People: Moseley, Katherine


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Surname

Moseley (Mosteley)

Forename

Katherine

Sex

Female

Parish

Warrington

Marital Status

Married

Spouse Name

John Moseley

Causes

EDC 5/1566/9  – defendant
EDC 5/1566/10  – defendant

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People: Smith, Ellen


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Surname

Smith

Forename

Ellen or Helen

Sex

Female

Parish

Prescot

Marital Status

Unmarried

Remarks

Ellen Smith was the daughter of Henry Smith. She was described as ‘pretie’ (CALS EDAC 2/8 f. 1v.)

Causes

EDC 5/1566/9 – plaintiff

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People: Rishton, Roger


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Surname

Rishton

Forename

Roger

Sex

Male

Parish

Whalley

Marital Status

Married

Spouse Name

Helen Rishton or Livesey

Occupation Status

Gentleman

Causes

EDC 5/17/4 – defendant

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People: Holden, Ralph


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Surname

Holden

Forename

Ralph

Sex

Male

Parish

Whalley

Marital Status

Married

Spouse Name

Isabelle Holden

Occupation Status

Gentleman

Causes

EDC 5/17/4 – husband of plaintiff

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People: Holden, Isabelle


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Surname

Holden

Forename

Isabelle

Sex

Female

Parish

Whalley

Marital Status

Married

Spouse Name

Ralph Holden

Occupation Status

Gentlewoman

Causes

EDC 5/17/4 – plaintiff

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Officials: Hanson, John


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JOHN HANSON

Archdeacon of Richmond and official principal of the Chester consistory court 1555-1556 during a sede vacante period.

JOHN HANSON (HANSOM/HAMPSON), d. by 1588

Qualifications: Master of Arts (Oxford) by 1556

CCEd person ID 36769

Career: fellow of Magdalen, Oxford, from 1538 to 1547; held a number of ecclesiastical offices, including archdeacon of Richmond from 1554 to 1559 (deprived); vicar of Bowdon, Cheshire, from 1556 to 1561 (deprived); vicar of Rochdale, Lancashire, from 1557 to 1561. Deputy to George Wilmesley, the diocesan chancellor, from 1554; later official principal of the Chester consistory court as commissary of the archbishop of York during the sede vacante period following the death of George Cotes late in 1555 and the appointment of Cuthbert Scott the following year. Chaplain to Scott.

Further notes: fled overseas shortly after the accession of Elizabeth I and died in exile.

Sources:

F.R. Raines, The Vicars of Rochdale, vol. i, ed. Henry H. Howarth (Chetham Society, new series, 1, 1883)

J. B. Wainewright, ‘Archdeacons Deprived under Queen Elizabeth’, Ampleforth Journal, 17:1 (1911), p. 41

Joyce M Horn, David M Smith, Patrick Mussett, ‘Archdeacons: Richmond’, in Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857: Volume 11, Carlisle, Chester, Durham, Manchester, Ripon, and Sodor and Man Dioceses( London, 2004), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/fasti-ecclesiae/1541-1847/vol11/pp47-49 [accessed 14 January 2025]

 

 

 

Places: Duckworth


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Place Type

Settlement

County

Lancashire

Parish

Whalley

Deanery

Blackburn

Causes

EDC 5/17/4 – Isabelle Holden, wife of Ralph Holden, esquire, of Duckworth contra Roger Rishton

DUCKWORTH

Duckworth was part of the township of Oswaldtwistle  in the hundred of Blackburn and the parish of Whalley.

Places: Church


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Place Type

Chapelry

County

Lancashire

Parish

Whalley

Deanery

Blackburn

Causes

EDC 5/17/4 – Isabelle Holden, wife of Ralph Holden, esquire, of Duckworth contra Roger Rishton

CHURCH

There was a chapel of ease for the parish of Whalley in the township of Church or Church-Kirk. In the cause reference EDC 5/17/4 dating from 1556 it is referred to as a parish, although it was still a chapelry at that time.

Officials: Wilmesley, George


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GEORGE WILMESLEY

First chancellor of the diocese of Chester.

GEORGE WILMESLEY (WILMSLEY, WILMYSLEY, WILMSLOW), c. 1502-1561

Chancellor of the diocese of Chester (being both official principal and vicar-general); commissary general; registrar

Qualifications: Bachelor of Civil Law 1526-28; Bachelor of Canon Law 1528 (Oxford)

Career: university lawyer at Oxford 1527-1535 then held a number of ecclesiastical preferments including (probably) prebendary of Beckingham (Southwell) following his father’s death in about 1536; vicar-general to the bishop of Rochester 1535-1539? According to Christopher Haigh he was probably not beneficed while Chancellor of the diocese of Chester.

