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John Perrot

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John Perrot
File:Sir John Perrot (1528- 1592) mezzotint after George Powle.jpg
Sir John Perrot, mezzotint after George Powle
FatherThomas Perrot (1505 - 1531)
MotherMary Berkeley (1510/1 - aft 1586)

Sir John Perrot (November 1528 - 3 November, 1592) served as Lord Deputy of Ireland under Queen Elizabeth I of England, and is best known for his part in the Tudor re-conquest of Ireland. Some historians have regarded him as an illegitimate son of King Henry VIII of England.[1], based on an account written by Sir Robert Naunton, who had married Sir John's granddaughter, Penelope[2]

Early life

Perrot was born at Haroldston St Issells, near Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire as the third child of Mary Berkeley and Thomas Perrott, Esquire of Haroldston. Perrot was rumoured to be the son of Henry VIII, whom he allegedly resembled in temperament and appearance.[3] However, these reports are erroneous.[4] The allegation of Henry VIII's fatherhood originated with Sir Robert Naunton, [5]. Naunton never knew Sir John, and used second-hand accounts of his person and character, along with a series of historically inaccurate events to reach his conclusion on John's paternity. For example, John was Mary Berekely's 3rd child, not her first, and there is no record of her and the king being in the same location during this period. .[6]


Perrott was attached to the household of William Paulet, 1st Marquess of Winchester, and thereby gained his introduction to the king. Before the promise of advancement could progress, the king died (January 1547), but Perrot did receive a knighthood at the coronation of Henry's successor, King Edward VI (February 1547).

In June 1551 Perrot visited France in the train of William Parr, 1st Marquess of Northampton. The Marquess travelled to arrange the marriage of the king to Elizabeth of Valois, the infant daughter of Henry II of France and of Catherine de' Medici. Perrot's skill as a knight and in the hunt fascinated the French king, who sought to retain him for reward, but Perrot declined and on his return to England Edward VI paid his debts.


During the reign of Mary I of England (1553-1558), Perrot suffered a brief imprisonment in the Fleet with his uncle, Robert Perrott, on a charge of sheltering heretics at his house in Wales. Following his release, he declined to assist William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke in seeking out heretics in south Wales, but went on to serve with him at the capture of Saint-Quentin in 1557. In spite of his Protestantism, Perrot was granted the castle and lordship of Carew in Pembrokeshire, and at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign the naval defence of South Wales was entrusted to his care.

Munster

In 1570 Perrot reluctantly accepted the newly-created post of Lord President of Munster in Ireland, then undergoing the first of the Desmond Rebellions. He landed at the port of Waterford in February of the following year and, during the course of a vigorous campaign in which he pursued the rebel James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, reduced the province to peace. In one grisly incident, after his forces had slain fifty rebels, Perrot sought to awe the Geraldine loyalists by having the heads of the dead men fixed to the market cross in Kilmallock. Fitzmaurice remained elusive and, out of frustration, Perrot issued him with a challenge to single combat, which the rebel declined with the comment, "For if I should kill Sir John Perrot the Queen of England can send another president into this province; but if he do kill me there is none other to succeed me or to command as I do." However gallant the offer, it provoked mutterings from the more level-headed servants of the crown, and Perrot's reputation for rashness grew. Soon after, he was ambushed by the rebels, who outnumbered his force ten to one, but was saved when the attackers retired on mistaking a small cavalry company for the advance party of a larger crown force. After a second and successful siege of the Geraldine stronghold of Castlemaine, Perrot had the satisfaction of receiving Fitzmaurice's submission in 1572.

Perrot's presidency saw over 800 hangings - most of them by martial law - but it can be judged[by whom?] overall as fairly successful. Perrot criticised the reinstatement after the rebellion of the chief nobleman of Munster, Gerald Fitzgerald, 15th Earl of Desmond, and having vainly sought his own recall, he departed Ireland without leave in July 1573. Upon presenting himself at court he was permitted to resign his office, in which he was succeeded by Sir William Drury.

Perrot returned to his Welsh home, where he became fully occupied with his duties as vice-admiral of the Welsh seas and as a member of the Council of the Marches. In 1578 the deputy-admiral, Richard Vaughan, accused him of tyranny, of subversion of justice and of dealings with pirates; but Perrot evidently retained the confidence of the Crown, for he became commissioner for piracy in Pembrokeshire in 1578, and in the following year received the command of a naval squadron charged with the interception of Spanish ships on the Irish coast.

Lord Deputy of Ireland

In 1582, the recall of Arthur Grey, 14th Baron Grey de Wilton, left vacant the office of Lord Deputy of Ireland, to which Perrot was appointed in 1584; at about the same time, Sir Richard Bingham was appointed as governor of Connaught. Perrot's chief instructions concerned the Plantation of Munster, by the terms of which the confiscated estates of the defeated Earl of Desmond - some 600,000 acres (2,400 km²) - were to be parcelled out at nominal rents, on condition that the undertakers of the plantation establish English farmers and labourers to build towns and work the land.

