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Anne Vavasour

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Anne Vavasour
Portrait of Anne Vavasour, attributed to John de Critz, c.1605
Bornc. 1560
Copmanthorpe,Yorkshire, England
Diedc. 1650
OccupationMaid of Honour
Known forMistress ofEdward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford,and later SirHenry Lee of Ditchley
Protagonist of Earl of Oxford's poem,Anne Vavasour's Echo
Spouses
  • John Finch
  • John Richardson
ChildrenEdward Vere (illegitimate)
Thomas Lee (illegitimate)
Parent(s)Henry Vavasour
Margaret Knyvet

Anne Vavasour(c. 1560c. 1650) was aMaid of Honour(1580–81)[1]to QueenElizabeth I of England,a member of theVavasour familyand the mistress of two aristocratic men. Her first lover wasEdward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford,by whom she had an illegitimate son – Edward. For that offence, both she and de Vere were sent to theTower of Londonby the orders of the Queen. She later became the mistress of SirHenry Lee of Ditchley,by whom she had another illegitimate son.

By 1590, she had married a sea captain by the name of John Finch. She later married John Richardson, while her first husband was still alive; and as a consequence, she was brought up before theHigh Commissionon a charge ofbigamy,for which she had to pay a fine of £2000; however, she was spared having to perform a public penance.

She was the inspiration, protagonist, and possibly the actual author, of the poem,Anne Vavasour's Echo,though her lover the Earl of Oxford is more commonly identified as its author.

Family

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Anne was born circa 1560, the daughter of Henry Vavasour of Tadcaster, Copmanthorpe,Yorkshire,and Margaret Knyvet.[2]Anne's maternal uncle was SirThomas Knyvet, 1st Baron Knyvet.It was this family connection which likely secured her a place at court as one of Queen Elizabeth's Ladies of the Bedchamber.[3]Her younger sister, Frances (1568 – c.1606), was also at court as aMaid of Honourto the Queen (1590–91), and in 1591 secretly married SirThomas Shirley.[4]Her younger brother,Thomas,also made a career at court and became embroiled in her scandals, at one point challenging the Earl of Oxford to a duel (which does not appear to have taken place).[5]

Earl of Oxford's mistress

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Shortly after her arrival at court, she became the mistress ofEdward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford,[2]who was married toAnne Cecil,the daughter ofWilliam Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley,the Queen's most trusted advisor. Oxford had separated from his wife in 1576.

On 23 March 1581, Anne gave birth to Oxford's illegitimate son, Edward,[4][6]which resulted in their imprisonment in the Tower of London by the command of Queen Elizabeth.[2]Oxford was released several months later, but was banished from court until June 1583. He had reconciled with his wife, Anne Cecil in January 1582.

Their love affair also led to open skirmishes andduelsin the streets of London, between Oxford and Anne's uncle, Thomas Knyvet, which on one occasion led to the wounding of both men, and the death of one of Oxford's men.

Though her child, baptised Edward Vere, would survive to manhood, Oxford took no responsibility for his upbringing or education though did settle lands on him and gave £2000 to Anne. The boy was raised by Anne. In later years her son became a protégé of Oxford's cousin,Sir Francis Vere.

Bigamy

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Sometime before 1590, Anne married a sea captain by the name of John Finch.[6]Around this time, she took another lover,Sir Henry Lee,Master of the Royal Armouries, by whom she had another illegitimate son, Thomas.[4]They lived openly together at his manor ofDitchley.[2]The Queen apparently approved of their liaison, as the couple entertained her at Ditchley House in September 1592.[7]In 1605, Lee pensioned off Finch, and left Anne an income of £700 per year in his will, some property, and instructions for their joint burial in the tomb he had had erected for them inQuarrendon,Buckinghamshire. He had written an epitaph for the tomb which described her as having been: "a fair and worthy Dame".[3]

Anne of Denmarkvisited Lee at a lodge near Ditchley known as the "Little Rest" and talked to Anne Vavasour on 15 September 1608.[8]A few days later the queen sent her a jewel worth more than £100, which pleased Lee to see "his sweet-heart so graced".[9][10]They remained together until his death in 1611.[6]Anne outlived Sir Henry, but was forced to engage in a series of legal battles with Sir Henry's son over the property he had left her.

By 1618, she had married a second time to John Richardson. At this point John Finch reappeared and she was brought up before the High Commission on 8 August 1618 and charged with bigamy.[6]On 1 February 1622, she was ordered to pay a fine of £2000, however she was spared the ordeal of performing apublic penance.[2]

She died in about 1650 at the advanced age of 90, and was buried atQuarrendon,nearAylesbury,in a chapel of which only a remnant of the outer wall now remains. Sir Henry's monument showed him lying down in armour with an effigy of Anne kneeling at his feet.[7]

Poems

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Two poems,Though I seem strange sweet friendandAnne Vavasour's Echo,appear in collections of the work of the Earl of Oxford, Edward de Vere, but have been attributed to Vavasour in some manuscripts.[3][6]

Anne Vavasour's Echois written as if spoken by her as a series of questions. The last word of each line she says is echoed as the answer: e.g. "'who was the first that bred me to this fever?' echo: 'vere'".[11]

References

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  1. ^"Life in Elizabethan England 81: Ladies of Honour".Elizabethan.org. 8 March 2010.Retrieved10 June2012.
  2. ^abcdeMay, Steven W. (2004)."Vavasour, Anne (fl. 1580–1621)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography(online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/68083.Retrieved12 July2014.(Subscription orUK public library membershiprequired.)
  3. ^abcSusan Dwyer Amussen; Adele F. Seeff (1 January 1998).Attending to Early Modern Women.University of Delaware Press. pp. 40–43.ISBN978-0-87413-650-0.
  4. ^abcEmerson, Kathy Lynn."A Who's Who of Tudor Women: U-V".Archived fromthe originalon 15 August 2014.Retrieved12 July2014.
  5. ^Bindoff, S. T. (1981)."VAVASOUR, Thomas (1560–1620), of Skellingthorpe, Lincs. and Ham, Surr.".In Hasler, P.W. (ed.).The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558–1603.TSO.ISBN9780118875011.
  6. ^abcdeLorna Sage; Germaine Greer; Elaine Showalter (30 September 1999).The Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English.Cambridge University Press. p.643.ISBN978-0-521-66813-2.
  7. ^ab"Armourers' Hall".The Worshipful Company of Armourers & Brasiers.Retrieved12 July2014.
  8. ^Sue Simpson,Sir Henry Lee: Elizabethan Courtier(Routledge, 2016), p. 177.
  9. ^John Nichols,Progresses of James the First,vol. 2 (London, 1828), pp. 209-10.
  10. ^Norman Egbert McClure,Letters of John Chamberlain,vol. 1 (Philadelphia, 1939), p. 263.
  11. ^Ilona Bell(1998).Elizabethan Women and the Poetry of Courtship.Cambridge University Press. p.78.ISBN978-0-521-63007-8.