Sir John Deane (1583 – 17 February 1626) of Dyne's Hall in the parish of Great Maplestead in Essex, was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1622.
Origins
Deane was the only son of William Deane (d.1585) of Dyne's Hall, Great Maplestead, Essex, by his second wife Anne Egerton, a daughter of Thomas Egerton of London, merchant, and widow of George Blyth (d.1581), MP, Secretary to the Council in the North.[3]
William Deane, "a younger son of Lancashire stock",[4] had been the steward and third husband of Anne Wentworth (1537-1580) (Lady Maltravers), one of the three daughters and co-heiresses of Sir John Wentworth of Gosfield Hall in Essex, and the widow successively of Sir Hugh Rich (a son of Richard Rich, 1st Baron Rich) and then of Henry FitzAlan, Lord Maltravers (1538–1556), son and heir apparent of Henry FitzAlan, 12th Earl of Arundel. In 1575 William Deane acquired and rebuilt Dyne's Hall (Called "Deane Hall" on the monument of his son's father-in-law[5]), near Gosfield Hall, and lived there after his first wife's death, when he remarried to Anne Egerton, the widow of George Blythe, Clerk of the Council of the North in 1572, and a younger daughter of Thomas Egerton, Citizen and Mercer of the City of London, who "claimed to be descended from the Egertons of Wrinehill in Cheshire". Her brother was Stephen Egerton, the Puritan preacher of St Anne’s in the Blackfriars.[6]
Career
He matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford on 24 October 1595, aged 12 and was awarded BA on 8 November 1600. In 1600, he became a student of law at Lincoln's Inn. He was knighted on 11 May 1603. He was a Justice of the Peace for Essex from 1607 until his death and was appointed High Sheriff of Essex for 1610–11. In 1621, he was electedas a Member of Parliament for Essex.[7] Deane died at the age of about 42 and was interred in Great Maplestead church,[7] where survives his mural monument with recumbent effigy dressed in full armour.
Marriage and issue
He married Anne Drury (d.1633), the second daughter of Sir Drue Drury (c. 1531 – 1617), of Riddlesworth Hall in Norfolk, a courtier and Member of Parliament, by whom he had 2 sons and 6 daughters. He is mentioned[8] on the inscribed monument of Sir Dru Drury in Riddlesworth Church, also displaying the arms of Deane.[9] His wife's monument with standing effigy survives in Great Maplestead Church, inscribed as follows:[10]
- Lady Deane, who lived ye faithful wife and dyed ye constant widow of Sir John Deane, of Gt Maplestead, in ye County of Essex, Knight. Let no sorrowe forget that she departed this life on ye 25th May, 1633. Her Shape w as rare, her Beauty exquisite, Her Wytte accurate, Her Judgment singular. Her Entertainment hearty, Her Conversation lovely, Her Heart merciful, Her Hand helpful, Her courses modest, Her discourses wise, Her Charity heavenly, Her Amity constant, Her Practise holy,Her Religion pure, Her vowes Laweful, Her Meditations divine, Her faythe unfeigned, Her Hope stable, Her Prayers devout, Her Devotion diurnal, Her dayes short, Her Life eternal. To whose beloved memory Sir Dru Deane, her eldest son, Here prostrate at her feet, erects This Monument April 14, 1634.
References
- ↑ Burke, Sir Bernard, The General Armory, London, 1884, p.271 "Deane of Maplestede, Essex and Blackburne, Lincolnshire; Deane of Gosfield, Essex (1577)
- ↑ arms of Deane impaling Drury, with Drury shown incorrectly with chief gules, should be vert
- ↑ Thrush
- ↑ Thrush
- ↑ Latin: Johanni Deane de Deane Aula Comitatu Essex[:File:St Peter's church - memorial to Drue Drury (d 1617) - geograph.org.uk - 1707351.jpg]
- ↑ See ODNB entry for Stephen Egerton; Fiona Cowell, Essex Gardens Trust, report to BRAINTREE DISTRICT COUNCIL DYNES HALL, GREAT MAPLESTEAD, TL 805 331 ; Notes on NATIONAL ARCHIVES PROB 11/57/549 1, Prerogative Court of Canterbury copy of the will, dated 20 June 1575 and proved 19 November 1575, of Dame Anne Wentworth of Gosfield, Essex, wife of Sir John Wentworth
- 1 2 'Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1714: Dabbe-Dirkin', Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714: Abannan-Kyte (1891), pp. 366-405. Date accessed: 19 November 2011
- ↑ Anna filia secunda Johanni Deane de Deane Aula Comitatu Essex "Anne, the second daughter, (married to) John Deane of Deane Hall in the County of Essex, (Knight)"
- ↑ See imageFile:St Peter's church - memorial to Drue Drury (d 1617) - geograph.org.uk - 1707351.jpg
- ↑ transcribed by david robarts
- Thrush, Andrew, "DEANE, Sir John (1583-1626), of Dynes Hall, Great Maplestead, Essex". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 11 June 2013.