. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . CHUTELEY HUNDRED beth the infant daughter and heir of Thomas toWilliam Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury,25 themost distinguished member of a family which hadalready been established for many years at Dyneley. Argent a Wabham. Gules a fate fesse sable ivith a molet or ivitb a goafs head between two roundels razed argent havinggolden sable in the chief. horns in the chief and three scallops argent in the foot. Here the archbishop appears to have been brought up,and hence he was sent to Wykehams colleges atWinchester and


. A history of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight . CHUTELEY HUNDRED beth the infant daughter and heir of Thomas toWilliam Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury,25 themost distinguished member of a family which hadalready been established for many years at Dyneley. Argent a Wabham. Gules a fate fesse sable ivith a molet or ivitb a goafs head between two roundels razed argent havinggolden sable in the chief. horns in the chief and three scallops argent in the foot. Here the archbishop appears to have been brought up,and hence he was sent to Wykehams colleges atWinchester and Oxford. He was afterwards a diligentstudent of the law and practised in the Court ofArches : he then became known to ArchbishopMorton, who commended him to Henry VII. Bothunder this king and Henry VIII Warham filled highoffice, being successively Keeper of the Rolls, Am-bassador to Burgundy, Bishop of London and Chan-cellor of He was a reformer on a moderatescale who ruled over the English Church with gentle-ness and some pliability. He died in 1532,27 andwas succeeded at Malshanger by his nephew andnamesake,28 who was still living in In June1550 he seems to have been in trouble with thePrivy Council, probably as a partisan of the ProtectorSomerset


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnaturalhistory, booky