BRANCHES IN OTHER COUNTIES
An interesting Arden whom I have not
been able to connect with any relatives was John Arderne,
of Newark, a physician who practised with distinction
at the time of the plague, 1349, and whose medical
books were freely quoted by Johannes Argentein and
succeeding medical writers.
I have not found his arms. There
is, indeed, the seal of a John Arderne, son and heir
of Sir Adam de Arderne, of Lincolnshire, 1312, in the
British Museum, bearing a shield “Ermine,
on a bend three crosses crosslet, depending from a
tree of three small branches,” who might have
been the same person.
Richard Arderne owned a messuage in
Stanford, Lincoln, 27 Edward III., Inquis. P.M.
As late as 1501 an Edmund Arden, of St. Martin’s,
Lincoln, left a gown to his brother Thomas, a gown
to Pierce Arden, and other legacies. John Gedney
married Mary, daughter of John Arden, of Sibsey, co.
Lincoln (Visitation, 1592). In the neighbourhood
there was a noted Robert de Arderne, of co. Norfolk,
1315, whose seal bears two shields side by side in
fesse; Dext. ermine a fesse chequy Arden; Sinist.
on a fesse three garbs with cabalistic letters, explained
in Journ. Brit. Arch. Ass.,
x.
Nothing brilliant is recorded of the
Ardens of Yorkshire. Sir
de Arderne, bearing arms Arg. a lion ramp. az.
debruized by a bastón gu., appears in Planche’s
Roll of Arms of Henry III. John de Ardern, of
Yorkshire, is in the list of gentlemen of 43 Edward
III. He is mentioned also as witness for Haselden,
of Goldyngton, 41 Edward III. Thomas Arden, of
Marton, near Bridlington, 1455, and Margaret, his wife,
1458, were buried in Bridlington Priory. William
Ardern, of Belthorp, was among the gentlemen of 12
Henry VI. John Arderne, of Kelingthorpe, secured
an exemption from serving on juries, April 1, 8 Henry
VIII., at Greenwich. There are many documents
in the Record Office concerning the sale of the lands
of John Ardern, of Kelingthorpe, York; and a
receipt from Thomas Perpoint, draper, London, of L516
paid him by John Arden; also a release to Perpoint
and John Arden by Thomas Hennage of the Cardinal’s
household. To this Hennage, Arden grants the wardship
of his son Peter; and, if he should die, the wardship
of Raffe; failing whom, the wardship of John, his
third son, 1533. His wife was Margery. Sir
Raff Ellerker married Jane, daughter of John Arden,
Esq. (Visitation, Yorks, 1563). There is
also noted the Inquis. P. M., of Peter Arden,
of York, 22 Henry VIII., and William Arden’s
lease of Yaresthorpe, Yorks. The priory of nuns
at Arden, founded 1150, was suppressed in 1536.
The Ardens appeared also early
in Essex. At the Conqueror’s Survey, Earl
Eustace of Boulogne owned Horndon-on-the-Hill,
but the next owners were Ardernes, who built Ardern
Hall. In 1122 Thomas Ardern and his son Thomas
gave to the monks of Bermondsey the tithe of the corn
in their lordship of Horndon. Sir Ralph de Ardern,
of Horndon, was Sheriff of Essex, 39 and 40 Henry
III. His seal bore on a shield a fesse chequy
between two roundels. Sir Thomas de Arderne, the
son of Ralph, used “a seal, bearing two trumpets,
mouthpieces in base, between nine crosses crosslet
in fesse, three and three, in pale S. Thome de Arderne."
John Lovetot, who died in 1295, held land of him in
Horndon, by the service of one rose of yearly rent;
and John de Arderne granted lands in Rochford 33 Edward
I. The manor of Walkefares, in Clavering, Essex,
belonged to Walter Arden some time previous to 1340.
The property of Timothy Arden, Somerset, was administered
1631.
There was an Inquisition Post Mortem
of William de Arderne, of Chelesworthy Manor, Devon,
in 56 Henry III. (39). Another of Adam de Ardern,
53 Henry III. (35), owner of Colverden, Walesworth,
and Berton juxta Gloucester.
In 1 Edward VI. Inquisition Post
Mortem of William Arden, Wig, the administration of
the goods of Richard Arden, of Worcester, was granted
his wife Margaret, 1636 (Admins., 1636-38, ,
Worcester).
