Elizabeth Southwell
Lady Elizabeth Cromwell (c. 1672- 1709) was an English noblewoman, the only daughter of Vere Essex Cromwell, 4th Earl of Ardglass and his Countess, Catherine Hamilton.
Life
When her father died in 1687, she claimed his title of Baron Cromwell, although his Earldom became extinct; she was ranked with the Peeresses at the funeral of Mary II of England and the coronation of Queen Anne, but her claim appears to have been a mistake.
Whether she was entitled to succeed her father depends on how the barony was created. A barony by writ descends to an only daughter; a barony by patent follows the rule of descent given in the patent - normally to the male heirs of the grantee.
The Barony of Cromwell has a patent, granted in 1540 to Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell (and his heirs male), son of Henry VIII's minister Thomas Cromwell, after his father's fall and execution. But the antiquarian William Dugdale had claimed in the 1670s that there was also a writ summoning Gregory Cromwell as Baron Cromwell, dated 28th May 1539. Although he gives a text of the writ, the form is not standard, and no writs at all are recorded as being issued on that day - the first day of Parliament, and so rather late to summon men to attend it; the Complete Peerage conjectures that Dugdale saw a reference to Lord Cromwell in the proceedings of the Parliament, deduced that it meant the son - not the father - and supplied the writ he assumed must exist. [1]
She married Edward Southwell, Secretary of State for Ireland, in 1703, a year after the death of his father, Sir Robert Southwell; their son Edward Southwell did not call himself Lord Cromwell. She died in 1709.
Her grandson inherited the much older and more distinguished Barony of Clifford.
Sources
- ^ G. E. Cokayne, 'Complete Peerage sub Cromwell; he suspects that Dugdale assumed that the Earl of Essex mentioned in the reports was Thomas Cromwell, the father, but Henry Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Essex was still alive in 1539, and Thomas was still only Baron Cromwell.