Name1st Viscount LISLE Arthur PLANTAGANET
Birth1461, Calais France
Death3/3/1541/42, Tower Of London England
Spouses
Birth1483, Stowe Cornwall
Death30 Apr 1566, Atherington Devon
Marriage20/2/1529/30, Kilhampton Cornwall
Notes for Honor (Spouse 1)
Notes for Honor GRENVILLE:
Married (1) Sir John BASSET Married (2) in 1529 Arthur PLANTAGENET , Lord Lisle, bastard son of King Edward IV. No issue to him.
Sir John Basset of Umberleigh in Devon and Tehidy in Cornwall, was a courtier in the reign of Henry VIII. He was married to Honor Grenville and had children including John, James, Elizabeth, Katherine and, most famously, Anne, who attracted the interest of Henry VIII.
Sir John died while his children were young.
Marriage (2) ref #T990362 Film 0884799 LDS. "From film 1,126,128 for pre 1500 birth or marriage dates for royalty or the nobilty."
His wife re-married, to Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle, who was the illegitimate son of King Edward IV. He had been given no titles during the reign of his father, half-brother Edward V or uncle Richard III, but was created a viscount by Henry VIII, his nephew. John Basset's children were moved to Calais, then an English enclave which is now a part of France. Lord Lisle was the governor of Calais, and the children were sent to France to be educated.
From A Who's Who of Tudor Women by Kathy Lynn Emerson 2008 "Honor Lisle was one of the six beautiful ladies who accompanied Anne Boleyn to Calais to meet King Francis I and in 1533 the entire family settled there."
Lord and Lady Lisle were apparently very happy and very much in love. Honor was a forceful woman, who wrote many letters to friends at court, ensuring that they were kept well-informed. These letters are preserved today as the Lisle Letters and give an interesting account of the developments during the reign of Henry VIII.
Honor finally succeeded in getting one of her young daughters appointed as a maid-of-honour to Queen Jane Seymour in 1537. She was asked to send two of her daughters - Anne and Katherine - to court, where the Queen would pick the more suitable. Anne, who became known at court for her beauty and respectability, was selected. Her first appearance as maid-of-honour was at Jane Seymour's funeral. It was over two years before another queen arrived, but Anne spent a lot of time at court and received expensive presents from the King. She went on to serve queens Anne of Cleves, Catherine Howard and Katherine Parr. Her sister, Katherine, and her mother eventually joined her at court, despite Lord Lisle's arrest for treason in 1540.
In 1542, the Imperial ambassador, Chapuys, reported that on the eve of Catherine Howard's execution, Henry seemed besotted with Anne, and that she was a possible sixth wife. This possibility may have been ruined by Anne's own family. Her sister, Katherine, favoured the King re-marrying her mistress, Anne of Cleves, and made comments that this seemed to be what God wanted. She also said, "What a man is our king? How many wives will he have?" This was reported to the King and she was brought in to be questioned - under the treason laws her remarks could have warranted the death penalty.
The Basset family continued to serve at the courts of Henry VIII's children.
There is a monumental brass of Sir John BASSET and his two wives in the Church of St Mary, Atherington, Devonshire.