William Arden, parson, of Wennington,
in 1582, left small legacies to his sister-in-law,
Bridget Doulton, and all the rest to his two daughters,
Alice Arden, who married a Stevenson, and Margaret
Arden.
In the Visitation of the Cheshire
Ardens, it is stated that from Thomas, son of
Ralph and brother of John, the Leicestershire Ardens
are descended.
In the great “History of Leicestershire,”
edited by Nichols, there are a few notices of the
name, and these chiefly of the Warwickshire Ardens,
who held property in the shire. Baldwin Freville
owned certain lands at Ratcliffe held by Roger de
Ardern 1387. Sir Robert of Park Hall was Sheriff
of Warwickshire and Leicestershire 16 Henry VI.
“Thomas Ferrars holds of the
heirs of Roger Arden the third part of the feod of
Radcliffe, Leicestershire,” 37 Henry VI., Inquis.
P. M. (34).
Simon de Ardern and Hugo de Arderne
were priests 1387.
In Bedford, the earliest entry I have
found is the record of lands of Sir Thomas de Arderne,
“utlagatus pro feloniis et transgressionibus,”
Rokesden Manor and Bereford Cottage in Bedfordshire,
21 Edward III. (Inquis. P. .
William Ardern of Struton, in Oskellyswade,
co. Beds, Clerk of the Market to the King’s
household, Crest a boar quarterly, or and az., granted
by Barker. A William Ardern
wrote to Cromwell, from Hawnes, May 27, 1535, on behalf
of Mr. Franklyn, cited before my Lord of Lincoln (Letters
and Papers Henry VIII., Gairdner).
There was an Inquisition Post Mortem on the property
of Isabel Arden,
Ideot, Bedfordshire, 10 Elizabeth.
The manor of Lyesnes, in Kent, was
released to Thomas Ardern in 37 Henry VIII. There
are many notices of the Kent Ardens in Hasted’s
“History of Kent.” But perhaps public
attention was drawn most to the member of the family
who was murdered. The story is closely followed
in the “Tragedy of Arden of Feversham,”
by some attributed to Shakespeare, though with little
probability.
Burke gives many other branches;
as, for instance, Arden of Sunbury Park, Middlesex,
and Rickmansworth Park, Herts; arms: Ermine, two
barrulets compony or and azure, in chief three boars’
heads erased of the last, armed of the second, langued
gu.
Ardens of East Burnham, Bucks,
same arms. Arden of Blackden Hall, co. Chester,
Ermine, a fesse chequy or and az.; same crest as the
Park Hall arms, but with different motto.
Various Ardens drifted to London,
but there seems to have been one business family settled
there from early times. Thomas of Plumstede left
rents and a cellar, called Drynkwater Taverne,
in the parish of St. Magnus, to John Arderne, fishmonger,
September 26, 1361. John Hanhampsted left the
reversion of tenements held for life by John Arderne,
Esquire, in the parish of St. Mary Aldermanchurch,
May 4, 1424. An administration of goods of John
Arderne, of St. Sepulchre’s, was granted February
15, 1508.
In May, 1534, a pardon was granted
John Appowell for abetting John Done, a thief, who
stole a gown and a piece of cloth belonging to Thomas
Ardrenne from the house of Thomas Chief, May, 1534.
Thomas Arden, September 29, 1549,
citizen and clothworker, left all his goods to Agnes,
his wife; will proved January 27, 1549.
Robert Arden, of St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields,
vintner, and Agnes Mather of the same, were licensed
to be married at any church in the jurisdiction of
Westminster, November 27, 1568.
A Robert Arden was assistant to the
Clerk of the Accatory, 1577.
Several deliveries to him of Government
victuals are noted in State Papers, 1594-97.
I do not know whether or not he is
the Robert Arden who writes a letter to the Government
about the composition of ling and cod from the Iceland
fisheries, landed in Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, September
14, 1593, a letter interesting as showing the relative
trade of the towns at that date.
At St. Saviour’s, Southwark,
Robert Stillard and Bridget Arden were married August
21, 1618.
Among marriage licenses are those
of Richard Bromfield and Jane Arden, February 14,
1564; John Arden and Dorothy Hazard, of the city of
Westminster, June 16, 1639; Hugh Phillips, gent.,
of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, and Elizabeth
Arden, of same, November 17, 1641; Henry Arden,
of Chelmsford, Essex, gent., widower, and Mary Boosie,
of Writtle, spinster, at St. Magnus the Martyr, London,
February 22, 1664; Thomas Arden, of the city
of Westminster, Esq., to Theodosia Long, October 10,
1664; William Ardern, junior, gent., Bach., of St.
