Thomas Fitzwilliam
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Thomas Fitzwilliam | |
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Occupation | Speaker of the House of Commons of England |
Sir Thomas Fitzwilliam (died 4 Mar 1497) was Speaker of the House of Commons of England between 1489–1490. [1]
He was born into a Lincolnshire gentry family, the son of Thomas Fitzwilliam of Mablethorpe and educated at the Inner Temple.
He was appointed recorder of Lincoln and elected MP for Lincoln in 1459. In 1467 he was returned as MP for Plympton Earle, then a seat under the control of the Crown. In 1478 he was appointed a serjeant-at-law for the Duchy of Lancaster.
After obtaining a house in Stepney, he was elected a recorder of the City of London and supported the claim of Richard III to the English throne. He nevertheless welcomed Henry Tudor after the Battle of Bosworth and became more active in government, representing London in King Henry's first parliament. He was knighted in 1486.
In 1489, in Henry's third Parliament, he was elected Speaker of the House, electing to sit as knight of the shire for Lincolnshire.
He died in 1497 and was buried in Mablethorpe church. He had married Margaret Harrington (d. 1498),with whom he had at least three sons, John, George, and William. John predeceased him, and he was succeeded by John's son, another Thomas, who also died young in 1502. The estates then passed to Sir Thomas' second son, George.
References
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Political offices | ||
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Preceded by | Speaker of the House of Commons 1489–1490 |
Succeeded by Sir Richard Empson |
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- 1497 deaths
- People from Lincolnshire
- Members of the Parliament of England (1485–1603)
- Speakers of the House of Commons of England
- Serjeants-at-law
- People of the Tudor period
- 15th-century English people
- Parliament of England (pre-1707) MP stubs