptista Mantuanus, seen at the one time by John Bale, but now lost.

He was twenty-six years of age when his father died on 7 April 1513. He was heir to 'the manor of Hanwell, near Banbury, and other property near by'.[4] He completed the building of Hanwell Hall, begun by his father. The Hall was later described by John Leland as 'a very pleasant and gallant house'.

In 1536, he was granted the lands of the dissolved Brooke Priory[5] in Rutland, which he afterwards sold, and bought more property in Oxfordshire. He was engaged in a dispute with the vicar of Banbury in 1540, and received the commendation of the council for his conduct.

Cope had been a long time friend of the Parr family. He was master of the Queen's hawks to Queen Catherine Parr.[6] He then became first vice-chamberlain, and then principal chamberlain to the Queen. Cope's duties for Catherine Parr included paying her goldsmiths, embroiderers, mercers, and her silkwoman Mistress Shakerley.[7]

He was knighted by Edward VI on 24 November 1547, being appointed in the same year one of the royal visitors of Canterbury and other dioceses. In 1548 he served as sheriff of Oxfordshire and Berkshire.

Marriage and issue

He married Jane Crewes, a daughter of Matthew Crewes of Pynne in the parish of Stockleigh English, Devon, by whom he had a son and daughter:

Death and burial

He died on 5 January 1551, and was buried in the chancel of the parish church. His wife, to whom he bequeathed £100 and an annuity of 100 marks, survived him.

Works

Cope was the author of:

Among manuscripts at Bramshill were two ascribed to Cope—an abbreviated chronology and a commentary on the first two gospels dedicated to Edward VI.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=57079 'Parishes: Wormleighton', A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 5: Kington hundred (1949), pp. 218-224
  2. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=57037 'Parishes: Fenny Compton', A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 5: Kington hundred (1949), pp. 47-50
  3. http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ancestorsearch&id=I72849 Summary of will of William Saunders of Banbury
  4. According to Hunt he inherited 'an old manor house near Banbury called Hardwick'.
  5. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=39909 'House of Austin Canons: Priory of Brooke', A History of the County of Rutland: Volume 1 (1908), pp. 159-161
  6. Susan James. Catherine Parr: Henry VIII’s Last Love, 2010
  7. David Starkey, Inventory of Henry VIII (London, 1998), p. 437.