( 164 y
THE LAST SAVAGES OE BOBBING.
BY G. 0. BELLEWES.
THE foUowing table shews the last three generations of the ancient
family of Savage of Bobbing:—
Sir Arnold Savage of Bobbiug.=fEleanor ,
Administration (Lambeth) 6 Aug.
1375. Inq. p.m. 1375-6 (now lost),
(See Will
No. I., infra).
Sir Arnold Savage, died^Joan, dau. of William A dau., mar- Eleanor.
29 Nov. 1410. Brass
in Bobbing Church.
EchynghamofEohyng- ried Boger
ham. (See Will No. Northwode.
II., infra.)
Sir Arnold Savage,=Katharine Scales. Inq. p.m. Elizabeth, married (1) Sir
died s.p. 25 March 1437, Thomas, Lord Scales, Reynold Cobham of Run-
1420. Brass in brother and heir. (See Will dale and Allington, who
Bobbing Churoh. No. IV., infra.) died in 1405 ; (2) William
(See Will No. III., Clifford, who died in 1438.
infra.) Inq. p.m. 1451.
The first Sir Arnold Savage here shewn sat in Parliament in
1352, and afterwards rendered various services abroad, including
negotiations with King Pedro of Castillo. His wife is described,
in the life of his son in the Dictionary of National Biographg,
as " Mary or Margery, daughter of Sir Michael de Poynings "
(cf. Sussex Archaeological Collections, vol. xv.., p. 15). It seems
clear, however, that Eleanor his widow was the .mother of his
children.
The next Sir Arnold Savage served with John of Gaunt in
Spain, hut is pf course best known to history as the "incomparably"
Speaker qf the House of Commons, to -whose,homilies Henry IV.
listened,with more than kingly patience. In 1404—6 he was one
of the King's Council. .
Sir Arnold Savage was one of the executors (1408) of John
Gower the poet. It is not clear whether the Speaker or his son
is meant. The vdeath of the latter s.p. negatives the claims of
THE LAST SAVAGES OP BOBBING. 165
various members or descendants of Savage families, including the
late Mr. Walter Savage Landor, to descent from the famous
Speaker.
Elizabeth, the eventual heiress of the Savages, is of considerable
genealogical importance. It is unfortunate that Hasted, in his
Kent, has given four inconsistent and mostly inaccurate descriptions
of her. Under Tracies (vol. ii., p. 558) and Bobbing (vol. ii.,
p. 636) he calls her Eleanor instead of Elizabeth, and says that
there was no issue of her first marriage. Under Sutton Valence
(vol. ii.; p. 412) he makes the same statements, hut notes that
" in some pedigrees she is called Elizabeth." Under Milton-next-
Gravesend (vol. i.,.p. 455) he calls her Isabel, and mentions Thomas
Cobham, her son by her first husband.
A Chancery Suit (undated, about 1452) was brought by her
grandson Alexander Clifford against Thomas Keryell, John Martyn,
and the other feoffees of the gavelkind manors of Bobbing, Holmes,
Ustede, and Kylmesle, that had belonged to "Dame Elizabeth
Cobham, late the wife of William Clyfford, esquire." He complained
that the feoffees refused to convey to him the manors held
in trust to the uses of her will, which directed feoffment to be
made to him ("Early Chancery Proceedings," B. 19, No. 142).
A like suit was afterwards brought by her younger son John
Clifford (ibid., B. 22, No. 142). The feoffees, in their answer
(No. 142b) to the latter suit, mention that a contingent remainder
in both moieties of the manors was devised to her daughters
Eleanor and Isabel.
ABSTEACTS OE WILLS.
I.
Testamentum Domine jElianore Savage, relicte Domini Arnoldi
Savage. To be buried before the high altar in the chancel of the
priory church of Walyngford. To the.works of the said church 40s.
Two aunuals for two chaplains, the one to celebrate where my lord's
body is buried and the other to celebrate for my soul and my
benefactors' souls in the chapel in the castle of Walyngford for
a whole year. To the monks of the priory 20s. among them, and
to each of them a silver goblet price 13s. id. to use at table.
To the priests of the college in the castle of Walyngford a silver
goblet, and.maser for use at table, to remain there for remembrance
166 THE LAST SAVAGES OP BOBBING.
of the souls of my lord and myself. To the chaplain of the
college 20s. To the clerks of the chapel 13s.
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