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Sir John Arundell (1474–1545) Knight Banneret, of Lanherne, St. Mawgan-in-Pyder, Cornwall, was Receiver-General of the Duchy of Cornwall. [1] Called "the most important man in the county", Sir John's monumental brass in the church at St. Columb Major in Cornwall was described by Dunkin (1882) as "perhaps the most elaborate and interesting ...
Sir John Arundell (circa 1366 – 11 January 1435), called The Magnificent, of Lanherne in the parish of St Mawgan in Pydar in Cornwall, was an English knight who inherited large estates in the County of Cornwall. He was Sheriff of Cornwall and was one of Henry IV of England’s Kings Knights.
Sir John Arundell (admiral) (1495–1561), Vice-admiral of the West; Sir John Arundell (of Trerice, died 1580), his son, Cornish MP; Sir John Arundell (born 1576) (1576–c. 1656), his son, Cornish MP and Governor of Pendennis Castle during the English Civil Wars; John Arundell (Royalist) (1613–1644), son of the above, MP for Bodmin
Sir John Arundell (c. 1500 – 1557), was MP for Cornwall in 1554. [1] He was also Sheriff of Cornwall in 1541–42 and 1554.. He was the eldest son of John Arundell (1474–1545), who was termed "the most important man in the county", and his first wife, Lady Eleanor Grey, daughter of Thomas Grey, 1st Marquis of Dorset and Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington.
They seem to have separated from the main stem of Lanherne at an earlier date than the Arundells of Trerice, and to have settled at Tolverne in the reign of Edward I, in consequence of Sir John Arundell of Trembleath (son of Sir Ralph Arundell of Lanherne, who was sheriff of Cornwall in 1260) marrying Joan le Soor of Tolverne.
Arms of Arundell of Lanherne, Cornwall: Sable, six martlets argent. John Arundell (by 1527 – 17 November 1590), of Lanherne , St. Mawgan-in-Pyder , Cornwall, was an English politician. He was a noted recusant , and a close associate of the Catholic martyr St. Cuthbert Mayne .
He was born in Bideford in Devon in about 1421, the son and heir of Sir John Arundell (1392–1423) of Lanherne by his wife Margaret Burghersh, widow of Sir John Grenville, lord of the manor of Bideford, and a daughter of Sir John Burghersh. [1] The Arundell family was long established at Lanherne. [2]
Mary Arundell's father, Sir John Arundell (d. 1545), was the son and heir of Sir Thomas Arundell (c. 1452–1485) (who after the defeat of King Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth (1485) supported Henry Tudor's claim to the throne) by his wife Katherine Dynham, one of the four sisters and coheirs of John Dynham, 1st Baron Dynham (c.1433 ...