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Humphrey Radcliffe
English landowner and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Humphrey Radcliffe (died 30 August 1566) was an English landowner and Member of Parliament.
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Biography

He was a son of Robert Radcliffe, 1st Earl of Sussex and Elizabeth, a daughter of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.[citation needed]
Radcliffe was a Member of Parliament for Bedfordshire and for Maldon in 1558 jointly with Roger Appleton.[1]
Radcliffe, as Lieutenant of the Gentlemen Pensioners, is said to have spoken in favour of the Protestant writer Edward Underhill shortly before the wedding of Mary I of England and Philip II of Spain, and so Underhill was allowed to serve at the feast at Wolvesey Castle.[2]
Radcliffe obtained the manor of Elstow in Bedfordshire, a former convent, from his wife's family, it had been granted to her father at the dissolution of the monasteries. He died on 30 August 1566.[3] There is a monument at Elstow, set over the altar.[4]
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Marriage and children
Humphrey Radcliffe married Isabel or Elizabeth Harvey (died 1594), daughter and heir of Edmund Harvey of Elstow. There is a somewhat fictionalised 19th-century account of their meeting at a tournament.[5] Their children included:
- Thomas Radcliffe (died 1586)
- Edward Radcliffe (died 1643), who became Earl of Sussex in 1629.
- Mary Radcliffe (died 1617), a lady of the Privy Chamber of Elizabeth I and keeper of her jewels. Humphrey Radcliffe "presented" her to Elizabeth on 1 January 1561 as if she were a New Year's Day gift.[6]
- Elizabeth Radcliffe, who married Henry Owen of Wotton, Surrey, a descendent of Owen Tudor.[7]
- Martha Radcliffe, who married William Gostwick of Willington.
- Frances Radcliffe, who married Henry Cheke (died 1586), Secretary to the Council of the North.
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References
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