THE LOCALITIES OF EARLY SHAKESPEARES
We find the name occurs in widely
scattered localities from very early times. Perhaps
a resembling name ought to be noted “in the hamlet
of Pruslbury, Gloucestershire, where there were
four tenants. This was at one time an escheat
of the King, who gave it to his valet, Simon Shakespeye,
who afterwards gave it to Constantia de Legh, who gave
it to William Solar, the defendant.” If
this represents a 1260 “Shakespere,” as
there is every reason to believe it does, this is the
earliest record of the name yet found. This belief
is strengthened by the discovery that a Simon Sakesper
was in the service of the Crown in 1278, as herderer
of the Forest of Essex, in the Hundred of Wauthorn,
7 Edward I. Between these two dates Mr. J. W. Rylands
has found a Geoffrey Shakespeare on the jury in the
Hundred of Brixton, co. Surrey, in 1268.
The next I have noted occurs in
Kent in the thirteenth century, where a John Shakespeare
appears in a judicial case, 1278-79, at Freyndon.
The fifth notice is in the north.
The Hospital of St. Nicholas, Carlisle, had from its
foundation been endowed with a thrave of corn from
every ploughland in Cumberland. These were withheld
by the landowners in the reign of Edward III., for
some reason, and an inquiry was instituted in 1357.
The jury decided that the corn was due. It had
been withheld for eight years by various persons, among
whom was “Henry Shakespere, of the Parish of
Kirkland,” east of Penrith. This gives,
therefore, really an entry of this Shakespere’s
existence at that place as early as 1349, and an examination
of Court Records may prove an earlier settlement of
the family.
There was a transfer of lands in Penrith
described as “next the land of Allan Shakespeare,”
and amongst the witnesses was William Shakespeare,
April, 21 Richard II., 1398.
In the “Records of the Borough
of Nottingham," we find a John Shakespere plaintiff
against Richard de Cotgrave, spicer, for deceit in
sale of dye-wood on November 8, 31 Edward III. (1357);
Richard, the servant of Robert le Spondon, plaintiff
against John Shakespere for assault. John proves
himself in the right, and receives damages, October
21, 1360.
The first appearance yet found of
the name in Warwickshire is in 1359, when Thomas Sheppey
and Henry Dilcock, Bailiffs of Coventry, account for
the property of Thomas Shakespere, felon, who had
left his goods and fled.
Halliwell-Phillipps notes as his
earliest entry of the name a Thomas Shakespere, of
Youghal, 49 Edward III. (1375). A writer in Notes
and Queries gives a date two years later when
“Thomas Shakespere and Richard Portingale”
were appointed Comptrollers of the Customs in Youghal,
51 Edward III. (1377). This would imply that he
was a highly trustworthy man. Yet, by some turn
of fortune’s wheel, he may have been the same
man as the felon.
In Controlment Rolls, 2 Richard II.
(June, 1377, to June, 1379), there is an entry of
“Walter Shakespere, formerly in gaol in Colchester
Castle." John Shakespeare was imprisoned in Colchester
gaol as a perturbator of the King’s peace, March
3rd, 4 Richard II., 1381. At Pontefract, Robert
Schaksper, Couper, and Emma his wife are mentioned
as paying poll-tax, 2 Rich. II.
The Rev. Mr. Norris, working from
original documents, notes that on November 24 (13
Richard II.), 1389, Adam Shakespere, who is described
as son and heir of Adam of Oldediche, held lands within
the manor of Baddesley Clinton by military service,
and probably had only just then obtained them.
Oldediche, or Woldich, now commonly called Old Ditch
Lane, lies within the parish of Temple Balsall, not
far from the manor of Baddesley.
This closes the notices of the family
that I have collected during the fourteenth century.
The above-noted Adam Shakespere, the younger, died
in 1414, leaving a widow, Alice, and a son and heir,
John, then under age, who held lands until 20 Henry
VI., 1441. It is not clear who succeeded him,
but probably two brothers, Ralph and Richard, who held
lands in Baddesley, called Great Chedwyns, adjoining
Wroxall. Mr. Norris says that no further mention
of the name appears in Baddesley, but one notice of
the property is given later. Ralph and Joanna,
his wife, had two daughters Elizabeth,
married to Robert Huddespit, and Isolda, married to
Robert Kakley. Elizabeth Huddespit, a widow, in
1506 held the lands which Adam Shakespeare held in
1389.
The family of Shakespeare appears
in the “Register of the Guild of Knowle,"
a semi-religious society to which the best in the county
belonged:
1457. Pro anima Ricardi Shakespere
et Alicia uxor
ejus de Woldiche.
1464. Johanna Shakespere.
Radulphus Shakespere et Isabella uxor
ejus et
pro anima Johannae uxoris primae.
Ricardus Schakespeire de Wroxhale et Margeria
uxor ejus.
1476. Thomas Chacsper et Christian
cons. sue de
Rowneton.
Johannis Shakespeyre de Rowington et Alicia
uxor ejus.
1486. 1 Hen. VII. Thomae
Schakspere, p aiaei.
Thomas Shakspere et Alicia uxor ejus
de
Balsale.
Mr. Yeatman has studied the Court
Rolls of this period. It is to be wished he had
published his book in two volumes, one of facts and
one of opinions. He says that the earliest record
of the Court Rolls of Wroxall is one dated 5 Henry
V. (1418). It is a grant by one Elizabeth Shakspere
to John Lone and William Prins of a messuage with
three crofts. (The same Rolls tell us that in 22 Henry
VIII. Alice Love surrendered to William Shakespeare
and Agnes his wife a property apparently the same.)
In 1485 John Hill, John Shakespeare
and others, were enfeoffed in land called “Harveys”
in Rowington, and John appears as witness in 1492 and
1496.
There were Shakesperes at Coventry
and Meriden in the fifteenth century. John Dwale,
merchant of Coventry, left legacies by will to Annes
Lane and to Richard Shakespere, March 15, 1499.
Among the “foreign fines”
of the borough of Nottingham, Robert Shakespeyr
paid eightpence for license to buy and sell in the
borough in 1414-15. The same Robert complains
of John Fawkenor for non-payment of the price of wood
for making arrows. And French tells us there
was a Thomas Shakespere, a man at arms, going to Ireland
on August 27, 18 Edward IV., 1479, with Lord Grey
against the king’s enemies.
John Shakespere, a chapman in Doncaster,
paid on each order 12d. Among the York wills,
John Shakespere of Doncaster mentions his wife, Joan,
1458. In the same year Sir Thomas Chaworth leaves
Margery Shakesper six marks for her marriage.
In 1448, William Shakspere, labourer,
and Agnes, his wife, were legatees under the will
of Alice Langham, of Snailswell, Suffolk.
A family also belonged to London.
Mr. Gollancz told me of a certain “William Schakesper”
who was “to be buried within the Hospital of
St. John of Jerusalem, in England,” in 1413.
On reference to the original, I found there was no
allusion to profession, locality or family. He
left to an unnamed father and mother twenty shillings
each, and six shillings and eightpence to the hospital.
The residue to William Byrdsale and John Barbor, to
dispose of for the good of his soul; proved August
3, 1413. There was also a Peter Shakespeare who
witnessed the deed of transfer of the “Hospicium
Vocatum le Greyhounde, Shoe Alley, Bankside,
Southwark, February 16, 1483."