The Tudor Society

March 6 – Lord Chancellor Thomas Wriothesley is accused of abusing his authority

Miniature of Thomas Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, by Hans Holbein the Younger

On this day in Tudor history, 6th March 1547, in the reign of King Edward VI, former Lord Chancellor to Henry VIII, Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, lost the Great Seal of his Lord Chancellorship and was confined to his home at Ely Place for abusing his authority.

Wriothesley was found guilty of issuing a commission without the knowledge or permission of the other executors of Henry VIII's will, but it was probably more to do with his opposition to Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset, becoming Lord Protector.

Wriothesley had been appointed as an executor of Henry VIII’s will and chosen by the king to serve on a regency council for the new nine-year-old king until he reached his majority. However, Henry VIII’s wishes for a regency council of equals were ignored as Edward Seymour took control of Edward’s council as Lord Protector. He was later re-admitted to the Privy Council, a position he'd also lost at his fall.

Let me give you a few facts about Wriothesley…

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