Edward was the eldest son of the courtier
Edward Lewknor of
Kingston Buci, Sussex, and his wife Dorothy, daughter of Robert Wroth and Jane Hawte, and sister of Sir
Thomas Wroth. His father grew up in the wardship of Robert Wroth (an associate of
Thomas Cromwell and
Richard Rich), who left directions in his will (1536) for the marriage of his ward to his daughter Dorothy. The elder Lewknor's career as a courtier benefited from the high favour in which King
Edward VI held his brother-in-law Thomas Wroth, one of the
Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, whose wife Mary was a daughter of Richard Rich. However, with King Edward's death and the accession of
Queen Mary in 1553, Wroth (a strong favourer of the Protestant reform) went with Sir
John Cheke and Sir
Anthony Cooke into exile abroad. The elder Lewknor, who was reputedly
Groom Porter to both monarchs, kept his position at court, but became implicated in the "Dudley conspiracy" (of
Henry Dudley and
Henry Peckham) to depose Queen Mary and install her sister
Elizabeth when he used his situation to procure a copy of King
Henry VIII's will on their behalf. In 1556 he was found guilty of treason,
attainted, and imprisoned in the
Tower of London under deferral of execution awaiting a possible pardon. At this time the Queen sought urgently to force Sir Thomas Wroth to return to England, but without success, and after three months in the Tower attended by his wife and one of his daughters Lewknor expired there in September 1556. His son Edward at the age of 14 therefore faced a complete reversal of his childhood status and expectations when his father was buried at the Tower. Many lands, including the manor and
advowson of
Hamsey, East Sussex, were restored to his mother in February 1556/57 by Mary's
Letters Patent. In the first year of Elizabeth an act was passed, on the petition of Lewknor's four sons (Edward, Thomas, Stephen and William) and six daughters (Jane, Maria, Elizabeth, Anne, Dorothie and Lucrece) to restore them to their blood, lineage and degree. This restored all their ancestral hereditaments excepting those held in use, possession or reversion by their father at the time of his treason and
attainder, or any which either Mary or Elizabeth should have found cause to withhold. They were therefore entitled to make their
pedigrees as Lewknor's heirs as if he had never been attainted, and to make conveyances thereof, except of lordships, honours and other benefits to which their Majesties were entitled on account of the attainder. His fortunes so far restored, Edward was educated at
St John's College, Cambridge, matriculating a pensioner at Easter 1559 and graduating B.A. in 1561, and was a fellow of the college from 1561 to 1563. He entered the
Middle Temple in 1562 to study law. His son recorded in his father's printed epitaph that he next found some service in the royal household of Queen Elizabeth. His next brother Thomas Lewknor (presumably the same who matriculated from
Trinity College, Cambridge in
Lent term 1557–58 and graduated B.A. in 1562–63) was presented Rector of Hamsey by the Diocesan 'by lapsed authority' in 1563, remaining until 1568. == Marriage and relocation to Suffolk ==