Ambrose Jermyn

Sir Ambrose Jermyn (1511 5 April 1577) was an English courtier, magistrate and landowner.[1]

Jermyn was the son of Sir Thomas Jermyn of Rushbrooke, Suffolk and Anne Spring, the eldest daughter of Thomas Spring of Lavenham.[2] He inherited his father's Rushbrooke Hall estate following his death in 1552. A fervent Roman Catholic, he was knighted by Mary I and served as a Justice of the Peace in Suffolk. In this role he was a notable prosecutor and persecutor of Protestants across East Anglia until the accession of Elizabeth I.[3] He served as Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1558 and 1572.

In 1538 he married Anne Heveningham, daughter of George Heveningham of Rushbrooke, and together they had thirteen children. He was succeeded by eldest surviving son, Sir Robert Jermyn, a Protestant magistrate.[4] His will was proved in May 1577.[5]

References

  1. An account of Sir Ambrose Jermyn and his family is given by S.H.A. Hervey, Rushbrook Parish Registers 1567-1850 (George Booth, Woodbridge 1903), pp. 198-207 (Internet Archive).
  2. http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/Probate/PROB_11-21_ff_83-4.pdf
  3. Patrick Collinson, From Cranmer to Sancroft: Essays on English Religion in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (A&C Black, 16 Jul 2007), p.33.
  4. Patrick Collinson, 'Magistracy and Ministry: A Suffolk Miniature' in Godly People: Essays On English Protestantism and Puritanism (Bloomsbury Publishing, 1983), p.449.
  5. Will of Sir Ambrose Jermyn (P.C.C. 1577, Daughtry quire). Transcript in Hervey, Rushbrook Parish Registers 1567-1850, pp. 143-46 (Internet Archive).


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