; the chapel was commissioned by George Talbot. Having a large family and being a very wealthy man, he found the castle accommodation extremely cramped. He broke with the tradition of his family and decided to make
Sheffield his home, living in the
castle built by
Lord Furnivall. This castle is best known for later holding
Mary, Queen of Scots, prisoner and indeed it was the
6th Earl, the Earl's grandson, who confined her. In 1516, he decided to build himself a country mansion on a hill about two miles away. In 1520, he had a chapel added to the
parish church at
Sheffield to serve as a family chapel with a burial vault below. This is now known as the Shrewsbury Chapel and now forms a historic part of
Sheffield Cathedral. In 1538, the Earl died, aged 70, while at
Wingfield Manor. He was laid to rest in the Shrewsbury Chapel along with his first wife,
Lady Anne. In his will, the Earl directed 'that a tomb of marble should be set over his grave with three images thereon, namely one of himself in his mantle of the Garter, another of his deceased wife in her robes, and a third of his wife then living'. The monument to Talbot and his two wives can still be seen in the church (now
Sheffield Cathedral). ==Marriage and issue==