Nielsen Hayden genealogy

Jane Statham

Female


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All

  • Name Jane Statham  [1, 2
    Gender Female 
    Person ID I36349  Ancestry of PNH, TNH, and others
    Last Modified 15 Sep 2021 

    Father Henry Statham,   b. of Morley, Derbyshire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 30 Apr 1480 
    Mother Anne Boothe 
    Family ID F21374  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 John Sacheverell,   b. of Morley, Derbyshire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 22 Aug 1485, Bosworth Field, Leicestershire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
    +1. Henry Sacheverell,   b. 1475, of Morley, Derbyshire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 22 Jul 1558 (Age 83 years)
    Family ID F21371  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 15 Sep 2021 

    Family 2 William Zouche,   b. of Bulwick, Northamptonshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Marriage Bef 18 May 1487  [2
    Family ID F21378  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 15 Sep 2021 

  • Notes 
    • "Born in the early 1450s, Jane was heiress to the manor of Morley in Derbyshire. Soon after the death of her first husband John Sacheverell at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, Jane was abducted by Henry Willoughby of Wollaton and forcibly married to his brother Richard. Jane was restored to her family, and her forced marriage annulled, after she petitioned Parliament for assistance. Her experience almost certainly triggered a change to the law in England to make abduction of a property-owning woman a felony. Later in life, Jane became the last Prioress of Markyate Priory before it was dissolved in 1536." [Wikipedia, accessed 15 Sep 2021]

      University of Nottingham, Manuscripts and Special Collections, "Extract from bill of complaint relating to the abduction and forced marriage of Jane Sacheverell":

      ... to the nombre of an C persones and moo Riotously and disensibily arraied in Maner of Warre the seid xj day of nouembre felonously ley in a wayte in a wode called Boroweswode bytwene the seid Manoures of Hopwell and Morley to Ræuysshe and to Robbe the seid Jane ayenst oure seid soueraine lordes lawes and his peace then and there Made assaute vppon the seid Jane and her toke and bound her fast vnto a man on horsbake and with grete violence and force led her by nygth tyme in to the Shire of Nothingham vnto a place of Sir Robert Markham knygth and from thens to leycester Shire and from thens to a place of the seid Herry Willoughby called Middelton in the Shire of Warrwick and putt her in Suche fere and manase that she was in poynte to haue perisshed and distroied and then and ther toke from her a pece prece of xl shillings and vj Spones of syluer prece xxvj shillings viij pence of the goodes of the seid Jane and ouere that the seid Richard Willoughby violently and greuously manasseth and yete doth the same Jane to Cary her in to Straunge Contrey to her vtter vndoyng and distruction and ther to do his plesure with her as his owen will withoute that she well consent and be aggreable vnto his unsatiable and riotouse entent

      [On the 11th day of November last, Jane then being at the manor of Hopwell, intended to go to the manor of Morley, but Henry Willoughby of Middleton, Richard Curson of Wollaton, Richard Willoughby of Wollaton, Henry Boson of Nottinghamshire, Hugh Willoughby of Risley, and others,] to the number of 100 persons and more, riotously and defensively clothed as if for war, feloniously lay waiting in a wood called Boroweswode [Burrow Wood, Spondon] between the said manor of Hopwell and Morley, to ravish and rob the said Jane [Sacheverell] against our said sovereign lord [the King’s] laws and his peace. Then and there they made assault upon the said Jane, and took her and bound her fast to a man on horseback, and with great violence and force led her by night time into Nottinghamshire, to a place belonging to Sir Robert Markham, knight, and from thence to Leicestershire, and from thence to a place belonging to the said Henry Willoughby called Middleton in Warwickshire. They put her in such fear and menace that she was in a situation to have perished and been destroyed, and then and there they took from her a peace price of 40 shillings and 6 spoons of silver, priced at 26 shillings 8 pence, from the goods of the said Jane. And more than that, the said Richard Willoughby violently and greviously menaced and yet caused the said Jane to be carried into an unknown country, to her utter undoing and destruction, and there to do his pleasure with her at his own will, without her consenting and being agreeable to his insatiable and riotous intent.

  • Sources 
    1. [S1520] The History and Antiquities of the County of Leicester by John Nichols. London, 1795-1815.

    2. [S5960] The Descent of the Family of Statham by S. P. H. Statham. London: Times Book Company, 1925.