, seat of the Walsingham family He was the eldest son and heir of James Walsingham (1462–1540) of Scadbury by his wife Eleanor Writtle (pre-1465 – post-1540), the daughter and heiress of Walter Writtle of
Bobbingworth in
Essex. Sir Edmund, according to a
monumental brass formerly in the church at Scadbury, had three brothers and seven sisters, including: • William Walsingham (died 1534), who married
Joyce Denny (1506/7–1560), the daughter of
Sir Edmund Denny, one of the
Barons of the Exchequer, and his second wife, Mary Troutbeck (died 1507), the daughter of Robert Troutbeck of
Bridge Trafford,
Cheshire, by whom he was the father of
Sir Francis Walsingham (c.1532–1590), Principal Secretary to
Queen Elizabeth I, and five daughters, Elizabeth (died 1596), Barbara, Christian, Eleanor and Mary (1527/8–1577). After William Walsingham's death, Joyce (née Denny) married
Sir John Carey, a younger brother of
Sir William Carey, by whom she had two sons,
Sir Wymond Carey and
Sir Edward Carey. • Elizabeth Walsingham, who married Thomas Ayloffe, second son of William Ayloffe (died 1517), a Bencher of Lincoln’s Inn, by his wife Audrey Shaa, widow of John Writtle and daughter of Sir John Shaa, a London goldsmith and
Lord Mayor in 1501. Thomas Ayloffe’s elder brother, William Ayloffe (died 1569), married Anne Barnardiston, the daughter of Sir Thomas Barnardiston (died 7 November 1542) of Ketton in
Kedington,
Suffolk, by whom he was the father of
William Ayloffe (c.1535 – 17 November 1584). • Cecily Walsingham. • Margaret Walsingham.
Early origins Although the Walsingham pedigree is said to date to the thirteenth century, the family is first recorded in the County of
Kent in 1424, when Thomas I Walsingham purchased the manor of
Scadbury. The descent was as follows: •
Thomas I Walsingham (d.1457) a wealthy wine and cloth merchant in the
City of London who served as a
Member of Parliament for
Wareham in 1410 and for
Lyme Regis in 1413, both in Dorset. He married Margaret Bamme, daughter and heiress of Henry Bamme, of the
City of London, a member of the
Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths. He purchased the manor of
Scadbury in the parish of
Chislehurst, to which additional land was added in 1433. • Thomas II Walsingham (1436–1467), son and heir, who married Constance Dryland (died 14 November 1476), a daughter of James Dryland, of
Davington, by whom he had a son, James Walsingham (1462 – 10 December 1540). Constance survived him and remarried to John Green, who in 1476 was
Sheriff of Kent in right of his wife. • James Walsingham, son and heir, who married Eleanor Writtle (born before 1465, died after 1540), the daughter and heiress of Walter Writtle of
Bobbingworth,
Essex, by whom, according to a
monumental brass formerly in the church at Scadbury, he had four sons and seven daughters, the eldest of whom was Sir Edmund Walsingham (d.1550), the subject of this article. ==Career==