Martin’s, Ludgate, and Mrs. Margaret Smith, of
Great Wigborough, Essex, widow, to be married there,
March 21, 1665-66; John Arden, of St. James’s,
Westminster, widower, aged about fifty, and Mrs. Elizabeth
Wright, spinster, twenty-two, January 12, 1687-88.
Gabriel Josselyn, gent., of St. Michael,
Bassinghall, and Elizabeth, daughter of
Arden of same, deceased, December 1, 1587.
John Brown, of St. Olave’s,
Hart Street, London, haberdasher, and Anne Arden,
of St. Andrew’s, Holborn, widow of John
Ardern, Fletcher, February 10, 1595.
The will of Robert Arden, gent., Deptford,
was proved 1579.
An Alexander Arderne, of Deptford,
wished to be buried in the churchyard beside the hawthorn-tree;
he had a wife, Elizabeth, a brother-in-law, William
Inson, and no children, February 26, 1639. Administration
of the goods of James Arden, London, was granted his
wife Anne, 1639. Thomas le Barber,
from Peter de Arderne, held tenements in the parish
of St. Clements Danes. Alicia Arderne, who was
wife of Richard Hampton, left tenements in the parish
of St. Mary in the Strand and in the parish of St.
Clement’s Danes, 1466.
It seems wiser to group a set of records
not generally accessible to students, which, though
preserved in London, concern the Ardens of many
branches I mean a set of deeds, charters,
and conveyances preserved among the Guildhall Records
of London:
“Johanna Arden, wife
of Roger de Arden, tailor, 1295. Roll 24.
“Henry de Arderne, A.D.
1305. Roll 34 (35).
“Cecilia, wife of Henry
de Arderne, 1307. Roll 36 (26).
“Agnes, wife of William
de Arderne, 1307....
“Henry, son of William
de Arderne....
“John, son of William
de Arderne, 1337 and 1345.
“Hugh de Arderne, 1321.
Roll 50 (5); A.D. 1342. Roll 70 (2).
“Alice, wife of Hugh
de Arderne ... Johanna, wife of ...
“Giles de Arderne, 1351.
Roll 80 (29).
“John Arden, called
Mordon, Stockfishmonger, 1363.
Roll
91 (87) (93); also 1371, 1373, 1374, 1377.
“Margaret, wife of John,
called Mordon....
“Isabella, wife of Richard
Arden, and widow of John Melbourne,
co.
Surrey, 1392. Roll 121 (143).
“Alice, wife of Thomas
de Arden, Brewer, 1371. Roll 99 (83).
“... 1372. Roll
100 (54) (55), 1373, 1376; 104 (145).
“Alice, widow of Richard
de Arderne, 1403. Roll 131 (61).
“John Arden, Esq., 1413.
Roll 141 (25-36); 1421 (Roll 149).
“... 1426. Roll
154 (50); 1457, Roll 185 (32).
“Margaret, wife of John
Arden, gent., 1413 and 1421; same Rolls.
“Peter Ardern, chief
Baron of the Exchequer, 1459. Roll 188 (37).
“Thomas Arden, clerk,
1466. Roll 196 (17).
“John Arden, of Creechurch,
merchant tailor, 1625. Roll 302 (15).
“Francis Arden, son
of Richard, Cit. and Loriner,
of
London, 1646, Apprentice.”
The Royalist Composition Papers,
1644-57, mention as “Delinquents,” “Mr.
Arden,” “John,” “Robert”
is mentioned twenty-three times, “Thomas,”
“Ann,” “Elizabeth,” “Godetha,”
“Mary,” “Mrs. Arden,” “John
and Mary Arderne.” And many other allusions
could be added to the list of references to the various
members of this distinguished family.
COLONIAL ARDENS
In speaking of the Ardens of
Victoria, Burke disclaims their right to arms,
but nevertheless derives them from Humphrey Arden.
He says: “The first recorded ancestor,
Humphrey Arden, of Longcroft, co. Stafford, died
in 1705, and so far from being able to show descent
from Siward, they are unable even to prove connection
with the extinct family of Arden of Park Hall.”
Here Burke is clearly in the wrong.
If they can prove their descent from Humphrey of Longcroft,
they can through him claim descent from the Ardens
of Park Hall and from Siward, as can be seen from all
pedigrees.