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Sir Edward Devereux, 1st Baronet of Castle Bromwich : ウィキペディア英語版
Sir Edward Devereux, 1st Baronet of Castle Bromwich

Sir Edward Devereux (c1544-1622) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons, and was an English Baronet.
==Career==

Edward Devereux〔Collectanea Topographica & Genealogica, Volume VIII. (London: John Bowyer Nichols and Son, 1843). 299-303〕 was born about 1544, and was the son of Walter Devereux, 1st Viscount Hereford by his second wife, Margaret, daughter of Robert Garneys of Kenton in Suffolk. His father established him at Castle Bromwich upon his marriage to Catherine Arden of Park Hall.〔L F Salzman (editor). A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 4, Hemlingford Hundred. (London, 1947). Parishes: Castle Bromwich, in pp. 43-47 () (accessed 3 July 2015).〕 He inherited little property on the death of his father, but purchased in 1572 from his half-nephew Essex the reversion of the Warwickshire manor of Castle Bromwich, which formed part of the jointure of his mother, Margaret, dowager viscountess of Hereford. Sir Edward built or rebuilt Castle Bromwich Hall in 1599.〔〔Lords of the Manor of Castle Bromwich
()(accessed 4 July 2015)〕
He was the Member of Parliament for Tamworth from 1588 to 1589.〔
He served as Sheriff of Warwickshire from 1593 to 1594.〔
Following the execution of his great-nephew the 2nd earl of Essex for treason, Edward Devereux and several relatives were reported to Sir Robert Cecil for holding a clandestine meeting at Wolverhampton. No charges were ever brought regarding this.
Edward Devereux had acquired considerable wealth during his lifetime. For a payment of £1000 to support efforts to suppress a rebellion in Ireland,〔 James I created him Baronet of Castle Bromwich on 25 November 1611 (10 Jac 1).〔Sir Egerton Brydges. Collins Peerage of England. (London: 1812). Volume VI; Devereux, Viscount Hereford, pages 1 to 22〕 He was knighted the following year. When his son and heir, Walter Devereux, married his second wife probably in January 1615, Edward settled on him the Herefordshire manor of Stoke Lacy.
Following Edward’s death, Walter engaged in a bitter quarrel over his inheritance with his mother, Catherine. The source of their dispute was an agreement made in 1601. As a widow Catherine was to retain possession of Castle Bromwich during her lifetime. In return, she was to pay her son an annual rent of £40; allow him to occupy a designated suite of rooms in the manor house if he wished; and grant him the right to receive the profits of timber on the estate. These arrangements, which had seemed acceptable when they were made, were now regarded by Walter Devereux as distinctly unattractive. Lady Catherine had already been well provided for, both by her husband, Edward, and the 1st Viscount Hereford; between them they had granted her a jointure estate worth £400 p.a. Her lease of Castle Bromwich gave her an additional £120 a year in clear profit. All told, Walter complained, Catherine’s landed income was now of a greater yearly value than the lands and tenements he had as heir of his father. Catherine responded to these complaints in February 1623 by accusing her son in Chancery of making Castle Bromwich the subject of secret conveyances, and of refusing to allow her half the interest on loans made by Sir Edward during his lifetime. As Sir Edward had £21,000 out on loan at his death, the sum involved was substantial. Unfortunately for Walter Devereux, the 1601 lease was valid in law, and consequently Catherine retained Castle Bromwich and most of its contents until her death in 1627.

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