The reform reversed Following the proclamation of Queen Mary (19 July 1553) and the city's submission to her authority, Bishop Ridley was immediately arrested and sent to the Tower, but Cranmer was not arrested until 14 September. Laurence Hussey, Anthony's son, was apprehended on 20 July carrying letters from Jane Grey's Council in the Tower to the Duke of Northumberland: at the time of the King's funeral, he was a
Groom of the Chamber. Cranmer's arraignment and condemnation, together with
Guildford Dudley and Jane Grey, occurred at the Guildhall in London on 13 November 1553, after which he was sent to the
Bocardo Prison in Oxford to await execution. It was not until after Cranmer had been tried for heresy (under papal jurisdiction) in 1555 that Rome decreed him to be deprived of his archbishopric, and his execution occurred at Oxford on 21 March 1556. Anthony Hussey's work as Registrar to the Archbishop thus took a different turn after 14 September 1553, but as Proctor to the Court of Arches, of which
John Story now became Dean, he remained attached to the functions of the Canterbury Court. As registrar to the Dean of St. Paul's he served until 1554 with William May as Dean, when May was replaced by
John Feckenham, who more readily served the purposes of Edmund Bonner, the reinstated Bishop of London. The London bishopric appears to have shared its Chancellory with London, and Hussey also kept registers for the bishop of London. His son Lawrence having been presented by Sir Andrew Judd to the
prebend of
Bishopstone (
Salisbury diocese) in December 1554, in
Stephen Gardiner's condemnation of
Bishop Hooper. He appears as Registrar to the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's, sitting with Harvey, on 10 March 1554/55. On 14 February 1554/55 Sir Henry Hussey made his will granting his manors to his brothers, but to his cousin Anthony Hussey of London and his heirs males in remainder, also requiring Anthony to ensure that his brothers made sufficient assurance of these estates and to act as their learned counsel in the entailing thereof. His witnesses included Sir John Tregonwell, Henry Harvey, Robert Johnson, Thomas Lodge (Alderman) and John Incent the notary: Sir Henry lived until 1557. Hussey called him again a week later and told him more of what he knew, not omitting to say that he knew Green had other copies of the book and demanding to know what he had done with them. Green then confessed that he had given one to an apprentice, and begged him not to harm the young man. Hussey promised this, provided that (because he had not at first confessed) Green himself would abide his judgement. To this Green assented, which was, that he should be whipped like a thief or a vagabond. After a further month in prison he was beaten with rods in the presence of Dr Story (who wanted to have his tongue cut out and his ears cut off), and was at last released.
Merchant Adventurers: Muscovy The voyage in search of a
Northeast Passage to
Cathay, led by Sir
Hugh Willoughby, departed in April 1553. The fate of Willoughby, who froze to death in January 1553/54 together with the crews of two ships, was not immediately known in England, but Richard Chancellor and Stephen Borough survived to return to England in the summer of 1554 in the
Edward Bonaventure, having made diplomatic and commercial negotiations in first contact with
Tsar Ivan IV in Moscow. Trade from central Europe into Muscovy (which then had no direct connection to the Baltic) was partly controlled by the Hanse, but the northern sea-route offered the means to circumvent this. Chancellor had carried letters of greeting from King Edward, and brought a reply from the Tsar offering friendship, trade and privileges in return, which, owing to Edward's death, was received by King Philip and Queen Mary. In February 1554/55, Mary issued the first fully ensealed charter to the
Company of Merchant Adventurers to New Lands (later called the
Muscovy Company). This opened by reciting the sponsors or adventurers already invested in the first voyage, among whom Anthony Hussey was one. Moreover, he was by name constituted one of the four founding Consuls (together with Sir
George Barne, Sir
William Garrard and
John Southcote), under Cabot its Governor. Barne and Garrard were respectively
Lord Mayor and
Sheriff of London through the year of Edward's death and Mary's accession, 1552–1553. Hussey's mercantile, Admiralty, notarial and archiepiscopal horizons suited the needed expertise, intelligence and polity; Southcote, a nephew of John Tregonwell's, was a respected lawyer of the
Middle Temple, in middle life, who sat in both parliaments of 1553 and had a career of prominence in justiciary lying before him. Sir William Garrard became Lord Mayor of London late in 1555. Philip and Mary composed a response to the Tsar on 1 April, and on 1 May 1555 Hussey was present as the whole Company assembled in open court to issue the articles for the second voyage. It was now intended for Russia, to be led by Richard Chancellor as Pilot of the fleet consisting of the
Edward Bonaventure and the
Philip and Mary. Richard Gray and George Killingworth were authorized to be agents and factors, and attorneys general and special for the company. After entering the
Northern Dvina the ships returned to England while Chancellor and the agents left a party at
Vologda in October and proceeded to Moscow. Killingworth's letter dated 27 November 1555 describes the success of their dealings with the Tsar, who addressed the grant of his first special privileges to the company, as to Cabot, the Consuls and Assistants, to Queen Mary. Willoughby's frozen ships were found and refitted, and, the
Edward Bonaventure leaving
Orwell Haven again in April 1556 with Stephen Borough and the pinnace
Searchthrift, where a narrative of his journey and his extensive reception in London through March and April was recorded for Anthony Hussey by John Incent. By April 1557 Lawrence Hussey was back in Scotland about the Queen's business on behalf of
Lady Lennox. and to the
Jewel House for "two pairs of grete white silver pottes", to Mr Hussey, Governour of the Merchauntes Adventurers, or three of his deputies, for the chamber of the ambassador during his visit. The
Philip and Mary limped into London on 27 February 1557, and Nepeya returned to Muscovy in the voyage led by
Anthony Jenkinson for the Company which set forth on 12 May 1557. The company's letter to the agents in
Colmogro explained that Master Anthony Hussey had given to Jenkinson a commission for further travelling, and that they should deliver to him some "painefull young men" (i.e.