Before his government had had time to embark on the plantation enterprise, Perrot got wind of raids into Ulster by the Highland clans of Maclean and MacDonnell at the invitation of Sorley Boy MacDonnell, the Scoto-Irish constable of Dunluce Castle. In response, the Lord Deputy marched into the northern province at the head of an army, but Sorley Boy escaped him and crossed over to Scotland, only to return later with reinforcements. Queen Elizabeth roundly abused Perrot for launching such an unadvised campaign, but by 1586 Sorley Boy had been brought to a mutually beneficial submission by the somewhat abashed lord deputy. At about this time Perrot also sanctioned the rather crafty kidnapping of Hugh Roe O'Donnell (who was lured to a wine tasting on a merchant ship and then sealed in a cabin and brought to Dublin), a move which gave the crown authority some leverage in western Ulster. A further achievement in his Ulster strategy came with the submission of Hugh Maguire, Lord of Fermanagh.

The establishment of the plantation of Munster would prove a painfully slow affair, but in 1585 Perrot did enjoy success on the perfecting of the Composition of Connaught, an unusually even-handed contract between the crown and the landholders of that province, by which the queen was to receive certain rents in return for settling land titles and tenant dues. Of similar significance in that same year was the opening of parliament at Dublin, the first since 1569; the spectacle was enhanced by the attendance of many Gaelic lords, and high hopes were held for the coming sessions. Even though the act for the attainder of Desmond (which rendered the rebel's estates at the disposal of the crown) was passed, Perrot's legislative programme soon ran into difficulty, particularly over the suspension of Poynings Law, and at the close of parliament in 1587 he was so utterly frustrated with the influence of factions within both chambers of the house (orchestrated to a large degree by Sir Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormond) that he sought a recall to England, which was eventually granted.

As Lord Deputy, Perrot had established peace and deserved well of Elizabeth; but his rash and violent temper, coupled with unsparing criticism, not to say abuse, of his associates, had made him numerous enemies. A hastily conceived plan for the conversion of the revenues of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin to fund the erection of two colleges led to a sustained quarrel with Adam Loftus, archbishop of Dublin, which Perrot wilfully aggravated by his interference with the authority of Loftus as Lord Chancellor. Perrot also interfered in Bingham's government of Connaught, and in May 1587 be actually struck Sir Nicholas Bagenal, the elderly knight marshal, in the council chamber at Dublin (an incident blamed on the deputy's drunken temper).

Elizabeth decided to supersede him in January 1588, and six months later his successor, the experienced Sir William Fitzwilliam, arrived in Dublin. After his return to England, Perrot's enemies continued to work his ruin, precipitated by a treacherous intrigue of the kind that marred the final decade of the queen's reign.

Ruin

Perrot was appointed to the Privy Council upon his return to England, where he maintained his interest in Irish affairs through correspondence with several members of the council in Dublin. In the heated politics following the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588, Perrot found himself accused of treason in Dublin on the basis of certain allegations presented by a former priest and condemned prisoner, Dennis O'Roghan. The evidence was contained in correspondence purportedly addressed by Perrot during his time as lord deputy (with his signature attached) to King Philip II of Spain and the Duke of Parma, in which certain treasonable promises and bargains were put forward concerning the future of England, Wales and Ireland.

Fitzwilliam set up an investigation, but O'Roghan's record of forgery soon emerged, and it seemed that the allegations would run into the sand.[clarification needed] Rather than let the matter lie, it was decided (probably at Perrot's urging) to pursue an inquiry into the manner in which the allegations had arisen in the first place, a process that was likely to embarrass Fitzwilliam. Accordingly, a commission was established, including several of Perrot's favourites on the Irish council, who set about their interrogation of the prisoner.

The prisoner made allegations of torture against the commission members, and Fitzwilliam was directed[by whom?] to resume his own investigation with strict instructions from the queen to forward the findings to the Privy Council in London, which would determine how to proceed. Perrot faced a moment of crisis, and further allegations were made - most notably by his former secretary - of his frequent use in private conversation of violent language against the queen. Allegations were also made of his prior knowledge of the rebellion in 1589 of Sir Brian O'Rourke (later extradited from Scotland and hanged at London), which had occurred under the government of Bingham in Connaught.

The authorities confined Perrot to the Tower, and in 1592 he was tried before a special commission on charges of high treason. The forged letters and the evidence concerning the O'Rourke rebellion played their part in the prosecution case, but the evidence of his remarks about Elizabeth guided the jury's deliberations. He was said to have called the queen a "base bastard piskitchin", and to have made many disparaging remarks on her legitimacy. Perrot protested his loyalty and, in reaction to a hectoring prosecution counsel, eloquently cried out, "You win men's lives away with words". But his defence fell into confused blustering, and a verdict of guilty was returned. His sentencing was put off for some months, in the expectation of a royal pardon, but Perrot died while in custody in the Tower in September 1592.

