Edmund Plowden

Sir Edmund Plowden (1518 – 6 February 1585) was a distinguished English lawyer, legal scholar and theorist during the late Tudor period.

Edmund Plowden
Born1518 
Died1585  (aged 66–67)
Spouse(s)Katherine Sheldon 
ChildrenFrancis Plowden 
Parent(s)
  • Humphrey Plowden 
  • Elizabeth Sturry 
Position heldMember of the October 1553 Parliament, Member of the 1554-55 Parliament, Member of the 1555 Parliament 

Early life

Plowden was born at Plowden Hall, Lydbury North, Shropshire. He was the son of Humphrey Plowden (1490–1557), by his wife, Elizabeth Sturry (died 1559), widow of William Wollascot, and daughter of John Sturry, Esq., of Rossall, Shropshire.[1] Educated at the University of Cambridge, he did not take a degree, and proceeded to the Middle Temple in 1538 to study law. Subsequent to studies at Oxford, he qualified as a surgeon and physician in 1552.[2]

Upon the accession of the Catholic Queen Mary, Plowden was appointed one of the Council of the Marches (of Wales). In 1553, he was elected Member of Parliament for Wallingford (then in Berkshire now in Oxfordshire), followed, in the next two years, by the same office for both Reading, Berkshire and then Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire. He lived mostly at Shiplake Court in Oxfordshire and Wokefield Park in Berkshire. The unusual breadth of his religious views were shown early in his career when he, however, withdrew from the House, on 12 January 1555, because he disapproved of the proceedings there.

Recusant under Elizabeth

His Roman Catholicism prevented Plowden from further promotion under Queen Elizabeth I, and he received increasing suspicion from members of the Privy Council. At the beginning of the reign he undertook the management of the Shropshire lands of Sir Francis Englefield, an important Catholic courtier under Mary who went into exile.[3] In 1567 he, with Edward Saunders, became joint guardian of Englefield's nephew and heir, Francis, through influence with the Earl of Pembroke.[4]

At one time, it is said, the queen wished to elevate Plowden to the Lord Chancellorship. Plowden declined, deprecating religious persecution. The occasion, according to the History of Parliament, could only have been the vacancy of 1578.[4] Plowden continued in the Queen's employ in his capacity as a lawyer.

He sought to assist those of his faith, including his defence of Robert Horne, Bishop of Winchester. In 1565 he defended Edmund Bonner, with William Lovelace and Christopher Wray.[5]

Death

Plowden died on 6 February 1585 in London and was entombed in the Temple Church.

"The case is altered"

"The case is altered" was a proverbial expression in the 17th century,[6] as well as the title of a 1609 play by Ben Jonson. As "the case is alter'd, quoth Plowden", it is attached to anecdotes. In one of them, while defending a gentleman charged with hearing Mass, Plowden worked out that the service had been performed by a layman for the sole purpose of informing against those present, and exclaimed, "The case is altered; no priest, no Mass", and thus secured an acquittal.[7]

Works

Plowden is noted today for his legal scholarship and theory, in his written works:

A Treatise on Succession attempted to prove that Mary, Queen of Scots, was not debarred from the English throne under Henry VIII's will.

Family

Plowden married Catherine Sheldon of Beoley, daughter of the Worcestershire Member of Parliament William Sheldon;[4] they had three sons and two daughters (Anne and Mary). Anne was the wife of Francis Perkins of Ufton, Berkshire, and Mary was the wife of Richard White of Hutton, Essex. Mary was also the mother of Thomas White.[12]

Plowden's sister Margaret inherited the Rossall estates and married Richard Sandford of Eglington. Plowden helped John Cole, husband of Alice Sandford, daughter of Richard, to gain the seat of Bishop's Castle in 1584.[13]

References

  1. See Tresswell & Vincent, Vis. of Shropshire 1623, 1569 & 1584, 2 (H.S.P. 29) (1889): 448–449 (Stury ped.).
  2. "Plowden, Edward (PLWN552E)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. Alan Coates (1999). English Medieval Books: The Reading Abbey Collections from Foundation to Dispersal. Oxford University Press. pp. 128–9. ISBN 978-0-19-820756-6.
  4. Plowden, Edmund (1519/20-85), of the Middle Temple, London; Plowden, Salop; Shiplake, Oxon. and Burghfield, Berks.
  5. Jones, N. G. "Wray, Sir Christopher". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. Bartlett Jere Whiting (1977). Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases. Harvard University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-674-21981-6.
  7. John Ray (1813). A compleat collection of English proverbs. To which is added, A collection of English words not generally used. [2 pt. Interleaved, with MS. additions by F. Douce]. p. 179.
  8. Ibbetson, David. "Ashe, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/752. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  9. Brooks, Christopher W. "Fleetwood, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/9690. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  10. Richard Dutton; Alison Gail Findlay; Richard Wilson (2003). Region, Religion and Patronage: Lancastrian Shakespeare. Manchester University Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-7190-6369-5.
  11. A. N. McLaren (1999). Political Culture in the Reign of Elizabeth I. Cambridge University Press. pp. 100–1. ISBN 978-1-139-42634-3.
  12. Humphry William Woolrych (1869). Eminent Serjeants-at-law of the English Bar. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-58477-217-0.
  13. historyofparliamentonline.org, Cole, John (d.1611), of Cole Hall, Shrewsbury, Salop.
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