painstaking) to continue in search of the route to Far Cathay. This letter was signed off by Hussey with Andrew Judd, George Barne, William Garrard and
William Chester, the latter having taken Hussey's place as Consul when Hussey succeeded to Sebastian Cabot as Governor. Hussey's governorship oversaw Jenkinson's remarkable expedition from Moscow to
Bokhara between April 1558 and 1560.
Merchant Adventurers: Antwerp The decree by which the Council of king Edward VI withdrew the Liberties of the Stillyard was upheld in the first parliament of Queen Mary, in October 1553. A body of Hanseatic merchants attended Mary's coronation procession at Gracechurch, and early in the following year Mary, to gratify the Hanse towns, suspended the operation of these Acts for three years and relieved the merchants from the extraordinary taxation which had been imposed upon them. A further deputation from the Hanse in 1555 gained little ground. From 1555 to 1556 the Governor of the Merchant Adventurers was John Marshe, MP (1516–1579), who was married to a cousin of Thomas Gresham's and became father-in-law to Anthony Jenkinson. Marshe, who had an extended parliamentary career, has been called "the outstanding Governor of the century", By the time of Hussey's appointment, by June 1556, Ridley and Latimer had been burned to death in Oxford in the preceding October, and Thomas Cranmer had suffered there on 21 March 1556. Hussey went to Antwerp bearing royal instructions to stamp out Protestantism among the members of the English Company. When Thomas Mowntayne fled to Antwerp and lived there for eighteen months to avoid persecution, "than commys over mr. Hussy beynge than guvernor of the Inglyshe nasyon, and yt was gyven owte that he wolde sodeynly shype and send awaye ynto Inglande al soche as were come over for relygion, he namynge me hymselve for one..." Hussey delivered certain instructions to Dr Martyn on 14 October 1556: Lawrence Hussey was admitted an Advocate of the Arches on 27 October following. In September 1557 Hussey, together with William Garrard and Randall Cholmeley, received a commission from the council to investigate the matter of three ships which had been captured by the French. It was suspected that the masters and mariners had betrayed the ships to their captors, by treachery or cowardice, and they were to be apprehended and imprisoned for examination. Anthony Hussey and Thomas Argall were also to search the house of the Queen's printer,
John Cawood, for writings and evidences. More formally, on 2 December Hussey, "a Master of Chancery, and Governor of the Merchants Adventurers" was joined to a general commission led by the
Bishop of Ely to seek out subtle practises by native and foreign merchants, by which gold and silver bullion and plate were being exported, counterfeit money was being brought into the realm, usury was practised, the value of merchandise imported by merchant strangers was not employed in the commodities of the realm, and the customs of wools and other staple wares were being concealed. They were to investigate all these matters from the commencement of the Queen's reign. These were the usual complaints laid against the Merchants of the Stillyard, and arose in response to a fresh deputation in August on behalf of the Hanse seeking the restitution of their lost privileges. In the following year they obtained only the most recently discussed privileges and an assent that they should pay the same tolls as the English. At the beginning of January 1557/58 attention turned fully to the
loss of Calais, and the Council instructed the
Lord Privy Seal to summon Mr Hussey, "and to wyll him to call suche marchauntes as he shall thinke mete to consulte and consyder amonge themselfes what porte is moste meteste for the common passage oute of this realme unto Flaundres", and to declare their opinions unto him. There followed a letter from the council to Hussey, considering that the ambassadors of the Stedes (the Hanse towns) had now departed, requiring him in the Queen's name to use all means at his disposal to find whether they went directly home to their country, or if they went by way of the King's Majesty. He is also required "to write hither from tyme to tyme suche occurrentes as he shall understande."
