The borough of Shaftesbury, granted to William Herbert I, 1st Earl of Pembroke, in 1553, was governed by a mayor and council of burgesses. It did not receive a charter of incorporation until the early seventeenth century.
Sir John Zouche (1559), warden of the nearby forest of Gillingham, was a close friend and neighbour of the 1st Earl of Pembroke. He was also a relative of his fellow 1559 MP, Henry Coker, regarder of Gillingham forest, who held considerable Dorset estates. Henry Iden (1563), who lived in Islington where Pembroke had property, was acquainted with several of the Earl’s servants. William Jordyn I was the Earl’s secretary.
The second Earl succeeded to the title in 1570. John Long (1571) had been steward to the 1st Earl, and came from a well-connected Wiltshire family. Thomas Morgan I was a soldier and a protégé of the 1st Earl. Both the 1572 MPs had been retained in the family service: Charles Vaughan had been the late Earl’s treasurer and Robert Grove his comptroller. Their names were entered on a ‘blank’.