Following Perrot's arraignment several of his allies who had sat on the commission to inquire into O'Roghan's allegations were replaced[by whom?] with English members, who fully equated the Protestant cause with the state and inclined to take a harder line in dealing with Gaelic Ireland. Fitzwilliam was thus free to pursue a policy opposed in crucial aspects to Perrot's, and the northern lords (including Hugh O'Neill) found themselves subjected to increasing government encroachment on their territories, which resulted in the outbreak of the Nine Years War (1595-1603).

Family

Perrot married twice; first to Anne Chayney of Kent, who bore his son and heir Thomas, and later to Jane Pruet [Prust] of Hartland in Devonshire. Pruet bore him a son, William Perrot, and two daughters: Anne, who married Sir John Phillips, 1st Baronet, of Picton Castle, ancestor of the Viscount St Davids and Lettice, who married Sir Arthur Chichester.

After his death the attainder on his property was lifted so that his son Thomas - who had married a daughter of Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex - could inherit.

Perrot also fathered bastard children. The best known is Sir James Perrott (1571-1637), whose manuscript The life, deedes and death of Sir John Perrott, knight was published in 1728. A son John, born about 1565, appears in an entry in the Inner Temple Register dated 5 June 1583: "John Perot, of Haryve, Co. Pembroke, 3rd son of John Perot, Knight"[7]. A daughter Elizabeth, who married Hugh Butler of Johnston, was the granddaughter of Sir Christopher Hatton, later enemy of Sir John.

Preceded by Custos Rotulorum of Pembrokeshire
bef. 1562–1592
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord Deputy of Ireland
1584–1588
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ The Mistresses of Henry VIII, Kelly Hart, p.75-77
  2. ^ Naunton, Robert, 1653. "Fragmentalia Regalia", ed Edward Arber, London, 1895.
  3. ^ Owen, Henry (2009) [1902]. Old Pembroke Families in the ancient County Palatine of Pembroke. BiblioBazaar. p. 56. ISBN 9781110914920. Retrieved 2009-09-10. Mary Berkeley was the mother of the most distinguished man of the name of Perrot, but he had little right to bear the name, for he was the son of King Henry VIII, whom he much resembled in person and character. [...] This was Sir John Perrot. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |trans_title= (help); More than one of |pages= and |page= specified (help)
  4. ^ Turvey, Roger. 2010. Sir John Perrot: The man and the Myth. Separating fact from fiction in the life of this legendary figure. The P-rr-tt Society special publication. London, England.
  5. ^ Turvey, Roger. 2005. The Treason and Trial of Sir John Perrot. University of Wales Press, Cardiff
  6. ^ Turvey, Roger. 2010. Sir John Perrot: The man and the Myth. Separating fact from fiction in the life of this legendary figure. The P-rr-tt Society special publication. London, England.
  7. ^ N.M. Nugent. Cavaliers and Pioneers : Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants 1623-1666. Vol 1, p 197.

Other sources

  • Richard Bagwell, Ireland under the Tudors 3 vols. (London, 1885–1890).
  • John O'Donovan (ed.) Annals of Ireland by the Four Masters (1851).
  • Calendar of State Papers: Carew MSS. 6 vols (London, 1867-1873).
  • Calendar of State Papers: Ireland (London)
  • Colm Lennon Sixteenth Century Ireland – The Incomplete Conquest (Dublin, 1995) ISBN 0-312-12462-7.
  • Nicholas P. Canny Making Ireland British, 1580–1650 (Oxford University Press, 2001) ISBN 0-19-820091-9.
  • Steven G. Ellis Tudor Ireland (London, 1985) ISBN 0-582-49341-2.
  • Hiram Morgan Tyrone's Rebellion (1995).
  • Cyril Falls Elizabeth's Irish Wars (1950; reprint London, 1996) ISBN 0-09-477220-7.
  • Gerard Anthony Hayes McCoy Irish Battles (Belfast, 1989) ISBN 0-86281-212-7.
  • Dictionary of National Biography 22 vols. (London, 1921–1922).
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  • The Prust Papers, at the North Devon Records Office, supplied by Hartland Digital Archive 2007

Further reading

  • A Critical Edition of Sir James Perrot's The Life, Deedes and Death of Sir John Perrott, Knight by Roger Turvey (2002)
  • The Treason and Trial of Sir John Perrot by Roger Turvey (2005)
  • The Mistresses of Henry VIII by Kelly Hart (2009)
  • Sir John Perrot, Knight of Bath, 1527-1591 by G. Douglas James (1962)
  • Sir John Perrot and the Irish Parliament of 1585-6 by V. Treadwell (1985)