Anglesey

The Bulkeleys of Beaumaris achieved pre-eminence in Anglesey during this period. However, their increasing domination of county affairs was resented by the longer-established and related landowning families, the Owens of Bodeon and Brondeg, and the Meredydds of Bodowyr. At the beginning of the reign they were powerful enough to obtain two of the county seats (Meredydd in 1559, when his uncle, Lewis Owen ap Meurig was sheriff, and Owen himself in 1572).

Cinque Ports

The Cinque Ports formed a separate group of constituencies whose Members were known as ’barons’ of the Cinque Ports. The Ports had their own assembly, the brodull. The lord warden of the Cinque Ports, whose administrative headquarters was at Dover castle, was a royal official with interests for the most part opposed to those of the Ports themselves.

Yorkshire

Yorkshire in Elizabethan times had one resounding election contest, in 1597. For the rest, the sources are silent and we are left to speculate whether peace prevailed on all other occasions. Perhaps it did. Geographically the county was very large, and to get freeholders from distant areas to the county court at York by 8 a.m. must have presented great problems. And yet, once a candidate had committed his social prestige to the trial of a contested election, he was compelled to recruit every voter he could.

Worcestershire

With the single exception of Sir Thomas Leighton in 1601, the Members for Worcestershire during this period were drawn from the leading county families. The Russell family of Strensham provided three Members: Sir Thomas Russell (1559, 1571), his son John Russell II (1584, 1586, 1589) and his grandson Thomas Russell (1601). Both Ralph Sheldon of Beoley (1563) and William Lygon of Madresfield (1589) were related to the Russells by marriage. Thomas Blount of Kidderminster (1559, 1563) came from an old-established county family.

Wiltshire

In Elizabethan Wiltshire there were two noble families whose influence was felt in county as well as borough elections. The Herberts, earls of Pembroke, with their seat at Wilton were the more important. The 1st Earl was a man of great qualities, who had eased his way to fortune, first by marrying the sister of Catherine Parr, and later by a switch of loyalties from Protector Somerset to the Duke of Northumberland.

Westmorland

In the first three Parliaments of the reign all the Westmorland knights of the shire were local gentry. Lancelot Lancaster (1559) of Stockbridge was related to Gerard Lowther I (1563) of Lowther, who came from one of the oldest county families and was related to both the Cliffords and the Dudleys. Lowther represented Westmorland while still a student at Lincoln’s Inn.

Warwickshire

Sir Ambrose Cave, chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster and Privy Councillor, held estates in Warwickshire and had no difficulty in obtaining the senior seat in the first two Parliaments of the reign. He died in 1568. His fellow MPs were Thomas Lucy of Charlecote and Clement Throckmorton of Haseley, both of whom were of sufficient standing to represent the county on more than one occasion. After being junior knight to Cave in 1559, Lucy was knighted in 1565 and achieved the senior seat in 1571 and 1584. Clement Throckmorton was junior knight in both 1563 and 1572.

Sussex

Sir Richard Sackville of Buckhurst, lord lieutenant of Sussex, was made Privy Councillor at Elizabeth’s accession and took the senior county seat in the first two Parliaments of the reign. He died in 1566, but since his son and heir Thomas was created Baron of Buckhurst in 1567, the family did not represent Sussex again until his grandson Robert came of age.

Surrey

For most of this period the representation of Surrey was shared between two county families, both powerful at court, the Howards of Effingham and the Mores of Loseley. At the time of the elections for the 1559 Parliament the head of the More family, William More I, was sheriff. Unable to return himself, he supported the candidature of the lieutenant of the Tower, Sir Thomas Cawarden of Bletchingley, standing with Thomas Browne of Betchworth, who had recently succeeded to his estates and made a fortunate marriage into the Fitzwilliam family.

Suffolk

All the MPs in this period were Suffolk country gentlemen. The only man whose election as knight of the shire may partly have depended upon an official position outside the county was Thomas Seckford I, the master of requests. (Sir) Owen Hopton’s story is a little unusual, in that he was appointed lieutenant of the Tower between his first election for his native Suffolk in 1559 and his second in 1571, and it was no doubt because of his central office that he went on to sit for Middlesex, thus becoming one of the comparatively few men to sit for two counties.