Cardinal Pole The death of
Stephen Gardiner,
Bishop of Winchester and
Lord Chancellor to Philip and Mary, on 12 November 1555 made way for Thomas Cranmer to be deprived of the See of Canterbury officially on the following day. On 11 December following, Reginald Pole was appointed
cardinal-priest and administrator of the See of Canterbury by the Pope. The University of Cambridge appointed Pole its
Chancellor in Gardiner's place, and in 1556 he succeeded Sir
John Mason in the
equivalent dignity at Oxford, so that he held both Chancellorships at once. Although of a mild disposition, Pole had in 1554 negotiated the
Revival of the Heresy Acts on behalf of the Queen, in exchange for the concession that confiscated former monastic properties should not be taken back from their new owners. The custody of the Great Seal and the title of Lord Chancellor were bestowed upon
Nicholas Heath,
Archbishop of York. His episcopal revenues were, however, appropriated to Pole, the Cardinal Legate, who, having sat in Convocation until its prorogation in February 1555/56, was consecrated as Archbishop of Canterbury on the first Sunday after the death of Cranmer, 22 March 1556. Pole's Consecration was drawn into Acts and attested by Anthony Hussey as Protonotary of the See, Thomas Argall Registrar of the Prerogative Court, Thomas Willett Apparitor-general, John Incent, public notary, and others. The
pallium was presented to Pole in his Cardinal's robes at
St Mary-le-Bow church (the Canterbury
peculiar home to the Arches Court, in
Cheapside), Bonner and Thirlby officiating, in the presence of dignitaries, witnessed by Hussey, Argall and Incent. In 1869 the Librarians of
Lambeth Palace made a formal affirmation that the handwriting of the Archiepiscopal Registers of Thomas Cranmer and of Reginald, Cardinal Pole was the same as in the opening section of
Matthew Parker's Register, and that they believed them all to be from the pen of the Principal Registrar Anthony Huse. Hussey and Incent notarize the rehabilitation of Richard Kersey, a married priest renouncing his wife, on 10 July 1556, and on 12 July, as Registrar at Lambeth, he signs a Dispensation by Pole (and bearing his official seal) to Thomas Twysden, deacon of the Canterbury diocese, for Twysden to act as executor in his brother's will. These date shortly after Mary's instructions to Hussey as Governor in Antwerp, and a week before Chancellor and Nepeya boarded the
Edward Bonaventure for London. At this time Hussey did great service to posterity by preserving Archbishop Cranmer's Register from the general destruction of writings devised against the Pope in the time of the late schism. Hussey retained his office as Principal Registrar to the Archbishops of Canterbury until his death, but his enjoinder to John Incent "to binde upp in due forme the regester of the late Archebisshopp Cranmer, together with all bookes as well belonging to the Archebisshoppe as to the Deane and Chappiter of Caunterberie" was written in his will in January 1557/58, evidently referring to a danger then still present.
Testamentary affairs, 1557/58 In Mary's last parliament (20 January 1557/58 to 7 March 1558, and 5–17 November 1558), Hussey was returned as Member for
New Shoreham, a constituency represented in 1547 by his cousin Sir
Henry Hussey. Sir Henry's sympathies were with the "true
[i.e. reformed] religion". These arrangements came to fruition when his will was proved on 27 September 1557, making bequests to Anthony Hussey and to William his son. The executrix, his widow Dame Bridget, made her own will on 23 September 1557, mentioning both Anthony and Laurence Hussey and again appointing Anthony an overseer. Hussey wrote his own will on 12 January 1557/58. Among various bequests (below) he restores a diamond to his "especiall good ladie" Dame Blanche Forman, as a remembrance of "the paines and travaile that I have taken in her affaires longe tyme paste": He needs to see the will of Robert Legge finally closed, of which he had been executor in 1550.
William Hussey A record is found in the Minutes of the
Middle Temple, 6 February 1556/57, for the special admission of William Hussey, second son of one Hussey of London, Esquire, one of the Masters in Chancery, at the instance of his pledge Mr Richard Weston for a fine of 40 shillings. On 7 April 1558 Cardinal Pole announced the replacement of Anthony Hussey "our primary registrar for many years" by his son William Hussey and John Incent. This is said not to have taken effect, because his name is not found in Archbishop Parker's Register. The inference arose from a false supposition that the same William Hussey was alive and living in Wiltshire until 1581, with a wife and several children. The true reason for his disappearance is that he was already dead before Archbishop Parker was consecrated. In 1633
Anthony Munday recorded Anthony Hussey's own statement carved in a stone monument that his son William Hussey, a bachelor, was Registrar of the Court of Canterbury but died on 27 October 1559 and was buried in St Martin, Ludgate by his grieving parents:"Gulielmo Huseo, Cœlebi, Almæ Curiæ Cantauriensis Registro, literarum scientia vitæ probitate, morumque urbanitate claro, notis & amicis omnibus dilecto. Antonius et Katharina conjuges, Chari parentes, orbati filio, Monumentum hoc dolentes posuerunt. Obiit quinto Kalendas Novembris Anno Dom. 1559. vixit annos 28. menses 3. dies 7. Obdormiat in Domino."
[To William Hussey, Bachelor, Registrar of the Court of Canterbury, well-known for his knowledge of letters, probity of life and civilized habits, loved by all his friends and acquaintances: the espoused Anthony and Katharina, loving parents bereaved of their son, in grief placed this Monument. He died on 5 Kalends November [sc. 27 October], A.D. 1559. He lived 28 years, three months and seven days. May he have repose in the Lord.] It therefore appears that the appointment did take effect, and may have continued for almost 8 months under Reginald Pole and perhaps well into the year following the accession of
Queen Elizabeth, before he died in October 1559 leaving no issue. ==Elizabeth==