Originally descended from a Wiltshire attorney, the Wriothesley family acquired a peerage when Thomas Wriothesley† became lord chancellor in 1544. Wriothesley’s father, best known as Shakespeare’s patron, was imprisoned for his part in the Essex rising, but released on the accession of James I.
At Cambridge Wriothesley became close friends with Sir Simonds D’Ewes†.
Having been rejected by Lord Treasurer Middlesex (Sir Lionel Cranfield*) as a potential match for his daughter,
The main business of the Parliament had been to consider whether England should enter the Thirty Years’ War, and after the dissolution Wriothesley was keen to get involved in the military preparations. Refused the command of a volunteer regiment in the Low Countries because of his youth, he had to be content with a captaincy under his father.