Further notes: Illegitimate son of George Savage, rector of Davenham; his grandmother was Katherine, sister of the first earl of Derby. One of his half-brothers, also illegitimate, was Edmund Bonner, bishop of London.

It was possibly while he was vicar-general to John Hilsey, bishop of Rochester, that Wilmesley met John Bird, Hilsey’s chaplain, and subsequently his patron as bishop of Chester.

Sources:

Christopher Haigh, ‘A Mid-Tudor Ecclesiastical Official: the Curious Career of George Wilmesley’, Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, 122 (1970), pp. 1-24

Rev. G. J. Piccope (ed.), Lancashire and Cheshire Wills and Inventories from the Ecclesiastical Court, Chester, Chetham Society, old series, 33 (1857), pp. 115-124

Places: Manchester


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Place Type

Parish

County

Lancashire

Parish

Manchester

Deanery

Manchester

Causes

EDC 5/11/2 – Sir Robert Worsley
EDC 5/9/1 – Francis Buckley contra Elizabeth Traves
EDC 5/1580/11 – Jane Chetam, wife of Henry Chetam, contra Richard Hall, clerk. Richard Hall was one of the Fellows of Manchester Collegiate Church.
EDC 5/1580/12 – Ralph Shalcrosse contra Robert Ridinges

MANCHESTER

The parish of Manchester covered a wide area and comprised numerous townships, including Manchester and Salford. The township of Manchester occupied a significant strategic position at the crossing of two important roads and the confluence of the river Irwell and two of its tributaries. It was the site of an important Roman castle at the confluence of the Irwell and the Medlock, and this area is still known as Castlefield. By 1536 it was said to be the most populous town in Lancashire.

A church in Manchester dedicated to St Mary is mentioned in the Domesday Book, the patronage belonged to the owners of the manor, latterly the family of le Warre. The oldest parts of the building date from about 1422 to 1500, although some parts may be older. It was substantially restored and rebuilt on several occasions in the nineteenth century and also in the twentieth century following extensive bomb damage during the Second World War, although much of the early woodwork and fittings such as the choir stalls survived intact.

In 1421 a college was established there by the le Warre family, and many of its buildings still survive, some now occupied by Chetham’s library and school. In the sixteenth century, the position of the college was uncertain as it was dissolved under Edward VI, refounded by Mary, dissolved again early in Elizabeth’s reign but then refounded again by her in 1578. Following the Marian foundation the Crown assumed patronage of the parish.

William Chaderton, bishop of Chester from November 1579, moved his establishment to Manchester after his appointment as warden of Manchester College in June 1580. From this base as a member of the Ecclesiastical Commission he worked to suppress Catholicism in the diocese and in an effort to encourage conformity imprisoned many recusants, including a number of gentry, in the New Fleet prison newly-constructed in Manchester on the banks of the river Irwell. In about 1593 he returned to Chester but continued to hold the wardenship of Manchester College with the see of Chester until 1595. The controversial mathematician, astrologer and alchemist, John Dee, succeeded him as warden of the college in 1595.

The cloth industry developed from the fourteenth century with the production of ‘Manchester cottons’, woollen cloth made from unprepared fleeces. The textile industry continued to develop over the centuries, with the production of linen being added to that of woollen goods. By the middle of the eighteenth century the production of cotton cloth developed, both for consumption at home and overseas and increasing mechanisation of the cloth industry from that time made the area increasingly important as a centre of production. Other industries also developed such as iron foundries, engineering factories and paper mills. The trading and commercial growth of the town of Manchester was facilitated by the construction of canals, such as the Bridgewater canal linking the town to the port of Liverpool, and railways such as the Manchester to Liverpool line which opened in 1830.

As the town grew with the industrialisation of the area a diocese was established in 1847, and the parish church became the cathedral.

Sources:

Christopher Haigh, ‘Chaderton, William (d. 1608)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online edition) https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/5011

‘The city and parish of Manchester: Introduction ‘, in A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 4, ed. William Farrer, J Brownbill( London, 1911), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol4/pp174-187 [accessed 6 January 2025]

‘Manchester: The parish and advowson’, in A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 4, ed. William Farrer, J Brownbill( London, 1911), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol4/pp192-204 [accessed 6 January 2025]

‘Colleges: Manchester’, in A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 2, ed. William Farrer, J Brownbill( London, 1908), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lancs/vol2/p167 [accessed 6 January 2025]

‘Malpas – Manchester’, in A Topographical Dictionary of England, ed. Samuel Lewis( London, 1848), British History Online https://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/england/pp221-247 [accessed 6 January 2025]

Historic England
Cathedral Church of St Mary, Fennell Street (1218041)
https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1218041  National Heritage List for England

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