My last post on the subject of the Ayscough family from Stallingborough Lincolnshire is about Edward Asycough, an Elizabethan country gentleman.

Edward Ayscough probably lived at the family’s manor house at Stallingborough as his tomb, seen here, can be found in the church that stood adjacent to the house. At this time Spain was threatening war and it was the duty of every Englishman of note to supply horses and weapons for the fight against the Armada.

In 1584 Edward’s local muster point was Caistor, but he failed to turn up with his assessed quota of ‘one dimi-lance and two horses’ his fine for this was to supply a third horse. Three years later he held the position High Sheriff of Lincolnshire.

Edward Ayscough had married Hester Grantham of Goltho, and as you can see he had rather a large brood of children - fourteen in all.

He died in 1612.

The manor of Stallingborough descended to his son William and then through three more Edwards until it passed, in the mid 16th century, to Isabella his 3x great granddaughter the wife of Andrew Boucherett.

On this marriage, the manor became the property of the Boucherett family.

#16thcentury #lincolnshire #localhistory #church
#churchesoflincolnshire #churchmonument #elizabethan #countrygentleman
#stallingborough #lincolnshirevillages #englishvillages #lincolnshirefamilyhistory #ayscough #spain #spanisharmada

Francis Ayscough inherited the manor of Stallingborough on the death of his father in 1546. At this time it is likely that he was living in the nearby village of South Kelsey. Francis was the older brother of Tudor martyr Anne Askew and is known to have been interested, like Anne, in the teachings of the new religion.

When Anne left her husband it is thought that it was to Francis’ home that she fled, she would later leave for London where she was tortured and executed. In Foxe’s Book of Martyrs it states that it was Francis who betrayed his sister to the authorities after her first trial and release, and who quickly made it clear he had returned to the old faith.

I don’t know what I think about this, it’s easy to think Francis was unprincipled, weak and a coward who betrayed his sister to save his own skin, in reality though, I wonder how many of us would have done the same?

Francis Asycough was married twice and High Sheriff of Lincolnshire on three separate occasions. He can claim Sir Issac Newton as one of his descendants.

#16thcentury #lincolnshire #localhistory #church
#churchesoflincolnshire #tudor #anneaskew #tudorwomen #women
#stallingborough #lincolnshirevillages #englishvillages #foxesbookofmartyrs #betrayed #lincolnshirefamilyhistory #ayscough #issacnewton

On the floor of St Peter and Paul’s Church in the Lincolnshire village of Stallingborough is this brass marker, it features William Ayscough and his wife Margery Hilyard. This couple were the grandparents of Anne Ayscough (Askew) who was burnt at the stake for her Protestant belief.

William Ayscough died in 1509, just a few years before the teachings of new religion began to take hold.

William was knighted in 1501 at the marriage of Prince Arthur to Catherine of Aragon.

#16thcentury #lincolnshire #church
#churchesoflincolnshire #tudor #henryvii #princearthur #catherineofaragon #anneaskew #tudorwomen #women
#stallingborough #lincolnshirevillages #englishvillages #churchbrass #lincolnshirefamilyhistory #ayscough

Church Lane in Stallingborough meanders its way north with what remains of a medieval village to its left. The green fields, seen in my photographs, cover the foundations of buildings that can be seen as ridges and hollows.

To the south of this lane, there were open fields, archaeologists think this was where the village expanded during the 16th century and where the Tudor house belonging to the Ayscough's was situated.

Living there in the 1520s was Anne, a young girl who was forced to marry a man to whom her dead sister was promised.

#lincolnshire #stallingborough #domesday #medieval #manor #lincolnshirevillages #englishvillages #lincolnshirefamilyhistory #ayscough #anneaskew #martyr

At the end Church Lane in the Lincolnshire village of Stallingborough is the 18th-century church of St Peters and St Paul. It stands on high ground where once stood the original church. On the surrounding terrain, there is evidence of a medieval settlement that can be seen as small banks and ditches.

In 1086 there were forty-five people living there, it was the third largest manor in north Lincolnshire after Barton and Grimsby and is listed as having five overlords.

#lincolnshire #stallingborough #domesday #medieval #manor #lincolnshirevillages #englishvillages #lincolnshirefamilyhistory #motorhomeadventures